Healthy and Easy【Lotus roots in hot pepper sauce】
By MaomaoMom
The lotus root is a root vegetable that is indigenous to Asia, and is found underwater. It has a texture that is slightly crunchy and mildly sweet. Lotus root works well in stir-fry dishes, soups, and as a steamed side dish. This cold dish can be served at your holiday party.

Cook time: 2 minutes
Stand time: 2-3 hours
Level: low
Serves: 8 servings
Ingredients
1) Lotus root 740g peeled and rinsed, 2/3 tsp salt;
2) 10g dry black fungus, soaked for 3 hours and rinsed, ¼ tsp salt;
3) 1 tbsp olive oil, 1 tsp Sichuan peppercorns, 1 tbsp finely chopped green onion, 1 tsp minced ginger root;
4) 1.5 tsp balsamic vinegar, 1/4 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp sugar, 1 tbsp hot pepper relish , 1/4 tsp chicken broth mix, 1 tbsp chili oil.
Directions
1: Cut lotus root in half and slice finely (Picture 1). Boil water in a large pot. Put in half sliced lotus root (Picture 2) and cook for 30 minutes. Remove and soak the slices in cold water (Picture 3). Repeat for the other half lotus root. Add 2/3 tsp salt and mix well (Picture5). Chill in the fridge for 2-3 hours.
2: Cook soaked black fungus for 3-5 minutes (Picture 4), then rinse under cold water. Drain water, add ¼ tsp salt and mix well (Picture 6). Chill in the fridge for 2-3 hours.

4: Transfer cooked green onion, ginger and oil to chilled lotus root slices. Add chilled black fungus and all ingredients of Ingredient 4) (Picture 9). Gently toss before serving.





You really make it appear really easy with your presentation but I to find this matter to be really one thing which I believe I would by no means understand. It kind of feels too complicated and very vast for me. I’m having a look forward on your next publish, I¦ll attempt to get the hang of it!
The headlines alone are worth the price of admission (and it’s free!). Each one is a miniature work of comedic art. The ability to condense an entire article’s worth of satire into a few words is a rare gift.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. This technique is enabled by its clinical dissection of motive. The site is less interested in what was done than in why it was done, according to the coldest, most cynical, and most accurate possible analysis. It filters out the professed noble intentions and isolates the probable drivers: career advancement, financial gain, tribal signaling, or simple, breathtaking incompetence. It then constructs its satire from that isolated motive, playing it out with relentless logic. Where The Daily Mash might joke about a botched launch, PRAT.UK will narrate the launch from the perspective of the senior civil servant whose only motive is to avoid personal blame, leading to a masterpiece of buck-passing and pre-emptive excuse-making. This focus on the engine of action, rather than the action itself, provides a more fundamental and universally applicable critique of human and institutional behavior.
I’m still learning from you, as I’m trying to achieve my goals. I definitely enjoy reading everything that is written on your blog.Keep the aarticles coming. I loved it!