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Katsu Ramen

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Chicken Katsu Ramen

You all know that 2021 was the year of the Ramen for me… I discovered it in the summer of 2020 (thanks Christian and Hadlee 💜) and set to work recreating less sodium-intense, more veggie-friendly versions at home. Taking the extra step to make the chicken katsu isn’t as straightforward as the veggie ramen but it does add another dimension which is very much appreciated on cold winter nights or crisp spring evenings. I adapted this from Half Baked Harvest who has tons of quick, Asian-inspired dishes that cycled through my kitchen at the end of last year. 

what you need

4 garlic cloves, minced or grated

2 shallots or 1/2 onion, minced 

1 ginger knob, minced or grated

1 cup mushrooms of choice, thickly diced

1 teaspoon red pepper flakes

1/4 cup miso paste of choice

2 tablespoons fermented chili paste 

6 cups chicken broth

1/2 cup coconut milk

1/4 cup soy sauce

Ramen noodles of choice

4 cups spinach

1 tablespoon toasted sesame seed oil

2 soft boiled eggs, halved

garnish: diced green onion

🍜

4 small chicken cutlets (if your chicken breasts are thick, it is important that you slice them smaller)

1 cup Panko

3 tablespoons sesame seeds

dash of salt, to taste

dash of cayenne pepper or paprika, to taste

1 tablespoon oregano

how to make it

Place garlic, shallots, ginger, and pepper flakes in a large pot with a tablespoon of oil over medium heat and sauté until fragrant. Add in the mushrooms and sauté another minute. 

Add the chicken broth, coconut milk, and soy sauce, and heat until steaming. At that time, add in the miso paste and the chili paste and bring to a gentle boil. Boil for approximately 10 minutes. Taste for flavor but, at this point, you shouldn’t need salt. 

As the broth gently boils, mix all the ingredients together with the Panko and bread your  chicken. You can use an egg to adhere the crumb mixture to the chicken but I prefer not to. Fry the chicken cutlets in oil over medium-high heat for 3-4 minutes on each side, remove to a cutting board, and cut the katsu into strips. 

Returning to the broth, add the spinach, noodles, and sesame oil, and simmer another ~5 minutes until the noodles soften. Alternatively, you are welcome to cook your noodle separately and pour the broth over them. 

Place noodles and broth in your serving bowls, adding to each bowl a halved egg and two chicken cutlets, sliced. Garnish with diced green onion and toasted sesame seeds and serve warm. 

Give Me Thai, Stir Fry, Ramen, Rice
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Veggie

Miso Ramen

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Miso Ramen

This is a hearty, complex take on Ramen with about 1/3 of the sodium and no fatty meat. Using eggs as protein, this dish is bolstered with thick-cut Portobello mushrooms or crunchy veggies of your choice like broccoli and bok choy. For a first foray into Ramen, I’m pretty pleased. Actually, Fall of 2020 was the first time I had Ramen without the Maruchan label… ‘real’ Ramen. It isn’t my favorite food but Ramen, like Pho, comes in handy on cold winter days. This is the first of many one-bowl, Asian-inspired noodle recipes you’ll find alongside Thai Curried Noodles!

what you need

1 package ramen noodles of choice (I like these Hakubaku noodles from Whole Foods)

2 eggs, soft boiled

6 cups vegetable broth

1/4 cup tahini

(optional) 2 tablespoons miso paste of choice

(optional) 1/2 tablespoon fish sauce

1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar

1/8 cup soy sauce or Tamari

1 knob of fresh ginger, grated 

2 cloves garlic, grated

1 tablespoon sesame oil

3 tablespoons olive oil

2 small shallots, diced (shallots have a unique flavor but if you don’t have shallots, you can use onions)

1/2 mushrooms, sliced (any kind, mixed kinds, the more mushrooms the merrier!)

2 types of veggies of choice… I used Brussel sprouts and carrots, but bok choy, kale, sweet red peppers, portobello mushrooms, pole beans, and broccoli would all work well.

Red pepper flakes or 1 spicy chili pepper, minced

Half a lime cut into wedges

Sesame seeds for garnish

(optional) 2 long green onions, cut into small slices

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350. Toss carrots and Brussel sprouts in olive oil, salt, and cayenne pepper if desired, and baked on foil-lined baking sheet for 20-25 minutes until just crispy, stirring once about 10 minutes in. If the vegetables you are using would be better blanched than roasted (like pole beans), blanch them in boiling water and set aside. 

Meanwhile, heat 1 tablespoon of sesame oil in pan over medium heat. Grate garlic cloves and fresh ginger root into oil. Add minced shallot and sauté until fragrant, about 4 minutes. Add the mushrooms (if using) to the mix and given it a stir. Add the tamari, miso paste (if using), fish sauce (if using), rice wine vinegar, and red pepper flakes or chili pepper. Stir until combined, still over medium heat. Add the tahini followed by the vegetable broth and bring to a gentle boil. Salt and pepper to taste.

Place ramen noodles in pot of broth and cook until soft, as package directs. Working with two bowls, remove a serving of noodles from the pot and place in each bowl. Add the carrots and Brussel sprouts, and the soft boiled egg, cut in half. Ladle desired amount of broth over bowl of veggies (ensuring you get some mushrooms, too) and garnish with a lime wedge, green onions, and toasted sesame seeds.

Obviously, you are free to customize this dish with different veggies or the addition of a protein. Veggies are better if oven roasted or pan seared before adding them to the bowl and something like bok choy should definitely be pan seared first, a la Thai Curried Noodles

More ramen and noodle recipes to follow! 

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