Made the best Chicken Fried Rice ever, using a youtube video tutorial.
And I did it without a wok in a regular non-stick pan on an electric stove!
PREP: It really, really helps with this dish if you prep all your ingredients ahead of time. Stir fry cooking is on a timer of sorts, you can't leave the pan alone for more than 30 seconds without something burning. So prep all your veggies, chicken, seasonings and liquid portions ahead of time!
You cook your rice first (making sure to wash the excess starch off before you do) and set it aside to cool. Use medium or short grain rices as they retain moisture much better than long grain rice, which tends to give you the dry middle eastern/indian style of rice.
While the rice is cooking and cooling is the ideal time to prep the rest of your ingredients.
Once your rice is at the cooling stage, get a pan hot on the stove. I'd say just a notch below "high" on an electric stove. Make sure your pan is actually hot before adding oil.
Start with oil. (Can be olive oil, vegetable, coconut. Most kinds will work.) If your oil isn't sliding around the pan with the consistency of almost water, your pan isn't hot enough yet.
Crack 1 or 2 eggs in the pan, start scrambling. The key to stir fry is to keep the shit in the pan moving around while on as high a heat as you can manage without stuff sticking or burning.
Once the yokes are cooking in, you throw in your very fine diced skinless chicken (diced fine for fast cooking times.)
Toss that around and get the chicken 80% cooked (or when you see the egg starting to brown.)
Then toss in your onion, your chopped garlic. Let that saute a minute. Keep tossing it around in the pan.
Then toss in your green onion. Mushrooms, carrot, water chestnut, peas if you're using them as well. Keep moving it around the pan and cook until most of these ingredients are soft and starting to sweat. In the case of mushrooms, they will continue to reduce in size throughout the cooking process.
Now add your mostly cool, cooked rice. It's going to be sticky so break up the chunks in the pan.
Now is the time when you have to move the fastest because that rice will start to brown and eventually burn after too long.
If you're on an electric stove, you can reduce the heat a little bit. (But only a little!)
Immediately after the rice goes in, add some sesame oil. This is to replenish the oil in the pan that everything else has soaked up.
Add your dry seasoning at this time. Garlic powder, salt, a little black pepper, maybe some onion powder, maybe some ginger powder.
IMPORTANT FLAVOR STEP #1: Crush up a chicken bouillon cube and season the stir fry with it. Seriously, this one ingredient has made my fried rice taste more like restaurant fried rice than anything else I've tried!
At this point, you're going to start having rice stick to the pan no matter what you do. DO NOT REDUCE HEAT! You may have to "scrape" the bottom of the pan to get the rice sticking to the bottom up. It won't be burned per se....unless you let it sit for 45 seconds or more. So you do this constant pattern of scrape/flip/scrape/flip as you're cooking through this section. If you were using a wok you'd be tossing and flipping the ingredients around like a crazy person and wouldn't have to be as deliberate. But if you're making due with just a regular non-stick pan you have to exercise a little more control.
After you've gotten the seasonings in the rice, and have tossed it around so it's all evenly coated in the sesame oil.....
Add soy sauce. Don't use too much! Believe me, when it comes to the flavor, less is absolutely more! For an average serving of this dish (say 1/2 cup of rice) use no more than 1 tablespoon of soy sauce. Too much won't ruin it but the color will be off and it will be hella salty. (For reference, between the chicken bouillon cube and 1 tbsp of soy sauce, this dish alone has like 110% of your daily recommended dose of salt!)
Toss and mix the rice with the soy sauce until it's evenly coated. Continue to scrape/flip the rice. Let it cook for another oh 30 seconds to a minute.
FINAL FINISHING FLAVOR STEP: Cut a square of butter off the stick and slap it right on top of the rice and toss it around until it's melted. This gives the rice its final, buttery richness that really makes it come alive. And because you do it only a minute or so before serving, the butter flavor really sits on top of everything.
Takes about 10 to 15 minutes total cooking time. When you add the prep and rice cooking time, the whole meal takes about 45 minutes to 1 hour 15 minutes depending on how fast you move.
I loved this recepie so much I made it for a week straight.