Dry-Fried Green Beans
- 10 ounces haricots verts or green beans
- Peanut oil
- 3 ounces ground pork (about 2/3 cup)
- 2 teaspoons Shaoxing rice wine or medium-dry sherry
- 2 teaspoons soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons Sichuanese ya cai or Tianjin preserved vegetable, finely chopped
- Salt to taste
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- Remove any strings from the edges of the beans and trim off the tops and tails.
- Break them into short sections (about 2 inches long).
- Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a wok, add the beans, and stir-fry over a medium flame for about 6 minutes, until they are tender and their skins are a little puckered.
- Remove from the wok and set aside.
- (If you want to save time, deep-fry the beans at about 350F until they are tender and puckered).
- Heat another 2 tablespoons of oil in the wok over a high flame, add the pork, and stir-fry for 30 seconds or so until its cooked, splashing in the Shaoxing wine and the soy sauce as you go.
- Add the ya cai or Tianjin preserved vegetable and stir-fry briefly until hot, then toss in the beans.
- Stir and toss, adding salt to taste (remember that the ya cai is already very salty).
- Remove from the heat, stir in the sesame oil, and serve.
- Variation:
- One restaurant I know in Chengdu cooks a similar dish with bitter melon, which is sensational.
- The melon is deseeded and cut into thin strips and then fried in the same way as the beans, until the strips are tender and slightly wrinkly.
- The final frying is exactly the same as in the recipe above, although they do add a few dried chiles and a couple of lengths of scallion, white, and green parts.
verts, peanut oil, ground pork, rice wine, soy sauce, tianjin preserved vegetable, salt, sesame oil
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/dry-fried-green-beans (may not work)