I had a bunch of rice left over from last night, so fried rice with chicken & broccoli is coming up later on #CookingForLieutenants.
2. If you’re hoping this turns you into the next Alice Waters or Marie-Antoine Carème, you’re looking at the wrong instructor. I’m just hoping to impart simple at-home recipes because this is what I cook for my kids on my days off.
3. Make a simple omelet with 3 eggs.
3a. Chop it up & set it aside. Note, I’ve got a wet paper towel under my cooking board to prevent it from shifting around on the counter.
4. I had chicken breasts in the fridge. I cut them horizontally to make thin cutlets, seasoned with S & P, then seared them in grapeseed oil. Flip, remove from heat, & set aside. Chop into 1/2” pieces after it cools down.
4a. Your chicken should look like this.
5. Steam your head of broccoli, but cut it smaller than this step from last night’ thread because fried rice is spoon food, not fork food.
5a. To better illustrate what I mean by cut the broccoli small, is what my steamer looked like when the broccoli was done. Still slightly crunchy, because you’ll cook it with the other ingredients shortly.
6. Dice 1 large onion. Sauté the onion in the pot or rondeau you used for the chicken. No need to add oil here, because you should have some fond & rendered fat from the chicken earlier. Dicing onion vids here.
7. Add chicken back into the pot containing the onions, more soy, a dash of sesame oil, & your cold leftover rice. Use a wooden spoon to mix everything together & break the clumps of rice. Reduce heat to medium low.
7a. *** Fried rice works best with cold rice ***
Like the young’uns on Twitter day, I don’t make the rules.
8. Add every other ingredients (egg, chicken, & broccoli) back into the pot. In tonight’s case, I also added 1 can of baby corn that I cut into smaller pieces. Raise heat to medium, have your 11 year old sous-chef mix thoroughly. Taste & season as necessary.
8a. Just in case, get final approval from your 8 year old prep cook (she helped chop the onion) before serving.
9. Being a typical tween Hoover of food, Junior had housed half his bowl within 2 minutes of taking this photo. My hopes for them having leftovers hinge on whether he’ll ask for thirds.
10. Open a bottle of Chardonnay, queue up the cartoon version of “Beauty & the Beast” for your 8 year old beauty for after dinner, & take immense satisfaction from watching them eat as if I hadn’t fed them 6 hours ago.
11. Here endeth the lesson.
Postscript: she asked for seconds & he asked for thirds, which means they’re gonna have to fight over 1 bowl of leftovers.
I took my girl to see a movie after dinner.
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🧵 #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
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.
3. DeWitt saw fifth columns of Japanese Americans around every corner & under every rock. This was a natural extension of the FBI and other LE agencies investigating potential Japanese American agitation since the 1930s. Not because it existed, but because they weren't white.
🧵 I just saw "tipping" tread on this app, so might as well fire up some brain cells and get started on this. I promise, it won't take 30 minutes, but also, please bear with me because this is all coming off the top of my head. Why do we tip?
2. Let's start with a quick primer about what happens to restaurant tips, an indignant threaded reply to someone who opined that servers make too much money.
3. Tipping began in Europe as a gift from a feudal lord to a serf for a service rendered by the serf. It was a gesture, & not necessarily a generous one. The practice continued into the 19th century when those cocky upstarts, aka rich Americans, began to visit Europe.
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.
I started this in 2018 because I was pissed off. At the time, @USArmy had a vanilla tribute to AAPI soldiers on the main Army page, but not even a link to the 4-4-Deuce. I’m still pissed, went to the @USArmyMuseum last summer & the tiny 442 exhibit feels like an afterthought.
If we - soldiers who share #AAPI heritage - are as important to our service’s history as you claim, @USArmyMuseum & @USArmy, then please do better. I didn’t even let my son see that sad display. I was spoiled, we’d been to @USMCMuseum just before, where they honor everything &
1/19. Today in the #AAPIHM thread, the battle of the Vosges from another POV, & one of the bravest men I've ever had the honor to meet. George "Joe" Sakato was born in Colton, CA, 3rd of 7 children to a couple who owned a barber shop & bath house. When FDR signed Executive Order
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
3/19. internment, but Japanese Americans living south of the tracks were not. Joe & one of his brothers sold produce to the War Relocation Authority, which ran the nearby camp in Poston. Joe was drafted in 1944 & wanted to join the ddr.densho.org/interviews/ddr…
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.
2/22. Hajiro was born in Maui as the 2nd of 9 children, & worked as a stevedore in Oahu to help support his family. Like many Hawaiian men, he was drafted after Pearl Harbor; like almost all Hawaiians of Japanese descent, he served in the HI Territorial Guard, predecessor to
3/22. the Hawaii Army National Guard. Military governor Delos Emmons disarmed, then disbanded the Territorial Guard, but also lobbied the War Department to form a provisional infantry battalion so that Japanese Americans in Hawai'i could prove their loyalty.
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.
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.