Yen Can Cook ~ Fried Meehoon with Canned Stewed Pork (Kou Rou Meehoon)
Were you one of the folks who went into panic buying during the MCO/CMCO period, and you’ve probably found yourself with a stockpile of pantry staples, like dried and canned goods, and a freezer full of frozen foods?
We must admit that canned food is a lifesaver, whether you’re trying to save time or making yet another meal from the stuff you stocked your pantry with while waiting out a pandemic. In order to minimize trips to the grocery store or if you’re trying to order online, you’ll find delivery slots are hard to come by, shelf-stable foods like canned goods are becoming an increasingly central component of our diets. But that doesn’t mean you’re eating out of cans for every meal as there are plenty of yummy hacks for zhuzhing up your canned food which can be found online.
Today’s recipe calls for canned stewed pork (Hong Shao Kou Rou) which is savoury, utterly soft tender (almost melt-in-your-mouth) stewed pork belly with skin on. It always depends on your luck whether you can get a decent canned of stewed pork with good portion of fat and lean meat layers. Unfortunately, the one I got this time was rather fat. ●︿●
Ingredients (Serve: 3-4)
1 canned stewed pork
200g meehoon
Choy Sum or any kinds of greens, cut lengthwise
1/2 carrot, julienned
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 shallots, minced
2 teaspoons dark soy sauce, adjustable according to own preference
1 cup of water
Salt & pepper to taste
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Step 1: Soak meehoon in water until softened. Drain well and set aside.
Step 2: Open the can of stewed pork, remove the meat from the can. Reserve 3 tablespoons of oil and all gravy in the can and discard the excess oil (optional, if you don’t mind your meehoon to be too greasy)
Step 3: Heat the wok and add in the reserved oil (Step 2), saute minced garlic and shallots till fragrant. Add in julienned carrot, stir fry till slightly soften.
Step 4: Add in soaked meehoon (Step 1), Choy Sum, the reserved gravy (Step 2), dark soy sauce and water. Toss well to distribute the sauce evenly. Add in the stew pork and let it simmer on low heat until the meehoon is softened/have soaked up all the sauce. Don’t over-stir the meehoon as this may break the stewed pork in small pieces.
Step 5: Season with salt and pepper as per desired. Serve.
Fried Meehoon Recipe –> HERE
If you have any recipes on transforming the canned food into gourmet dishes, please share with me!
HAPPY COOKING!
#dudukrumah #stayathomeagain #stayhealthy









Oh my! I love this meehoon. I have cooked like this before some years ago. Now I wanna go look for the canned pork. The last time I remembered it was quite expensive.
PH, I got mine at RM15, not cheap I would say. >_<
Nope, no more panic buying.
Your mee hoon looks good. Every strand seems to be well cooked and mixed. 🙂
Tekkaus, I’m happy with the outcome too, yummy 🙂
Agree 100%! Your meehoon looks fantastic. This canned stew pork is heavenly! It is the best ingredient to make the meehoon taste like Michelin class. I heard someone say can put whole can into the rice cooker to cook rice. Sedap giler.
TM, the recipe you mentioned, stewed pork rice, imagine also can feel the yummy-ness! OMG, I want to try it next time!
Whenever I resort to canned food, that means I want something fast that involves no ‘extra’ cooking, so I don’t do any zhuzhing up…haha! My MIL used to add stewed pork to jazz up her mui choy kau yoke (I have to say it was very delicious). My lazy & favourite way is to microwave sang choy with stewed pork ribs or add fried dace (and some greens) into the rice cooker when cooking rice. ^_~
Kris, one pot rice with canned food sound like a really idea when you need something fast. I never buy stewed pork ribs though, does it tastes similar with this stewed pork?
I would think so coz the sauce should be the same…one uses pork ribs, the other fatty pork. I’ve never tried stewed pork since I don’t like fatty meat.
hi5!!!
and yes I’ll use all the oil 😛
KY, you have quota to eat more oil, but not me. ~>_<~
Hi
What is the brands of the hong sau kou rou?
Hi Yuen Yee Lim, I used Gulong brand but I believe other brands work well too.
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