Warr-Shu-Gai Almond Boneless Chicken

"Warr Shu Gai or Almond Boneless Chicken, like chop suey, is a Chinese-inspired American dish. So far as I have been able to determine, it originated in Detroit. It was a favorite dish of my childhood there. Every Cantonese restaurant in the area serves it, but I've never been able to find it outside of Michigan. Descriptions of it to Chinese restaurant personnel elsewhere have been met with blank stares. "
 
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Ingredients:
16
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ingredients

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directions

  • Prepare sauce: In a small saucepan, stir together cornstarch and water until smooth.
  • Gradually stir in chicken broth, mushrooms (if desired), butter, soy sauce and bouillon granules.
  • Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring constantly.
  • Let boil 1 minute. Keep warm.
  • Prepare batter: Beat together cornstarch, flour, baking powder, egg and water until smooth.
  • Coat each piece of chicken with batter.
  • Pour vegetable oil into a large skillet or wok to the depth of 1/2 inch; heat to 375 degrees.
  • Cook coated chicken pieces in oil, turning once, until golden -- 5 to 7 minutes.
  • Drain on pa per towels.
  • Cut chicken diagonally into strips.
  • Reassemble strips in chicken breast shapes and place on a bed of shredded lettuce. Sprinkle with almonds and green onion.
  • Spoon sauce over chicken and serve immediately.
  • Makes four to six servings.
  • It's been some time since I last made this, but I recall that the batter seemed not quite the same, but the rest is authentic. This can also be made with duck, in which case it becomes Warr Shu Opp.

Questions & Replies

  1. another 'piece' of the recipe just popped up---"sprinkle with almonds"-mystery solved. Numbskull that I am---I missed it. (but is still isn't listed in the ingredients)
     
  2. I don't see any almonds in the ingredients for your "almond boneless chicken" (warr shu gai) I am confused. What did I miss?
     
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Reviews

  1. This is definitely not something you can get in south Florida where I now live. I used to order this every week at my local Chinese restaurant, and still do whenever I visit Michigan.<br/>This recipe is good. The sauce is right on but the batter is wrong. First of all, forget the baking powder. Instead of using water, try clubsoda. It will give your chicken a crispier tempura like texture.Make sure the batter is on the thin side so that it dredges off easily. Use peanut oil or don't make this dish! Regular veg or corn oil cannot get hot enough to really crisp the chicken without setting off smoke alarms!<br/>Also, the sauce does require 1/4 teaspoon of real Almond Extract to give it the authentic restaurant flavor we Michiganders know and love. Forget the mushrooms. They just water down the gravy. Use Iceberg Lettuce. It is the coldest, crunchiest to offset the warmth of the chicken and gravy.<br/>I know this works because I experimented with this recipe until it was just like my favorite Chinese haunts in suburban Detroit.<br/>Also, change out the chicken for duck and make it Wor Su Opp!
     
  2. When I was a boy in Detroit I worked as a bus boy in Wing Hong's Chinese American Restaurant. I'm sure Wingy is either very old or dead by this time but the cries of "War Sho GAI" still ring in my ears (along with our american response "wash your OWN guy!!") My first attempt at this receipe was ok but not completely successful, never the less the taste was what I remembered and that earns it a five. Be sure to use THIN cuts of boneless chicken so it fries up crisp. Too thick a piece makes the coating soggy and therefore less edible. This sauce will work best with rendered chicken fat. I save what renders out when I broil chicken for other receipes for just this kind of dish. Thanks for posting this Tonkcats. It was a wonderful addition to my cookbook.
     
  3. Makes a lot of gravy for two chicken breasts. Maybe serve 4 instead. Don't forget chopped scallions, makes all the difference.
     
  4. I would like to say that it originated on the east side of cleveland. Pretty sure it predates my mother's birth in 67 if not my father's in 65.
     
  5. I made this several months ago, using duck breast. I followed the directions exactly, and it came out very much like our local restaurant used to fix, bit not quite. I'm going to fix it again this week and follow the "club soda" and peanut oil and almond extract. However, I'll keep the mushrooms, using fresh instead of canned to keep the moisture content low. This is one of my favorite ways to make duck breast. Yum!
     
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Tweaks

  1. Please add the almonds (toasted) and green onion to the ingredients listing. Also, I believe that the Sherry should be sprinkled on the breasts and left to marinade BEFORE the sauce is made, and then they should be battered. Thank you so much for this recipe! It's a favorite.
     
  2. This is definitely not something you can get in south Florida where I now live. I used to order this every week at my local Chinese restaurant, and still do whenever I visit Michigan.<br/>This recipe is good. The sauce is right on but the batter is wrong. First of all, forget the baking powder. Instead of using water, try clubsoda. It will give your chicken a crispier tempura like texture.Make sure the batter is on the thin side so that it dredges off easily. Use peanut oil or don't make this dish! Regular veg or corn oil cannot get hot enough to really crisp the chicken without setting off smoke alarms!<br/>Also, the sauce does require 1/4 teaspoon of real Almond Extract to give it the authentic restaurant flavor we Michiganders know and love. Forget the mushrooms. They just water down the gravy. Use Iceberg Lettuce. It is the coldest, crunchiest to offset the warmth of the chicken and gravy.<br/>I know this works because I experimented with this recipe until it was just like my favorite Chinese haunts in suburban Detroit.<br/>Also, change out the chicken for duck and make it Wor Su Opp!
     
  3. I always serve this on rice with iceberg lettuce on the side so that the lettuce stays crisp. I also add Mushroom Better than Bullion but use low sodium broth and soy sauce or it will be too salty.
     

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