2008年2月24日星期日

Be careful using RRSP to buy home

Many rules apply to tax-free withdrawals

Ownership status, closing dates can decide eligibility

My client was very excited about her new condominium when she came to see me, to review the builder's agreement of purchase and sale. She went over the points I had raised with the builder's sales rep and then went to her bank to withdraw money from her Registered Retirement Savings Plan, or RRSP, for the first of four $5,000 deposits.

It was only then she discovered, to her dismay, that the federal Home Buyers' Plan would not allow her to use her RRSP money to buy a condominium scheduled for an occupancy closing in June, 2007. Here's how the Home Buyers' Plan, or HBP, works and why my client couldn't use her own RRSP money for a deposit on her dream residence. Ordinarily, withdrawals from a taxpayer's RRSP are added to that year's taxable income and subject to income tax at regular personal rates. Under the HBP, withdrawals from a taxpayer's RRSP are not subject to tax, as long as the required repayments are made when they come due. Up to $20,000 can be withdrawn from an RRSP to buy or build a qualifying home for a taxpayer who is a first-time buyer or for a related, disabled person. If the taxpayer is buying the qualifying home with his or her spouse or common-law partner, or even with other individuals in partnership, each buyer can withdraw up to $20,000. Naturally, the money cannot be withdrawn if it is not already in the plan, or if it is not cashable — as in the case of locked-in pension benefits, or guaranteed investment certificates which have not reached maturity. In order to qualify to participate in the HBP, a number of pre-conditions have to be met before applying to withdraw RRSP funds:
  • You have to enter into a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home.
  • You have to intend to occupy the qualifying home as your principal place of residence.
  • You have to be considered a first-time homebuyer.
  • Your HBP balance on Jan. 1 of the year of the withdrawal has to be zero. Under the Income Tax Act, a first-time buyer is a person who has not owned a principal residence for five years preceding the withdrawal, and who has not lived in a principal residence owned by his or her spouse or common-law partner for the same period of time. This definition is often confused with the first-time buyer definition under the Ontario Land Transfer Tax Act. Under that law, the first $2,000 in land transfer tax is forgiven on a purchase of a house from a builder if the buyer has never — ever — owned his or her own house in the past. After qualifying, several additional conditions must be met at the time of the RRSP withdrawal:
  • Neither the taxpayer or the spouse or common-law partner can own the qualifying house more than 30 days before a withdrawal is made.
  • You have to be a resident of Canada.
  • You have to fill out form T1036.
  • You have to receive all the withdrawals in the same year.
  • You cannot withdraw more than $20,000 per person.
  • You have to buy or build the qualifying home before Oct. 1 of the year after the withdrawal is made. It's this last point that effectively makes it impossible for virtually anyone buying a new home or condominium from a builder to use the RRSP money as a deposit at the time of signing the deal. If the funds are withdrawn at the beginning of January in any year, the house must be purchased, the deal closed and the deed registered within 21 months — before Oct. 1 of the next year. If the withdrawal is made late in the year, the Oct. 1 deadline can be as little as nine months later. In today's market, many closings — especially condominiums — do not have an occupancy or closing date within that time. As a result, RRSP money cannot be used as an upfront deposit, and that's unfortunate. It's not unusual today for agreements of purchase and sale to permit closings to occur as late as five years after the offer is signed. Some pending transactions now in my office have estimated closing dates as late as 2008, but with the built-in extensions, those closings could take place in 2010. At the time the Income Tax Act provisions for the Home Buyers' Plan were written, closing dates of new homes did not contemplate delays as long as these. If the Oct. 1 time limit in the Income Tax Act could be extended to reflect the realities of today's building industry, more people could take advantage of the HBP to make that all-important first deposit on a new home. Once the home is purchased and the money is spent, the taxpayer has up to 15 years to repay the amount withdrawn under the HBP. Minimum annual payments are one-fifteenth of the total initial withdrawal, and the first repayment is due the second year after the year of the withdrawal. Larger payments can be made, but failure to make a payment will result in that amount being added to the taxpayer's income in that year and the loss of the ability to play catch-up for the missing payment in future years. I asked my client if she could withdraw the deposit money from her RRSP, pay tax on it and use the remainder as a deposit, but that would have required a withdrawal of more than $30,000 to net the necessary $20,000, and the RRSP wasn't that big. As a result, my client is being forced by the HBP regulations to buy a resale residence instead of the new condo of her dreams. Maybe it's time for the government to rethink some of the HBP rules. Details of the HBP are available on the Canada Revenue Agency website: http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tax/individuals/topics/rrsp
  • and http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tax/individuals/topics/rrsp/withdrawals/hbp/menu-e.html .


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Bob Aaron is a Toronto real estate lawyer. He can be reached by email at bob@aaron.ca, phone 416-364-9366 or fax 416-364-3818. Visit the column archives at http://www.aaron.ca.

    2008年2月22日星期五

    NBA BASKETBALL ONLINE TV

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    http://channelsurfing.net/

    2008年2月7日星期四

    Five Homeownership Tax Myths


    Owning a home tops the dream list for most Americans, and for plenty of good reasons. It's a shelter for your family, a gathering place for your friends and a good long-term investment.

    Tax breaks are also frequently cited as motivation for moving from renting to owning, and there are many ways a home can cut your tax bill.

    More from Bankrate.com:

    Don't give Uncle Sam early access to cash

    Who qualifies as a dependent?

    Getting tax help to care for your parents

    But, as is often the case with the U.S. tax code, homeownership tax benefits are not always clear-cut. That frequently leads to some bad information floating around.

    While myths, half-truths and misconceptions may abound, we've narrowed it down to five that, if you buy into them, could cost you.

    Half-truths, misconceptions and just plain hogwash

    1. Mortgage interest will reduce my tax bill.
    2. All costs related to my home are deductible.
    3. I must use home profits to buy a new home.
    4. Putting my children on the deed is tax-smart.
    5. If I take a loss on a sale, I can write it off.

    1. My mortgage interest will reduce my tax bill.

    This is true for the majority of homeowners, but not for all. And this tax break won't work forever.

    To take tax advantage of your home loan's interest, you must itemize and come up with a total that exceeds your standard amount. On 2007 tax returns, the standard deductions are $5,350 for single taxpayers, $7,850 for head of household filers and $10,700 for married couples who file jointly. These amounts increase a bit each year to account for inflation.

    "Given home prices these days, most owners are itemizing," says Mark Luscombe, principal tax analyst with CCH Inc. of Riverwoods, Ill. By the time they count mortgage interest, property taxes and other nonhome deductions, such as state taxes and charitable gifts, their itemized totals easily surpass their allowable standard deductions.

    But most is not all.

    Want More Money-Saving Tax Tips?
    Visit our 2008 Tax Center

    Taxpayers who buy a home late in the year, for instance, might find the standard deduction is more beneficial, at least initially, says Kathy Tollaksen, a CPA at Sikich LLP in Aurora, Ill. In these cases, where you make only a few payments in a tax year, depending on your loan you might not pay much interest, at least not enough to exceed standard amounts.

    Timing also could reduce or eliminate other home-related tax breaks.

    "Quite a few states have real estate taxes that are calculated in arrears. That is, they have already been paid or mostly paid (by the seller) by the time you buy," says Tollaksen. "In the first year, you're seeing taxes that are someone else's responsibility so you're not getting the full tax value of your real estate taxes."

    The benefit of mortgage interest also could be a myth if you've lived in your home for a long time. In this case, you likely are paying more toward your loan's principal instead of interest. So homeowners at the end of a loan term don't get much, if any, from this tax break.

    Or, as Bob D. Scharin, senior tax analyst and editor of Warren, Gorham & Lamont/RIA's monthly tax journal "Practical Tax Strategies," puts it, "Every deductible expense you incur may not produce a deduction."

    2. All costs related to my home are deductible.

    There are no two ways about this one. It's flat-out false.

    "Some buyers think, hope, they can write off everything connected with the house," says Tollaksen. "Not so. Association fees and property insurance costs are not deductible."

    Neither, in most cases, is private mortgage insurance, which your lender probably required if your down payment was less than 20 percent. However, a new law changes the deductibility of PMI for mortgages originated or refinanced between Jan. 1, 2007, and Dec. 31, 2009.

    If you got your mortgage and policy in that time frame, you might be able to deduct your insurance premium payments. The law also extends beyond private insurance to others, including FHA, VA and rural housing.

    There are some limits, though. The PMI deduction is phased out for taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes exceeding $100,000 and is totally elimitnated once AGI reaches $110,000.

    Don't try to deduct basic maintenance, repair or home improvement costs either.

    Tollaksen says, "I've had people say, 'I put a new roof on my home; can I deduct that?' No."

    If you try to write off these expenses, expect to hear from the Internal Revenue Service and to pay a higher tax bill (and possible penalties and interest) after you refigure your taxes without the disallowed deductions.

    However, you still need to keep track of these expenses.

    "If you convert the home to rental property or sell it," she says, "these costs will affect the property's tax basis."

    A home's basis is critical when it comes time to sell. And selling is also a tax area in which many people fall for myth No. 3.

    3. I must use money from my home sale to buy another residence.

    This used to be the only way to get around a tax bill on a home sale. Even then, you were only able to defer taxes by purchasing a new residence of equal or greater value with the profits from your other house. When you sold your final house, you'd owe those long-deferred taxes you had rolled over throughout the years. Home sellers age 55 or older were allowed a once-in-a-lifetime tax exemption of up to $125,000 in sale profit.

    But on May 7, 1997, home-sale tax law changed. Still, almost a decade later, many homeowners are confused about the tax implications of selling.

    "I recently heard some neighbors talking about having to buy another house when they sell to avoid the taxes," says Scharin. "If the last time you sold the house was before 1997, you're thinking of those old rules."

    Don't worry. Most taxpayers still get a nice break. Now, if you live in the house for two of the five years before you sell, the IRS won't collect tax on sale profit of up to $250,000 if you're single or $500,000 if you and your spouse file a joint return.

    "The law change has really affected people's behavior," says Luscombe. "Before, it didn't really matter much whether you sold frequently or held onto your home for a long term. You, basically, could roll over the gain into a larger home and people could avoid tax until they sold for the final time without putting it into a replacement home.

    "Now the law rewards people who sell frequently. In this current market, people who sell every couple of years can get and keep their gain," Luscombe says. "But people who buy and hold might find they have reached the point where the gain exceeds the exclusion."

    That means they face unexpectedly high tax bills, even at the lower 15-percent capital gains rate. The profit could also push them into a higher overall tax bracket, meaning they would make too much to claim some deductions, credits or exemptions. They also might even end up owing alternative minimum tax.

    Another problematic consequence, says Luscombe, is that when the new rules took effect, people basically quit keeping records related to their homes.

    "They thought: Since we're never going to be taxed on the sale, there's no need to keep track of what we paid and what improvements we made," he says. The improvements add to your home's basis, which you subtract from the sale price to determine your profit and whether any of it is taxable.

    "Now with inflation in the housing market, a lot of people are selling homes in excess of the gains without any way to show that their tax bill should be less," says Luscombe.

    4. Putting my child on my home's title is a smart tax move.

    Worries about taxes on a residence sometimes lead homeowners to fall for this myth. It's a particularly tricky one, because it combines confusion about residential taxes with the even more complex estate-tax area.

    "Sometimes we'll hear about taxpayers who, in doing some quick back-of-the-envelope estate planning, decide to put their home in the children's names," says Tollaksen. "The thinking is: My son or daughter won't have to worry about this when I die."

    The goals: Avoid probate, keep the home in the family and get the property out of the parent's estate for those tax purposes. Such a move, however, could produce other tax problems for your children.

    Unless the child moves into the newly deeded house with the parent and lives there long enough (two of the previous five years) to make the house the child's main residence, too, says Tollaksen, the son or daughter won't get the $250,000 or $500,000 residential tax break when the child later decides to sell. Without establishing primary residency in the house, either before or after the parent passes away, the child's ownership is viewed as an investment property.

    Other parents opt to simply add a child's name along with theirs on the title to the house, known legally as a joint tenancy. It doesn't mean that all the owners live in the home, but simply that two or more people hold title to the property.

    This, too, can produce tax complications.

    Generally, when someone inherits a property, its value is stepped up. That means when the owner dies, the property becomes worth its fair market value that day.

    But if the child co-owns the property with his parent, the child doesn't get to fully use stepped-up basis. Tax law considers the addition of the child's name to the title as a gift. And, along with that half of the home, the child receives half the basis that his or her parent has in the property.

    This is known as the property's carry-over basis. And it could be costly.

    Consider, for example, that you bought your house many years ago and your basis in the property is $50,000. You add your daughter to the title. When you die, she inherits your half of the home, which by then is worth $250,000. A buyer offers $300,000 for the home.

    Pretty good deal, right? From a real estate perspective, yes. But not when it comes to your daughter's tax bill on the sale.

    What had been done with the best parental intention turned out to carry a big price because of this homeownership tax myth.

    5. If I take a capital loss when I sell my home, I can write it off.

    This myth, like No. 2, was probably started by wishful homeowners. Sorry, it's just as wrong.

    It is true that real estate, like any other asset, has the potential to go down as well as up in value. But unlike most of those other holdings, you cannot write off any loss you suffer if you must sell your main residence for less than what you paid.

    That's because your residence, under tax law, is considered personal property.

    "When you sell your home for a loss, it's not like other capital items," says Scharin. "You don't get to deduct personal property that you sell for a loss."

    "It's the same as any personal property that declines in value," says Luscombe, "like that old TV you sold to the neighbor kid so he could take it to college. You sold it for much less than you paid, but you can't take a loss."

    You do, however, have to pay tax on gains you make when selling personal property.

    But at least you now know the difference between fact and fiction when it comes to your residential property, which will help you make appropriate real estate and tax decisions in the future.

    Copyrighted, Bankrate.com. All rights reserved.

    又是一年报税季:2007年节税的十步骤(图) - 新闻直通车 news.wenxuecity.com

    又是一年报税季:2007年节税的十步骤(图) - 新闻直通车 news.wenxuecity.com

    2007年11月3日星期六

    “解密”夫妻肺片

    “解密”夫妻肺片


    淡鸟

    俺这个号称“解密”, 其实也就是近两年来对这个菜反复捉摸后心得的一个总结,今天写出来希望能对大家功克这道菜有所帮助。 如果你真的知道这夫妻肺片的秘方,可千万不要吝啬!

    不过俺一直怀疑这所谓秘方的存在,即便有,俺认为充其量也不过是各家各店的枝末变化而已。其实话说回来,有没有秘方并不重要,重要的是味道可不可以模仿,就像Cocacola, 没有秘方并不妨碍其他厂家配置出味道相近足以乱真的 XXcola来。

    如果说夫妻肺(废)片是最受广大食客欢迎的一道川菜,恐怕举手的人有不少。和其他几个流行川菜相比(如麻婆豆腐,宫宝鸡丁,水煮肉,辣子鸡等),夫妻肺片明显是难度比较高的。虽然俺不敢说其他几味川菜没什么技术含量,起码能把这几个菜鼓捣得像模像样的大有人在。而夫妻肺片则不同,在国外即使在大城市最好的川菜馆里恐怕也未必点得到让你满意的肺片。

    “主料;牛肉,牛杂(肚,心,舌,头皮),辅料:红油,油酥花生,白卤水,复制酱油,芝麻,花椒面,盐,味精,白酒. 八角8只,花椒5克,桂皮10克包纱布袋,。做法:牛肉牛杂加卤水,盐,白酒75克煮料至熟而不烂.晾凉,片成4厘米长,2.6厘米宽的薄片.加红油,卤水,复制酱油,盐,味精,芝麻花椒面,芹菜段伴匀.”这段文字据说是根据川菜大师陈松如的方子而来,大家随便到网上找找或者拿本川菜图书翻翻,这夫妻肺片的做法基本上就是这样,差别不大。俺认为这方子虽然不错,可惜缺少了很多重要的细节,尤其是关于红油,味汁的调制。那么做好这道菜的关键到底在哪呢?

    根据俺的仔细研究和反复尝试,总结这道菜的调味关键有三个环节:红油,复合酱油,和卤汁的使用。

    先说红油。这个问题看到很多朋友讨论过,有人认为这红油的制作是不需要除辣椒外的任何调料的,亦无须长时间熬制。 我认为这是把红油和油泼辣子混淆了。个人认为这个红油是做好很多麻辣川味凉菜的首要关键,比如夫妻肺片和蒜泥白肉,这红油应含有多种香料的复合香气,浓郁而具有回味,而简单的油泼辣子是无法满足这种要求的。这里顺便说一句,本人其实是油泼辣子的忠实拥护者,一直认为简单的油泼辣子(当然需要辣子新鲜优质)是真正的百吃不厌。只不过对于夫妻肺片来讲,油泼辣子并不合适。

    除气味以外,红油的另一个关键就在这个“红”字上,鲜红发亮的红油给人以感官的刺激,让人食欲大增。要是你调出的“红”油黄不黄白不白,那么拌出的肺片味道再好也要大打折扣了。

    再谈复合酱油。所谓复合酱油就是用多种香料调料与酱油混合熬制而成的再加工酱油,这个不是能直接从商店里买来的,需要你自己动手。酱油要尽量选用高质(废话!)并且咸度较低的。因为经过较长时间熬制后的复制酱油比较浓稠,如果原料酱油本身过咸就不大合适了。复合酱油是这个夫妻肺片调味的另一关键,如果只用简单的酱油(包括老抽生抽)这肺片任你大力咀嚼回味恐怕也是难以悠长滴。除调味外,复合酱油还起到附加的调色作用。

    川菜馆子里的一盘夫妻肺片往往大半的牛肉牛杂都浸在红油里,诱人是不必说了,可这正是俺们这些妄想仿冒天下一切美食的家庭厨师们最头痛心痛的问题——有多少人在吃过那盘子里的片片之后动过要把那半盘红油端回家去的念头?反正我是有的。

    那么那红彤彤油亮亮的真的都是红油么?

    当然不是。这个不用说大家也知道——菜谱上不是明明白白写着么“加白卤水。。。”真正的问题是:这个卤水到底要加多少呢?这个恐怕心里有谱的就不多了。

    经过俺的反复试验,这卤水和红油的用量比例可以控制在大约 1:1左右(当然这个比例是建立在一定的红油绝对用量上的),希望这个消息能减轻各位拌肺片时一半的心痛:)不过,虽然掺了一半水,你看到的那半盘子红油倒差不多实实在在的全是红油,因为大部分的卤水都吸附在牛肉牛杂上了。较高量的使用卤水有两个好处:1。使肺片充分入味;2。避免了肺片因吸附了太多的红油而过于油腻。


    好,罗嗦了半天总算可以进入正题了:具体做法。为了大家易于掌握,俺特意“精确”度量了各种原配料的用量。 注意:“大勺”指Table Spoon, 这个度量比一般咱们家里用来喝汤吃饭的勺子要大一点; “小勺”指Tea Spoon.

    一. 红油熬制:

    原料:

    这个需要选用优质的辣椒面是没错的。看到网上有人讲红油要用几种不同种类的名贵辣椒如四川二金条云南小米椒等,按特定比例混合熬制,这些东西在国内也不一定买得齐,咱们就更不敢奢求了:—)从实际角度出发, 韩国辣椒面是一个不错的选择,优点在于色泽红润自然,辣度适中,又哪里都买得到。

    除辣椒外,我还用约十余种香料/调料,多是家里平时常用的,大家一般在中国超市里也买得到。下面这张图中,按从左到右,从上到下的次序依次是:

    花椒 (1 大勺),丁香(4-6粒,这个味道强烈,不宜多放),桂皮(小指大小2-3块),小茴香(1小勺),白芝麻(1大勺),草果(1-2枚,用刀拍破),八角(又称大料,大茴,3 – 4 颗),紫草(1大勺),辣椒面 (1 Cup),香叶(2 – 4 片),生姜(1块),葱白(数段)。




    (插图1):红油香料合影。

    这里面除了紫草以外基本上都是中国菜最基本的调料。紫草是制作四川红油常用的一种天然色素,加强红油的红色,一般在国内的调料店或中药店买得到,我这个还是几年前托朋友从国内带来的。如果没有紫草也没有关系,单用韩国辣椒面也能有很好的效果。

    桂皮没有就算了,千万不能用老美的cinnamon (肉桂) 代替,切记。

    熬制:将植物油2.5 Cup(约500克,菜籽油为上选,可用大豆色拉油代替)锅中烧开,放置温凉后下葱白姜块,见到有细小的泡沫从姜葱四周升起时将炉火转至最小,然后下入花椒,丁香,桂皮,小茴,草果,八角,香叶,紫草,辣椒面,搅拌匀,熬制30-40分钟,熬制期间时常搅拌一下,以防糊锅底。30-40 分钟后加入白芝麻继续熬制30-40分钟,关火。将熬好的红油晾至温凉后连油带料倒入一个大的玻璃量杯或其他带嘴的玻璃或瓷质容器中,用保鲜膜封好在冰箱冷藏室内放置24-48小时以使辣椒面的辣味,红色,香料的香气进一步溶解于油中。同时找几个洗干净晾干的带盖玻璃瓶备用。




    (插图2):刚熬好的连油带料的红油,看上去颜色很深。


    1-2天后将红油取出,这时你会看到除了香叶,葱段,花椒,八角 和稍许芝麻漂浮于油面外其他调味料都已经和辣椒面一起像淤泥一样牢牢地沉在油低,用筷子拣除浮在上面的香叶,葱段和八角,然后就可以轻松地把红油倒在事先准备好的玻璃瓶中。杯低的“淤泥”弃去不用。




    (插图3):从瓶口往下看,红油的颜色呈深棕红色。






    (插图4):透过阳光来看,两瓶诱人的红色。

    补充说明:
    1.刚熬好的新鲜红油味道最佳,这样一次熬出的红油可以拌4-5次肺片(每次可拌3-5倍饭店里一盘量),用剩的最好放冰箱冷藏室保存,并且尽量在半个月内消灭光。见过一本制作精美的西人编纂的中餐烹调书里白纸黑字写着这四川红油熬好了要封入瓶中60天后开封取用不由大笑,作者八成对于这红油和红酒的区别没太搞清 :)
    2. 三奈是红油增香的一种比较重要的香料,又名山奈,砂姜,沙姜。长相类似老姜,一般分新鲜的,切片晾干的或磨成粉的三种,大家若有幸在超市看到,千万不可客气,买来每次熬红油的时候放一点。
    3. 红油香料的使用可以灵活一些,但是一个重要的原则是那些味道强烈、怪异的要少放或不放,如孜然,咖喱等是万万放不得的。


    二. 复合酱油制作方法:

    原料:优质酱油或生抽1 Cup, 老抽2大勺,白糖3大勺,红糖3大勺,其他调料与红油调料相仿(除辣椒面,紫草和芝麻外其他都要)。

    制法:将酱油等各种原料放在一只小锅中,中火烧开后转最小火熬制40-60分钟,晾凉后将调味料取出倒入一个干净的玻璃瓶中备用。

    补充说明:
    1. 复制酱油熬制糖的重要性很高,熬出的成品应以咸为主但咸中回甜。红糖起到上色作用,使被卤汁稀释后的复制酱油色泽红润。白糖可以冰糖替代。
    2. 熬制时锅不要盖盖,这样酱油中的一部分水分得以蒸发,使成品浓稠。比如我这次1Cup酱油熬了约1小时后还剩2/3多一点。
    3. 向大家推荐两种优质酱油,第一个是台湾产的“万家香”牌陈年酱油,注意这种酱油有几种不同的包装,品质不尽相同,要买那种每桶64 FL OZ (1600 毫升)装的。此酱油在色泽和口味上都属上乘。第二个是美国产“万”字牌酱油(KIKKOMAN Soy Sauce),Costco 有卖,1加仑铁桶装6-7刀,很划算,质量也不错,缺点是有点过咸。


    三.关于卤水:

    这里卤水指用来卤制牛肉牛杂的汤汁,不放酱油,所以是白卤水。因为我一般牛肚用的较多,卤制后的卤水腥味较大,所以在拌肺片时便改用以猪骨和整鸡熬制的高汤,效果更好。如没有高汤可用水1Cup, 鸡精、盐各一小勺,加姜片葱结烧开代替。


    四. 好,终于可以进入夫妻肺片的正式制作:

    1. 将牛肉牛杂切大块洗净后飞水。锅中加水没过牛肉,加料酒,姜块,葱结,八角,花椒,桂皮,小茴等香料大火煮开后转中小火炖至牛肉牛杂熟而微烂(more on this later), 捞出放晾,切薄片备用。
    2. 关键部分来了!取一只大碗或小锅,里面放1/2 Cup卤汁或高汤,加鸡精、精盐各1/2小勺(如果是用现烧的简易高汤替代品就不用再加鸡精和盐了),复制酱油3大勺,花椒面1/2小勺,红油1/2 Cup,麻油(香油)1大勺,花椒油1大勺搅拌匀后加入切好的牛肉牛杂250克,拌匀,装盘(最好用深盘或碗),撒上油酥花生碎(去皮花生米油炸/炒酥黄后用刀压碎或blender打碎)、炒熟的白芝麻、香葱碎、芹菜末(用中国芹菜)和香菜末就可上桌了。




    (插图5):夫妻肺片


    补充说明:
    1. 传说中的牛头皮是买不到了,所以原料中的牛肉最好用牛腱(beef shank)代替,其他牛肚,牛心和牛舌都比较容易购得。牛腱和牛肚都富含胶质,在卤熟放凉后因胶质重新凝结而会变得很硬,所以要煮得烂一些。我一般都是这两种一起放在高压锅中压至熟烂(约40-45分钟),放冰箱冷藏室中彻底冷却后取出切片。
    2. 此红油/卤汁/牛肉牛杂的用量和比例可以确保你拌好的肺片在外观上达到professional 的效果。废片吃完后少量的补一些卤汁和复制酱油即可继续加入牛肉牛杂,如此可以反复添加至少3次牛肉牛杂而不改变成品的效果。注意每次添加的片片要比上一次略少。
    3. 吃完后剩下的红油汤汁用来煮面或拌面味道奇佳。
    4. 最后给大家推荐两种很好的花椒油,一个是“黎红”牌花椒油,另一个是“川老汇”牌花椒油,两种花椒油都是用著名的汉源花椒炼制而成,在国外很难买到优质的花椒,如果你能买到这两种花椒油,就可以一尝四川花椒的香麻了。





    (插图6):夹两片尝尝~~

    总之只要处理好红油、复合酱油、卤汁的调制和红油与卤汁的用量比例这几个环节,你就一定可以拌出具有专业水准的夫妻肺片了。每次俺请三五好友到家里来吃饭时,干掉两斤牛肉牛杂是不成问题的,下次你和朋友一起potluck 时别忘了也拌一道夫妻肺片,俺担保你成为当天聚会最受欢迎的人!




    (插图7):再来片肚片!



    后记:
    其实早想把这篇夫妻肺片写出来跟大家分享,不过一直没什么时间,于是东一下西一下地抠点零碎时间慢慢写了,结果一不小心凑成了这么一篇又臭又长的,其实我写菜谱时有这个臭毛病,总想把自己的经验心得尽可能的仔细描述出来,所以难免显得有些婆婆妈妈(各位私房女同胞不要多心,俺用这个词纯粹是因为这是一个约定俗成的说法,便同夫妻肺片里未必有“肺”一样, :)),即便如此,我做梦也没想到一个菜谱可以写这么长,只好谢谢大家的耐心了~~