I recently dined at a new local restaurant and overheard the manager responding to a customer's question about the fat content of her noodle bowl. "Nope, not a drop of oil is in the peanut sauce," he said cheerfully, "It's made with peanut butter, an Asian dressing and coconut milk with our special spice blend." With that he gave her a chummy wink and went on clearing the table next to hers. I asked to try some of the peanut sauce and confirmed my worst fears… it was loaded with fat.
Peanut oils from the peanut butter, sesame and vegetable oils from the Asian dressing and the rather "health unfriendly" saturated fats from the coconut milk, were separating from the rest of the pale brown mixture and floating to the top of my sample. I don't think he had misinformed her intentionally, they almost certainly had not added additional oil to the sauce, he just did not know enough about the ingredients to answer the question correctly.
Market pressure will soon allow us a little more confidence when we dine out. You can see it all around you. Carbonated high-calorie beverages are being taken out of our children's schools, dressings and sauces are being served on the side, nutritional information is being posted in fast food restaurants and smaller portion entrees are popping up on menus everywhere.
But, it will be a while before you can blindly trust food
producers to have your health in mind. For years chefs have
thrived on the addition of fat and calories to keep their
customers coming back for more and that pattern is deeply
ingrained in the restaurant industry. So, for now we will let
market pressure do the work and … if the sauce looks and
tastes "oily"… I can assure you, IT IS.
Japanese Noodle Salad
Ingredients:
1/4 cup reduced fat peanut butter
2 tablespoons low sodium soy sauce
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 1/4 tablespoons sesame oil
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger
1 teaspoons minced garlic
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1/2 pound soba noodles
2 scallions, thinly sliced
1 medium carrot, peeled and thinly sliced
1/2 cup snow peas
Directions:
Mix the peanut butter in a large bowl with the soy sauce, lemon
juice, sesame oil, ginger, garlic and red pepper. Season with
salt and pepper and set aside.
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the noodles and cook stirring constantly until the water returns to a boil. Cook until the noodles are al dente. Soba noodles are sold fresh so this will only take four to five minutes.
With a pair of tongs, lift the noodles out of the pot. Shake and place directly into the bowl with the peanut butter mixture. If needed, add 1 to 2 tablespoons pasta water to loosen up the sauce. Add the vegetables and toss well. Let cool. Cover and refrigerate. Makes four servings.
Per serving: 24g carbs; 4g fiber 10g fat; 210 calories
About the author:
Chef Walter Husbands, CEC, began his culinary career as a chef
at resorts
in Las Vegas, Nevada and Scottsdale, Arizona and then as a
Director of Food
Services and Executive Chef at some of the largest health care
systems in
the United States. Nominated by the Oklahoma Gazette in 2003 as
the "Best
Chef in Oklahoma", he is now a restaurant owner in Oklahoma
City. With a cooking style that is a mixture of classically
trained expertise and home cooking sensibility, his eye is ever
trained on the final outcome - healthy, fun, easy to prepare
dishes that are as much a pleasure to make as they are to eat.
Visit Chef Walter online
http://members.cox.net/chefwalter/Sign_Up.htm!For
more food and cooking,
http://sheknows.com/about/Food_and_Cooking/index.htm
here.
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