{"id":150,"date":"2009-05-26T16:39:00","date_gmt":"2009-05-26T20:39:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.spiceaholic.com\/2009\/05\/26\/double-header-general-tsos-chicken-and-veggie-lo-mein\/"},"modified":"2009-05-26T16:39:00","modified_gmt":"2009-05-26T20:39:00","slug":"double-header-general-tsos-chicken-and-veggie-lo-mein","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.spicesbites.com\/double-header-general-tsos-chicken-and-veggie-lo-mein\/","title":{"rendered":"Double-header: General Tso’s Chicken and Veggie Lo Mein"},"content":{"rendered":"
I think it’s safe to say that it’s no surprise that two of my favorite things to order in a Chinese restaurant are also two of the most fat and calorie-laden choices. It’s nice how things work out like that.<\/p>\n
Given those circumstances, it’s also fairly safe to say that these two items are high on my list of things to master cooking and to lighten up. \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n
As you know, I have the cookbook collecting bug and have recently been trying to make actual use out of the ones I have rather than letting them taunt me from the bookshelves with their glossy pictures and their “someday” potential.<\/p>\n
I dug out one of the few Weight Watchers cookbooks that I’ve actually cooked out of before — Take-Out Tonight<\/span>, which is an excellent source of . . . you guessed it, take-out favorites.<\/p>\n There was a recipe for General Tso’s Chicken in there I wanted to try, since I had decided I was going to cook dinner for my friends when they got here Friday night. I found the recipe and was promptly paralyzed by the list of ingredients. And then, as if the book had anticipated my anxiety, the “clever cook’s tip” box at the bottom of the page told me I had a quick alternative — bottled stir-fry sauce. Yay! So using their shortcut method and what I had at home, I came up with a version of General Tso’s Chicken that meets my weeknight dinner criteria — quick, versatile, and flavorful.<\/p>\n