Pickled Greens and Beans (Guizhou classic)

  Рет қаралды 73,152

Chinese Cooking Demystified

Chinese Cooking Demystified

Күн бұрын

Pickled greens and beans! A fantastic dish to smother over white rice or to have as a component in a larger meal.
0:00 - Why I love Guizhou Pickled Greens and Beans
1:01 - Classic Braised Version
5:27 - Crispy Deep Fried Version
7:49 - Greens and beans, outside of Guizhou?
PICKLED GREENS AND BEANS, BRAISED VERSION
* Dried pinto beans (红豆) or kidney beans (腰豆), 110g
(from the cooked beans, mash ~1/10 of them and reserve; also reserve 1.25 cups of the cooking liquid)
* Chinese pickled mustard greens (酸菜), 100g
* Smoked Larou (烟熏腊肉/湖南腊肉), 15g, optional
* Aromatics:
Garlic, 4 cloves, smashed;
Ginger (姜), ~1 inch, smashed;
Scallion, white and green part separated, white smashed and greens sliced
* Spicy dried chilis, e.g. Heaven facing or Thai bird’s eye, ~3, halved
* Lard (preferably), 2 tbsp, for frying
* Baijiu (白酒) or Shaoxing wine (料酒/绍酒), 1 tbsp
* Oil, 1.5 tbsp, for frying the mashed beans
* Soy sauce (生抽), ½ tbsp
* Ingredients to season the cooking liquid:
Salt, ¼ tsp;
Sugar, ¼ tsp;
Chicken bouillon powder (鸡粉), ¼ tsp
* Final seasoning:
MSG (味精), ¼ tsp;
Dark Chinese vinegar (香醋/), ¼ tsp;
White pepper powder, a sprinkle, ~1/16 tsp
(Note: in place of the smoked larou and lard combination, you can also start this with some American style bacon. To do so, slice one strip of bacon into ~2 cm pieces. Render out the bacon grease over a medium low flame, supplement with extra oil if need be.)
Rinse the beans and soak them with cool water overnight. The following day, simmer - covered - over a medium-low flame for 60-90 minutes, or until the beans are soft.
(Alternatively, if you own a pressure cooker, simply use that instead of the soaking/simmering. I believe that this amount of beans should use about a half a liter of water and take ~30 minutes, but do do your own homework there)
Strain, and reserve 1.25 cups of the bean cooking liquid. Remove about a tenth of the beans, smash them, and reserve.
Mince the pickled mustard greens. Slice the smoked Larou, if using. Smash the garlic, ginger, and scallion whites; slice the scallion greens. Snip the stems off the chilis and discard, then slice in half.
To a wok - as always, first longyau: get the wok piping hot, add in the lard, give it a swirl. Over a medium-low flame, fry the larou for 1-2 minutes to flavor the oil, then scooch it up the side of the wok. Add in the garlic, ginger, and scallion whites, and up the flame to high. Stir fry for ~15 seconds, until fragrant. Add the chilis, quick mix. Swirl the baijiu or Shaoxing wine over the spatula and around the sides of the wok, quick mix.
Flame still on high, add in the pickled mustard greens. Fry for ~2 minutes, or until fragrant and the greens begin to ‘pop’. Lower the flame to medium-low, scooch everything up the side of the wok.
Add in the additional 1.5 tbsp of oil, and to that add in the mashed beans. Fry it together in the oil for ~1 minute, or until it begins to vaguely resemble a roux. Swap the flame back to high.
Add in the cooked beans, gently mix for ~30 seconds with everything. Swirl in the soy sauce. Add in the reserved bean cooking liquid, together with the “ingredients to season the cooking liquid”. Cover (lid ajar if it’s a heavy/tight fitting lid), simmer over medium for ~8 minutes.
After that time, remove any aromatics you do not want in the final dish (we remove the ginger and the scallion whites). Optionally swap over a high flame, and reduce to your desired consistency - we reduced for 3-4 minutes.
Add the “final seasoning”, together with the sliced scallion greens. Heat off, quick mix, out.
CRISPY DEEP FRIED VERSION
* Dried pinto beans (红豆) or kidney beans (腰豆), 110g
* Chinese pickled mustard greens (酸菜), 100g
* Aromatics:
Garlic, 2 cloves, sliced;
Scallion, 1, white and green part separated, both sliced
* Spicy dried chilis, e.g. Heaven facing or Thai bird’s eye, ~3, cut into ~1cm sections
* To coat the beans:
Cornstarch (生粉), 2-3 tbsp
Salt, 1/8 tsp
* Seasoning:
Salt, ¼ tsp;
Sugar, ¼ tsp;
MSG (味精), ¼ tsp
* Soy sauce (生抽), 1 tsp
* Five spice powder (五香粉), ¼ tsp
Rinse the beans and soak them with cool water overnight. The following day, simmer - covered - over a medium-low flame for 60-90 minutes, or until the beans are soft. Strain, and lay the beans out on a paper towel to dry (we dried 30 minutes).
Slice the aromatics and the chilis. Coat the beans.
Get a pot of oil up to 150C, then deep fry the beans. Fry for ~7 minutes, or until the oil's reached back up to ~140C. Remove, lay on a paper towel lined plate.
To stir fry, follow the video at 6:47 (apologies, ran out of space)
______
And check out our Patreon if you'd like to support the project!
/ chinesecookingdemystified
Outro Music: คิดถึงคุณจัง by ธานินทร์ อินทรเทพ
Found via My Analog Journal (great channel): • Live Stream: Favourite...

Пікірлер: 148
@ChineseCookingDemystified
@ChineseCookingDemystified Жыл бұрын
Hey guys, a few notes: 1. Obviously, this dish can be made vegetarian if that describes you. The addition of the lard and smoked pork provides some nice depth and richness, but a quick google of Guizhou beans and greens recipes in Chinese would yield many recipes where said components are not included. If in doubt, just skip them. 2. If I *personally* was cooking this dish for a vegetarian friend, I would probably do this: toss a dried shiitake into the bean cooking liquid to add a touch of complexity, because why not. If I had some on hand, maybe I’d incorporate a touch of smoked bamboo shoot into things, if not I’d just skip it. I’d use caiziyou (virgin rapeseed oil) in place of the lard if I had it. I’d probably then lean towards keeping this on the soupy side - perhaps serving it alongside sticky rice? (beans + soup + sticky rice is a cool combination in southwest China… add enough soup to the sticky rice to loosen it up, but not so much that it becomes, like, congee) 3. I’m getting the nagging feeling that we might’ve buried the lead with the deep fried version of this dish haha. Now that I think of it, I don’t think I’ve every seen beans deep fried like this in the west - apologies in advance if we swing back to “deep fried beans” as an overarching category in the future :) 4. You can absolutely used canned beans instead, as we went over in our previous ‘weeknight’ sort of version. Simply use ~240g of beans and charge forward with the recipe. Obviously, you’ll need to skip the whole ‘bean cooking liquid’ bit, but hey. 5. For me personally though… I usually just opt for the full version from dried beans. It’s one of my favorite dishes, and because we (obviously) work from home, it’s not too much of a hassle to just soak some beans in advance and toss the pot of beans on the hotplate an hour before starting to cook dinner. 6. That said, I think we might finally bite the bullet and belatedly hop on the whole Instapot train. Pressure cookers never seemed to be an attractive prospect to me, because in my brain long braises were always the type of thing that I cooked on a lazy Saturday: swing over to the market, buy what you need, have a late morning beer or two while you get the dish started, play a game of Civ while things bubble away in the kitchen all day, have something tasty for dinner. There’s something sorta de-stressing about the whole process. And yet, having a ‘bean cooker’ to sit right next to the ‘rice cooker’ is a… pretty attractive proposition. Would be nice to be able to get some beans sorted in 30 minutes. Anyone have any experience, pros/cons of pressure cooker beans? That’s all I can think of for now. Might edit some more notes in a bit :)
@Wanriky
@Wanriky Жыл бұрын
Instant pot for beans is the best, I do it all the time! I usually go for 30-35min for a pinto bean and I think they turn out a bit softer than canned ones. No pre-soak or anything, and a 30-35min cook time usually means about an hour total including the time to come up to pressure + release. No measurements, just pour some amount of beans, enough water to completely cover plus a bit more, and then salt, lemon, maybe a bay leaf or onion or something. I actually also use my instant pot for rice and think it works just as well as any rice cooker. Instapots (and most other multi cookers) do usually have a slow cooker function as well if you have a recipe you want to do that way. lol sorry if this sounds like an ad, just genuinely not had any cons with mine, haha
@rachaelludwick215
@rachaelludwick215 Жыл бұрын
instant pot for rice in this house as we don’t have a separate rice cooker. it’s not as perfect probably but works pretty well. anyway long time pressure cooker fan. if you don’t want the whole instant pot, a bog common stove top pressure cooker is easy and super cheap and will last forever. I had one before we got the instant pot that cooked many hundreds of batches of beans. aside from some varieties like lima beans where the skins don’t seem to hold up to pressure cooking and lentils which aren’t really faster done either a pressure cooker, we do all our beans with one.
@s.p9189
@s.p9189 Жыл бұрын
I've heard using the pot in a pot method for instant pots can produce pretty good rice and also be pretty convenient for certain dishes. Basically you "pressure steam" something by putting an elevated (via steamer basket) metal bowl inside the pressure cooker chamber with rice or another dish that you want to cook alongside the thing in the main basin.
@deathpyre42
@deathpyre42 Жыл бұрын
Make sure you get a pressure cooker that's easy to clean, that tiny little valve in the lid is really easy to clog. Or get a slow cooker because those are more flexible since you can take the lid off mid-cook with no issues.
@alanthecat59
@alanthecat59 Жыл бұрын
Superb,will make gg
@willpearson3951
@willpearson3951 Жыл бұрын
This is wild, because I've been serving our pinto beans and cornbread with Chinese pickled greens for a few years now. It's a discovery I made when I made a pot of beans and was low on pickles but had a pouch of the pickled Chinese mustard greens in the pantry. In the southern Appalachia region we always have raw onion and some variety of pickles to go with our pinto beans (locally called "soup beans") and always served with savory (never sweet) cornbread. One of my favorite meals of all time and a staple in our house.
@Rhugor
@Rhugor Жыл бұрын
This is pretty much exactly how my family did it in Texas and Oklahoma as well
@brandonhall7498
@brandonhall7498 Жыл бұрын
Me living in Tennessee: Mustard greens? Pinto beans and chiles? Shit...I got this one.
@ClarionMumbler
@ClarionMumbler Жыл бұрын
Chris has infiltrated my brain. Whenever I see my catch stretch that patented kitty stretch, I always think to myself, "long meow, get that cat piping hot."
@catnip202xch.
@catnip202xch. Жыл бұрын
its long yao :) nvm i read your comment wrong XD
@SAFEACK
@SAFEACK Жыл бұрын
This is another one that reminds me of southern grandma cooking in the US. Funny how comfort foods can be so similar across cultures. :)
@ermkindofcringe9401
@ermkindofcringe9401 Жыл бұрын
I KNEW I WAS ONTO SOMETHING WHEN I PUT XINKIANG VINEGAR AND SOYSAUCE TO THAT CAN OF BEANS AND ATE IT WITH RICE I KNEW IT
@ampersand64
@ampersand64 3 ай бұрын
this is the vegetarian way of life :)
@chimpkinglich1637
@chimpkinglich1637 Жыл бұрын
This sounds like a super tasty dish, in Mexico we make something that reminds me of this called frijoles charros, we use Chiles, cilantro, onion, tomato and a bunch of different meats like chorizo, sausage, ham and chicharrón, beans are king
@AwesomeTea
@AwesomeTea Жыл бұрын
It reminded me of carne en su jugo
@easternizedfooddiscovery6730
@easternizedfooddiscovery6730 Жыл бұрын
Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! I'm not from Guizhou, but when I had frijoles in Mexican and Guatemalan restaurants I like to add pickled vegetables to them.
@PhocaCPH
@PhocaCPH 11 ай бұрын
Seeing this recipe having half of the view count of surrounding recipes is criminal. This is such a simple and delicious comfort food.
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
I love how close this feels to the way we cook beans in Brasil! Aside from a few ingredientes, this is pretty much the same flavor profile, and even some techniques overlaps, like smashing some of the beans to thicken the sauce (although we usually do it directly in a separate pan with the frying aromathics). Definately will try to make something close to this recipe. Love your work, keep it up!
@fish3977
@fish3977 Жыл бұрын
I really have to give south american foods another look - me having the cilantro gene just kinda soaps the first meeting
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
@@fish3977 Well, if it serves any consolation, a lot of people in Brasil don't really like cilantro as well, specially in the south / southeast part of the country, so I can guarantee that there's plenty out there without it. And in most cases you can just skip it and it'll be fine (although a bit different). If you're interested in brazilian cuisine, I highly recomend looking for dishes from the north and northeast side of the country. (=
@Anesthesia069
@Anesthesia069 Жыл бұрын
@@Laurodriguesable What is the Brazilian dish called? I must learn to make it!
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
@@Anesthesia069 It's kind of hard to give you a name or direction to point at, because for brazilians is just every day food, rice and beans is the base of every brazilian lunch. A simple enough recipe would be to cook the pinto beans with salt and bay leafs and (optional, but very common) some form of cured/smoked pork meat, like sausages, salted feet, bacon etc. After fully cooked, in a separate pan, proceed to fry garlic, onions, eventually some bell peppers and maybe some chili, along with a couple of tablespoons of the cooked, smashed beans. Common seasonings at this stage are black pepper and cumin. Then you add this "sofrito/pasty" thing to the cooked beans to thicken and season the rest of them, and finnish with fresh cilantro and scallions.
@moohan6518
@moohan6518 Жыл бұрын
@@Laurodriguesable Sounds like Feijoada, delicious
@jameshaulenbeek5931
@jameshaulenbeek5931 Жыл бұрын
Amazing how this is a staple food in so many cuisines!
@baloonman5
@baloonman5 Жыл бұрын
Take this with a grain of salt, but I've heard it said that every culture has 1.some version of a dumpling 2.some version of a quickbread or pancake, and 3.some version of cooked beans. There is also rule 0, every sentiant species in the solar system has some version Swedish meatballs, but we don't have to worry about that one too much.
@SusanIvanova2257
@SusanIvanova2257 Жыл бұрын
@@baloonman5 I was just about to mention the meatballs
@rita7070
@rita7070 Жыл бұрын
@@baloonman5 that reminds me of Babylon 5
@baloonman5
@baloonman5 Жыл бұрын
@@rita7070 glad someone caught the reference. There's a line from g'kar that everyone has some version of Swedish meatballs, and it's later speculated that it's influence from the vorlons.
@akshayb6536
@akshayb6536 Жыл бұрын
Amazing recipe, love this channel! This reminds me of a dish from the western part of India and Pakistan called rajma masala! And obviously since it's the subcontinent we throw a ton of aromatics and spices to the braise! I am glad to see that this kind of a dish with rice is a comfort food across different cultures!
@mcgovemj
@mcgovemj Жыл бұрын
When you misread "Hunan" and "human", this becomes a veeeeeerrrrry different channel.
@Dzbiq
@Dzbiq Жыл бұрын
Whoa, it reminds me of Polish christmas dish called "kapusta z fasolą i grzybami" that is one of my favourite winter dishes that my family makes. I'm amazed how comfort foods can be almost identical across the world, in my country we use some sour cabbage, soaked beans and mushrooms. I will definitely try this one tho, thank you!
@sumatrippin4851
@sumatrippin4851 Жыл бұрын
I made this tonight and it was so delicious! I love the acidity the pickled mustard greens bring. Will definitely be going into the weeknight rotation.
@bobbykeene12
@bobbykeene12 Жыл бұрын
Wow. That was REALLY good! As another riff on the first version, save half and throw a handful of brown sugar in it. Also, those crunchy beans go great on top of the first recipe! Thanks for posting this one.
@mdharrisuiuc
@mdharrisuiuc Жыл бұрын
I gotta try that fried version! These have been a stand-by, canned beans/pack of pickled greens/chili oil sort of healthy dish since I saw it in the over rice video.
@legoisland
@legoisland Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is the perfect dish I need right now! Would you be able to show us more meat-free/low-cost dishes?
@the_purple_mage
@the_purple_mage 6 ай бұрын
Finally made this for the first time and was pleasantly blown away with how complex and rich the flavor profile is! Thank you for making these videos and giving us ideas for food we (or I at least) otherwise never would have encountered!
@seamus6387
@seamus6387 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of a pickled relish my grandmother made. Mostly pickled onions, green tomatoes, little cabbage maybe, with enough sweet to cut through the sour and keeping it from being blah. It always had garlic and a few spices including jalapeno. And my family also had a habit of a slice of raw onion with beans. Good stuff. But it's still funny, many would see this dish and think it sounds insane yet, ignore the home grown version.
@erinhowett3630
@erinhowett3630 Жыл бұрын
Here in the American South, beans and a particular kind of pickled relish called chow-chow is really common. I feel inspiration coming on...
@ZauberbergV
@ZauberbergV Жыл бұрын
Just made this. Wow… Absolutely fantastic!
@WokandKin
@WokandKin Жыл бұрын
YUMMM! This is exactly what I’d love over rice. The comforting flavors of the beans and that crunchy tang from the mustard greens sounds like a phenomenal combo! Thanks for sharing. I’ll have to try it out myself!
@Potatoes9000
@Potatoes9000 Жыл бұрын
Steph's hair looks stellar
@Magius61
@Magius61 Жыл бұрын
I love that braised beans can also be beer nuts.
@Antaios632
@Antaios632 Жыл бұрын
My experience with pressure cooker beans is that they work great - the only thing is that they don't break down & release starch quite as much because you don't get as much physical agitation from the bubbling water. I like my beans to really start to break down (depending on what I'm making), so I usually need to continue to cook them on the stove top for a little while to get them where I want them. But it definitely cuts down on time. I still soak them before, by the way, but you can cook them without soaking. I just find that they aren't quite as creamy inside. They have a bit more of a mealy texture if you don't soak them, and they need longer to cook of course.
@deftoned2
@deftoned2 Жыл бұрын
Made this tonight and it was absolutely delicious!
@Skypad00
@Skypad00 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for showing this. I love beans and it's so hard to find savoury bean recipes in China where the beans aren't processed into a sauce or paste.
@bedivere20
@bedivere20 Жыл бұрын
I just made this and finished my first serving and oh my god this recipe is AWESOME!! Thank you so much for sharing. I live next to a grocery store in the states that has pickled mustard greens right next to the tofu for $1 a pop and I didn't know what to use it in other than dan dan noodles. This is going to be a regular meal in my house from now on. Cheap, fast (other than the bean prep), and amazingly tasty. What's not to love?
@GatorAidMedical
@GatorAidMedical Жыл бұрын
Gotta make this ASAP!
@seantynan1
@seantynan1 Жыл бұрын
As a bean lover, I never knew that pinto beans are used in Chinese cooking! 😋
@Skypad00
@Skypad00 Жыл бұрын
Guizhou and Yunnan seem to have the most unique and exotic dishes in China.
@ClockworkAvatar
@ClockworkAvatar Жыл бұрын
this looks super tasty
@Anesthesia069
@Anesthesia069 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE beans, so this is perfect!
@honey4clover
@honey4clover 11 ай бұрын
Looking so good! I’ll have to try this asap! Growing up in a different region of China, dried beans weren’t something we regularly consumed (except for desserts). And I only learnt to cook them after moving to the US. This unlocked a whole swath of possibilities for me, esp as a plant-based eater. Thanks so much for the inspiration❤🙏🏼
@mysteryloaf
@mysteryloaf Жыл бұрын
I don't typically like to make comments like this but Steph was looking very well in today's video! Feels a little like you two (and the critters) are thriving out there, and I hope it feels that way to you!!
@damanorelse
@damanorelse 4 ай бұрын
I've been following your recipe for Beef and celery for a while, but recently I started serving just a small amount of that mixed with a larger amount of Kimchi, and it was amazing. no meat this week, So I was looking to recreate that protein+Pickles combo with beans instead, and this recipe looks perfect!
@cookingwithmimmo
@cookingwithmimmo Жыл бұрын
🌸 那味道当然很好吃👍
@Pastry626
@Pastry626 Жыл бұрын
You should publish a cookbook - all your meals and snacks look so delicious!
@sergeant_ozzy1037
@sergeant_ozzy1037 Жыл бұрын
Would love for you guys to do some more 湘菜 recipes. Food from Hunan really is in a league of its own, and I miss it every day I’m not there.
@rafaelperalta1676
@rafaelperalta1676 Жыл бұрын
Wanna try this one day, with some alternatives. Bet it tastes great!
@beybslifeintheus494
@beybslifeintheus494 Жыл бұрын
look yummy food
@jonnyspeed8974
@jonnyspeed8974 Жыл бұрын
amazing
@Earthling3996
@Earthling3996 Жыл бұрын
I think this is the first time I've ever seen a Chinese bean dish like that. It's usually green beans, red or mung beans as dessert, or soy beans. I'm excited to try this recipe! Thank you for sharing! ☺👍🧡 Also, do you know if there are any traditional Chinese dishes that make use of lentils as the main ingredient?
@notmyname327
@notmyname327 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a great vegetarian option! I don't think I can find those pickled greens in South America but I'll definitely experiment with sauerkraut
@nemo5335
@nemo5335 2 ай бұрын
take: chinese and mexican flavors actually meld very nicely, this dish is proof.
@marsy6359
@marsy6359 Жыл бұрын
Unrelated but Steph your hair looks really nice in this vid!
@darraghchapman
@darraghchapman Жыл бұрын
How would you feel about using the suancai pickling liquid in lieu of the black vinegar? It often comes with a fair bit of juice in the pack, seems a shame to waste it. Also, the lao rou reminded me of one of my favourite Chinese ingredients. I used to get it all the time at the massive RT Mart near me in Suzhou, it was left open in a big tray near the Harbin sausage for you to bag up yourself, but I never translated the hanzi so I don't know what it's called! Extremely dry, extremely smoked pork with a thick black crust and a fair amount of fat. Much much darker than jinhua ham. A combination of a few slivers of that, a chunk of pork from the wet market, some fresh green chillis and some spices from my store cupboard made a pretty good take on 'mexican' pulled pork in the pressure cooker. Do you know the stuff I'm in about?
@jrmint2
@jrmint2 Жыл бұрын
This looks delicious, I don't like kimchi but for some reason like some Chinese pickled vegetables, I really love the one that comes from a squat earthenware jar, its not sour at all, just umami and salty...I wonder if I could use those... maybe I'll try a variation of this w bok choy and the salty veg, I know it's not the same, but theres no way I'd convince my kids to eat sour veg. I'm intrigued by the combination of vegetables and beans, the cornerstone of healthy diets. Thanks for sharing these previously unknown dishes from China to the rest of the world. Theres just so much to cover in Chinese cuisine and it's fascinating!!
@kikkomanUT
@kikkomanUT 7 ай бұрын
Omg you did my request
@victoriachuong8397
@victoriachuong8397 Жыл бұрын
I made a vegetarian version of the dish (soupy style) and really enjoyed it! All the flavors just really pack a punch, but the dish is just comforting to eat too.
@10lauset
@10lauset Жыл бұрын
Cheers.
@emmahu9964
@emmahu9964 Жыл бұрын
Suan cai dou mi hotpot is my all time favorite
@clochettestarz
@clochettestarz Жыл бұрын
I used to eat the deep-fried version regularly in Yunnan, didn't realize it was also a Guizhou/Sichuan dish!
@jeffdenniscampbell
@jeffdenniscampbell Жыл бұрын
This is great! Definitely a keeper! I used canned beans and lap xuong sausage for the larou. I used the liquid from the beans as well- it has a great texture. I'll try the deep fried version with the other mustard pickle in the package. Can you be more specific about the Sichuan version? What is the best substitute for beans- I can get Lima, Fava, or Butter Beans, they seem fairly close.
@chuck1384
@chuck1384 Жыл бұрын
Did you mention the name of the city Qingdao instead of the name of the brewery Tsingtao? I'll try the recipe for sure! Thanks for sharing, really appreciated.
@krbeijing1
@krbeijing1 Жыл бұрын
I was just looking at the pinto beans the other day and trying to think of some way to use them, while the drawer above had a couple of bags of suancai. It wasn't until tonight the connection was made, so the beans are going for their soak.
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Жыл бұрын
Same!!! Beans are a good and cheap source of protein too, so useful in times of high inflation
@krbeijing1
@krbeijing1 Жыл бұрын
Checking back in, I made this for lunch and my daughter and I liked it so much that we made it again for supper. This dish is amazing.
@catnip202xch.
@catnip202xch. Жыл бұрын
@@krbeijing1 its the perfect make a huge batch then survive the next month on it type deal. i could eat a whole pot of it if i could, so delicious
@brassen
@brassen Жыл бұрын
Get some rice and a fried egg on top, we Brazilians will be waiting with the baijiurinhas 🍹
@tdb517
@tdb517 Жыл бұрын
Nice video as always. A quick remark : your subtitles are placed exactly on the wok/bowls so if I want to watch the video without sound or have some subtitles cause some people don't understand English as well as they can read it, it's then impossible to see what your food looks like at the same time. Maybe slightly changing the camera angle so the inside of the wok is higher (more central) on the frame would help. Thanks again for all your videos
@apiium
@apiium Жыл бұрын
You can move the subtitles on most platforms, they aren't baked into the video. If on mobile or desktop try dragging the subtitles to whatever position on the screen suits you.
@tdb517
@tdb517 Жыл бұрын
@@apiium I tried but the subtitles kept moving back to the bottom
@GirishManjunathMusic
@GirishManjunathMusic Жыл бұрын
Sarsonn and rajma does sound great...
@bes4497
@bes4497 Жыл бұрын
Would Japanese takana work in place of the suan tsai? They're both pickled mustard greens, just different varieties of mustard green, so I imagine they must be pretty similar, but I've never had suan tsai so I'm not sure if they are actually similar.
@renaenglish8256
@renaenglish8256 Жыл бұрын
Dear Mr Chris, could u pls teach me how to make black beans snack just like eating dried fired peanuts? Thank u so much.
@codybergman5991
@codybergman5991 Жыл бұрын
Barely related to this video, but more of a general question for Cantonese speakers that comes up in these videos occassionally: I have noticed that occasionally they will say a word in Cantonese that ends with a hard "R" or "ER" sound, with the one that sticks out in my mind being their word(s) for red miso (which sounds to me like "min shirr"). However, I was trying to use this pronounciation to describe something to my Shanghainese coworker and he looked at me confused, and assured me that no words in any Chinese language (including Cantonese) ends with a hard "R" sound. I also have coworkers who are ethnically Cantonese (but born in Canada) who support this, suggesting I misheard it. Am I crazy (or, crazier than usual, anyway)? Of note: I also listened to an Australian teaching "Foundations of Eastern Civilization" and a similar thing happened with the word for a "Confucian scholar-gentleman", which I he pronounced "Shirr", but looking online I see it written shì assuming I searched it correct.
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Жыл бұрын
Specifically in the cantonese word 面豉 you talk about I don't think there's an R sound. But the shi is a bit elongated which gives an impression of r maybe? If we're talking about dialects, northern ones such as Beijing-ese have a lot of ER sounds at the end of words, as in ~儿. As for Cantonese, maybe you were hearing elongations intoned in a particular way. Also it's just difficult to discuss pronounciations in pure text so I maybe am not getting what you mean by the R sound.
@capfogful
@capfogful Жыл бұрын
Is Haam Choy different from Zhai Chai? I can only find Zhai Chai where I live.
@shutupreallynow5741
@shutupreallynow5741 Жыл бұрын
I pickled my own mustard greens a couple of weeks ago specifically to make this. It is soooooooo good. I'm in a semi food coma as I write this. Great recipe, easy to follow!
@llund90808
@llund90808 Жыл бұрын
Would a sour chow chow work in place of the pickled mustard greens?
@peggymicsky8607
@peggymicsky8607 Жыл бұрын
Beans alone, no rice! With Hot Sauce of course!
@catnip202xch.
@catnip202xch. Жыл бұрын
beans and rice and tobasco hot sauce
@UltimateArts13
@UltimateArts13 Жыл бұрын
Drink every time he says “go in with” death edition
@gabronijabroni
@gabronijabroni 5 ай бұрын
Can someone provide the name of this recipe in 汉语? i cant find it vis english google other than this one video and want to learn more. Thanks!
@RemiDobbs
@RemiDobbs Жыл бұрын
you say you can do this with sauerkraut and kimchi, both of which kind of have a sour flavor to them, is that the main flavor component of the mustard green? I have access to a chinese grocery but not consistent access, and I know that pickled greens can sometimes be sweet, would a, say, sweet pickle work here?
@catnip202xch.
@catnip202xch. Жыл бұрын
pickled mustard green is mostly sour and savory, with no sweet or any other taste. imo sauerkraut would work best since its fermented cabbage that has a similar albeit more sour taste.
@MrSomethingred
@MrSomethingred Жыл бұрын
Hurray for (nearly) vegetarian content!
@archiekleung
@archiekleung Жыл бұрын
Present
@altang884884
@altang884884 Жыл бұрын
That's amazing, how in the world did an New World bean make it's way to become Chinese Food?!?!?? Are there similar traditional dishes using dried soybeans in this way? I know soybeans are eaten fresh and then transformed into everything else under the sun, but I never see them eaten in the standard bean method of rinse, soak and stew.
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Жыл бұрын
Dried soybeans and black soybeans can certainly be used in stews and soups! For example there's soybean and pig trotter stew. Beans go great with meats, although it's true soybeans are mostly used for making soy sauce.
@IAmTheUltimateRuler
@IAmTheUltimateRuler Жыл бұрын
probably the same way that a lot of new world ingredients became entrenched in old world cuisines - it's not like the chillies are indigenous to guizhou either iirc chris&steph even did an interesting video on china and the columbian exchange
@easternizedfooddiscovery6730
@easternizedfooddiscovery6730 Жыл бұрын
Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex! Gui mex!
@goawayinternet
@goawayinternet Жыл бұрын
ok random question, could one sub in black beans? I mean like, western black beans, not fermented black soybeans. I accidentally bought an extra massive bag of them and need to use them lol. I assume the cooktimes would be less
@IAmTheUltimateRuler
@IAmTheUltimateRuler Жыл бұрын
why not, seems like a cool idea just cook the beans until they're done - beans are always difficult to give timings for bc it varies so wildly depending on age, soaked or not, etc. if you don't want the whole dish stained black, then I'd suggest cooking the beans with lots of water, drain + rinse when cooked through, and swap the bean cooking liquid in the braise for water or stock. But you'd lose out on some flavour + richness, so if you're not bothered about the colour then just charge right ahead
@angelomonroy97
@angelomonroy97 6 ай бұрын
What is the Chinese name for this dish?
@JGMoore
@JGMoore Жыл бұрын
The dog survived.
@nofahz
@nofahz Жыл бұрын
Finally had a chance to make a vegetarian version last night and it came out delicious. I wish I still had a jar of my homemade ham choy but it tastes great with the store bought pickled mustard greens. I would recommend biting the bullet and buying a simple pressure cooker. It's a versatile tool that I use for a number of things throughout the course of the week.
@kueapel911
@kueapel911 Жыл бұрын
For pickled greens, anywhere there're a group of chinese descendant around your area, you'd find the stuff. Even better, make a batch yourself, like I do. Just a simple combination of coconut water and salt would do as the brine for the raw greens.
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
Do you have any proportions on that?
@kueapel911
@kueapel911 Жыл бұрын
@@Laurodriguesable to about 1 liter of coconut water (+-2 fruits) without the flesh ofc, add as much salt as you want to make it as salty as your favorite sauerkraut or other pickled salted veggies. Add the greens into several plastic bags portions, top the plastic bags up with coconut water, tie up the bags to seal, then leave to brine overnight outside for up to 3 days, then refrigerate for 3 months or up to half a year max, or as long as it stays mold-less. I've tried one that's 1 year old in my fridge, and it was extremely sour, but still edible.
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
@@kueapel911 That's very helpfull, thank you!
@krysab6125
@krysab6125 Жыл бұрын
As long as you have at least 3% of the weight of the greens in salt (so, at least 3g for every 100g of greens), you should be okay. Some say as low as 2%, but I prefer to be on the safe side. Lactofermentation is one of the easiest, relatively safe methods of pickling and preservation- well worth it!
@Laurodriguesable
@Laurodriguesable Жыл бұрын
@@krysab6125 Yes, I like it a lot too! I've done it quite a lot of times, but never used coconut water, so I was curious on this particular process.
@uberrave3
@uberrave3 Жыл бұрын
Question unrelated to vid. Why is Chinese poultry cut into pieces often with bone fragments and not carved with western method. i did a little searching only to find that its just for presentation I dont see any advantage like less meat waist and i often find my self painfully biting down on a piece of bone the size of grain of rice. Growing up with an Asian family in America this made little sense to me.
@catnip202xch.
@catnip202xch. Жыл бұрын
bruh saaaaaaaame. its mostly due to it being a time saving measure since its served in restaurants or street stalls with huge foot traffic. so the faster out the door(and less thought put into it) the better. imho the "it presents better" is just an excuse(though it also might be to show the customer that they indeed are receiving what they paid for since the silhouette is intact).
@GirishManjunathMusic
@GirishManjunathMusic Жыл бұрын
Wait pinto beans are just rajma?
@rita7070
@rita7070 Жыл бұрын
please say all the ingridients at loud instead of just writing them as it makes the videos mora accessible
@Asako-Rull
@Asako-Rull Жыл бұрын
好的都消失啦,都是世界绝顶地方放美食,怀化粉你
@caramelconundrum9280
@caramelconundrum9280 Жыл бұрын
greens beans tomatos potatos
@MintyFarts
@MintyFarts Жыл бұрын
nfguiahuigfpahiufgbn damn I might just make this tomorrow, I have pickled mustard green in my pantry right now... 🤤
@aquitainedugascon4726
@aquitainedugascon4726 Жыл бұрын
Decided I needed to make this when I first saw the thumbnail image - and my goodness it was even better then I thought it would be. Made a vegan version with some Vegetarian Butcher bacon and a Madame Jeanette pepper instead, but absolutely delicious and a future staple meal in my household for sure.
@Cairah2013
@Cairah2013 Жыл бұрын
Who else is from the south?
@thomas726
@thomas726 Жыл бұрын
can you cover chinese alcohol food pairing?
@Max-se3ii
@Max-se3ii Жыл бұрын
I made this today and used CANNED BEANS INSTEAD
@SorewaNekodesu
@SorewaNekodesu Жыл бұрын
Has anyone ever told you that you sound eerily similar to Ben Shapiro?
@PhoenixPwnsAll
@PhoenixPwnsAll Жыл бұрын
Very gassy dish
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407
@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Жыл бұрын
Worth it tho
@hxhdfjifzirstc894
@hxhdfjifzirstc894 Жыл бұрын
I was trying to watch Joe Brandon, but I just couldn't take it anymore and decided to watch Chinese Cooking instead. Six uh one, half uh dozen of da udder.
@timothyvanderschultzen9640
@timothyvanderschultzen9640 Жыл бұрын
Joe is bringing fast internet to the rural masses. God bless Joe.
@ChineseCookingDemystified
@ChineseCookingDemystified Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, it's state of the union day, huh
@az.................
@az................. Жыл бұрын
Who is Joe Brandon?
@OlEgSaS32
@OlEgSaS32 Жыл бұрын
@@az................. saltier than all the soy sauce in the world numbskull name for joe biden
@az.................
@az................. Жыл бұрын
@@timothyvanderschultzen9640 Yeah, I know. I was hoping to see "hxhdfj ifzir st c hxhdfj ifzir st c" stop hyperventilating for a moment and explain why he thinks he's so clever. Those types never can, sadly. Sad to see Chris is too lazy to shut that nonsense down. Oh well, at least I don't feel bad about unsubscribing from a RWNJ channel masquerading as a food channel. As the old tale goes: … and then you realize, oh shoot, this is a Nazi bar now. And it's too late because they're entrenched and if you try to kick them out, they cause a PROBLEM. So you have to shut them down.
@klasa3gplaterka5
@klasa3gplaterka5 Жыл бұрын
Well for me chinese dishes all taste the same there's a lot of chili pepper, ginger, garlic and scallion and soy souce. It's getting boring really fast. I totally don't recomand eating it more often than once per week. Better try some fancy European cuisine instead
@marsy6359
@marsy6359 Жыл бұрын
Considering how early this was commented methinks this is bait?
@noob19087
@noob19087 Жыл бұрын
No problem with that. But Chinese food is just as varied as European, you just don't know it as deeply as European.
@anthonyr8231
@anthonyr8231 Жыл бұрын
Yuropoor allergic to flavor
@sazara
@sazara Жыл бұрын
Amazing how this is a staple food in so many cuisines!
@notmyname327
@notmyname327 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a great vegetarian option! I don't think I can find those pickled greens in South America but I'll definitely experiment with sauerkraut
Garlic Dipping Sauce Noodles (蒜蘸面)
6:26
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 563 М.
Basics: Beef and Broccoli (西兰花炒牛肉)
16:54
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 286 М.
Smart Sigma Kid #funny #sigma #comedy
00:26
CRAZY GREAPA
Рет қаралды 17 МЛН
Little girl's dream of a giant teddy bear is about to come true #shorts
00:32
The Original Hakka Noodles (腌面)
10:29
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 125 М.
I Bought Taiwan’s EXPENSIVEST Noodles!!
19:50
More Best Ever Food Review Show
Рет қаралды 15 М.
Chinese Meat Sauce
13:12
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 278 М.
Breakthrough in Spicy Chicken Technology 🚀
13:17
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 155 М.
Cantonese Rice Plates (碟头饭)
10:28
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 74 М.
What does "Curry" mean in Asia?
17:37
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 71 М.
Chinese Seitan Making 101 (ok, maybe 201)
12:35
Chinese Cooking Demystified
Рет қаралды 170 М.
PRADO 250 - классная машина!
0:28
Тарасов Auto
Рет қаралды 3,4 МЛН
My Hero Brother‼️ How to Survive Swimming Pool😎 Like a Boss💕❤️😘 | JJaiPan #Shorts
0:49
Sigma girl and soap bubbles by Secret Vlog
0:37
Secret Vlog
Рет қаралды 11 МЛН
Жду в тг: @kedrovaalyona
0:59
Кедрова Алёна
Рет қаралды 3,4 МЛН
#kidsong
0:11
J House jr.
Рет қаралды 31 МЛН
When Brother Refuses to Listen #shorts #funny #fypシ゚viral
0:19
Javi’s Family Adventures
Рет қаралды 20 МЛН