Go To ChefTalk.com
    Cooking ArticlesCookbook ReviewsCooking ForumsRecipesCooking Glossary  

Welcome to the ChefTalk Cooking Forums forums.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

Go Back   ChefTalk Cooking Forums > Food and Cooking Forums > Recipes
Register Blogs Photo Gallery FAQ Members List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Recipes Looking for a recipe, or do you just have a great one that you think everyone will enjoy? Share recipes with people from around the world.

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 01-03-2006, 08:09 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: At home cook
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1
als24 is on a distinguished road
Question Sarku Japan: Chicken Teriyaki?

Recently I have fallen in love a local mall's food court-joint Sarku (also known as Sakkio) Japan's Teriyaki Chicken. It's a nice, quick little deal where they grill up the chicken in front of you and then pour on the teriyaki sauce and serve it over rice and veggies. Quick and seems fresh enough. It's not a bad price for me, just a bad drive and I am clueless as to how they make it. I've tried a couple of times, and I can't even come close. Hopefully someone knows this cause I'm dying to know; seems so versatile if paired with the right sides and setting. I'm stumped on:

#1. The Teriyaki sauce itself. I can come reasonably close, but mine is too powerful or something. It has just the right amount of flavor to it and I can't get it. They don't marinate the chicken in it (as far as I can tell), they just pour it on but it gives a deep but not overpowering flavor to the chicken even when extra is put on.

#2. The chicken texture. They use these little (breast I'm assuming) bites, but the thing that I am absolutely clueless on is what it sits in. When they scoop it out in front of you, it looks like they have some sort of coating on it--not a marinade or a sauce, but a coating.

Getting me hungry just thinking...

Anyone who has some help for me, thanks in advance.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Sponsored links
Foodservicesingles.com
  #2  
Old 01-04-2006, 02:29 PM
Mezzaluna's Avatar
Cafe Moderator
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Wisconsin USA
Posts: 8,271
Mezzaluna is on a distinguished road
Question

Betcha the chicken is marinated in the same solution as the frozen chicken breasts in the supermarket. Is the texture ultra-tender, almost mushy?
__________________
Moderator, Welcome Forum
***It is better to ask forgiveness than beg permission.***
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-04-2006, 03:32 PM
Anneke's Avatar
Cafe Moderator
Culinary Experience: Culinary Instructor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 1,879
Anneke is on a distinguished road
Default

Have you asked them? It's a ligitimate question. After all, you could have a food allergy...
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 02-05-2006, 11:52 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: At home cook
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 2
Plissken is on a distinguished road
Default

My dad ran a teriyaki restaurant for about 5 years or so. I was still young back then but I do remember ginger and sugar were involved...soy sauce as well. I remember my dad heating it up in a big pot....
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 02-11-2006, 04:43 PM
cakerookie's Avatar
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Line Cook
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: The Carolinas
Posts: 1,204
cakerookie is on a distinguished road
Default

Love Sarku! We have one at a local mall here. But I cannot tell you anything about the preparation of the food. Sorry.....
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 01-02-2007, 10:55 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Sous Chef
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 1
Keitaro427 is on a distinguished road
Chef The Secrets to Sarku Sucess

Hello,

I am a chef who worked for a Sarku Japan for 4 years while in High School. I learned every recipe they ever had, and remember them off by heart. For legal reasons, I cannot give you EXACT recipes, but I can lead you on the path to the ever-elusive Sarku (or Sakkio, as it was called when I worked there) Chicken Teriyaki.

First, the chicken. It's thigh meat, people. A breast will never come close to the texture (or moisture level) you are seeking. Specifically, boneless/skinless YOUNG chicken thigh meat. Since I have found it difficult to purchase this for home cooking, you will have to buy a big package of chicken thighs and remove the bones and skin. (leave SOME of the fat, it is necessary and you will understand why later) Cut your chicken into bite-sized pieces (preferably while it is still partially frozen).

Second, the chicken IS marinated. But not in teriyaki sauce. The sauce in and of itself could take up an entire chapter of a novel, but we'll touch on that later. Put your chicken in a large tupperware container. Add water, cooking sherry, granulated garlic, vegetable oil, white pepper, and soy sauce. Again, can't give out exacts, but try a ratio of 4 water to 1 soy sauce to 1 oil. A decent amount of pepper, and just a tiny bit of garlic (granulated garlic is strong, and the finished product should have an UNDERTONE of garlic, but not a FLAVOR of garlic). Add more liquid than you think you need - the chicken will "drink" a lot of this fluid. Put on a pair of gloves and massage the **** out of this, combining all the ingredients, and coating all the chicken. If the chicken is still too frozen, let it set for a while to thaw, and then massage it.

FUN LITTLE BIT OF KNOWLEDGE: We at Sakkio used to refer to this process as "pushing" the chicken - until a goofy man from the Sarku/Sakkio Head Office refered to it as "massaging" the chicken. So I use the term "massage" with a smirk and a tongue-in-cheek inside joke.

"Massage" your chicken every few hours, and allow it to marinate in the fridge overnight. Yes, overnight. You didn't think something so wonderful was going to be made up in 5 mintues, did you?! Plus, the path to making good teriyaki sauce is long and tedious - so you will need that day to contemplate the chemistry of SAUCE.

TRUE Sakkio sauce was composed of only five components. That's right. Just five. The problem there lies within the fact that ONE of the ingredients is extremely complicated to make and nearly impossible to duplicate: the soup base. You read correctly, folks - the ultimate secret ingredient in Sakkio sauce is a complex soup stock simmered in a GIANT sauce pot overnight. The soup itself was a myriad of ingredients, many of them scraps, from the Sakkio kitchen. Beef trimmings and bones, carrots, onions, cabbage pieces, pulverized ginger fingers, smashed whole garlic bulbs, and more stacked into the pot - which was then topped off with water. The result, after a nights worth of simmering and straining - was a somewhat fatty golden-colored BROTH OF LIFE, packed with nutrients and a distinctive flavor, which, like so many other Sakkio items, carried untertones of many things but the flavor of nothing. The stock itself made a glorious breakfast when simply poured over rice, and gave the lucky diner a days worth of energy.

While you are obviously welcome to experiment with a "from scratch" Sakkio soup base, you will save time, money, and broken spirits by cheating your way out of it. The Sakkio stock was a one of a kind creation, and unless you have access to an Asian kitchen, a ginormous sauce pot, and about sixty-five years of Chinese culinary know-how - your stock will always come out stinking up your home, and tasting like oily over-cooked cabbage/onion water. Trust me.

I recommend getting yourself a good chicken stock, one that is NOT salty (these flavors must be DEEP, but not OVERPOWERING), and simmering it with some roughly chopped ginger and garlic, thus giving you a tasty Asian-flavoured soup. If you can find an Asian stock to work with that already incorporates these flavors - even better!

Once you have an acceptable soup (remember - NOT salty - we will be adding plenty of salt element in a moment. Your soup should be flavorful, but rediculously bland at the same time), it's time to go to town. Both Kikkomann Soy AND Terkiyaki sauce are used here, in a ratio of about 3 parts teriyaki to one part soy. The soup should be about 60% of your total product, with the soy/teriyaki mix making up the rest.

Next it's time for the sweetening of the beast. This comes, not from honey (as I have heard suggested), but from brown sugar. Since there are not any numbers here, the amount is difficult to guage - I recommend warming your sauce over a burner and slowly adding brown sugar until you are satisfied with the level of sweetness.

Now you have yourself a sweet and savory brown sauce that is just DYING to be drizzled over grilled chicken.... but wait.... this sauce is very watery - not the lovely "sticks to every bite" consistency that you crave? Fear not! A quick slurry (mixture of cornstarch and cold water) will do the trick nicely.

Bring your sauce up to a boil and SLOWLY - REALLY SLOWLY - add some of your slurry. The consistency is very important here, and there is no turning back. Stir in your slurry with a wire whisk, as to not create any lumps. Give it thirty seconds or so to accept the starches and thicken up. Your sauce should ONLY be thick enough to leave a glaze on the spoon, or stick to the side of the pot if you splash a little up there - no thicker. If it's still like water, add a little slurry. If it follows the aforementioned properties, you're sauce is done. Congratulations. You have just developed a beautiful, beautiful thing.

This sauce can be refridgerated overnight while your chicken marinates, or made up the same day that you are cooking - it matters not because you will have to warm it up for serving either way (careful to warm it slowly and stir frequently - once thickened, the sauce will want to burn very easily).

Now back to the lovely chicken. You have now "massaged" and marinated your chicken overnight, and it's time to mix it. Mix it. As in with a mixer. Or, if you are REALLY lucky, a Kitchenaid Mixer with a dough hook. Or ANY mixer with a dough hook. This is a huge step that cannot be deleted, so don't even think about it. The chicken/marinade mix needs to run at least a 30 minute course through the mixer on a slow setting. You will know it is done because all of the fat will be separated to look almost like fatty off-white snow, and the whole mix will look like pukey slop. This is good. Trust me.

Once your chicken is a slop that you wouldn't even want to feed to the pigs, it's high time you fired up a flat-top grill (one of those electric ones will do nicely). You are shooting for 500 degrees, which, is probably the highest setting on most of those grills. Be SURE that the grill is SUPER hot before adding your chicken - if you have access to a infared thermometer, this would be an excellent time to whip that gadget out and impress all of your neighbors.

Add a bit of vegetable oil to your grill and spread it out with a steel spatula. Add a scoop of your chicken slop (enough to decently cover the grill, but not so much as to dramatically kill the heat) - and spread it into a nice thin layer with your spatula. Use a chopping motion to do this, DO NOT flatten the chicken with the broad end of the tool. PLEASE. You've come this far, don't ruin it now!

Cook the first side of the chicken until golden brown and delicious - about 3 mintues. Don't play with it. Just let it grill and carmelize. Then flip and do the same with the second side. When both sides of the chicken are finished, add a happy scoop of your sauce and use your spatula and a tine fork (like you would use for grilling) to chop up your chicken teriyaki into lovely bite-sized pieces. Allow to cook for another 30 seconds or so, and plate onto your rice and/or veggies. Add another ladle of sauce, and you are in Sarku/Sakkio heaven.

Play with it a bit. You WILL develop the right flavors. Don't be afraid to experiment, and don't get frustrated if your first batch isn't a Food Court delicacy.

Any questions / comments / misc. trivia - feel free to ask.

Sayonara!
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 01-05-2007, 02:10 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Home Chef
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Burr Ridge, IL
Posts: 677
MikeLM is on a distinguished road
Thumbs up

Keitaro-
Copied your entire almost-recipe and am gonna try it.

Help and info like this is what makes this site.

Thanks and welcome.

Fun read, too. Every think about writing a cookbook?

Mike
__________________
travelling gourmand
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 01-05-2007, 05:15 PM
Myplaceoryours's Avatar
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Line Cook
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 79
Myplaceoryours is on a distinguished road
Default

The only question I have about the posted recipe is that all of the dietary information I've read about Sakkio Chicken indicates it has zero grams of sugar so I don't understand the brown sugar ingredient.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 01-08-2007, 02:56 PM
notoriouslyKEN's Avatar
Registered User
Culinary Experience: At home cook
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: DC/MD/VA
Posts: 73
notoriouslyKEN is on a distinguished road
Default

OMG!! Thanks for this recipe. I think I am actually addicted to Sarku's teriyaki Chicken. I have tried to replicate it numerous times without success using both breast and thigh meat. Any clue on the hot sauce they offer too? I always dump 2 of those on top of the chicken (with extra sauce). I love it spicy.
__________________
"Not all chemicals are bad. Without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, for example, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer." -Dave Barry
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 04-20-2007, 09:50 AM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 1
dimnicholas is on a distinguished road
Wink hellosakkio sarku japan

thank you for recipe. how about salad that they have.. and rice white and golden color???

could you give me recipe for these??

Olga
my e-mail address is olgaclevelandrussia@yahoo.com








Quote:
Originally Posted by Keitaro427 View Post
Hello,

I am a chef who worked for a Sarku Japan for 4 years while in High School. I learned every recipe they ever had, and remember them off by heart. For legal reasons, I cannot give you EXACT recipes, but I can lead you on the path to the ever-elusive Sarku (or Sakkio, as it was called when I worked there) Chicken Teriyaki.

First, the chicken. It's thigh meat, people. A breast will never come close to the texture (or moisture level) you are seeking. Specifically, boneless/skinless YOUNG chicken thigh meat. Since I have found it difficult to purchase this for home cooking, you will have to buy a big package of chicken thighs and remove the bones and skin. (leave SOME of the fat, it is necessary and you will understand why later) Cut your chicken into bite-sized pieces (preferably while it is still partially frozen).

Second, the chicken IS marinated. But not in teriyaki sauce. The sauce in and of itself could take up an entire chapter of a novel, but we'll touch on that later. Put your chicken in a large tupperware container. Add water, cooking sherry, granulated garlic, vegetable oil, white pepper, and soy sauce. Again, can't give out exacts, but try a ratio of 4 water to 1 soy sauce to 1 oil. A decent amount of pepper, and just a tiny bit of garlic (granulated garlic is strong, and the finished product should have an UNDERTONE of garlic, but not a FLAVOR of garlic). Add more liquid than you think you need - the chicken will "drink" a lot of this fluid. Put on a pair of gloves and massage the **** out of this, combining all the ingredients, and coating all the chicken. If the chicken is still too frozen, let it set for a while to thaw, and then massage it.

FUN LITTLE BIT OF KNOWLEDGE: We at Sakkio used to refer to this process as "pushing" the chicken - until a goofy man from the Sarku/Sakkio Head Office refered to it as "massaging" the chicken. So I use the term "massage" with a smirk and a tongue-in-cheek inside joke.

"Massage" your chicken every few hours, and allow it to marinate in the fridge overnight. Yes, overnight. You didn't think something so wonderful was going to be made up in 5 mintues, did you?! Plus, the path to making good teriyaki sauce is long and tedious - so you will need that day to contemplate the chemistry of SAUCE.

TRUE Sakkio sauce was composed of only five components. That's right. Just five. The problem there lies within the fact that ONE of the ingredients is extremely complicated to make and nearly impossible to duplicate: the soup base. You read correctly, folks - the ultimate secret ingredient in Sakkio sauce is a complex soup stock simmered in a GIANT sauce pot overnight. The soup itself was a myriad of ingredients, many of them scraps, from the Sakkio kitchen. Beef trimmings and bones, carrots, onions, cabbage pieces, pulverized ginger fingers, smashed whole garlic bulbs, and more stacked into the pot - which was then topped off with water. The result, after a nights worth of simmering and straining - was a somewhat fatty golden-colored BROTH OF LIFE, packed with nutrients and a distinctive flavor, which, like so many other Sakkio items, carried untertones of many things but the flavor of nothing. The stock itself made a glorious breakfast when simply poured over rice, and gave the lucky diner a days worth of energy.

While you are obviously welcome to experiment with a "from scratch" Sakkio soup base, you will save time, money, and broken spirits by cheating your way out of it. The Sakkio stock was a one of a kind creation, and unless you have access to an Asian kitchen, a ginormous sauce pot, and about sixty-five years of Chinese culinary know-how - your stock will always come out stinking up your home, and tasting like oily over-cooked cabbage/onion water. Trust me.

I recommend getting yourself a good chicken stock, one that is NOT salty (these flavors must be DEEP, but not OVERPOWERING), and simmering it with some roughly chopped ginger and garlic, thus giving you a tasty Asian-flavoured soup. If you can find an Asian stock to work with that already incorporates these flavors - even better!

Once you have an acceptable soup (remember - NOT salty - we will be adding plenty of salt element in a moment. Your soup should be flavorful, but rediculously bland at the same time), it's time to go to town. Both Kikkomann Soy AND Terkiyaki sauce are used here, in a ratio of about 3 parts teriyaki to one part soy. The soup should be about 60% of your total product, with the soy/teriyaki mix making up the rest.

Next it's time for the sweetening of the beast. This comes, not from honey (as I have heard suggested), but from brown sugar. Since there are not any numbers here, the amount is difficult to guage - I recommend warming your sauce over a burner and slowly adding brown sugar until you are satisfied with the level of sweetness.

Now you have yourself a sweet and savory brown sauce that is just DYING to be drizzled over grilled chicken.... but wait.... this sauce is very watery - not the lovely "sticks to every bite" consistency that you crave? Fear not! A quick slurry (mixture of cornstarch and cold water) will do the trick nicely.

Bring your sauce up to a boil and SLOWLY - REALLY SLOWLY - add some of your slurry. The consistency is very important here, and there is no turning back. Stir in your slurry with a wire whisk, as to not create any lumps. Give it thirty seconds or so to accept the starches and thicken up. Your sauce should ONLY be thick enough to leave a glaze on the spoon, or stick to the side of the pot if you splash a little up there - no thicker. If it's still like water, add a little slurry. If it follows the aforementioned properties, you're sauce is done. Congratulations. You have just developed a beautiful, beautiful thing.

This sauce can be refridgerated overnight while your chicken marinates, or made up the same day that you are cooking - it matters not because you will have to warm it up for serving either way (careful to warm it slowly and stir frequently - once thickened, the sauce will want to burn very easily).

Now back to the lovely chicken. You have now "massaged" and marinated your chicken overnight, and it's time to mix it. Mix it. As in with a mixer. Or, if you are REALLY lucky, a Kitchenaid Mixer with a dough hook. Or ANY mixer with a dough hook. This is a huge step that cannot be deleted, so don't even think about it. The chicken/marinade mix needs to run at least a 30 minute course through the mixer on a slow setting. You will know it is done because all of the fat will be separated to look almost like fatty off-white snow, and the whole mix will look like pukey slop. This is good. Trust me.

Once your chicken is a slop that you wouldn't even want to feed to the pigs, it's high time you fired up a flat-top grill (one of those electric ones will do nicely). You are shooting for 500 degrees, which, is probably the highest setting on most of those grills. Be SURE that the grill is SUPER hot before adding your chicken - if you have access to a infared thermometer, this would be an excellent time to whip that gadget out and impress all of your neighbors.

Add a bit of vegetable oil to your grill and spread it out with a steel spatula. Add a scoop of your chicken slop (enough to decently cover the grill, but not so much as to dramatically kill the heat) - and spread it into a nice thin layer with your spatula. Use a chopping motion to do this, DO NOT flatten the chicken with the broad end of the tool. PLEASE. You've come this far, don't ruin it now!

Cook the first side of the chicken until golden brown and delicious - about 3 mintues. Don't play with it. Just let it grill and carmelize. Then flip and do the same with the second side. When both sides of the chicken are finished, add a happy scoop of your sauce and use your spatula and a tine fork (like you would use for grilling) to chop up your chicken teriyaki into lovely bite-sized pieces. Allow to cook for another 30 seconds or so, and plate onto your rice and/or veggies. Add another ladle of sauce, and you are in Sarku/Sakkio heaven.

Play with it a bit. You WILL develop the right flavors. Don't be afraid to experiment, and don't get frustrated if your first batch isn't a Food Court delicacy.

Any questions / comments / misc. trivia - feel free to ask.

Sayonara!
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 04-20-2007, 11:02 AM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Camp Pendleton, CA
Posts: 70
DevilNuts is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Keitaro427 View Post
First, the chicken. It's thigh meat, people. A breast will never come close to the texture (or moisture level) you are seeking. Specifically, boneless/skinless YOUNG chicken thigh meat.

This is something I figured out by accident about 6 months ago. I was shopping on a tight budget, and I came across a package of skinless/boneless thighs that were on sale. I chopped them up and voila! Perfect in rice/ stir fry.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 04-20-2007, 11:58 AM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Can't boil water
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: SLC UT
Posts: 2,579
phatch is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Myplaceoryours View Post
The only question I have about the posted recipe is that all of the dietary information I've read about Sakkio Chicken indicates it has zero grams of sugar so I don't understand the brown sugar ingredient.
This is the joy of the nutrition information rules.

First to consider is serving size of the sauce. It was probably something on the order of a tablespoon. If you look at the instructions for this recipe, in a tablespoon of sauce, there will be very little sugar. Some sugar but very little. If the amount of sugar is under a gram in the serving size portion, rounding rules apply and they can declare it as zero.

And so zero calorie food is born as well.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 04-20-2007, 02:09 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Montréal
Posts: 284
Ninja_59 is on a distinguished road
Smile

Hi

Mine may not be japanese but the taste is honestly excellent


Tériaki Marinade

This is my adaptation, I was in a rush to eat


1/4 cup soya sauce

1/4 cup honey

3/4 cup canola oil

2 tablespoon of wine vinegar

2 garlic cloves ( minced )

4 french shallots( I use french shallots ), minced very finely


1/4 teaspoon of fresh ginger


Mix all ingredients & marinate 4 hrs to 48 hrs( in the fridge )

This marinade is good for all types of meats & poultry


This marinade is worth trying out, the taste is simply divine


Cheers
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 04-30-2008, 10:09 PM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: I Just Like Food
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 1
steelydan12 is on a distinguished road
Default is it the same thing for beef teriyaki

hi just want to know if it is the same procedure for the beef teriyaki need help guys ty.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 05-01-2008, 10:34 AM
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Montréal
Posts: 284
Ninja_59 is on a distinguished road
Default

I tried both, chicken & beef, tastes great
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Sponsored links
Foodservicesingles.com
Reply


Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
What goes with grilled chicken teriyaki!!! blackknight81 Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion 3 10-14-2005 09:15 AM
Chicken Stock skilletlicker Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion 11 10-07-2005 07:26 AM
Slow Roasted Sticky Chicken ***** mudbug Recipes 28 10-15-2001 04:25 PM
Honeyed Chicken Teriyaki Afra Recipes 2 03-22-2001 05:29 PM
Chinese Red Cooked Duck...I think TopChef Recipes 1 11-27-2000 08:54 PM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:31 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.9
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.1.0
© 1998 - 2006 ChefTalk.com • All rights reservedAd Management by RedTyger

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117