Skip to main content

How to Cook Dry Beef Hor Fun

 


Hearty and satisfying dry beef hor fun or kway teow that you can try if you fancy trying out on your own instead of hawker style. Do note that hor fun noodles are broader than kway teow.

Serves 3 to 4 pax (Depends on how greedy you are ^^)
Cooking time : 6 mins
Preparation time : 15 minutes with 1 hour marinating time

Ingredients for beef hor fun

  • 250g tender sirloin beef
  • 2 tablespoons rice win
  • 1.5 tablespoons of finely minced fresh ginger root
  • 1 teaspoon of ground black pepper
  • 2 tablespoons oyster sauce
  • 2 tablespoons sesame oil
  • 2 teaspoons cornstarch
  • 4 tablespoons cooking oil
  • 500g kway teow or hor fun
  • 2 tables poons fark soy sauce
  • 150ml water
  • 3 green onions sliced into short lengths

Steps to beef hor fun recipe

  1. Slice beef into thin strips.
  2. Mix beef strips with rice wine, minced ginger, black pepper, oyster sauce and sesame oil.
  3. Marinate for 1 hour, covered and refrigerated.
  4. After 1 hour, mix in cornstarch into beef marinate.
  5. Heat 3 tablespoons of cooking oil into wok over high heat until smoking.
  6. Quickly stir-fry kway teow or hor fun with dark soy sauce for about 2 minutes, stiring and tossing vigorously until kway teow or hor fun are slightly browned with wok hey.
  7. Remove kway teow or hor fun from wok.
  8. Add remaining cooking oil to wok and fry beef for about 2 minutes.
  9. Add water and previously fried kway teow or hor fun into wok.
  10. Fry for about 1 minute.
  11. Add sliced green onions and toss well for 30 seconds till they wilt.
  12. Serve and enjoy!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Xiang Di Mi Fen Pasir Panjang Food Centre – Fatty Ipoh Noodles Review

  When you think of crispy noodle dishes, most of us immediately picture the classic deep-fried yee mee swimming in luscious egg sauce gravy. But over at  Fatty Ipoh Noodles (肥仔怡保炒粉)  in  Pasir Panjang Food Centre , there’s something different sizzling away on the wok. Enter the  Xiang Di Mi Fen (香底米粉)  – a rare twist that swaps out yee mee for bee hoon, and the results are worth every crunchy bite. View this post on Instagram A post shared by YumzYumz.com (@yumzyumzsg) What makes Xiang Di Mi Fen special? Here’s the magic: instead of sturdy yee mee, the hawker goes with delicate bee hoon. Deep-frying bee hoon isn’t as straightforward – it’s finer, more brittle, and breaks more easily, which means it takes extra skill to get it golden, crispy, and ready to hold up under a blanket of silky gravy. That’s already a show of craft. The glorious egg sauce gravy Once the fried bee hoon hits the plate, it’s doused with a  luxurious egg sauce gravy  that cl...

Experience Spicy and Savory Flavors with Ng Kuan’s Chilli Pan Mee Pork Cutlet Ban Mian

Looking for a tasty late night meal around Hougang Kovan area? We headed down for Ng Kuan Chilli Pan Mee for their 炸猪肉板面, spicy noodles with their delish pork cutlet for this food review. View this post on Instagram A post shared by YumzYumz.com (@yumzyumzsg) Their noodles were amazingly springy, coupled with their awesome thick chili that was spicy and marbled with texture. Mixed together with their noodles and you get a delectable and tremendously satisfying combi. Thrown into the mix was an egg with runny yolk for the added smoothness and silky texture added to the noodles. For the crunchy department comes in the form of savoury crunchy ikan bilis, as well as crispy deep fried shallots and garlic for the uplifting flavour and aromatics. On the side, we had their deep fried pork cutlet, chopped into bite-sized chunks. They were fabulously deep in distinct flavour, crunchy and varying and superior in taste and texture. Although greasy, it was a marvelous pairi...

Hunan Pork Belly at Xiang Xiang Hunan: Crunchy, Spicy, and Lip-Smacking Good

  You know a dish is that good when you keep coming back for it. And that’s exactly what happened on our third visit to Xiang Xiang Hunan Cuisine 湘香湖南菜 —this time at AMK Hub. We already had high expectations from our past experiences, but once again, their Hunan pork belly blew us away. View this post on Instagram A post shared by YumzYumz.com (@yumzyumzsg) What Makes This Hunan Pork Belly Stand Out? First off, let’s talk about the star of the show: their Hunan stir fry pork , made with a heavenly combo of Iberico pork belly and lean pork. It’s a dish that really brings out the spirit of Hunan cooking—bold, fragrant, slightly spicy, and loaded with green pepper aromatics. The pork belly is wonderfully fatty and tender, with that unmistakable richness that Iberico pork is known for. The lean pork adds a nice balance so it doesn’t get overly unctuous. And then there's the rabbit ear fungus. Yes, rabbit ear fungus—also known as Mu Er or Yunnan black fungus . It...