Chinese Long Bean
Seafood Sinigang
Sinigang is adobo’s close contender for the title of National Dish of the Philippines. Like many Filipino dishes, this soup is bold in taste: sour, salty, slightly sweet, spicy, and umami.
By Jacqueline Chio-Lauri
Kare-Kare with Beans, Baby Bok Choy, and Eggplant
If the ingredient list didn’t tip you off, the seven-hour cooking time makes it official: This recipe is a project that you make for people you love. They’ll be thankful.
By Genevieve Villamora
Red Curry of Lobster and Pineapple
This curry is doubly rich from the coconut milk and the deep red curry, but the pineapple keeps it from being too heavy and gives a beautiful freshness to the dish. I like to cook the lobster in the shell because it makes for a more flavorful sauce, and I like to serve it that way too. You can be as refined as you like or, like me, pick up the shell and make an animal of yourself. If lobster is going to blow the budget, you can still have a delicious curry by substituting shrimp or monkfish.
By Curtis Stone
Thai Hot-and-Sour Chicken Soup with Wide Rice Sticks
Some varieties of noodles suggest soaking them in boiling water instead of cooking them; check your package instructions before preparing them.
Tofu Salad with Peanut Sauce
This is a warm salad, combining a wide range of textures and flavors, great as a light lunch or a starter for any Asian meal. Although you can buy packaged fried tofu at many Asian markets—and that is undeniably convenient—it is much better homemade. Just be sure to remove as much of the water as you can, by firmly pressing the tofu between paper towels as detailed on page 491. For information on shrimp paste, see page 9; for information on nam pla, see page 500.
Som Tum
This fiery, strong northern Thai specialty (if it’s made correctly, you will really reek after eating it, but it’s worth it) has become one of the most popular dishes in Thailand and at Thai restaurants in the States. When I was in Bangkok, I could not walk down the streets or through the markets without at least a dozen offers of Som Tum from the vendors, and it was hard not to stop for a little dish with some grilled meat and sticky rice. You can usually find green, or unripe, papayas and yard-long beans (and the Thai fish sauce called nam pla) at Asian or Latin groceries, but you can also substitute Granny Smith apples for the papaya and Napa cabbage for the beans.
Saigon Chicken Salad
Kajsa Alger, chef and co-owner (with super-chef Susan Feniger) of Street in Los Angeles, isn't a fan of chicken breast. "It's my least favorite meat," she says. So if chicken breast is to make it onto Street's menu, it has to be something special. This salad—inspired by Vietnamese green papaya salad—is anything but boring.
By Sarah Dickerman
Stir-Fried Pork with Long Beans
If using dried shrimp, grind to a powder in an electric coffee/spice grinder or use mortar and pestle. Seasoning paste can be made ahead and chilled, covered, up to 1 week or frozen 1 month.
By Prasan Fargrajang
Indonesian Fried Noodles
Bahmi goreng
You'll be hard-pressed to refuse seconds of this irresistible stir-fry. Tender Chinese egg noodles, crisp green snow peas, and Chinese long beans mingle with plenty of rich, garlicky sauce. Cubes of tofu and shredded omelet add even more texture.
Cellophane-Noodle Salad with Roast Pork
This noodle salad, studded with slices of sweet mango and crisp cucumber, is a cooling oasis in the midst of a meal packed with rich, spicy dishes. The glazed roast pork gives the salad added dimension, but could also be served on its own.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
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.
Fish with Red Curry Sauce
Pla Phad Phrik Khing
The pummelo salad makes a nice first course with this dish.
Chicken in Lemongrass Sauce
Serve rice with this dish from Le Colonial, a Vietnamese restaurant in West Hollywood.
Long Bean Salad
Pae Thee Thoke
Chinese long beans, also known as yard-long beans, really are long — about 18 inches.
Chicken Roasted with Lemongrass and Garlic
Lemongrass lends a delicate flavor to this simple roast chicken from Market. Begin marinating the chicken one day ahead.
Ambila Chicken
(Braised Chicken with Chilies and Chinese Long Beans)
The intoxicating seasoning paste in this Eurasian stew may be used to flavor chicken, beef, lamb, or seafood.
Tangy Eggplant, Long Beans, and Cherry Tomatoes with Roasted Peanuts
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Lemony Grilled Scallops and Blistered Long Beans
Delicate scallops need only a brief marinade before a short stint on the grill, meaning you can have this summery slam dunk on the table in 35 minutes.
By Kendra Vaculin
Cheesy Charred Green Beans
Grilled cheese? Yes, please. But not that kind. We’re talking creamy-charred paneer with grilled green beans—a perfect vegetarian side for your next cookout.
By Rachel Gurjar