azaz...@koroviev.de (Victor Sack) wrote:
>This very nice and easy Sichuanese recipe from Fuchsia Dunlop's new,
>soon-to-be-released book, _Every Grain of Rice_, appeared recently in
>The Telegraph. Much recommended.
Agree on the recipe-- don't know the boo.
-snip-
>combination of seasonings, known as 'garlic paste flavour' (suan ni
>wei), is a Sichuanese classic, with its garlicky pungency and
>undercurrent of sweetness. The same sauce may be used to dress fresh
>broad beans, thinly sliced cooked pork (perhaps mixed with fine slivers
>of carrot and Asian radish), boiled pork dumplings or wontons, and many
>other ingredients. You may use sweet, aromatic soy sauce instead of
>light soy sauce if you have it in stock.
I didn't notice that note on the soy sauce this morning. Glad I
didn't. I don't know what makes it 'light soy sauce'. I spent
a lot of time in 2 stores looking for a lighter colored sauce. I
ended up with a bottle of Amoy's "Supreme (Grade A) Light Soy Sauce"
It is neither light in color or flavor-- good stuff.
-snip-
>
>1 cucumber (about 300g)
As luck would have it, the only good looking cukes in the Asian stores
were labeled "Chinese Cucumbers''- and were about 150g each. Made
them the perfect size for smacking with my chef's knife.
-snip-
>4 tsp Chinkiang (brown rice) vinegar
mmmm-- I got Gold Plum brand for this-- another welcome addition to
the pantry. My lesson for the day is that Asian stores have
about 8 feet of shelf space dedicated to different rice vinegars.
>2 tbsp chilli oil
Is this a misprint? Granted, there were several different chili
oils, and the one I got was in a small bottle. . . Tso Hin Kee
"Szechuan Style Chile Oil"
I tasted it and reduced the amount to a single *scant* *teaspoon*.
I swear if I had filled the spoon, I would have ruined the dish. My
chili eating son will try it later.
>a pinch or two of ground roasted Sichuan pepper (optional)
Darn it-- I forgot to add that. But the dish was fine without-- a
lot already going on. I'll have another helping after I toast,
smash and add some peppercorns.
>Lay the cucumber on a chopping board and smack it hard a few times with
>the flat blade of a Chinese cleaver or with a rolling-pin.
That's an interesting technique. Tomorrow I'm going to smash one
and just cut one and see if I can notice the difference. And I'll
try it with a few different kinds of cucumbers.
-snip-
>
>Smacked cucumber with sesame and preserved mustard greens
The Sichuan gods were guiding me, apparently. I noticed a can of
"Preserved Vegetable" in the back corner of one store. Funny labels
catch my eye- and further investigation showed me it was *vegan*
mustard greens. My daughter liked the greens she got in Georgia last
winter, but brought home greens with meat in them.
Then, I saw another label "Yuquan, Preserved Vegetable with black
fungus" -- that package is going to get mixed in this cucumber dish.
-snip-
>mustard greens (ya cai), 1 tsp finely chopped garlic, 1 tbsp runny
>sesame paste,
Didn't find the sesame paste in either store-- Guess I'll make my
own.
> 14 tsp clear rice vinegar,
Another nice addition to the cupboard.
Thanks for the recipe-- and the prod to get down to the Asian markets
again-- It is exhausting for me-- but in a good way.
And those cucumbers-- I've been nursing a chest cold and a helping
of them did more to loosen up my chest than any of the decongestants
I've been taking. Garlic? Chili oil? Salt? - all good
Jim