Steam
Rice-Studded Meatballs
These rice-coated meatballs, commonly referred to as zhen zhu, meaning "pearls" in Chinese, are often prepared at home in New York City's Chinatown. Steaming them on lettuce leaves helps prevent them from sticking to the steamer rack. They are traditionally made with sticky rice (sometimes called sweet rice), but we've used long-grain rice, which is easier to find.
Steamed Jasmine Rice
This fail-safe method for steaming rice comes from Kasma Loha-Unchit's book It Rains Fishes.
Chinese Style Steamed Fish
Complement the entrée—and the Chinese theme—with rice, stir-fried snow peas, then pineapple sherbet topped with coconut.
Vegetables Giardiniera
Steamed cauliflower florets, broccoli florets and carrot slices are mixed with olives and tossed with a sun-dried tomato and oregano vinaigrette in this Italian-inspired starter "from the garden."
Cauliflower-Leek Purée
This recipe originally accompanied Sugar Snap Peas and Baby Carrots with Cauliflower-Leek Purée .
Beet and Arugula Salad
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Herbed Steamed Rice
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Marinated Vegetable Salad
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires additional unattended time.
Gingerbread Christmas Pudding with Orange Hard Sauce
English Christmas "pudding" is really a dense, moist spiced cake. This gingerbread version is flavored with orange marmalade and topped with a traditional hard sauce — butter and sugar mixed with brandy.
Winter Squash with Browned Butter and Rosemary
Browned butter is butter cooked to a browner, nutty-tasting stage. It adds lots of flavor to the steamed squash.
Spiced Stonington Shrimp Steamed in Beer
Jasper White discovered the flavorful, tender red shrimp of Stonington, Connecticut, while opening Summer Shack, his restaurant at the nearby Mohegan Sun casino. For this recipe, we tried several different kinds of shrimp, and all varieties worked well.
Steamed Pork and Jícama Dumplings
Though these dumplings are traditionally cooked in stacked Asian bamboo or metal steamers, you can also use a pasta pot with a deep perforated colander-steamer insert. If your pot has a second shallow colander-steamer insert, you can steam 2 batches at once. The dumplings should be served warm, so reheat them in batches as platters need replenishing.
Steamed Mussels in Thai Curry Sauce
"On a trip to the Northwest, I enjoyed dinner at Yarrow Bay Grill in Kirkland, Washington," writes Sue Eltringham of Prescott, Arizona. "I'm a big fan of mussels and was especially fond of their version, with coconut-curry sauce. I'd like to have the recipe so that I can enjoy it again before my next visit."
Rich coconut flavor and just the right amount of heat make this starter special. A trip to an Asian market will likely yield most of the ingredients you need.
Steamed Red Snapper with Ginger, Chiles, and Sesame Oil
Steaming, a method often used by Asian cooks, works well with delicately flavored red snapper, since the aromatics (ginger, scallion, chile) are easily absorbed by the fish.
Two-Potato Salad with Mustard Dressing
prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Mussels with Tomatoes, Jalapeño and Tequila
"While in Sarnia, Ontario, on business, I stayed at the Village Inn and had dinner at its restaurant, Monet's Table," says Melanie Cooke of Calgary, Alberta. "I thought I was being adventurous when I ordered the mussel appetizer my first night there. Obviously I'd lost my sense of adventure when I went back the second night and ordered it again."
Khao Neeo
(Thai Sticky Rice)
If you have never tried sticky rice, you are in for a unique treat. Thai sticky rice, sometimes called "sweet rice" or "glutinous rice," is opaque-white when raw, unlike most other rices, and when cooked has a wonderful scent and distinctive texture. Make sure to buy long-grain Thai sticky rice, not the Chinese-style short-grain or the kind grown in the Untied States, which lack the aroma and texture of the Thai variety. On the label look for the words pin kao or gao nep.
There are a few options for steaming sticky rice: If you live near a Thai, Lao, or Vietnamese market, chances are it sells the large, conical baskets used for cooking sticky rice as well as the lightweight pot the basket rests in as the rice steams. Otherwise, use a large sieve lined with cheesecloth or muslin and put it over a large kettle of water
In Thailand and Laos, cooked sticky rice is kept warm and moist during the meal by serving it in small covered baskets, which can also be found in some Southeast Asian markets.
This recipe was created to accompany Grilled Beef Salad , Charred Chili Salsa , Thai Grilled Chicken , Thai Eggplant Salad and Chicken Stir-Fry with Holy Basil .