Wok
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."
By Grace Young
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.
By Ching He Huang
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.
By Lillian Chou
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.
By Kylie Kwong
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!
By Michael Tong
Easy Veggie-Shrimp Stir-Fry with Udon
By Wendy Hess, R.D.
Stir-Fried Asian Greens with Chiles and Garlic
Tumis Sayur
There are, I think, few things more purely satisfying than quickly stir-fried Asian greens. Indonesian cooks agree: Meals in the country are unthinkable without greens on the table. They're so popular that market vendors often sell as many as 15 different kinds, from the tender mustard shoots known as sayur sawi, similar to bok choi, to bitter young papaya leaves (daun papaya), which are stir-fried along with their small white flowers. On our shores, young, tender Asian greens with slender stems — such as water spinach, bok choi, baby bok choi, choi sum, and baby kai lan — work best for stir-frying. Chinese and Southeast Asian markets will likely carry at least two of these varieties at any given time; farmers' markets will have them stocked in the summer months (and year-round in places with temperate climates such as Southern California and Florida). Always buy unblemished greens that have no signs of yellowing, and cook them as soon as possible — they don't store well.
By James Oseland
Golden Crisp Daikon Cake with Spicy Herb Soy Sauce
Start preparing this one day before serving — it needs to chill overnight.
Shaking Beef
By Charles Phan
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.
By Peng Changgui
Tea-Smoked Duck Breasts
Though many people see smoking as a process meant for professionals, or at least for doing outdoors, this procedure—done mostly in a wok—is simple and produces a mean smoked duck. Try thin slices over a salad, or make smoked-duck sandwiches for a picnic. When smoking, be sure to seal the foil tightly to keep the smoke from infusing more than just your duck.
Spicy Wok Shrimp with Coconut Rice
Coconut milk ties this dish together, adding a tropical note and balancing the heat of Sriracha sauce (a Thai bottled sauce of puréed red chiles).
By Melissa Roberts-Matar
Hoisin Chicken in Lettuce Leaves
You can make this superfresh-tasting version of the Chinese takeout classic yourself.
By Ruth Cousineau
Stir-Fried Garlic Lettuce
One of the most beautiful and inspired cookbooks of the year was The Breath of a Wok. Grace Young's stories and recipes make us want to set off in pursuit of wok hay, the special taste of wok-cooked food. But if the wok itself is too much to tackle, Young gives us permission to stir-fry in a skillet, as her parents did when they emigrated from China to San Francisco.... Young tells us that the Cantonese word for lettuce sounds like the words for "growing fortune," which makes this an auspicious dish to serve for the lunar New Year.
By Fran McCullough and Molly Stevens
Fried Rice with Ham, Egg, and Scallions
The egg in this fried rice is cooked by a super easy method. Rather than being made like the classic egg "crêpe," the egg is cooked right in the well of the rice, which creates a much more delicate texture.
By Grace Young and Alan Richardson
Chicken Roasted with Onions and Soy Sauce
This tried and true recipe, a Hong Kong tradition of chicken roasted in the Chinese manner, has a long history in my family. It is the dish I have made when, because of circumstances, our family has not eaten together: my older son off to swimming practice, my daughter to ballet, and my younger son to lacrosse. Or I am off to a cooking class and I must leave dinner in the oven.
By Eileen Yin-Fei Lo
Lee Wan Ching's Chinese Broccoli with Ginger Sauce
Editor's note:
The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Grace Young's book The Breath of a Wok. Young also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page. For Young's article on Cantonese cooking, click here. Chef Lee Wan Ching of Yee Hen restaurant on Lantau Island, Hong Kong, taught me this recipe. Traditionally ginger is always cooked with broccoli — its warmth balances the coolness of yin vegetables such as broccoli. Just a small amount of ginger juice intensifies the flavor of the vegetables. To make ginger juice, grate a small amount of ginger and then squeeze it with your fingers to extract the juice.
The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Grace Young's book The Breath of a Wok. Young also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page. For Young's article on Cantonese cooking, click here. Chef Lee Wan Ching of Yee Hen restaurant on Lantau Island, Hong Kong, taught me this recipe. Traditionally ginger is always cooked with broccoli — its warmth balances the coolness of yin vegetables such as broccoli. Just a small amount of ginger juice intensifies the flavor of the vegetables. To make ginger juice, grate a small amount of ginger and then squeeze it with your fingers to extract the juice.
By Grace Young and Alan Richardson
Spicy Stir-Fried Chinese Long Beans with Peanuts
Pa-O Long Beans
Finding long beans is worth the effort — the high heat of the wok is just too much for green beans, which aren't as hearty.
Water Spinach with Shrimp
Kangkong Masak Lemak
This dish is all about the greens; water spinach has a delightfully light and crunchy texture, unlike regular spinach, which tends to be stringy. A bit of coconut milk lends body and richness.
Pan-Roasted Sizzling Shrimp
Improv: Replace the shrimp with sea scallops and use only poblano chiles.