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Andrew Zimmern Recipe Steamer Clams

Maine Steamers Mariniere

By Andrew Zimmern Ever since my dad introduced me to clams as a kid, I was hooked. From cherrystones to razor clams, I love them all, but there’s something truly special about the Maine steamer clam. The soft-shell clams are tender, sweet and slightly briny, and they’re one of my favorite ingredients on planet earth.…  Read More

Cooking with Chinese Steamers

Andrew Zimmern’s Tips for Cooking with Bamboo Steamers

Tips for Cooking with Bamboo Steamers I love cooking with a multi-tiered bamboo steamer, it’s one of the most used and versatile tools in my kitchen. Using a steamer is an easy, and certainly healthy, way to achieve crisp tender vegetables and super moist, perfectly cooked proteins. They fit inside of my pans well, plus…  Read More

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Andrew’s Favorite Things

You’ve been asking for my favorite gear for years, and I finally created this handy roundup with all my favorites. From woks and knives to salt and coffee, here’s what I actually use in my home kitchen (and beyond). This page contains affiliate links, but all opinions are my own.

Andrew Zimmern's recipe for sticky rice

Andrew Zimmern Cooks: Sticky Rice

Sticky Rice By Andrew Zimmern Thai sticky rice is one of the great culinary treasures of the world. It’s easy to do at home as long as you have a few inexpensive pieces of equipment found at your local Asian market or online—a bamboo basket, sticky rice steamer, cheesecloth and the right type of rice.…  Read More

Andrew Zimmern's Seafood Platter recipe

Andrew Zimmern Cooks: Plateau de Fruits de Mer

The Ultimate Seafood Tower By Andrew Zimmern This is Plateau de Fruits de Mer 101. First, learn how to dispatch a lobster and cook it in a court bouillon, and then how to steam crab, mussels and shrimp in a multi-tiered bamboo steamer. I’ll teach you how to shuck oysters and clams with the proper…  Read More

Andrew Zimmern's Pearl Rice Balls

Chinese Recipes Made Easy for the Home Cook

Celebrate Chinese New Year With These Recipes Chinese cooking has complex, technique-driven elements, which makes it a bit daunting for the average home cook. But, practice makes perfect. Get a great cookbook, and cook a new dish twice a week. Next, make sure you have the right equipment (a good wok, a bamboo steamer) and the…  Read More

Andrew Zimmern's Siu Mai Dumplings

Pork & Shrimp Siu Mai Dumplings

‘Cook & Sell’ Siu Mai Dumplings By Andrew Zimmern These siu mai dumplings are the southern Chinese version of potstickers with a carrot crown.

Andrew Zimmern's Pearl Rice Balls

Pearl Rice Balls with Ginger-Sesame Sauce

Show-Stopping Pork & Rice Dumplings By Andrew Zimmern I started making these pearl rice balls about 18 years ago after returning from my first trip to China. I visited a dumpling house in Xian and became fascinated with the presentation styles of standard Chinese pork farces. Creating different wrappers and decorating them is beyond the normal…  Read More

Chinese Dumplings|Easy Chinese Broccoli with Oyster Sauce|Braised Cucumbers with Pork and Ginger|Aromatic Soy Sauce Noodles|Pork & Asparagus with Chile-Garlic Sauce|Pearl Rice Balls|Fish-Fragrant Eggplant

9 Recipes to Make for Chinese New Year

Chinese Cuisine at Home Chinese cooking has complex, technique-driven elements, which makes it a bit daunting for the average home cook. But if you’re as obsessed with it as I am, that shouldn’t stop you from cooking Chinese food in your own kitchen. So, I’d suggest that you get a great cookbook, and cook a…  Read More

Braised Cucumber|Braised Cucumber

Braised Cucumbers with Pork and Ginger

Cantonese-Style Stuffed Cucumbers By Andrew Zimmern My friend Mrs. Wakabayashi learned to make a version of this dish from a Chinese chef in New York City in the mid-’70s. I devoured it then, and whenever I see this dish on Cantonese menus I always order it. I think you will love its textural surprise. Just…  Read More

Leek Salad with Mustard Vinaigrette & Eggs

Leek Salad with Mustard Vinaigrette & Egg

Salade de Poireaux, Sauce Moutarde By Denise Lurton Moullé Leeks are a staple in France. All vegetable gardens have leeks planted and French farmers’ markets offer beautiful, tall, firm leeks throughout the fall and winter. As common and as inexpensive as potatoes, leeks are used throughout the long French winters to make soup (the sentimental…  Read More

Beef Cheek and Wine Tamales|Tamales|Beef Cheeks and Wine Tamales

Beef Cheeks and Wine Tamales

Nose-To-Tail Tamales By Alice Guadalupe Tapp For me, beef cheeks are simple and sublime, and this recipe makes them so. It is almost like making a stew or an easy version of boeuf bourguignon. Make this even simpler by using a slow cooker or pressure cooker. Recipe from Alice Guadalupe Tapp’s new cookbook Tamales. Order…  Read More

Steamed Chicken

Steamed Chicken with Scallions & Ginger

A Take on Hainanese Chicken Rice By Andrew Zimmern This is the dish to make when you get a fresh, natural chicken and you really want to show off its insane flavor. I use heritage chicken breeds and the results are stellar. It’s a take on the classic Malay-style Hainanese chicken rice dish, but it’s…  Read More

Khao Niaw Sankhaya Turian (sticky rice with durian custard)|Pok Pok

Sticky Rice with Durian Custard

Khao Niaw Sankhaya Turian By Andy Ricker Durian has a powerful aroma. Westerners, who tend to shun the fruit, would probably choose a stronger term. In Southeast Asia, however, durian is considered the queen of fruit and it fetches a high price. Yet even where durian has fans, it’s not always welcome. Cabs, trains, and…  Read More

Andrew Zimmern's Boiled Chinese Dumplings

Boiled Chinese Dumplings

Be careful, these are highly addictive. By Andrew Zimmern This dumpling recipe is much easier than you’d think and they can be made in advance, frozen on baking sheets and then bagged. Frozen dumplings take a little longer to boil but the quality is still strong. I have to say, there is something magical about…  Read More

Naomi Duguid's Kachin Chicken Curry|Naomi Duguid's Burma|Burma: Rivers of Flavor

Naomi Duguid’s Kachin Chicken Curry

Burma: Rivers of Flavor By Naomi Duguid This dish can be cooked in a bowl set in a steamer or in a tightly covered pot. The chicken is chopped into small pieces, on the bone. It cooks more quickly than it would in large pieces, and more surface area is exposed to the flavor paste…  Read More

5 Questions: Fuchsia Dunlop

Falling in Love With Chinese Cuisine Chef and James Beard award-winning food writer Fuchsia Dunlop is an expert when it comes to Chinese food and culinary culture. The native Brit was the first foreign student, and one of only a few women, to graduate from the acclaimed Sichuan Institute of Higher Cuisine. Since then, she’s mastered…  Read More

5 Questions: Fuchsia Dunlop

Falling in Love With Chinese Cuisine Chef and James Beard award-winning food writer Fuchsia Dunlop is an expert when it comes to Chinese food and culinary culture. The native Brit was the first foreign student, and one of only a few women, to graduate from the acclaimed Sichuan Institute of Higher Cuisine. Since then, she’s mastered…  Read More

Go Fork Yourself: Chinese Cuisine at Home

Chinese Cuisine at Home Beyond Stir Fry Andrew teaches Molly the ins and outs of cooking great Chinese cuisine at home. On this week’s Go Fork Yourself, find out what every cook should have in their kitchen to make Chinese dishes, the most common mistake made by American cooks, and why grocery store soy sauce…  Read More

Go Fork Yourself: Chinese Cuisine at Home

Chinese Cuisine at Home Beyond Stir Fry Andrew teaches Molly the ins and outs of cooking great Chinese cuisine at home. On this week’s Go Fork Yourself, find out what every cook should have in their kitchen to make Chinese dishes, the most common mistake made by American cooks, and why grocery store soy sauce…  Read More