Hey, I'm Bruce Weinstein, and this is the podcast cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:And I'm Mark Scarbrough.
Speaker:And together with Bruce, we have written three dozen cookbooks.
Speaker:And in this episode of our podcast, we're going to put our cooking
Speaker:chops to the test because we are making a homemade chili crisp.
Speaker:If you don't know what chili crisp is, well...
Speaker:I feel sorry for you, but also we're going to tell you what chili crisp is.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:Chili crisp, my favorite things in life.
Speaker:So we're going to make a batch here on the air and let you know how it goes.
Speaker:If you want to see this recipe, it lives on our website, bruceandmark.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:It also will be in our newsletter, which you can sign up for on
Speaker:our website, bruceandmark.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:And of course, we'll post this recipe in our Facebook.
Speaker:Group cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:It's all Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:Everything's Bruce and Mark . So we will post the recipe there on Facebook and
Speaker:the group cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:But besides Chili Crisp, we've got a one minute cooking tip coming
Speaker:right up and we'll tell you what's making us happy in food this week.
Speaker:This week's one minute cooking tip for the richest and easiest whipped cream.
Speaker:It's getting you ready for the holidays.
Speaker:And I don't want you jumping on me, Mark, because I know this isn't
Speaker:how you like to do whipped cream.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:I'm gonna let it happen.
Speaker:For the richest and easiest whipped cream.
Speaker:Use a hand blender, or you know, those immersion blenders, stick
Speaker:blenders, that's what they're called.
Speaker:So you're going to take one cup, or two cups of cream, if you want to make a lot.
Speaker:Now remember, when you whip cream, it doubles, right, in volume.
Speaker:So, be prepared.
Speaker:So you're going to then pour that into, I like to use a Pyrex little...
Speaker:measuring pitcher, and I use one twice as big as the cream.
Speaker:So if I have one cup of cream, I use the two cup Pyrex pitcher, two cups of cream,
Speaker:I use the one quart pitcher, put the stick blender in the bottom, press the button
Speaker:on it, and it starts to whirl around.
Speaker:And then you end up with a very dense, not an airy, but a dense, rich whipped
Speaker:cream without all the splatter that you get when you use a hand mixer.
Speaker:And if you want to get it even denser, make sure that the whipping
Speaker:cream is cold, really, really cold, like right out of the refrigerator.
Speaker:And if you want to get it even denser, put that measuring vessel that you use to
Speaker:whip it in, put that in the refrigerator overnight for when you make the cream.
Speaker:The colder everything is, and you can even put the blade of the
Speaker:stick blender in the refrigerator.
Speaker:The colder everything is, the denser the whipped cream will ultimately be.
Speaker:So, there's your one minute cooking tip.
Speaker:That will get you ready for the holidays.
Speaker:And now, we're gonna get you ready for something else.
Speaker:We are gonna make chili crisp on the air.
Speaker:So, get ready.
Speaker:Mark and I have talked about Chili Crisp a lot on this podcast, right?
Speaker:It's been our what's making us happy food this week.
Speaker:It's been lots of things on the thing is it's expensive.
Speaker:It can be now.
Speaker:The basic plain Lao Gan Ma chili crisp.
Speaker:I love this.
Speaker:The basic plain.
Speaker:It was the revelation chili crisp for everyone.
Speaker:Lao Gan Ma.
Speaker:It was.
Speaker:And that woman is now like a billionaire and drives around China in her limousine.
Speaker:And you could still buy bottles of her chili crisp for about four bucks a
Speaker:bottle, you know, in most Asian markets.
Speaker:Yeah, in Whole Foods, you probably spend seven on it, but okay.
Speaker:But you want to go by Momofuku chili crisp or, you know, Fly by Jing, you're going to
Speaker:pay 11, 12, 14 for these tiny little jugs.
Speaker:Oh my goodness, $16.
Speaker:S Z E, daddy, she daddy.
Speaker:It's one of my favorites.
Speaker:She daddy has a funkiness about it that I absolutely love.
Speaker:So before we get into going on and on about what we're about to
Speaker:do here, let's just talk about If you don't know what a chili crisp
Speaker:is, a chili crisp is a condiment.
Speaker:It is favored in certain regional Chinese cuisines, and it is
Speaker:essentially a mixture of spices and as the name suggests, tons of dried.
Speaker:Chili's and oil, of course, and oil and then tons of different mix ins and
Speaker:what happens is through the oil and the chilies and the spices, you create a
Speaker:condiment that you can spoon on dumplings.
Speaker:You can add to noodles.
Speaker:I stir it into everything.
Speaker:Bruce puts it on top of hamburgers.
Speaker:Gosh, you really can do everything with this chili crisp.
Speaker:Well, okay, you can't paint your house with it.
Speaker:Well, I bet you could be back all your bedroom with it.
Speaker:But, um, you can do so much in the kitchen with this chili crisp.
Speaker:It would be a delicious accompaniment to a roast at Christmas.
Speaker:You can mix it with mayonnaise for a spread for sandwiches.
Speaker:You can mix it into butter for a spread to dip into.
Speaker:It is So versatile and let's get going.
Speaker:So the technique for chili crisp is pretty much the same across the board.
Speaker:And that is where you take your dried ground up chilies, all your other spices,
Speaker:whatever optional add ins you're going to use from sesame seeds to shredded
Speaker:coconut, and then you're going to heat up oil and pour it over the top.
Speaker:So the whole thing sizzles together, but I want to talk about the different
Speaker:kinds of chilies you can use because.
Speaker:The different chilies will give you a completely different personality
Speaker:to your chili crisp, right?
Speaker:Chili de arbol is very commonly used.
Speaker:They are those small little red chilies.
Speaker:They are very, very hot.
Speaker:And so I don't like to use them exclusively.
Speaker:You may know them from sometimes used in North American Chinese dishes.
Speaker:If you see that long, red, thin chili in a hot.
Speaker:dish that's sitting there and people say, Oh, don't eat the chilies.
Speaker:Well, I have a friend in Texas who eats them all.
Speaker:Um, anyway, uh, that's, that's that chili day are bold.
Speaker:You can use standard American chili flakes that you get in the
Speaker:spice rack at your supermarket.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You can use, but it seems like a standard, you, you can, for this recipe, use chili
Speaker:flakes, but it seems like they would.
Speaker:be weird.
Speaker:And my problem with chili flakes that are sold in the spice rack
Speaker:of North American supermarkets is that they're very monochromatic.
Speaker:They don't have any depth of chili that good chili flavor has citrus notes,
Speaker:high notes, lemony notes, acid notes.
Speaker:It has all kinds of wild flavors to it.
Speaker:And it's not just burning hot.
Speaker:I have bought pre ground Chinese, uh, chili in Asian markets.
Speaker:And I find that those are so hot also, they give me more flavor
Speaker:than the chili day or bowl, but I like to ideally grind my own.
Speaker:And my favorite chilies are Erjingtao.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Now you're going to have to explain what an
Speaker:Erjingtao chili is.
Speaker:An Erjingtao chili is the, the chili of Sichuan, China.
Speaker:It is a very long.
Speaker:Dark red chili, very narrow, skinny, long chili.
Speaker:It is incredibly flavorful, full of a fruitiness and a little sweetness.
Speaker:It's got definite, definite fruit flavors.
Speaker:With a mild heat.
Speaker:Mild heat from my palate and they, I think a lot of books that I
Speaker:read about Sichuan food actually call it a Mild chili sweet chili.
Speaker:Yeah, but most American palates.
Speaker:It's gonna be a hot chili.
Speaker:It's hot now It's not burning hot and when I eat it, I don't just faint
Speaker:Bruce also uses pickled urging towels for some Chinese braises And they're
Speaker:not they don't knock you out and you can easily eat them and not be bowled
Speaker:over in your chair If you like spicy food, there, I have many friends who
Speaker:I would never serve Erjingtao chilies to because it would knock them out.
Speaker:Well, I have 50 grams here and it's about in the size I
Speaker:have, there's about 12 of them.
Speaker:And I'm just using a scissor to cut off the stem end.
Speaker:And I am not splitting them down the middle and pulling the seeds
Speaker:out because I want the seeds.
Speaker:You can do that.
Speaker:You can split them.
Speaker:Some like it hot.
Speaker:I like it hot.
Speaker:And I'm going to cut these into, you know, like one inch pieces and I'm
Speaker:putting them into my little spice grinder.
Speaker:And I'm going to grind them up.
Speaker:Now here's the trick.
Speaker:If there are any other spices you want to add, now's the time to put them into
Speaker:your spice grinder with the chilies.
Speaker:You need a big spice grinder, but you can put.
Speaker:You can now put in a little bit of dried cinnamon bark, you know, that those
Speaker:those barky rolls of cinnamon, you can break up a little piece of that you can
Speaker:put in a star anise seed, you can put in some cloves, you can put in cardamom,
Speaker:there's all kinds of different dried.
Speaker:Uh, or uh, spices that you can put in.
Speaker:You can put in mustard seeds, you can put in coriander seeds.
Speaker:So think hard dried spices.
Speaker:Black peppercorns you can put in here, white peppercorns, which is
Speaker:very actually traditional in Chinese cooking, you can put in here.
Speaker:I'm going to put one star anise with these cut up chilies and
Speaker:now I'm going to grind them.
Speaker:I'm going to pulse it to make sure they get all ground up.
Speaker:Now I'm not looking for a powder.
Speaker:I'm going to stop it and take a look.
Speaker:I want these to look about the size of standard American red chili flakes.
Speaker:So that's what I'm going for and this is pretty close.
Speaker:This is really nice.
Speaker:So now I am going to dump these into this.
Speaker:I have this two cup Pyrex.
Speaker:Picture the same thing I would have done the whipped cream in that we talked about
Speaker:the first segment And I'm gonna dump these chilies and the ground up star anise into
Speaker:that.
Speaker:Okay now to that we're gonna add two Tablespoons of smoked paprika and you can
Speaker:add mild smoked paprika or if you're brave you can add hot smoked paprika, but then
Speaker:understand it's going to get really hot.
Speaker:I like to use the mild here and we always do because it's sweeter and
Speaker:it kind of balances the chilies.
Speaker:So two tablespoons of smoked paprika and then, oh, two, maybe
Speaker:three teaspoons of ground sumac.
Speaker:And now you're going to have to explain that.
Speaker:Sumac is a spice, very popular in Middle Eastern cooking, and it adds a tartness.
Speaker:It's red.
Speaker:It's like a Burgundy, a dark burgundy red.
Speaker:It is not the same kind of sumac you have growing along the roadside in New England.
Speaker:It is a necessarily, this is a Q and so don't eat that because you don't know.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:You want to buy culinary sumac.
Speaker:And I like it because
Speaker:I also don't know about the stuff growing along the side, the varietal it is.
Speaker:And you also don't know about the pollutants from cars and et cetera.
Speaker:Settling on that sumac,
Speaker:but it adds a sourness, not unlike what.
Speaker:A char does in Indian food.
Speaker:And the, the dried, uh, sour, the,
Speaker:that's a char.
Speaker:That's not, that's not a char as in cooking, , like you've charred the
Speaker:steak and now it has a char on it.
Speaker:That's, it's achar.
Speaker:Just to be clear, a char in Indian cooking,
Speaker:which is that, you know, it's the ground sour mango, and that adds a, so
Speaker:this is really delicious for tartness.
Speaker:And I am gonna put in two tablespoons of dehydrated onion,
Speaker:which will add some more crunch.
Speaker:And I like the onion flavor.
Speaker:Always want to add granulated or castor sugar to chili crisp.
Speaker:So we're going to put about a tablespoon of granulated
Speaker:sugar or castor sugar into it.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Because the sugar will actually balance all of those chilies.
Speaker:And actually now here's a kicker for you.
Speaker:The sugar is a good heat delivery system.
Speaker:So it's actually going to make the.
Speaker:Hot bits a little more present even as it balances them So there you go,
Speaker:and then you need about a teaspoon of we're using just table salt, right?
Speaker:You could use kosher salt, but why
Speaker:no table salt actually will dissolve into the oil now notice What was
Speaker:missing from here mark and I decided?
Speaker:Not to put any Szechuan peppercorns in this.
Speaker:We're getting enough heat from the Erjing Tao.
Speaker:Although you could.
Speaker:You could if you wanted in that grinder.
Speaker:You could have thrown a teaspoon of Szechuan peppercorns.
Speaker:That would be perfectly fine.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so now we need to pour.
Speaker:oil over this, and it needs to be hot.
Speaker:The oil needs to be about 300 degrees, and we're having two thirds
Speaker:of a cup of just vegetable oil.
Speaker:So what you want here is a neutral flavored oil, so just
Speaker:any neutral flavored oil will do.
Speaker:Corn oil, refined.
Speaker:Peanut oil, not unrefined, but refined peanut oil, safflower oil,
Speaker:canola oil, um, vegetable oil, all those, any kind of neutral flavored
Speaker:oil is what you're looking for here.
Speaker:Because all of those aromatics are carrying all the flavor.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I've poured it into a little skillet.
Speaker:I mean, this is a really tiny little six inch skillet.
Speaker:Now, the oil is not deep enough for me to stick.
Speaker:a candy or oil thermometer into no when it gets to 300 degrees.
Speaker:So I'm waiting for it to get a little shimmery.
Speaker:I don't want smoke coming off of it.
Speaker:Then it's going to be too hot and my chilies are going to get a
Speaker:toasted taste that I don't want.
Speaker:So either you need a laser thermometer, which will tell you the temperature of
Speaker:it, Or what you could do is what I learned when I took Chinese cooking classes.
Speaker:You take a chopstick and you take the wider end of it, the flat wider end
Speaker:of it, and you stick it straight up and down into that oil in the pan.
Speaker:And if bubbles start to come up around the bottom of that
Speaker:chopstick, the oil is hot enough.
Speaker:Okay, it looks like Looks like the bubbles are coming up around the chopstick.
Speaker:So now what Bruce is going to do is he's going to take this
Speaker:pan of oil and just pour it over everything in that measuring vessel.
Speaker:And that's why we use the heat safe vessel because this oil is super hot.
Speaker:Pour it gently but quickly over the spices.
Speaker:They'll stick.
Speaker:Sizzle like mad.
Speaker:It's really hot.
Speaker:You want to put your vent on if you have it?
Speaker:Because you will get
Speaker:fume.
Speaker:You want a ventilated space to do this?
Speaker:This is going to be so good on scrambled eggs because it's burning me right now.
Speaker:We're not done yet because now, and this is interesting, this
Speaker:is an ingredient that I can only ever find in Asian supermarkets.
Speaker:It's jarred pre fried garlic.
Speaker:It's crunchy little bits of garlic.
Speaker:If you can't find this, then you need to chop up a couple of tablespoons of
Speaker:garlic and Fry it in the oil before you make this till it's crispy and brown.
Speaker:Couldn't
Speaker:I just put this in the two thirds a cup of oil and let it just right at
Speaker:the end and let the garlic kind of sizzle in there for a few seconds?
Speaker:Not a few seconds.
Speaker:It takes about a couple of minutes for this garlic to get this brown and crunchy.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And you run the risk of then overheating your oil or burning the garlic.
Speaker:So I like, if you want to do that.
Speaker:Cook the garlic first.
Speaker:It'll take a few minutes to get crunchy brown.
Speaker:Take it out.
Speaker:Then check your oil temperature, pour it over your chilies,
Speaker:and stir the garlic back in.
Speaker:After we're stirring this up, this now has to...
Speaker:Cool, right?
Speaker:This has to go.
Speaker:So we're gonna let this cool at least an hour, and then we're
Speaker:gonna come back and taste it.
Speaker:So just to say, uh, Bruce's got it here in front of him.
Speaker:You'll hear it in the jar.
Speaker:And what happened here is that that chili crisp went into a canning jar.
Speaker:What size?
Speaker:This is a pint jar.
Speaker:Okay, a pint jar.
Speaker:And then we put a lid on it and put it away for an hour or two.
Speaker:It's pretty wild.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:You know, this is not as hot as I thought it was.
Speaker:It's hot.
Speaker:My throat is burning, but it's so flavorful.
Speaker:It's so delicious.
Speaker:There's so much going on in here.
Speaker:Yeah, that's, that's, that taste from when you killed me
Speaker:in the kitchen with the fumes.
Speaker:Mm, that's good.
Speaker:No, but it's really good.
Speaker:I'm being, I'm being, uh, not very serious, but it is so complex.
Speaker:This is so much better than, yeah, no, Shade on Lao Gan Ma,
Speaker:but it's so much better than her stuff because It's fresher.
Speaker:This is also much garlicky er, much, much garlicky er.
Speaker:I want to put this on fried eggs.
Speaker:And actually, now that I've swallowed it and I'm talking for a minute,
Speaker:of course it's always to kiss me, Um, everything's cooled down.
Speaker:I mean, I don't even feel it anymore in my mouth.
Speaker:It's gone.
Speaker:That's the fun part of eating hot food and chili for me, is that you eat it,
Speaker:and it burns what's in your mouth, and then you swallow it, and then the
Speaker:burn goes away, and then you just want to have more, and you want to keep
Speaker:going back for more, and every time the cool goes away, you go for more.
Speaker:So, I have added chili crisps.
Speaker:to chicken salad.
Speaker:I have put it on fried eggs.
Speaker:I put it on scrambled eggs.
Speaker:I've mixed it with ketchup and put it on fried potatoes.
Speaker:I've mixed it with sour cream on baked potatoes.
Speaker:We've actually just had it on its own over dumplings, of course,
Speaker:even and I now you're going to die from cookbook writers, even frozen
Speaker:dumplings out of the supermarket.
Speaker:Why not?
Speaker:Why not that we have steamed quickly at home for a fast dinner and we
Speaker:put Chili crisp on top of it using Chili Crisp like this is fantastic.
Speaker:Now, where you can find this recipe again is of course here on the
Speaker:podcast, but you can also find it on our website Cooking with Bruce
Speaker:and mark.com or bruce and mark.com.
Speaker:It all goes to the same place.
Speaker:You can look it up there, the recipe lives there.
Speaker:You can also find it in our Facebook group cooking with Bruce and Mark,
Speaker:and if you've signed up for our newsletter, you'll get it there.
Speaker:So there's a lot of ways to get.
Speaker:This recipe, and honestly, I have to tell you that if you put this in
Speaker:little tiny canning jars and seal them up and store them in the fridge,
Speaker:it makes a great New Year's gift for New Year's parties to bring to people
Speaker:and also little wonderful treats to give people who come to
Speaker:your house on their way out.
Speaker:Let them leave with little tiny jars of chili crisp so they can remember you.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, boy, will they?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So that's it for our making a recipe on air.
Speaker:Now let's turn to what we always do.
Speaker:What's making us happy in food this week.
Speaker:So what's making me happy in food this week is something that we made.
Speaker:on the air for Portland TV.
Speaker:If you don't know, we are on the air about once a month for Portland,
Speaker:Oregon AM TV, and we shoot it from our house in New England.
Speaker:It's really funny.
Speaker:So it's morning TV there, but it's about noon our time and we shoot
Speaker:it on our iPhones and we're on with Helen, the host, and we are always
Speaker:making some recipe and recently on the air and you can probably go to.
Speaker:a.
Speaker:m.
Speaker:Northwest and check out the video and the recipe for this.
Speaker:We made a broccoli cheese casserole in the air fryer from our book,
Speaker:the look and cook air fryer Bible.
Speaker:And I want to tell you when that segment ended, I ate half that nine inch
Speaker:square of broccoli cheese casserole.
Speaker:It was so delicious.
Speaker:It's such an easy recipe from our book.
Speaker:You may have.
Speaker:bechamel in the microwave with flour and milk and salt and pepper, you pour it over
Speaker:thawed frozen broccoli florets that have had some melted butter poured over them,
Speaker:then you put cheese in that bechamel, and then you cover the top of it with cheese.
Speaker:And then you just bake it in the air fryer for what, eight
Speaker:minutes at 375 or something?
Speaker:That's all it takes.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:It's so crunchy and delicious.
Speaker:I literally had to save myself by throwing half a pan out after taping
Speaker:that episode for Portland Morning TV.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:There's my confession and my nightmare, but it was really tasty.
Speaker:What's making me happy in food this week is a Belgian style hard cider,
Speaker:which I got from Nine Pin Cidery.
Speaker:in, uh, Albany, New York.
Speaker:You seem to be talking about Albany all the time.
Speaker:We are.
Speaker:We went into 9 PIM when we were there, and I was asking the woman to describe all
Speaker:the ciders to me, and all she basically said is that they were all the same.
Speaker:She was so helpful.
Speaker:She was so unhelpful.
Speaker:She said, oh, they're all the same.
Speaker:It was ridiculous.
Speaker:We actually said, can you help us choose a cider?
Speaker:And she literally said, said, I'm not making this up.
Speaker:They're all the same.
Speaker:And I'm like, no, they're not.
Speaker:And do better.
Speaker:I said to Bruce, as we walked out, I said, the least she could
Speaker:have done is just made it up.
Speaker:She could have at least said, well, this one's tart and this one's sweet.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Cause you know, I would have bought this
Speaker:like, you know, freshly opened tennis balls
Speaker:and dryer lint.
Speaker:This was, this has a dryer lint quality about it.
Speaker:I know it's like just.
Speaker:Listen, make it up.
Speaker:You're paid to be here.
Speaker:So just do something.
Speaker:But I bought it for you.
Speaker:Anyway, she didn't.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:but there was one that was made with Belgian yeast.
Speaker:And I said to her, what does that taste like?
Speaker:She said, Belgian yeast.
Speaker:I'm like, oh, that's so helpful.
Speaker:Thanks for being so helpful.
Speaker:But what it does taste like,
Speaker:is it tastes earthy.
Speaker:And it tastes, it does, it tastes very earthy and almost a little
Speaker:dirty, but it's also sweeter than I usually like cider to be.
Speaker:It has a quality, almost like those Belgian beers, which could be on the
Speaker:sweet side and mixed with the apples.
Speaker:It was actually really good.
Speaker:So I'm really enjoying the Belgian farmhouse style cider from 9th and Cidery.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:it's an interesting thing.
Speaker:And cideries are just everywhere.
Speaker:The kids are crazy about cideries.
Speaker:Uh, you probably know if you listen to my guest much that we went for a week on
Speaker:vacation to Asheville, North Carolina, and we spent an entire day going from
Speaker:cidery to cidery outside of Asheville.
Speaker:There are tons of them in Asheville, but we went to the ones out in the
Speaker:hills and the hollers around Asheville.
Speaker:We had such.
Speaker:A great day tasting cider and looking out at the mountains.
Speaker:Some of those places are just gorgeous.
Speaker:And it didn't hurt that we found one of the best taco trucks to
Speaker:have lunch at that we ever went to.
Speaker:It was true.
Speaker:We passed a taco truck and I was like, um, when we come back out of
Speaker:the holler from the cidery, we're going to stop at this taco truck.
Speaker:The taco truck yonder.
Speaker:Yeah, yonder over yonder.
Speaker:We're gonna stop at that over yonder.
Speaker:Wait, I can do it.
Speaker:When we come out of the holler We're gonna go out of that taca truck over yonder.
Speaker:Excellent.
Speaker:And you notice I said it correct for my mother, a taca.
Speaker:A taca truck.
Speaker:Taca truck.
Speaker:So anyway, um, yeah, anyway, uh, it was great.
Speaker:So the cideries are everywhere.
Speaker:That's our podcast for this week.
Speaker:Um, really, we've banged on enough.
Speaker:So, um, Really, we've talked too much, but that's our podcast for this week.
Speaker:Thanks for joining us.
Speaker:We really appreciate your being with us.
Speaker:Thanks for supporting us by rating and liking this podcast.
Speaker:We appreciate yours.
Speaker:And every week we tell you what's making us happy in food.
Speaker:So go to our Facebook page, cooking with Bruce and Mark, share what's
Speaker:making you happy in food this week so that we can share more food with you
Speaker:here on cooking with Bruce and Mark.