Hey,
Bruce:I'm Bruce and this is the podcast cooking
Bruce:with Bruce and Mark
Mark:and I'm Mark Scarbrough and together with Bruce we have written over three dozen cookbooks and Now I have to say welcome
Mark:And now what we're doing is we're concentrating on a single thing in each episode.
Mark:We're going to start with a cooking tip, the famed one minute cooking tip.
Mark:Then we're going to go on and do some.
Mark:thing in the second segment, whether that is cook a recipe, have an interview, talk about food, and then
Mark:So we might as well get started.
Bruce:Our one minute cooking tip.
Bruce:Whenever I turn the oven on, I think about what else I can make at the same time.
Bruce:If I'm baking potatoes to go with a steak, well, I'll throw a tray of eggplant slices in so I could have eggplant parm another night.
Mark:Is this a one minute cooking tip?
Mark:Or a lesson in how to be OCD.
Bruce:If I'm baking lasagna, maybe I'll throw a few sweet potatoes in the oven so I have them for a salad at lunch the next day.
Bruce:Saves time, saves electricity, and allows me to have something to eat beyond the meal I'm currently making.
Mark:I guess that's our one minute cooking tip.
Mark:Think what else you can cook in your oven.
Mark:In this episode of the podcast Cooking with Bruce and Mark, we are going to actually make a recipe.
Mark:So we're going to go into the kitchen and pull together, believe it or not, an air fried version of chicken char siu.
Bruce:Most people know char siu as pork, or it's pork char siu, but what?
Bruce:is char siu in Chinese markets.
Bruce:It's usually pork, right?
Bruce:And it's barbecued and it's hanging in the front of the store or in the back of the store.
Mark:We often call it street meat, but yes, street beast or street meat.
Mark:Yes, exactly.
Bruce:And lately I have found packaged, ready to grill Chinese marinated pork and chicken labeled char siu.
Bruce:And yes, even in my local supermarkets, I have something that The big Y, which is a big New England chain.
Bruce:But usually that stuff is just sweet soy, almost like teriyaki.
Bruce:And maybe they put some red food coloring in it.
Mark:Okay.
Mark:We're going to make a traditional marinade.
Mark:We're going to put it on untraditional meat using chicken.
Mark:And we're going to make it in an air fryer because you know, we're all about air frying with all our air frying books.
Mark:You know, all about all that stuff.
Mark:So here we go.
Mark:Let's get started.
Mark:So I've got a big.
Mark:bowl here.
Mark:And you need a big bowl.
Mark:Don't pull out some little salad bowl.
Mark:You need a big mixing bowl, or as my mother would call it, or as my grandmother would call it, a big stirring bowl.
Mark:You need a big bowl.
Bruce:We called it a salad bowl when I was a kid, because that was always the biggest bowl we had
Bruce:And that was like the biggest mixing bowl we had.
Mark:Okay.
Mark:Well, anyway, you need the biggest thing you have.
Mark:And here's what we're going to put in here.
Mark:We're going to start with a quarter cup of hoisin sauce.
Mark:Now, if you don't know about hoisin sauce, That is a, well, it's supposed to be a sweet potato paste,
Bruce:It's barely been made with sweet potatoes in the last, uh, how many dynasties?
Mark:I don't know.
Mark:A lot.
Mark:But you can find it in even supermarkets.
Mark:It's hoisin sauce.
Mark:And then we, I'm going to add a quarter cup of brown, what brown sugar?
Bruce:What is this?
Bruce:Well, I like, I like using light brown sugar in this, but I think dark brown sugar probably is a better choice.
Bruce:I just have this thing about light brown sugar.
Mark:What in the hell is this stuff?
Bruce:Mmm, , a third of a cup of red fermented bean curd.
Bruce:What?
Bruce:Wait, what?
Bruce:Mark is asking me what it is because there's not a, there's not a word of English on this bottle.
Bruce:What?
Bruce:This bottle is all in Chinese, a little square bottle.
Bruce:So, this is...
Bruce:Tofu, but it's not stinky tofu.
Bruce:Oh, well, thank heavens.
Bruce:If you know about stinky tofu, uh, well, it's not what this is.
Bruce:This is tofu cubes that are brined and preserved and, sometimes it's called tofu cheese.
Bruce:It comes In, oh, that didn't make it sound better.
Bruce:. It comes in, uh, varieties that are red or white.
Bruce:Most Americans don't know what it is.
Bruce:So what is it?
Bruce:It actually is one of those foods that I think could have been on Fear factor.
Bruce:Remember that show where people would have to eat all sorts of gross things?
Mark:Yeah.
Mark:Well, I'm fear factored right now.
Mark:A third, a cup of red fermented bean curd.
Bruce:So it's basically you start with fresh bean curd and then they, they age it and ferment it with salt, with rice wine.
Bruce:flavorings.
Bruce:Um, actually in Cantonese, it's a called foo ee.
Bruce:And,
Mark:oh my gosh, please don't write in about that pronunciation.
Mark:I can feel the idiocy of that pronunciation, but do go on.
Bruce:And it is used mostly as a flavoring agent, not as a main protein.
Bruce:It's salty.
Bruce:Mostly the red comes from red rice yeast.
Bruce:That is the ingredient that.
Bruce:Turns it red.
Bruce:Okay,
Mark:so, so, okay, so what am I supposed to do with all this stuff?
Bruce:So you're gonna take a fork and I want you to mash up that fermented bean curd red cheese with
Bruce:You're doing good.
Bruce:So it's a smooth paste.
Mark:Is it's supposed to look like something in a baby diaper?
Mark:Is that what it's supposed to?
Mark:Well, I guess if your baby's having bloody, yeah,
Bruce:I was about to say, if it's coming out red, Seek medical attention.
Mark:Did you know the woman in TikTok, maybe you don't, as I do this, who always says, everybody's so creative.
Bruce:Everybody's so creative.
Bruce:Notice how that looks like something you never want to eat, but we're gonna.
Mark:That's what I feel like.
Mark:I feel like she said, notice how that looks like something, yeah, you don't want to eat.
Mark:Well.
Mark:Okay,
Bruce:so now I'm going to pour into that a third of a cup of soy and I'm not gonna keep mixing.
Bruce:No, you could stop.
Bruce:And I'm not using low sodium soy in this.
Bruce:Why?
Bruce:This is a marinade.
Bruce:This is a brine.
Bruce:This is a salty dish.
Bruce:And to balance that soy, I'm using two tablespoons of honey for a little sweetness.
Bruce:And I'm putting two tablespoons of Shaoxing wine, which is a rice cooking wine.
Bruce:And one.
Bruce:Teaspoon of Chinese five spice and Mark, what is five spice powder?
Bruce:It's
Mark:a traditional like five spice powder.
Mark:It's a traditional mix of cinnamon, sometimes cardamom, fennel.
Mark:There's a star anise.
Mark:Honestly, there's as many versions of five spice as probably there are Chinese home cooks.
Mark:I know when you go in the store, you just see this bottle of five spice.
Bruce:But you know, the thing is you can buy a little tiny jar of it.
Bruce:in almost any supermarket and it's worth having.
Bruce:It'll last a while.
Bruce:So I would just go in and use this last ingredient.
Bruce:Uh, red food coloring.
Bruce:Isn't that cancer?
Bruce:No, it's actually usually insects.
Bruce:It's that carmine red.
Bruce:And it's made from ground up, dried insects.
Mark:So we really are at fear factor.
Mark:Okay.
Bruce:So a few drops, it really gives it that beautiful char siu golden red that you want.
Bruce:Okay.
Bruce:So mix those up.
Bruce:Let's get all that mixed up.
Bruce:Okay.
Bruce:There, that's good.
Mark:This seems wrong.
Mark:I mean, I don't know.
Mark:I don't know why it seems wrong to me.
Bruce:You know what seems wrong, and this is interesting.
Bruce:Notice how there's no garlic, there's no ginger, except for whatever ground ginger is
Bruce:The holy trinity of Asian cooking, of Chinese cooking, and it's none of those are in here.
Bruce:Was that
Mark:racist?
Mark:That felt racist.
Mark:Was that racist?
Mark:The Holy Trinity of Chinese cooking?
Mark:I don't know.
Mark:Is that?
Mark:I don't know.
Mark:I don't know.
Mark:Um, let's skip over that.
Mark:Okay.
Mark:Because maybe garlic, ginger, and scallions is the Holy Trinity of Armenian cooking.
Bruce:Well, maybe it is.
Bruce:Okay, now we're going to pull out a cutting board and we're going to pull out a knife.
Bruce:And we have one pound of boneless, skinless chicken thighs, and I'm only cutting off the large blobs of fat because quite
Bruce:So I'm just slicing off some of the larger pieces, but I'm keeping the big chunks of chicken thighs whole.
Bruce:And now we're going to Add them to that marinade you just made.
Bruce:I believe the
Mark:culinary term is plop them in.
Mark:We're going to plop them in.
Mark:We've got this in here, and I've stirred it around a little bit.
Mark:And now what we're going to do is cover this in plastic wrap and set it in the fridge for six hours.
Mark:Um, you can do it up to 24 on the day ahead.
Mark:Okay, when we stick this in the fridge, great.
Mark:Okay, in it goes.
Mark:Now, talk to me about this red fermented bean curd.
Mark:Where in the world does one find this?
Bruce:I found it in the little town of Great Barrington, Massachusetts in a Japanese, uh, grocery store and he
Bruce:Okay, that's great.
Bruce:Um, any Asian...
Mark:So if you live in Oregon, you just drive to Great Barrington, Massachusetts
Bruce:and If there is an Asian supermarket near you, they should have it.
Bruce:And if you don't have one near you, you can go online.
Bruce:There are so...
Bruce:Many online Asian markets from yammybuy.
Bruce:com to gogofresh to posharp store.
Bruce:So there are just Google red fermented bean curd.
Bruce:You will find square jars without any English writing on them.
Bruce:And that's what you're looking for.
Mark:And why is this a secret?
Bruce:There's an umaminess to this tofu there when, you know, umami being that other sense that's not
Bruce:But without it, there's a huge difference in taste.
Mark:Right.
Mark:Okay, and let me say one more thing before we get on to air frying this.
Mark:We're going to actually have to cut away and let this marinate.
Mark:Before we get on to air frying it in a minute, let's just say for a minute that we did use the Shaoxing wine, the rice wine.
Mark:It is traditional in Chinese cooking.
Mark:If you don't have Shaoxing, the best substitute is dry sherry.
Mark:because it has a slightly woody flavor to it.
Mark:It's the better substitute than vermouth or any kind of white wine.
Mark:If you want to dump the alcohol completely from the dish itself, then what I would suggest that you use is a little bit of
Mark:Some people say you should use unsweetened prune juice for a Shaoxing substitute, but I always think that's too far.
Mark:But you can dump the alcohol from this, but just be mindful of the fact.
Mark:That most of the alcohol here will cook out.
Mark:Well,
Bruce:not all.
Bruce:And plus the food's not going to absorb that much alcohol to begin with.
Bruce:And then what it might have will cook off, but okay.
Bruce:We're going to come back after this has been marinated 24 hours and cook it.
Mark:Here's the air fryer and it is going, it's at 400 degrees and we are heating it up.
Mark:Now this is really debatable.
Mark:And a lot of people debate this endlessly, and we have a theory, because we've written so many air frying
Mark:You want to talk about that?
Bruce:It's called Do It.
Bruce:Basically, do it, and I get questions all the time in our Essential Air Fryer group on Facebook, where
Bruce:I get questions on our YouTube channel with the air fryer recipes all the time.
Bruce:They say, well, my recipe says I don't have to, or my new air fryer says I don't have to.
Bruce:All
Mark:the online gurus of air frying say, you know, essentially put the crap in there and turn it
Bruce:on.
Bruce:And they're telling you that so that they think you're making your life easier.
Bruce:And are they?
Bruce:Well, sure.
Bruce:You're making your life easier, but you're not making your food better.
Bruce:And it doesn't take but two to three minutes at most for an air fryer to heat up.
Bruce:So heat it up.
Bruce:You want that little sizzle on the bottom, on the cooking tray.
Bruce:You want the instantly to have.
Bruce:The marinade, the coating, whichever on it to start to set, not blow off.
Mark:What we've discovered is that this has nothing to do with the recipe we're making now, but that lighter coatings
Mark:So you really, really want to heat your air fryer.
Mark:So we've got this thing up to 400
Bruce:degrees.
Bruce:I'm going to open the drawer, and I'm going to lay these Chicken thighs in there.
Bruce:Using kitchen tongs, he said.
Bruce:The chef wants to use his hands.
Bruce:Always.
Bruce:Your hands are the best tools you have in the kitchen.
Bruce:Gross
Mark:fingernails.
Mark:Gross food safety.
Mark:So, using kitchen
Bruce:tongs.
Bruce:And if they touch, it's okay.
Bruce:If your hands touch?
Bruce:No, if the chicken thighs touch.
Bruce:And you just don't want to make a...
Bruce:solid wall of them.
Bruce:So as long as air can get around, that's okay.
Bruce:If yours is not big enough to fit all of your thighs in there.
Bruce:Oh, are we still talking about cooking?
Bruce:Then you're going to have to do it in batches.
Bruce:We're using...
Bruce:Oh, are we still talking about cooking?
Bruce:So ours fit and because I have this like super sized giant double vortex thing which is really pretty
Mark:Okay, so 10 minutes are over and these are pretty sizzly
Bruce:already.
Bruce:They're blackened on the edges, which is nice.
Bruce:That's because all the sugar that's in it and the fat we left on the
Mark:chicken.
Mark:There's sugar in the hoisin.
Mark:There's the honey that we've put in it.
Mark:Brown sugar.
Mark:Yeah.
Mark:There's the brown sugar.
Mark:And then there's that.
Mark:Red fermented bean curd going on.
Mark:So it's blackening up like char siu, except again, we're using chicken thighs and we're air frying it.
Mark:So this is so weird.
Mark:We're using a very traditional marinade, but a very non traditional meat.
Bruce:And a very non traditional cooking method.
Bruce:Yeah.
Bruce:And method.
Bruce:So I'm going to turn them and each one of these, Oh God, you can see, look at that beautiful,
Bruce:It looks a little lacquered.
Bruce:I've seen recipes.
Bruce:Where people insist on brushing them with more honey at this point.
Bruce:We're saving back some of that marinade and brushing it on.
Bruce:Now, I think that's overdoing it.
Bruce:Personally, after testing this recipe a number of times, I think the flavor is best to just turn them.
Bruce:So, back in and another 10 minutes and then they'll be done.
Mark:Okay, so we're done.
Mark:And let me just say that, uh, remind you that if you're gonna make this recipe...
Mark:Uh, two things.
Mark:One, the recipe itself exists in the program notes to this episode, so you can just look down in the player,
Mark:And two, let me also say that if you have to do this in batches, Put the remaining chicken thighs back in the
Bruce:And I want to say something about people who are going to write and say, can I make this with chicken breast?
Bruce:The answer is, can you?
Bruce:Of course you can.
Bruce:Will it be good?
Bruce:Not in my opinion.
Bruce:This is something that really requires the dark meat, the juiciness of the dark meat, the fat of the dark meat.
Bruce:You're cooking this a long time.
Bruce:20 minutes is a long time for a boneless flattened out skinless chicken thigh, but you want that lacquer on it.
Bruce:You want this.
Bruce:Beautiful golden edges that we have quit talking.
Bruce:All right.
Bruce:I'm going to slice up one.
Bruce:Really honestly, stop talking.
Bruce:Okay.
Bruce:And now we are going to taste
Mark:this.
Mark:Yeah.
Mark:Um, I'm sorry.
Mark:I'm stepping away because I'm blowing on it.
Mark:I don't want to blow into the mic
Bruce:Mark has this theory that you shouldn't blow on your foods.
Bruce:I'm surprised he's even blowing on the spoon,
Mark:but it's too hot.
Mark:It just came out of the machine, but you know, in the, in the spirit of a podcast, here we go.
Bruce:This to me tastes like Chinatown.
Mark:Yeah, it is an amazing.
Mark:Replication of flavors without the pork.
Bruce:It's salty, it's sweet, it's umami.
Bruce:What I want to do with these, because there's a lot of them here, is I want to slice them up and I want to make
Bruce:The stir fried rice noodles with...
Bruce:The homemade char siu chicken and some scallions and garlic and a little splash of black soy sauce.
Bruce:Oh God.
Bruce:That'd be so good.
Mark:Let me just say before we step away from this actual cooking adventure, which I had
Mark:And the red food coloring.
Mark:Oh God.
Bruce:Optional.
Bruce:Optional.
Mark:Oh God.
Mark:Anyway, um, let me just say that again, this recipe lives in the show notes of whatever player you're looking at this on
Mark:And let me also say that there is a video of Bruce making this on Tik Tok.
Mark:So if you join our Tik Tok channel, Cooking with Bruce and Mark, you can actually see Bruce make these.
Mark:Not as we did here.
Mark:It's a very fast cut video.
Mark:What?
Mark:It takes like about 90 seconds to get the whole thing done.
Mark:So it's a very fast cut video, but still in the, unless you'll get the idea of how it goes,
Bruce:you'll see what that red tofu cubes look like.
Mark:Yeah, you will.
Mark:So there you go.
Mark:There's a cooking.
Mark:episode of Cooking With bruce and Mark.
Mark:We got so many listener requests that we returned to cooking podcast episodes.
Mark:And so here we are.
Mark:Some people said that they missed the cooking spicy content.
Mark:So I hope that we've given you spicy content here.
Mark:I'm a little over the top.
Mark:And let's move on to the typical last section of our podcast.
Mark:What's making us happy in food this week?
Bruce:Homemade creme de cassis liqueur.
Bruce:Mark is an amazing gardener, and many of you may know this, and he has these beautiful blackcurrant bushes right outside
Bruce:So I mushed them up and I steeped them for three weeks in a bottle of Everclear, which in case you don't know is like 190 pounds.
Bruce:proof grain alcohol, anybody who's been to college knows what Everclear is, anyone.
Bruce:And then I strained that out in a jelly bag and I mixed it with simple syrup and it is delicious.
Mark:It is wild.
Mark:I just say that I'm going to say one thing about this, that I'm a total renegade.
Mark:Because when I planted those black currant bushes in New England, they were illegal.
Mark:You couldn't have black currants.
Mark:And I'm not exactly sure what the legality of it, but it was, at the time, illegal.
Mark:So it was like growing pot in my garden.
Mark:It was a total illegal substance, allegedly.
Mark:Like, someone's going to arrest me for black currants.
Mark:What's making me happy on Food This Week is French press coffee.
Mark:I don't know if you ever have a French press at home.
Mark:But I love French press coffee.
Mark:Explain what it is.
Mark:So, right, a French press is a, um, coffee maker where you put the grounds in the bottom, it's a glass carafe, you
Mark:over the grounds.
Mark:You put the plunger in the carafe.
Mark:You wait.
Mark:I like really strong coffee, so I wait five or six minutes.
Mark:You push the plunger down, the grounds go to the bottom, and then you pour off the coffee from it.
Mark:And the coffee is super smooth, super delicious.
Mark:I'm having a great time having French press in the mornings, and I'm enjoying every
Bruce:And let me just say that French press does require a very coarsely ground coffee.
Bruce:You do not use the same grinds that you would put in a drip pump.
Mark:It must be a very, very coarse.
Mark:They'll all slip through the filter and it's a mess.
Mark:And also, let me just also say, since I love French press coffee, that it is a real mess to clean up.
Mark:It's ridiculous.
Mark:I line a colander with paper towels, and then I have to pour the grinds into it and keep washing the carafe
Bruce:And that's because we live in the country and we're on spetic.
Bruce:If you're not on septic, coffee grinds won't really hurt it.
Bruce:too much if you cut some down the drain, but not where the septic is.
Mark:I don't even know about septic.
Mark:I mean, non septic.
Mark:I don't even know.
Mark:We've lived so remote for so long on septic.
Mark:I don't even know about real town.
Bruce:Yeah.
Bruce:Your, your town.
Bruce:Yeah.
Bruce:Your town probably wouldn't like it if you were dumping coffee grounds down there.
Mark:No, probably not.
Mark:But, um, okay.
Mark:Anyway, so there you go.
Mark:That's.
Mark:That's our show, uh, in the fourth season, our first episode of Cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Mark:We actually cooked the dish live.
Mark:It took us a while because we had to let that chicken marinate, so it's been kind of a labor of weirdness to get, to get to
Bruce:And we still have our group, Cooking with Bruce and Mark on Facebook, so please go to
Bruce:We post episodes, we post videos, we talk about recipes.
Bruce:So we'll see you there.
Bruce:And we'll see you back here for another episode of season four, cooking with Bruce and Mark.