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Well Captain Scarlet. most of the chicken in batter, tastes very similar to the grisly stuff in bags that they sell in Iceland. The last takeaways chicken balls tasted like ground up chicken feet, it was vile. If your chicken is shaped into little balls dont eat it. Big chunks in batter are best.

Tarot Wrote:

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> Well Captain Scarlet. most of the chicken in

> batter, tastes very similar to the grisly stuff in

> bags that they sell in Iceland. The last takeaways

> chicken balls tasted like ground up chicken feet,

> it was vile. If your chicken is shaped into little

> balls dont eat it. Big chunks in batter are best.


Thank you for the advice Tarot but may I ask...Are they using real chicken balls?...They would be tiny!

If anyone is interested in making Chinese (pork, chicken or prawn) batter balls at home: the batter is made with beaten egg and 'potato starch flour' (available from Khan's in Rye Lane under the name 'Farina' - not to be confused with ordinary 'potato flour' which doesn't work), seasoned with a little salt and deep fried at a medium to high temperature until crisp and golden brown.


The filling should be pre-cooked - pieces of raw pork and chicken don't have time to cook properly in the short time it takes to fry the batter.

The advantage with home cooking is that one can experiment with standard recipes to create a taste that precisely suites one's palate.


With sweet and sour sauce, one can use either mild or dark soy sauce, brown or white sugar and rice, malt, distilled or other types of vinegar. Also, many other ingredients may be added to expand the taste and texture, including: shredded carrot or sliced green pepper, orange or pineapple juice and fruit chunks, a dash of hot chilli pepper and/or oyster, plum or Worcestershire sauces, for example.


Most Chinese restaurants add relatively large quantities of Monosodium glutamate (MSG) to their dishes ? which, although controversial, is necessary to capture the authentic 'umami' taste of commercial Anglo-Chinese cuisine.

Thanks Hal, that sounds really professional.Where as I would probably poison people. I tried to cook fried rice once, I put a pint of cooking oil in a wok. poured on the rice and heated it for half an hour, served it up with very poorly battered chicken.It was swimming in oil. No one ate it and never want to try my cooking again.
Hal re you a chef? I think you knowledge of cooking is admiarable, and I think you should be the forums cooking advisor. I like watching cooking, my favourite programme was Rosemary Shragers. chef school,dont know when its on again. But I guess i,ll have to watch more careful, Thank you all , all places been noted, advice taken.

I think I may need to try this recipe out - sounds great. Especially as it does always bug me the way the Sweet and Sour Sauce can vary so much from place to place.


Tarot, I am sorry, but I did laugh quite hard at your Fried Rice. In theory you "did exactly what it said on the tin" But that really is funny! Another good suggestion is to use old rice i.e. a day old or so that has been in the fridge. If you can't to that then cook your rice a bit earlier and dry it out in a low heat oven. Try not to burn it, but basically the dryer the rice the better it fries.


And to make the egg, mix 1-2 eggs with dark soy sauce and a drop of sesame oil. Heat wok, add egg mixture, let it cook a little then using a fork or spatula try and scramble it almost. Then add a touch more oil before adding the rice to the mixture, and then dark soy and blend together. It should only need to cook for a few minutes and keep mixing well to heat evenly.

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