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Smoked pork tenderloin fried rice
JohnInCarolina
Posts: 35,391
We had smoked a pork tenderloin over the weekend on the BGE, and I’m on my own tonight for dinner so I decided to use the leftovers in some fried rice. Here they are in the wok:

And plated with an IPA from Maine Beer Co:

That’s it - that’s the thread!

And plated with an IPA from Maine Beer Co:

That’s it - that’s the thread!
"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat
Comments
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I’d hit it
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LBGE,SBGE, and a Mini makes three......Sweet home Alabama........ Stay thirsty my friends .
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Had the same dinner but subbed in a broccoli from the other half For the pork rice. Finally found lunch. Darn good beer. That Rice would have been a good additionfukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it
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I don’t know if you’ve ever done any wok cooking, fish, but it’s damn quick and easy. This meal all came together inside of ten minutes. It heats up fast and cooks fast. The rice is only in it for maybe three minutes.fishlessman said:Had the same dinner but subbed in a broccoli from the other half For the pork rice. Finally found lunch. Darn good beer. That Rice would have been a good addition"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
That is nice. I never thought about smoking the pork.South of Columbus, Ohio.
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That looks great. All I have is some two day old white chicken chili.Las Vegas, NV
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That looks great. The egg ratio looks perfect to me!Stillwater, MN
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That’s my kinda food. Looks delicious 😋Greensboro North Carolina
When in doubt Accelerate.... -
JohnInCarolina said:
I don’t know if you’ve ever done any wok cooking, fish, but it’s damn quick and easy. This meal all came together inside of ten minutes. It heats up fast and cooks fast. The rice is only in it for maybe three minutes.fishlessman said:Had the same dinner but subbed in a broccoli from the other half For the pork rice. Finally found lunch. Darn good beer. That Rice would have been a good addition
have had a wok indoors on a stove burner since 2000. most of those pics are locked out by pbucket now. at the camp i have a 500,000 btu burner on the deck, makes korean tacos quick table side. had some scary fried orange chicken pics done on the egg one winter while ice fishing, skating. the trick with frying in a wok in the egg is small amounts to keep the oil down, get the egg up to about 500 dome, keep the dome open and lower vent shut (keeps the flames down). a big outdoor burner makes it all easier. increase your temps every cook until comfortable with extreme heat, newbies always back down on the heat. hit a restaurant supply in a china town, its so inexpensive you will think you stole stuff, last time i hit the one in boston i was triple parked, ran in and had my arms full for 20 bucks.
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
Canugghead said:Nice but no chopsticks, blasphemy

ive learned that eating at my neighbors, bring a fork, well, or, eat with my hands
nobody wants to see that
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
That's funny, as we do have chopsticks and I will use them when out for sushi or whatnot. But I'm not an expert, and so using them on rice seems like a form of self-torture more than anything else.Canugghead said:Nice but no chopsticks, blasphemy
"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
That looks terrible! Send it over, and I'll dispose of it properly.

Somewhere in The Wok, Kenji has a technique for fried rice that calls for beaten egg to be poured in after the rice hits the wok (or something like that). The egg coasts each grain of rice, and made for a cool silky texture.
I usually prefer having bits of egg in fried rice (like yours), but give it a shot some time.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
Yes I've seen that section of the book. I'll definitely give it a shot sometime.caliking said:That looks terrible! Send it over, and I'll dispose of it properly.
Somewhere in The Wok, Kenji has a technique for fried rice that calls for beaten egg to be poured in after the rice hits the wok (or something like that). The egg coasts each grain of rice, and made for a cool silky texture.
I usually prefer having bits of egg in fried rice (like yours), but give it a shot some time."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
Just teasing you. We use chopsticks only when eating rice from a bowl. When eating leftovers it's everything one can finish on a big plate and fork. In SE Asia it's common to use spoon-n-fork when folks order quick one-plate-meal at a restaurant.JohnInCarolina said:
That's funny, as we do have chopsticks and I will use them when out for sushi or whatnot. But I'm not an expert, and so using them on rice seems like a form of self-torture more than anything else.Canugghead said:Nice but no chopsticks, blasphemy
canuckland -
fishlessman said:Canugghead said:Nice but no chopsticks, blasphemy

ive learned that eating at my neighbors, bring a fork, well, or, eat with my hands
nobody wants to see that
canuckland -
Sometimes we do just that, pouring in beaten egg near the end and mix. For presentation/visual swmbo premake some egg crepe, rolled and thin sliced; spread over rice before serving.caliking said:That looks terrible! Send it over, and I'll dispose of it properly.
Somewhere in The Wok, Kenji has a technique for fried rice that calls for beaten egg to be poured in after the rice hits the wok (or something like that). The egg coasts each grain of rice, and made for a cool silky texture.
I usually prefer having bits of egg in fried rice (like yours), but give it a shot some time.canuckland -
Canugghead said:fishlessman said:Canugghead said:Nice but no chopsticks, blasphemy

ive learned that eating at my neighbors, bring a fork, well, or, eat with my hands
nobody wants to see that
if i were at home the rice would get shoveled between two pieces of white bread....why pick up one grain at a time
when you can eat it as a sandwich
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
Love pork fried rice. When I double cook it, I like to get the oil ripping hot and fry the pork, like double fried french fries.
I also find peas cut the saltiness and serve as a nice counterbalance to the rest of the dish. I will forgive the unevenness of your shallot dice. I would happily eat that!
Quick edit, because I always do ..... I am with @caliking and I love the egg chunks like you have.
I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
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I use a stickier, short grain rice (Cal-rose brand) for chinese cooking, it's fairly easy to pick up with chopsticks. Long-grain (basmati, jasmine) I use a fork (paella, mexican rice, etc).
One thing I've noticed just a couple month ago, the long-grain smells so much better while it's cooking, but I think the short-grain tastes better, plain (would think it'd be the other way around).Counting to ten only makes it Premeditated.
Ogden, UT, USA
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I will try Cal-Rose again. I had a 15lb bag ages ago. I found it too “sticky” and clumpy for my liking. However, that was pre-Zojurushi. I mostly use Uncle Ben’s parboiled white rice. It is stupidly expensive for rice, but always cooks up perfect. Can use it for all manner of rice dishes too. It is like the best of basmati, jasmine, and short grain rice.Botch said:I use a stickier, short grain rice (Cal-rose brand) for chinese cooking, it's fairly easy to pick up with chopsticks. Long-grain (basmati, jasmine) I use a fork (paella, mexican rice, etc).
One thing I've noticed just a couple month ago, the long-grain smells so much better while it's cooking, but I think the short-grain tastes better, plain (would think it'd be the other way around).I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
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Well, it's that "sticky/clumpy" that makes it manageable with chopsticks, fwiw.
Counting to ten only makes it Premeditated.
Ogden, UT, USA
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I love the challenge of eating items with chopsticks. I lived in Japan when I was very young and grew up with my very own pair of chopsticks. Rice takes a special “insert and scoop” method. Once you identify and confirm the dispersive viscosity of your rice you can judge the proper stick gap and then proceed with scooping and eating. Real pros lift the dish close to their face and shovel it in, but in the USA that is frowned upon.Botch said:Well, it's that "sticky/clumpy" that makes it manageable with chopsticks, fwiw.I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
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insert and scoop for fresh cooked plain rice that stick together, otherwise shove, couldn't care less what others thinkOzzie_Isaac said:
I love the challenge of eating items with chopsticks. I lived in Japan when I was very young and grew up with my very own pair of chopsticks. Rice takes a special “insert and scoop” method. Once you identify and confirm the dispersive viscosity of your rice you can judge the proper stick gap and then proceed with scooping and eating. Real pros lift the dish close to their face and shovel it in, but in the USA that is frowned upon.Botch said:Well, it's that "sticky/clumpy" that makes it manageable with chopsticks, fwiw.canuckland -
Have you tried this brand?Ozzie_Isaac said:
I will try Cal-Rose again. I had a 15lb bag ages ago. I found it too “sticky” and clumpy for my liking. However, that was pre-Zojurushi. I mostly use Uncle Ben’s parboiled white rice. It is stupidly expensive for rice, but always cooks up perfect. Can use it for all manner of rice dishes too. It is like the best of basmati, jasmine, and short grain rice.Botch said:I use a stickier, short grain rice (Cal-rose brand) for chinese cooking, it's fairly easy to pick up with chopsticks. Long-grain (basmati, jasmine) I use a fork (paella, mexican rice, etc).
One thing I've noticed just a couple month ago, the long-grain smells so much better while it's cooking, but I think the short-grain tastes better, plain (would think it'd be the other way around).
It’s our “daily” rice. Easily available in most grocery stores, and may be cheaper than Uncle Ben’s. (And, yes… it comes in smaller bags 😀)#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
Cooked rice is closer to a viscoelastic solid than a viscous liquid, and what matters here is the interfacial response and not the bulk as much. That is a very long way of pointing out that you are a gigantic dork.Once you identify and confirm the dispersive viscosity of your rice you can judge the proper stick gap and then proceed with scooping and eating."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
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Hmmm. I have always thought of rice as similar to unstable soil. I may need to rethink about it after cooked. I do agree the interfacial response is ultimately the most important.JohnInCarolina said:
Cooked rice is closer to a viscoelastic solid than a viscous liquid, and what matters here is the interfacial response and not the bulk as much. That is a very long way of pointing out that you are a gigantic dork.Once you identify and confirm the dispersive viscosity of your rice you can judge the proper stick gap and then proceed with scooping and eating.
This reminds me of a Mongolian Grill place I used to eat at. You paid 1 price depending on bowl size. I found you could weave snow pea pods togther and make side boards around the bowl like on a dump truck. You could easily double and if careful triple the standard amount a single bowl holds.I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
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It is, just when it’s *uncooked* - it is basically a cohesionless granular media, that can flow very much like a non-Newtonian fluid with nonlocal interactions (basically long distance force chains) when it’s dry.Ozzie_Isaac said:
Hmmm. I have always thought of rice as similar to unstable soil.JohnInCarolina said:
Cooked rice is closer to a viscoelastic solid than a viscous liquid, and what matters here is the interfacial response and not the bulk as much. That is a very long way of pointing out that you are a gigantic dork.Once you identify and confirm the dispersive viscosity of your rice you can judge the proper stick gap and then proceed with scooping and eating.
Once cooked it typically has a fair amount of cohesion and can support small tensile loads. That’s why when you pick up a chunk with chopsticks gravity doesn’t win and return all the grains to the plate before they can make it to your mouth.
"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
Now I'm wondering what the angle of repose of uncooked varieties of rice is. Is basmati steeper than jasmine? Is sushi rice lower than arborio?
Gotta be a chart somewhere.
“Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk
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