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| Creative Cookery |
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STIR-FRIED THIS'N'THAT
In the mood for something Asian and not too heavy, I pondered a fridge full of
leftover this (tofu) and that (pork tenderloin) and went to the grocery for
something else (skinny, expensive haricots verts) and proceeded to merge two
West Chinese favorites (ma po tofu and Szechwan spicy green beans and pork)
into one quick stir-fry. I held back on the spice to make it wine-friendly,
and it worked very well indeed with a dry red wine.
It went like this. Lots of finicky steps, looks complicated, but actually
took only about 30 minutes to do:
I took a small piece of fat-free pork tenderloin (about 6 ounces) and cut it
into smallish dice. Put them in a bowl; and let them marinate in a
Szechwan-style marinade featuring a well-blended mix of 1 tablespoon hot bean
sauce, 1 tablespoon hoisin sauce, 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce, 1 teaspoon
sesame oil, 1 teaspoon lemon juice and 1/2 teaspoon sugar.
I minced two fat garlic cloves and an approximately equal amount of peeled
fresh ginger, and chopped about 1/2 of a fresh green bell pepper, enough to
make about 1/2 cup. Minced the white part (and part of the green) of three
scallions and set aside; sliced the rest of the green ends for garnish and
set aside separately. Toasted 1 teaspoon Szechwan peppercorns in a small
skillet until they got really aromatic, then ground them to a powder in a
mortar and pestle.
Washed and trimmed the ends from about 6 ounces of hoity-toity French green
beans (haricots verts) and set aside.
Drained, rinsed and cut into smallish dice about 4 ounces very firm tofu
(left over from the tofu dish I made with the other half of it a few days
ago).
Thawed and set aside about 1/4 cup chicken broth from my frozen stash.
Ready to stir-fry: Fire up the wok until it's very hot, then drizzle in a
spoonful of peanut oil and bring it up to heat. Stir-fry the ginger and
garlic; before they start to burn, add and stir-fry the chopped green
peppers, then the chopped scallions and Szechwan pepper, and then the minced
pork with its thick marinade. As soon as the pork loses its raw color, add
the broth and bring to a simmer, then lower heat and put in the green beans.
Cover and let simmer for 4 or 5 minutes, then add the tofu and cook just
until heated through. Garnish with the remaining scallions, and serve with
steamed rice.
It tasted great, although if I do it again, I may blanch the green beans in
boiling water first. They were good, not raw, but not very tender; I think
that's the nature of the animal, but I wouldn't have minded them being a
little easier to chew. I also went back and forth about whether to thicken
the sauce with cornstarch before deciding not to, but it could have gone
either way. And if I hadn't been worried about keeping it wine-friendly, I
probably would have gone for more fire by adding dried chile peppers to the
initial garlic-and-ginger fry.
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