Basically this is a clean-out the refrigerator stew. The sauce is more watery and you'll have to eyeball it as to the thickness. What I do is add the cornstarch to thicken it first and then cut it with water to the consistency I like AFTER I add the diced tomatoes. The "Contadina Diced Tomatos with Italian herbs" turns the mix into an Italian tasting dish with just the right nip of the gochu paste. The end result is a very colorful dish that tastes great.
If you use other brands of unseasoned stewed/diced tomatos, it tastes like the beef-tomato recipe above -- but still ono. I cook with a wooden spoon so my "1 tbs" is really a wooden spoonful -- more or less.
This makes an excellent summer dish. I make small musubi with cold rice with a strip of nori seaweed (kim) and a bowl of COLD tomato chicken stew to pick at using chopsticks. Because the boneless chicken with skin removed has little oil, this is not greasy if served cold.
3 Pcs Boneless chicken breasts (frozen) sliced into 1/4 |
2 Tbs Butter (or cooking oil) |
2 Lg Onion - rough chopped |
1 Bag Bean sprouts (optional) |
1 Handful Green onions (about 8 stalks) - cut into 1 1/2 -inch lengths |
2 Tbs Pimento |
1/2 Cup Grated carrots (optional) |
1 Cup Snow peas (frozen) or Sweet peas (frozen) |
4 1/2 Oz Sliced button mushrooms (bottle or can) |
14 1/2 Oz Diced or stewed tomatoes *(See note below) |
2 Tbs Mirin (or Rice Vinegar) (NOTE: Mirin contains corn syrup so it is sweeter) |
1 Tbs Sugar (if using rice vinegar) |
3 Tbs Soy Sauce |
1 Tbs Gochu paste (pepper paste) |
1 Cup Water with 1 tbs cornstarch dissolved in it |
Salt and pepper to taste |
* NOTE: I use "Contadina Diced Tomatoes with Italian Herbs" to give it a hearty Italian taste but with the small bite of the gochu paste. If you use stewed tomatoes, the mixture has more of a beef-tomato taste.
Serve with rice -- I prefer cold rice to offset the "hot" of the gochu paste.
Serve with French bread with garlic butter (for sopping up the juice).
Submitted by Chef Valentina "Paki" Arizo