Williams-Sonoma sells this sauce. In the past I have made a sauce for chicken lettuce cups composed of water, soy, vinegar and sugar. But even though the price tag on this was ridiculous ($14.95), I decided to give it a try.
I diced up water chestnuts, green onions and carrots into a bowl.
I cooked a pound of ground chicken in a skillet, then added the Williams-Sonoma sauce for a minute until it was warmed through.
Then I turned off the heat, dumped in the veggies and stirred it all up.
The chicken mix went into butter lettuce leaves, with a dollop of Chinese hot mustard on the ones I ate. I loved these. They were some of the best I have ever had. I still think it's silly that the bottle of sauce cost twice the rest of the ingredients combined, but I cannot deny that they were fantastic.
I didn't actually read the description of these; they claimed to be pilsner crackers, so I grabbed them.
Spicy queso dip sounded like it would be a nice complement to those beer crackers.
It was indeed.
I've called Whole Foods pork buns the worst I have ever had. So why was I willing to purchase the orange chicken variety? I dunno, I'm kind of an idiot. (Really I'd never heard of orange chicken buns and I was curious.) Fortunately, they were not bad once I steamed them. I thought they would be juicier on the insides, but overall they were fine and I would get them again.
Were there barbecue chips? Yep, two kinds.
Some breaded-but-uncooked chicken nuggets from Whole Foods, too. I fried them up for about five minutes.
Since chicken nuggets require at least two dipping sauces, I used a "Sweet Sticky Red Sauce" and a cajun remoulade. The former was really, really sweet. The latter was quite spicy. But both went well with the nuggets.
It was my favorite day of the season - actually, of the last several seasons.
1 comment:
This got a lot of laughs on the Chowhound board I visit. I thought it was hysterical. Language alert!
http://deadspin.com/5959212
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