Read Every Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking Online
Authors: Fuchsia Dunlop
Tags: #Cooking, #Regional & Ethnic, #Chinese
OTHER ESSENTIALS
食鹽
Salt
(
shi yan
)
A fine-grained table salt is best for fast wok cooking and for mixing sauces: salt in the form of flakes or larger crystals won’t disperse or dissolve quickly enough.
鮮湯
Stock
(
xian tang
)
Fresh stock is clearly not a larder ingredient, but it’s helpful to have some frozen or canned stock to hand for making soups and stews. Water can generally be used as a substitute for small amounts of stock in sauces, though if you have frozen some homemade stock in ice cube trays, you will have small amounts readily available. I tend to make chicken stock, or chicken and pork bone stock, in large batches when I know I’ll be at home for a few hours, then freeze it in one-quart containers. Canned chicken stock can also be used, as can chicken or vegetarian stock granules, although do take care with adding extra salt when using bought stock or granules, which may already be salty. Vegetarians can also make a good stock from sprouted soy beans (tap
here
), or fall back on the rustic Chinese tradition of using the silky cooking water left behind after cooking a pot of rice or noodles as a comforting base for soups.
糖
Sugar
(
tang
)
White granulated sugar is the main sugar used in the Chinese kitchen. Brown sugar (known as “red sugar,”
hong tang
, in Chinese) is used in some dishes, as is rock or crystal sugar (
bing tang
). In this book, sugar means white sugar unless otherwise indicated.
This book, simple as it is, has grown out of many years of cooking and eating in China, and it would be impossible to list here the names of everyone who has played a part in it. I would like, however, to thank a few people in particular.
The team at Barshu restaurant in London have been a fantastic support to me in so many ways. Owner Shao Wei and managers Juanzi, Sherrie Looi and Anne Yim have done everything possible to encourage me in this and many other projects. Head Chef Zhang Xiaozhong has been extraordinarily generous with his expertise, answering innumerable questions and helping me with the testing of recipes on several occasions. I’m also very grateful to Chef Wei Guirong, who assisted me in cooking for the photoshoots, and from whom I have learned so much in terms of dumpling-making. Chefs Fu Bing of Baozi Inn and Li Xue, Zhou Bo and Zheng Qingguo of Bashan have given me advice on certain recipes; and all the other staff have been delightful colleagues.
In China, A Dai (Dai Jianjun), the owner of the Dragon Well Manor restaurant in Hangzhou, has been one of the strongest influences on my research and my cooking in recent years. I find his passion for China’s traditional cuisine, culture and agriculture, and his efforts to preserve them for future generations, tremendously inspiring, and I’ve had the most wonderful times with him and his team, going fishing, gathering wild fruits, sharing meals in rural homes and, of course, eating the incomparable food in his restaurant. So thank you to A Dai and to everyone in the great
cao tang
family for making me feel at home, especially Chefs Dong Jingmu, Guo Ming and Yang Aiping, Qian Lu, Zhou Shifu, He Shifu, Xiatian and Xueyan.
In Chengdu, where my Chinese culinary explorations began and which remains one of my richest sources of recipes, my old friends Yu Bo and Dai Shuang have patiently answered a stream of questions, accompanied me on market visits and fed me with unbelievable delicacies. Their commitment to their craft is remarkable, and their knowledge of Sichuanese cuisine truly astonishing. A big thank you to them, and to the other staff of their marvellous restaurant, Yu Jia Chu Fang, in particular Xiao Huang and Guo Liang.
For their encouragement and support over many years I would like to thank Wang Xudong, editor of
Sichuan Cuisine
magazine; Professor Jiang Yuxiang of Sichuan University; Professor Du Li of the Sichuan Institute of Higher Cuisine; Liu Yaochun and Liu Jun; Sansan and Liu Wei; Feng Quanxin and Qiu Rongzhen; Li Shurong; Feng Rui; Susan Jung and Nigel Kat; Lai Wu; Lan Guijun; Hugo Martin; Francesca Tarocco; Nunzia Carbone; Gwen Chesnais; and Wu Xiaoming. Special thanks also to the amazing Rose Leng for arranging a couple of emergency shipments from Hong Kong at inconceivably short notice!
Back home, thank you to Lambros Kilaniotis for his ceaseless support and enthusiastic eating—I couldn’t have done this without you; Zoë Waldie, my ever-wonderful agent; Carolyn Dunlop, for her help in testing (and tasting!) recipes; Anissa Helou for fun, food adventures and writerly camaraderie; Chef Jerome Henry for trying out some of my recipes; Seema Merchant, for her invaluable advice; Nikki Johnson at the BBC for her patience, forbearance and good humour; the staff of the Shanghai restaurant in Dalston for advice on tofu; and my local guinea pigs Sam Chatterton Dickson, Cathy Roberts and Simon Robey for their comments on my culinary experiments.
I’m also very grateful to my editors, Richard Atkinson and Natalie Hunt at Bloomsbury, and Maria Guarnaschelli at W. W. Norton, for their enthusiastic commitment to the book and the immense creative effort they have put into its production; to Caroline Clark for her beautiful designs; to the very patient and apparently unflappable Lucy Bannell for her work on the text; to Chris Terry for his mouthwatering photographs; and to Cynthia Inions for her styling of the shoots.
Finally, although I’ve tried to reproduce recipes faithfully and to write accurately, any errors are entirely my own.
Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.
A
alfalfa sprouts 167
amaranth, purple 328
Purple amaranth with garlic 190
Purple amaranth with red fermented tofu 190
avocado
Silken tofu with avocado 42
B
bamboo shoots
Rice-cooked bamboo shoots 264
bay leaves 339
beancurd
see
tofu
beans (
see also
black, fava and soy beans) 149
Green or romano beans with black bean and chilli 154
Sichuanese “dry-fried” green beans 150
Stir-fried green beans with “olive vegetable” 150
beansprouts 332
Beansprouts with chilli and Sichuan pepper 164
Sprouted soy bean stock 319
Stir-fried beansprouts with Chinese chives 164
bean thread noodles 267
Bear’s paw tofu 80
beef 93
Beef and cilantro or celery dumpling filling 300
Beef with cumin 106
Buckwheat noodles with red-braised beef 286
Ho Fun rice noodles with beef 272
Red-braised beef noodles 284
Red-braised beef with tofu “bamboo” 108
Sichuanese numbing-and-hot beef 56
Sichuanese “send-the-rice-down” chopped celery with ground beef 194
Slow-cooked beef brisket with berries 110
Slow-cooked beef brisket noodles 284
Stir-fried beef with black bean and chilli 101
Stir-fried celery with beef 194
Xi’an pot-sticker dumplings 308, 311
Xie Laoban’s dan dan noodles 279
black beans
Black bean chicken 116
Black bean stock 319
Clams in black bean sauce 146
Laoganma black bean sauce 336
blanching vegetables 22
bok choy 167, 328
Baby bok choy in superior stock 176
Bok choy with fresh shiitake 180
broccoli/Chinese broccoli 328
Chinese broccoli in ginger sauce 182
Purple-sprouting broccoli with sizzling oil 168
Stir-fried broccoli with chilli and Sichuan pepper 174
Stir-fried broccoli with garlic 174
brown rice vinegar 10, 345
buckwheat noodles
see
noodles
butternut squash
Rustic steamed squash with spicy black bean sauce 222
C
cabbage, Chinese leaf 167, 328
Chinese cabbage and ground pork dumpling filling 300
Chinese cabbage with vinegar 184
camellia oil 344
carp, mirror
Mirror carp in chilli bean sauce 140
carrots 225
cassia bark 10, 339
celery/Chinese celery 328
Sichuanese “send-the-rice-down” chopped celery with ground beef 194
Stir-fried celery with beef 194
Stir-fried celery with lily bulb and macadamia nuts 196
chard
Smothered rainbow chard with garlic 188
Twice-cooked Swiss chard 186
Chef Chen Dailu’s spicy sesame noodles 282
chestnuts (
see also
water chestnuts) 124
Braised chicken with chestnuts 124
chicken 113
Black bean chicken 116
Braised chicken with chestnuts 124
Braised chicken with dried shiitake mushrooms 121
Braised chicken with shiitake mushrooms on noodles 284
Chicken stock 318
Clay bowl chicken 52
Cold chicken with ginger and spring onion 50
Cold chicken with a spicy Sichuanese sauce 48
Congee with chicken and shiitake mushrooms 263
Everyday stir-fried chicken 120
General Tso’s chicken 122
Gong Bao chicken with peanuts 118
poaching chicken 50
Silken tofu with chicken slivers and pickled mustard greens 88
Simple chicken soup 251
Spicy buckwheat noodles with chicken 268
Steamed chicken with Chinese sausage and shiitake mushrooms 114
Stewed chicken noodles 284
Stir-fried oyster mushrooms with chicken 234
Stir-fried yellow chives with chicken slivers 202
chicken fat 324
Chicken livers with Chinese chives 126
chillies 209, 338
chilli bean paste 12
chilli bean sauce 140
Chilli oil 10, 320, 338
dried chillies 10, 338
ground chillies 320, 338
Sichuan chilli bean paste 338
Chinkiang vinegar 10, 345
chives, Chinese, flowering and yellow 199, 330
Chinese chives with smoked tofu 201
Flowering chives with pork slivers 200
Flowering chives with smoked tofu 20
Golden Chinese chive omelette 204
Scrambled egg and chives dumpling filling 300
Stir-fried Chinese chives with pork slivers 200
Stir-fried eggs with yellow chives 205
Stir-fried yellow chives with chicken or pork slivers 202
Stir-fried yellow chives with venison slivers 202
chopsticks 16
choy sum 167, 328
Blanched choy sum with sizzling oil 168
Stir-fried choy sum with ginger and garlic 177
Stir-fried chopped choy sum 178
cilantro 330
Clams in black bean sauce 146
cleavers, Chinese 18
cloud ear mushrooms 231
cloves 339
Congee 263
Congee with chicken and shiitake mushrooms 263