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East Asian

Five-Spice Tofu Stir-Fry with Carrots and Celery

A serrated kinpira peeler ($15 online at amazon.com) makes quick work of a carrot-and-celery julienne.

Pork and Noodle Soup with Shiitake and Snow Cabbage

Cutting the pork is easiest using a cleaver or large chef's knife: Slice thick crosswise pieces, stack them, and then cut matchstick-size pieces.

Soy-Marinated Fish

In Shanghai restaurants, this popular appetizer is typically served cold, which brings out its rich flavors. Traditionally, the fish is smoked. Though modern cooks now skip this step, the Shanghainese still call it "Smoked Fish."

Shanghai Soup Dumplings

Steam the dumplings in batches and eat them when they're at their best — hot out of the steamer.

Korean-Style Short Ribs

A long marinade in a mixture of Korean ingredients infuses these short ribs with spicy-sweet heat. Braising the ribs locks in the fiery, garlicky flavor and results in incredibly tender meat that pulls easily away from the bone.

Vegetarian-Style Congee (Xi-fan)

Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from China Modern by Ching-He Huang. In Chinese, Xi-fan means "watery rice." This modern version contains both brown rice and mixed whole grains.

Chicken Wings with Black-Bean Sauce

Chinese fermented black beans are a bargain—the small amount here packs a pungent, salty flavor that complements the sweet, garlicky sauce for the wings.

Pork Fried Rice

Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Simple Chinese Cooking by Kylie Kwong. Because pork is rather rich, I like to add a touch of hoisin sauce—the pork can stand up to it. The malt vinegar balances out the flavors, cutting through the richness and sweetness.

Shredded Pork with Garlic Sauce

Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from The Shun Lee Cookbook by Michael Tong. This Sichuan dish features a regional sauce, sometimes called "fish-fragrant flavor," that combines hot chili paste, garlic, ginger, scallions, vinegar, sugar, and soy sauce—but no fish!

Green Tea Cheesecake with Raspberries and Raspberry-Mint Tisane

A tisane is a tea-like aromatic infusion; this one is a lovely partner to the cheesecake.

Golden Crisp Daikon Cake with Spicy Herb Soy Sauce

Start preparing this one day before serving — it needs to chill overnight.

Baby Bok Choy

Dim Sum Dipper

Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Simply Ming by Ming Tsai. It's part of a menu he created for Epicurious's Wine.Dine.Donate program. This is a great dipping sauce for all dim sum — pot stickers, shu mai, spring rolls, scallion pancakes, to name a few — but it's also good with any fried goodie, like chicken fingers. You can and should adjust the heat to suit your palate. Though the dip lasts about a week in a fridge, it's so easily prepared that I recommend you make just as much as you need when you need it.

Cranberry-Teriyaki Glaze

Editor's note: The recipe below is from Ming Tsai's book, Ming's Master's Recipes. Use 1 cup of glaze as a dipping sauce for Ming Tsai's pork potstickers and cranberry-crab rangoons and the other cup to make his braised short ribs.

Cranberry-Crab Rangoon

Editor's note: This recipe is from Ming Tsai's book, Ming's Master Recipes.

Pork Pot Stickers

Chef Ming Tsai created this recipe for Epicurious's Wine.Dine.Donate program. Serve the potstickers with his dim sum dipper and cranberry-teriyaki glaze.

Noodle Soup with Soy-Cooked Pork (Slack Season Tan Tsi)

The addictive topping, a potent mix of pork belly, mushrooms, and Chinese rock sugar, takes some time to cook, but you'll love the result.

Tofu, Fried, with Pork and Black-Bean Sauce (Peng's Home-Style Bean Curd)

Fried tofu takes on a meaty texture in this traditional Hunan dish that goes from pleasantly spicy to five-alarm fire in a matter of teaspoons. Pungent fermented beans add a satisfying fragrance to the sauce, perfect for spooning over rice.

Black Cod with Roasted Sweet-and-Sour Onions

Many of us first tasted this rich, buttery fish (also known as butterfish or sablefish) at Japanese restaurants. It's often lacquered in a sweet miso glaze — a combination credited to famed sushi master Nobu Matsuhisa. It was only a matter of time before chefs everywhere discovered its succulence and versatility, comparable to Chilean sea bass. Now they're pairing it with everything from truffles to the Spanish flavors in this dish.

Japanese Cucumber Salad with Miso Dressing

Imrov: Use fresh lemon juice instead of yuzu juice; try English hothouse cucumbers in place of the Japanese variety.
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