Dan Kim, new cat dad Profile picture
Jul 28, 2020 16 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Who doesn’t like pork chops? Or homemade teriyaki sauce? #CookingForLieutenants will be back by popular demand later tonight.
2. Standard disclaimer: I started this as a thread of cooking instruction for people in their 20s who were a bit clueless in their first kitchens, so the recipes are simple by necessity. With that said, however, simple ≠ a lack of flavor.
3. Tonight I used:
4 bone-in pork chops
1 head of broccoli
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup honey
2 tbsp corn starch & 2 tbsp water for a slurry

That’s it
4 Hopefully by now you’ve invested in a proper rice cooker, & are not following that BBC Food video of cooking rice in a saucepot like a heathen. Wash your rice until the water turns clear, then let your rice cooker or 8-year-old assistant do the rest. ImageImageImage
5. Combine soy, water, honey, & corn starch slurry in a bowl. Add granulated garlic & onion to taste, then whisk together. Set aside. ImageImageImage
6. Cut florets off the head of broccoli. What are you going to do with the stalk? Cut the skin off, then cut it into batons, of course. ImageImageImageImage
7. Steam the broccoli, & yes, I over-cooked this batch, but with enough teriyaki sauce, I doubt my kids will mind. Nor will you. Image
8. Cut & season your pork.
8a.
9. Sear the pork in a screaming hot pan with oil - in this case, grapeseed oil, which has a higher smoke point than EVOO & isn’t nearly as heavy.
10. Flip the pork over after about 3 minutes, cover, & cook over low-medium heat for another 5-7 minutes. Image
11. Put your teriyaki sauce in a saucepot & heat over a medium flame. Whisk constantly, this is your desired consistency.
12. Put everything together. Optional: slice the pork for your kids. Drizzle teriyaki over everything. If you have kimchi, then feel free to put that out as an accompaniment. That kimchi thing goes without saying for almost any food. Image
13. Do your in-house critics approve? Yes? #winning Image
14. Finish that glass of Chardonnay you poured during step 8 but were too busy to drink. Image
15. Here endeth the lesson.

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More from @danielmkim

Feb 20
🧵 #OTD in 1942, FDR signed Executive Order 9066, which ordered the incarceration - under the guise of benign "relocation" - of over 120k Japanese Americans. And now, not for the 1st time, a presidential candidate thinks this is a swell idea to revisit. #DayOfRemembrance Image
2. The perceived disloyalty of Japanese Americans, coupled with good ol' xenophobia that's as American as apple pie or baseball, drove this policy. So did Lt. Gen. John DeWitt, commander of the US Army's Western Defense Command. Such a charmer, this DeWitt. Image
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Read 25 tweets
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May 30, 2023
I’m limited to a certain # of tweets per thread, but like my old squad leader used to say, I improvised, I adapted, & I overcame. Started this labor of love a few years back, but the 2023 thread of daily threads for #AAPIHM begins here on 1 May, with links to successive threads.
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2/19. 9066, the Sakatos were given a choice of being "interned," or moving to the Zone of the Interior (landlocked states). They chose the latter & moved to Glendale, AZ, where relatives already lived. By sheer luck, their new address north of the train line exempted them from
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Read 19 tweets
May 29, 2023
1/22. Almost 300k Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders have served in our nation's military. Of those, 36 are Medal of Honor recipients. Today for the #AAPIHM thread, we honor a soldier who was court-martialed for fighting, yet still received the MoH, Barney Hajiro. Image
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Read 23 tweets
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1/21. I covered the Lee brothers in a previous #AAPIHM thread, but considering the significance of this weekend, they deserve a closer look. The Lee brothers, Chew-Een (Kurt) & Chew-Mon (Buck) were born in Sacramento to Chinese immigrant parents. ImageImage
2/21. Kurt joined the US Marine Corps in 1944 when he turned 18, eager to join the war effort, but the Marines specifically, to counter white people's misconception of the "meek, obsequious, bland Asian," as he called that stereotype. Due to his ethnicity,
3/21. he was redirected to Japanese language school after boot camp. Undeterred, Sgt Lee applied for Officer Candidate School, & was commissioned in 1945. This gave Kurt the distinction of being not just the first non-white Marine officer, but its first Asian American as well. Image
Read 23 tweets

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