Friday, October 1, 2010

Chinese vegetable: On-Choy, 空心菜 - IN STOCK


My favorite vegetable is the Chinese dish 空心菜 (pinyin: kong xin cai) or in Cantonese, On-Choy. The literal translation is hollow heart vegetable. It totally makes sense once you take a look at the green stems…which are hollow on the inside! I always ask for this dish in any Chinese restaurant- even if its not on the menu because it is often a specialty dish. If you try it you might even impress the waitstaff with your Chinese vegetable knowledge.

Ingredients:
One bunch On-Choy/空心菜
3-4 cloves of garlic, peeled and coarsely chopped
1 tbsp vegetable oil - I think peanut oil is used most often in cooking, but correct me if I'm wrong.
salt to taste

Directions:

1. Take the vegetable and unbundle it. Cut about 1/2 inch-1 inch off the stems and discard.
2. Next separate the leaves from the stem. Just gently snap off the leaves and separate from the stems and put into separate bowls. (I like to do this because the leaves cook so much faster than the stems, so starting with the stems will keep your leaves tender and not overcooked). Wash the leaves and stems thoroughly and dry. (Sometimes I lay them out on a paper towel to dry. This is so that when you toss in the vegetables later you do not get crazy oil splatter from the water)

3. Add oil to a pan, add garlic and turn to high heat.

4. When you hear the garlic start to sizzle, add the stems. (Be careful of oil splatter if the stems have any excess water). Cook for ~2-3 minutes or until the stems start to get soft, but not fully cooked (taste one to try).

5. Add in the leaves to the pan and slowly mix as the greens cook. Don’t worry- they shrink A LOT!  Cook another 2-3 minutes until greens are just tender. Add salt to taste.

Note: Another variation I like is instead of salt to use 豆腐乳(fermented tofu). Thoroughly mix 1-2 cubes with some water in a separate bowl and add in pan in lieu of salt.

6. Take vegetables out of the pan immediately otherwise they will continue to cook and get tough. Even if you take them out onto a plate, they will still cook a little.

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