MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05

     Title: Hypothetical Tso
Categories: Main dish, Poultry, Chinese
     Yield: 4 Servings

     1 lb Chicken thigh meat; *
   1/8 c  Sherry or rice wine
   1/8 c  Soy sauce [regular soy]
     1 cl Garlic; mashed fine
   1/2 c  Corn starch; approximate **
    20    Dry hot peppers ***
          Oil for stir-frying ****
     2 cl Garlic; mashed @
    10 sl Ginger root; 1/4" thick
   1/2 ts Salt; to taste
     1 tb Sugar; brown or white
   1/2 c  Dark soy sauce @@
   3/4 c  Chicken broth or more; @@@
     2 bn Watercress; washed @@@@
     2    Scallions

 NB ML's ingredients notes:

 * ML prefers thigh meat, but white meat will do. Cut in 1/2" chunks.
 ** Original specified Water chestnut flour.
 *** Chinese or Thai best, but Mexican hot peppers will also do.
 **** Some recipes deep fry chicken ML prefers stir fried.

 @ ML would use more. (Crushed but not pureed. IMH)
 @@ Regular soy will do, but in this case, leave out salt.
 @@@ Thin chinese style, otherwise omit the salt.
 @@@@ Don't use Brocolli as they often do in chinese restaurants.

 [like what I eat, only I don't use a recipe; NOT like restaurant Tso]

 Clean the scallions, discarding dried outer leaves and roots. Slice
 both white and green parts very thinly and set aside to use at the
 last minute as a garnish.

 Marinate chicken in soy and sherry with the garlic. Dredge in starch.
 In a hot wok, stir-fry the ginger, garlic, and hot peppers in oil.
 Push them to one side (discard them if you feel like doing so - I
 usually toss ginger but keep garlic in and separate out hot peppers
 for me to eat by myself). In this oil, stir-fry the chicken until it's
 firm.

 Add sugar and salt and dark soy and broth. Cook until sauce is thick
 (if it's too thick, add more broth). In a separate pan or wok,
 stir-fry watercress in a small amount of oil over very high heat for
 30 seconds. Mound watercress on a platter, make an indentation in the
 middle, pour in the chicken, and strew scallions over. Serve with
 plain white rice.

 This is neither crunchy nor sweet as the dish is usually served in
 restaurants. This is more or less the way it used to come out of the
 kitchen at Say Eng Look in New York, which served the best version
 I've ever eaten (that includes my own). Recent visits to that
 restaurant have yielded a more standard version.

 From: Michael Loo
 Date: 12-26-94

 From: Ian Hoare
 Date: 01-29-97

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