You get a packet of orange sauce, about a cup of uncooked rice, a packet of seasonings and 4-5 red peppers |
I promised I would report back on my box of Wanchai Ferry that I got from My BlogSpark a few weeks ago. The other night I saw it sitting on my pantry shelf and decided to go for it.
Before you get all excited, I'll remind you that this is Chinese food in a box. Expectations were pretty low to begin with.
Contents:
- A pouch or orange sauce
- A pouch of dried red peppers
- A pouch of rice
- A pouch of seasonings and corn starch
You provide:
- Chopped raw chicken breast
- Optional veggies like broccoli or green peppers. I went with broccoli.
Results:
There are a fair number of steps in the Wanchai process, so you need to pay attention. The labeling of the instructions I didn't find super easy to follow, but that could've been me. A couple of tips:
- Make your own rice. The portion of rice is STINGY. The expectation that this one pouch will make 5 servings was obviously derived from a planet where 1 tablespoon of rice constitutes a serving.
- This makes TONS of sauce. If you don't make enough rice, you will have some sort of orange chicken soup on your plate
- Ignore the directions where it says you can use a zip lock bag to coat the chicken. I found the chicken and coating mix stuck all over the inside of the bag. A bowl would have been better, or make sure you really, REALLY pat your chicken dry
- We ixnayed the red peppers after reading the warning they were "VERY HOT."
Overall: B
- The product had good flavor, but it was a little overpowering.
- The kids pronounced it as OK
- My husband would not recommend ever buying it again, however. I think the lack of rice it came with was a big turnoff. I should have realized this ahead of time but didn't.
- Paired with another side item, like egg rolls or fried rangoons and enough rice, it is a decent substitute for takeout.
- At nearly $5 a box, I'd suggest they get rid of the rice altogether and just market the sauce and powder mix on their own for about $2. I can get a huge portion of real Chinese takeout from the local place for $5-$6.
2 comments:
I have never used the dry kit, but have bought the frozen meals several times; including the Orange Chicken. We really like them a lot. I think the frozen ones taste like restaurant take-out. Just my two cents' worth!
I'll have to try the frozen version. Thanks for the tip? Do you know how much it costs?
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