Monday, August 30, 2010

Sweet 'N Sour Sauce

One of my daughter's favorite things to eat is sweet 'n sour chicken. We often will get some kind of oriental food, and the restaurants often have a version of this famous American-Chinese food dish. Jocelyn has always loved to eat steamed rice, and the sweetness of the sauce with the standard child protein - fried chicken in bite sizes - makes this dish a winner.

The problem with this is the sauce. Most places have this IMMENSELY red sauce that obviously contains some sort of food coloring, probably red #40 or some other dye that we'd prefer not to eat in such high quantities. If it was just a little, that'd be one thing, but she eats lots of this sauce, and at least once a week, and it stains her fingers, it has so much dye in it. This is not what we'd consider healthy, and to top it off, it stains worse than almost anything else. (And is drippy to boot.) My husband and I have always wanted to try to make our own sweet 'n sour sauce.

Today, we ordered Chinese food from a delivery place nearby, Dragon Cafe Express. We ordered Sweet 'N Sour Chicken for Jocelyn and my husband to share, a family size, and (this is the first time this has happened with this restaurant) we did not receive the sauce, just the entree without sauce. This, as any parent will understand, was a disaster, because without sauce, the chicken might as well be fried radishes or something - it's inedible to a three year old expecting sweet sauce!

We both ran to the computer to Google a recipe, and pieced one together. This is basically what we got:
  • 1/2 c ketchup
  • 1/3 c vinegar
  • 2/3 c brown sugar
  • 1/2 c water
  • 1 TBS corn starch
First three ingredients: mix in pan, heat until simmering, remove from heat to slowly add in the water + cornstarch mixture, whisking as you add.  Return to heat and simmer, then turn off heat, stirring occasionally.  The sauce will thicken as it cools.

We decided to use some of the other recipes' ideas, and add a little bit of soy sauce and, since we didn't have straight pineapple juice, some of the Simply Orange juice with added pineapple we had bought for our daughter.  Probably about 1 - 2 TBS of each.

The sauce was a hit!  It was a bit thick once it cooled to luke warm (a good eating temperature), and we decided we would use a different recipe without ketchup next time to adapt to the thickness problem as well as the pseudo-ketchup flavor.  It kind of reminded me of a mild BBQ sauce you might get on deli meatloaf or something.  We also thought we'd use apple cider vinegar or rice vinegar instead of the plain white vinegar, just to give it dimension.   I actually liked the orange+pineapple; you could almost make an "Orange Chicken" sauce by adapting this sauce to have more of the juice.  Some of the recipes called for adding minced garlic, ginger, or chives/green onions, and some called for making an infusion with said ingredients, also perhaps adding crushed red pepper flakes or a red pepper itself for flavor.  Also, many added salt, but if we are adding soy sauce, we decided not to add the salt.

All-in-all, it was fun, fast, and easy to make, and making the chicken itself wouldn't be that hard!  (Though maybe a little messy... I'm not a fan of frying at home, especially without a deep fryer.)

I was so impressed with my husband and I, both that we were working so well as a team, had the same idea, and carried it out to a yummy completion!  My daughter never knew that we didn't actually receive the sauce.  A beautiful way to do lunch (and to learn a new, quick weeknight recipe)!

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