Tag Archives: Oven

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

Please enjoy this Rosh Hashana blog from last year. One of my favorite recipes. I make for clients regularly. If you want to tone down the spice, use a bit less chili powder.

———–

For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

Christmas Crown Pork Roast

Americans don’t seem to have one traditional dish that they prepare for Christmas dinner. From Goose to Prime Rib most of them are rather hard to fit into our “under five dollar per person” budget here at Five Dollar Feasts. A lot of people do another Turkey, but not everyone wants a repeat of Thanksgiving, only a month removed. If you do want to do a Turkey, though, you can try my Bourbon Brined Grilled Turkey recipe.

Last year, however, my Mom and I had an army of mouths to feed for Christmas dinner in Olympia, Washington. My Mom had already bought a Prime Rib roast, but it wasn’t going to be enough to feed everyone and she just couldn’t afford another roast that expensive. We thought about a turkey, but decided it would take up too much precious oven time that we would need for the Prime Rib.

Still, my mother, who grew up eating turkey for Christmas, was disappointed that we wouldn’t have stuffing for the holiday meal. That’s when we came up with the idea of a Crown Pork Roast. It was perfect. It was affordable, it could fit in the oven with the Prime Rib, AND you can stuff the center of it with your favorite stuffing recipe. At her local Top Foods in Washington, we had to ask the butcher to make one up for us, but in Southern California I see them ready to go at the store every holiday season.

And you know what? It was a huge hit. People enjoyed it as much or more than the Prime Rib at a fraction of the cost. (Not that I am saying there is anything wrong with Prime Rib, if you can afford it.) Plus, you get all that wonderful stuffing as a side. It’s also a great time to try out any apple or pear dressing recipes you may have, because, as I have said before, apple and pork is a match made in heaven!

The one trick: take it out when the meat thermometer reaches 155 degrees. It will cook to 165 degrees on it’s own while it rests, and you do not want to overcook pork.

So, if you don’t want to break the bank this holiday season, (and let’s face it, in this economy, who does?) go out and grab a Crown Pork Roast, stuff it, and enjoy, knowing that no one will be missing a thing this Christmas dinner.

Oh, and after you finish roasting it up, decorate it with some extra rosemary sprigs, tied to the ribs with Christmas ribbon for a festive feast!

Crown Pork Roast

1 crown pork roast, around 7 pounds (you usually order this by the amount of ribs. 16 is pretty standard)

2 Tablespoons fresh rosemary (plus extra sprigs for garnish) (or 2 teaspoons dried)

2 Tablesoons fresh sage, chopped (or 2 teaspoons dried) 

2 Tablespoons fresh thyme (or 2 teaspoons dried) 

Salt and Pepper to taste

¼ olive oil

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Mix the olive oil, rosemary, sage, thyme, salt and pepper together. Rub the meat of the roast with this wet rub. (By “meat” I mean that there is no need to rub the ribs as well.)
  3. Fill the center of the roast with you favorite stuffing or dressing. (Or you can use the recipe below)
  4. Roast for 20 to 25 minutes per pound (normally about 2 to 3 hours) until a meat thermometer reads 155 degrees in the thickest part of the meat. Do not hit the bone when testing the temperature.
  5. Let sit for 20 minutes before carving.

Dressing (or Stuffing)

4 cups of stale bread, cubed into 1/2″ thick pieces

1/2 cup butter

6 to 7 celery stalks, chopped

2 large onions, chopped

3 to 4 cloves garlic, chopped

12 to 16 button mushrooms, chopped

approximately 1/2 cup of chicken broth

1 teaspoon dried sage

1 teaspoon dried majoram (or thyme)

3 to 4 apples or pears, chopped (optional)

1 cup crushed walnuts or sliced almonds (optional)

  1. Sautee the celery and onion in the butter over medium heat until translucent, about 8 minutes. Add the mushrooms, garlic and optional apples or pears and brown for about another 5 minutes.
  2. Combine the sauteed vegetable mixture with the bread, and optional nuts and chicken broth. Mix well. The dressing should be moist from the butter and broth, but not gummy. Add more chicken broth if needed. Stuff into your bird or roast before baking. Bake any additional dressing at 425 degrees for 30 minutes.

Fun Halloween Dinner Idea – Stuffed Personal Pumpkins

Six years ago now, my wife, Jodie (she shoots all the wonderful food photos on this blog) started listening to NPR. She kept telling me how great it was with shows like Marketplace, All Things Considered, and Splendid Table. I scoffed at her. I regularly made fun of her for turning into an old lady in her mid-twenties. (I mean, Marketplace? Really? How boring does that sound?)

Then, one day, while driving Jodie’s car, she had left the station on our local NPR station (KPCC.) My reaction was to immediately turn it off, but as I reached for the dial, the story fascinated me. (I think it was about the sale of AC-DC’s new album despite the economic downturn, but I don’t remember for sure.) I listened to that story, determined to change the station right afterward and listen to some tunes. But, then, the next story was great too, and the one after that. Before I knew it they were reading off the stock market numbers and Kai Ryssdal signed off his show called Marketplace. I had just listened to an entire episode of Marketplace and loved it. Crap. Since then, I have been hooked to NPR. (I still listen to Kevin & Bean in the morning, and listen to my iPod on long road trips, so I am not completely an old man yet, right?)

I know, “Why is he talking about NPR? This is a food blog, right?” Hold your horses, I am getting there.

About a year ago, I heard Lynne Rossetto Kasper of The Splendid Table describe a recipe from Dorie Greenspan’s book, Around My French Table, called Pumpkin Stuffed with Everything Good and I was intrigued. Basically it is a whole pumpkin, scooped out like you plan to carve it, and then stuffed with bacon, cheese, bread, cream and other goodness.

Now, for Halloween, I finally have a chance to make it. This may not be blood and guts spaghetti or gummy worms in dirt pudding, but I wanted to make something delicious for Halloween that was less gimmicky than those types of recipes.

I modified Dorie Greenspan’s recipe so that I could throw in whatever I had lying around my kitchen (she says that you can throw anything you want into the pumpkin without really screwing it up). I also thought it would be fun to use the small “pie” pumpkins that all the grocery stores sell around Halloween. That way everyone got their own individual pumpkin on their plate. And the pie pumpkins are so cheap, I could stuff ‘em with leftovers, fill ‘em with cream, and still serve each person a five dollar feast served with a flavorful Chardonnay from Grocery Outlet.

This recipe can be made with bacon or sausage, bread or rice, and nuts, pears, or apples, or even all of the above. I used Bacon Ends & Pieces from Trader Joe’s or Fresh and Easy to get a smokey bacon-y goodness without spending the money on whole slices of bacon, and I threw in stale bread, pears, and walnuts, and Emmentaler (fancy name for aged swiss cheese; it’s not as expensive as it sounds) that I had lying around the house, but you are welcome to experiment with your favorite ingredients.

This is a great meal to make with your kids. They will love scooping out the pumpkins and helping stuff them. Then they can have their very own pumpkin they helped make for dinner! Although, don’t serve this too often as it certainly isn’t health food.

 

Modified Pumpkin Stuffed With Everything Good

You can see Dorie Greenspan’s original recipe here.

1 “pie” or small pumpkin per person

Salt and pepper

2 or 3 slices of stale bread per pumpkin, cut into 1/2-inch chunks (alternatively you can use rice for a risotto-like interior)

1/8 pound cheese per pumpkin, cut into 1/2-inch chunks (Gruyere, Emmentaler, cheddar, or a combination of all three are all good choices. Buy what’s cheap)

1-2 garlic cloves per pumpkin, coarsely chopped

1 strip of bacon per pumpkin or ½ package of Bacon Ends & Pieces from Trader Joe’s or Fresh & Easy (or perhaps from your local butcher. Sausage meat, removed from its casing, also works well.)

½ pear per pumpkin (or apple)

1 Tablespoon walnut pieces per pumpkin

About 1/4 cup snipped fresh chives or sliced scallions

1 teaspoon dried thyme (use what herbs you have on hand, no need to buy anything you don’t normally have in your spice rack)

About ¼ cup heavy cream per pumpkin

Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg for every pumpkin

  1. Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with a silicone baking mat, wax or parchment paper.
  2. Just like making a Jack-O-Lantern, cut a cap out of the top of the pumpkin. Cut off enough of the top to make it easy for you to stuff it. Scoop out the seeds and pulp, then season the inside of the pumpkin generously with salt and pepper.
  3. Make the stuffing by tossing the bread, cheese, garlic, bacon, pears, walnuts herbs, and other dry ingredients together.
  4. Fill the pumpkins with this stuffing and pack the mix into the pumpkin. The pumpkin should be well filled.
  5. Stir the cream with the nutmeg together and pour it over the stuffing in each pumpkin. Adjust the level of cream to taste. Should get all the stuffing wet, but not make it swimming in cream either. (As Dorie states, it’s hard to go wrong here.)
  6. Put the cap in place, place the filled pumpkins on the baking sheet and bake the pumpkin for 70 minutes. Then remove the cap and continue roasting for 20 more minutes (90 minutes total) or until everything inside the pumpkin is bubbling and the flesh of the pumpkin is tender enough to be pierced easily with the tip of a knife.
  7. When the pumpkins are ready, carefully transfer them to each plate. Guests may choose to eat from the center of the pumpkin or take large slices out of the roasted pumpkin. It is all edible.

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

Oven Roasted Hawaiian Spareribs

Enjoy this Hawaiian twist on a summer favorite for just $4.70 per person.

My wife, the lovely Jodie Younse, largely hails from Hawaii.  Her mother’s family is Portuguese that spent a generation in Hawaii before moving to the mainland in California, and her father’s family is Chinese Hawaiian who mostly still live on the islands. He did a fair bit of growing up there himself.

She is what they would call a Hapa Haole (a half foreigner) I, however, am full Haole. And probably even more than that seeing as how pale I am. I have, however been privileged enough to be able to attend several of Jodie’s family reunions.  So, I feel I have been able to not only see the beauty of the islands, but also of the local traditions.

If you do spend any amount of time in Hawaii, you will find a very distinct food culture, not known to anywhere else in the world.  And I don’t just mean teriyaki sauce and poi.  There are also many other small differences.  McDonald’s serves spam masubi, haupia pies, saimin noodles, and Portuguese sausage.  The hot dogs in Hawaii are pink, whole pigs are roasted under the ground, and ahi poke and lomi lomi salmon are their unique raw fish appetizers. The unique blend of cultural influences on Hawaii has produced significantly unique food. They have combined the best parts of Chinese, Japanese, Polynesian, Portuguese, and American foods.

A great example of this fusion is their style of BBQ sauce, which is just as original as anything you’ll find in Kansas or St. Louis. It has all the same ingredients as your basic BBQ sauce, with the addition of brown sugar, soy sauce, pineapple juice, and ginger. And, did I mention that it’s delicious on spareribs?

Around memorial day, I found some frozen ribs at a ridiculously low price, bought them and have been storing them in my freezer. Recently, I took them out, defrosted them, and cooked ‘em up.  I actually prefer spareribs to baby back ribs, myself, but there is a trick to it.  Both ribs need low and slow heat for a long time, but where baby back ribs tend to fall apart with less time, the spareribs really need to be treated to a good three to four hours in the oven or grill (closer to four if you can manage it.)  It is an all-day process to do it right.  You don’t need to babysit the ribs once they are cooking, but you need to make sure you don’t leave the house with your oven on.

While the ribs cook in the oven with a dry rub, you have plenty of time to make the BBQ sauce.  Since the BBQ sauce saves well, I prefer to make a large batch at a time and save the rest for later.  For the purposes of accounting, I have added up the total cost of the BBQ sauce, but only added half the cost into this particular meal (and you will use much less than half.)

I rounded the feast out with a salad I bought, two for one, and Trader Joe’s version of tater tots. (Hey, I like tater tots. Do I always have to be gourmet?  Tater tots is delicious.)

Oven Roasted Spareribs

1 rack spareribs (baby back will also do)

olive oil

Dry Rub

½ cup chili powder

¼ cup brown sugar

¼ cup table salt (I use fresh cracked sea salt, so I need to reduce this to 2 Tablespoons)

2 Tablespoons pepper

2 teaspoons cayenne pepper

  1. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees.
  2. Using kitchen shears, cut the ribs into desired portions, ½ to 1/3 of a rack. Rub the ribs with dry rub and a little olive oil. Let stand for one hour.
  3. Place the ribs in a roasting pan and cover tightly with foil. Roast for three to four hours.
  4. Preheat the grill.  Remove the ribs from the oven and place on the grill starting with the meaty side down. Brush with BBQ sauce (in this case the Hawaiian BBQ sauce, recipe below.) Cook for five minutes, flip, brush with more BBQ sauce, and cook for five more minutes. This is mostly to get the ribs that cooked-on-the-fire taste.  Alternatively, you could preheat the broiler and finish the ribs off similarly that way.

Hawaiian BBQ Sauce

1 32 oz can tomato puree (I prefer to start from scratch so that I can adjust the flavors to my liking. You may substitute ketchup for the tomato puree and corn syrup in this recipe. You’ll also need to reduce the vinegar by at least half.  Make sure to taste as you go.)

1 cup corn syrup

½ cup white vinegar (white wine or apple cider will work as well, whatever you have on hand.)

¼ cup Worcestershire sauce

½ cup brown sugar

1/3 cup soy sauce

1 eight ounce can sliced pineapple in juice (or ¼ cup pineapple juice)

ginger to taste (grated fresh or frozen preferred, but ground can be substituted.)

2 teaspoons sambal olek (Optional. Sriracha or other chili sauce will also do. Add to taste, if you want a spicier BBQ sauce. These sauces are well explained here.)

  1. Combine the tomato puree, corn syrup, and vinegar in a large saucepot.  Stir, bring to a simmer, and taste. The sauce should taste very similar to ketchup at this point.  It may be a bit thinner, but the sauce will thicken as it simmers. Adjust flavors as desired.
  2. Add the Worcestershire, brown sugar, soy sauce, juice from the pineapple can (reserve the actual pinapple,) ginger, and sambal olek (or other chili sauce.)
  3. Let the sauce simmer for 30 minutes up to an hour.
I like to grill the actual pineapple slices to go with whatever I am cooking with the BBQ sauce. In this case, the ribs. This sauce is also great on chicken, other pork products, or a hamburger topped with pineapple.
Accounting: 
BBQ Sauce: Tomato Puree $1.29 + white wine vinegar (1/4 bottle @$1.99) $.50 + 3/4 cup brown sugar $.40 + 1 can sliced pineapples $.99 + sambal olek (1/8 container @ 1.99) $.25 + soy sauce (1/3 bottle @ $2.29) $.76 + worcestershire sauce (1/8 bottle @ $2.50) $.31 = $4.50
Total Recipe: 1/2 BBQ Sauce $2.25 + 1 rack spareribs $4.20 + potato tots (1/2 package from Trader Joe’s @ $1.99) $1.00 + asian salad mix (2-for-one deal) $1.00 + sun tea (3 tea bags left in water in pitcher in the sun all day, then poured over ice) $1.00 = $9.45
÷ 2 people (1/2 rack each)
Comes to $4.70 per person!
Kitchen Basics Used: Corn Syrup, ginger, chili powder, salt, pepper, cayenne pepper, olive oil,

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