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Pineapple Fried Rice

I was given a package of dried Chinese sausage by a friend of mine, and had no idea what to do with it, and had no idea what it tasted like. The label was in Chinese! I found out, by researching, that I had been given a package of Lap Cheong!
Since this sausage already tastes like pineapple, you don't have a lot of choices about what to do with it.

Here is the recipe I came up with to deal with it:

4 cup uncooked white long grain rice, cooked in a large pot with 2 packages Lipton garlic soup mix. Brown rice could also be used.
10 short lengths, (6" long), of Lap Cheong sausage, coating peeled off and then sliced thin.
2 very large yellow or white onions, chopped
10-20 cloves garlic, peeled and minced and allowed to rest
1 very large bunch of scallions, (green onions), sliced.
1 can sliced water chestnuts, drained and each slice cut into quarters
1 can bamboo shoots
8 oz can crushed pineapple, drained.
Avocado oil
Sesame oil
1/2 cup dark soy sauce
1/2 cup reduced sodium kikkoman soy sauce


In the most enormous frying pan you can find, fry the Lap Cheong on medium heat. The Lap Cheong sausage already tastes like pineapple, and is sweet, so you have to watch it carefully, and turn it frequently as sweet things will burn. Cook until you can no longer see specks of white fat inside the slices, and the fat has rendered into the bottom of the pan. When cooked, remove the lap cheong slices to a plate.

Drain or dump the rendered fat in the bottom of the fry pan, and while the pan is still hot, add the water chestnuts and the bamboo shoots. Fry them until lightly browned. They should partially deglaze the bottom of the pan. Remove to a plate.

Add about 3 Tablespoons of Avocado oil to the pan, and fry the 2 large yellow onions until crisp and brown on the edges, then remove them from the pan onto a plate or bowl.

Now add about 1/4 cup more Avocado oil, and about 1/4 cup or a little more of Sesame oil. Heat on medium low, and gently fry the garlic, but not for too long. If you fry it too long it will get bitter. Once the garlic is cooked, add the cooked rice. Stir to coat the rice with oil. This will involve a lot of tossing, because the amounts are huge.

Add all of the remaining ingredients except the green onions and continue to toss well. Heat should be reduced to warm/low. Cover the pan, and heat very gently for 20 minutes. Add the green onions, toss the rice again, cover again and heat for 20 minutes more. When the pan is gently steaming when you remove the lid the second time, it is done.

Serves about 12 people.
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Heartlander · 80-89, M
Looks good. We do a lot of sausage casseroles ... w/rice, or w/potatoes, or w/cabbage.

The recipe looks like enough to feed an army ... or at least a couple of basketball teams :)

If this is still in the "plan", can you give an update after it's done and consumed?
4meAndyou · F
@Heartlander It's all gone already. 12 servings, and I have to eat big "cooks" like this for every meal till it's gone, or freeze it. I didn't think this would freeze. Anyway, it smelled just as fabulous as any Chinese restaurant fried rice I've ever had, and tasted like pineapple mixed with fried rice and pork.

It was great.
4meAndyou · F
@Heartlander I'm doing Italian tomorrow. I'll be removing hot Italian sausage from the casings and mixing them with meatball ingredients and I'll be marinating them in a big pot of sauce.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@4meAndyou

I bet! Looks great! Just the word pineapple is a great clue to the outcome :)

I had the great privilege of a Filipino roommate for a couple of years in college who paid is way through college by working at a Polynesia restaurant.

There was no end to what he could do with rice, soy sauce and whatever else was handy.
4meAndyou · F
@Heartlander I wish I knew more about Chinese cooking. My next experiment will be to create a really good black bean sauce. Our local restaurant thinks you put one garlic clove in beef gravy and it's black bean sauce.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@4meAndyou

:) So many Chinese restaurants are like so many Mexican restaurants that won't venture beyond tacos, enchiladas and tamales

Do you cook for 12 daily?
4meAndyou · F
@Heartlander No. Normally I DO make big batches of soups, spaghetti sauce, pulled pork...things like that, because they can be bagged and frozen for smaller meals for one. I am so used to cooking like that...first my family ate like lumberjacks, and then later I did amateur catering for my singles group.

The rice is not something that can be frozen, because it would damage the rice and the green onions a little bit. I decided to go big on that recipe because I wanted to get rid of the sausage all at once, and I had to do a special shop for some of the ingredients.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@4meAndyou

:) sounds like the singles group might morph into a gourmet club.

I've always had a vision of a gourmet soup kitchen everyone pays (or doesn't pay) what they wish.
4meAndyou · F
@Heartlander That sounds nice. If I were doing that I would have homemade chicken or turkey noodle soup with homemade noodles, homemade tomato bisque with chunks of tomatoes, my winter warmer pumpkin bisque, my homemade seafood chowder,
and my signature chicken and pepperoni soup.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@4meAndyou

Thanks,

We did once enjoy like a 5 course+ gourmet meal at a halfway shelter and though it was a one-time event that tried to draw awareness to that particular shelter, the idea of a sustainable, larger project stuck with me. Like a chance to put the movers-and-shakers at the same table with people struggling to hold on. So both sides can see the other side in non-threatening settings, and over something that both rich and poor enjoy equally: good food.