Bao’s Top 10 Must-Have, You-Need, Shut-Up-and-Get Cookbooks

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Though over the past year or so I’ve tried to explore cookery via my own instincts — sometimes to great success, and sometimes to dismal failure — it’s no secret that most of my culinary knowledge hails from cookbooks.  Recently, during a bout of procrastination, I decided to tally the number of cookbooks I possess and to my surprise, the figure lies somewhere around eighty.  I’m not sure whether that’s high or low for a home cook (I happen to know Nigella Lawson has several thousand, but she’s a few decades and several billion pounds sterling ahead of me), but in my circle it makes me something of a cookbook authority, I suppose, and over the past year many people have come to me asking what books they “need.”

While everyone’s cookery goals are personal and my recommendations might vary, I’ve compiled a list of my top ten cookbooks.  So read on, buy on, cook on!  It’s a countdown, kids, so get excited.
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A Stranger in a Foreign Land

Well, well, well.  Someone’s been very naughty and neglectful of his blog, and I’m only feeling mildly apologetic.  Still (much like every other time), I promise to be more passionate about updates from now on.  Really.

Let’s talk about “curry rice,” a Japanese (really!) take on a food quite different from traditional Japanese cuisine.  Curry rice (カレーライス) is the quintessential Japanese comfort food, a plate of white rice and a curry sauce with meat and veggies.  This no doubt sounds surprising to those less familiar with Japan (I can hear some of your hearts screaming, “Isn’t it sushi!?”).
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I Should Rename This Blog to “Bao’s Burgers and Lentils”

There seems to be a very obvious trend in my cooking lately:  I make lots of new, weird hamburgers, and cook an almost obsessive amount of lentils.  I probably need to be stopped.  In any case, a couple days ago I reaaaally started craving a Vietnamese sammich, a banh mi, which is traditionally made with pork and served on a baguette.  But I wanted lentils too!

Voila my lentil banh mi burger, another bastardization of someone else’s culture.  It’s also 100% vegetarian, and if you replace mayonnaise with something else that’s probably disgusting, it’ll be vegan, too.  You won’t miss the meat, I promise.

Lentil Banh Mi Burger

Lentil Banh Mi Burger
Serves 2.

For the burgers:

1/2 cup dried lentils
Kosher salt
1/2 onion, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
Pinch of crushed red pepper flakes
1 tbsp chopped fresh basil
1/3 cup plain dried bread crumbs or panko
1 tsp corn starch
2 1/2 tsp sugar
2 tsp fish sauce
2 tsp sriracha
1/2 tsp kosher salt
1/2 tsp rice vinegar

For the dressing:

2 tbsp mayonnaise
1-2 tsp sriracha (to taste)
2 tsp chopped scallions

Bring the lentils, 2 cups of water, and 1/2 tsp of salt to boil and cook until very very tender, about 20 minutes.  Meanwhile, saute the onion, garlic, and red pepper flakes in a little vegetable oil in a pan over medium-low heat until the onions are translucent and soft.  Do not let them brown.

Drain lentils and add to a medium bowl.  Add onion mixture, basil, bread crumbs, corn starch, sugar, fish sauce, sriracha, 1/2 tsp salt, and vinegar.  Using a potato masher, your hands, or anything similar, mash everything together until well combined and shape into two patties.  At this point, you can pop them in the fridge for a few minutes so they firm up.

Combine the mayo, sriracha, and scallions.  Set aside.  Heat some veggie oil in a large frying pan over medium to medium-high heat and fry the patties on both sides until brown and crunchy and yummy looking.  Slather some mayo on a hamburger bun, a crusty roll, toast, English muffin, etc, and then add a patty and enjoy!

(Sometimes) I am Cheap Enough to Use Leftovers

I am unapologetically pretentious enough to admit that I loathe leftovers.  Despite the fact that I cook far too much food than necessary and most of the food winds up in the fridge, I wholeheartedly shirk from any sort of economical reuse of last night’s meal.

One leftover I do make use of, however, is pasta.  You can make it into a frittata or heat it up in some garlic oil and have a second Italian bonanza.  Since it reconstitutes remarkably well if properly encouraged, I find myself boiling a bit more than I need so I can create something tasty the next day.

The Italians stole pasta from the Chinese and I feel there’s a kind of poetic justice in reclaiming leftover noodles for their intended purpose, and thus was born my ghetto ramen.  I say ‘ghetto’ only in the sense that I know several Japanese who would curl up and die at this dish, but I’m going for flavors I like more than authenticity.  In any case, it’s far healthier than instant ramen, which has enough sodium and fat in it to kill a small donkey.

Ghetto Ramen

Before you critique my chipped chopsticks, please realize they’re my personal set that I’ve used since my first long-haul in Japan in 2000.  Recipe follows the jump!

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