Handy ingredients for chinese cooking
Handy ingredients for chinese cooking
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ScotHill

Original Poster:

3,854 posts

130 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
There are a few Chinese supermarkets around us and we basically have no idea what 90% of the ingredients are.

We're up on the basics like soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, five spice, chillies and lime juice, but what are some handy ingredients we could buy to give an authentic boost to cooking meat and veg? Thinking pastes, spice mixes, bottles of stuff, anything we could drop into an existing dish to add to the flavour.

hoagypubdog

756 posts

165 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
MSG

loskie

6,664 posts

141 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
If you like Chinese curry
Yeungs brand Chinese curry sauce mix

add some extra ginger, chilli and garlic and make with chicken stock for extra loveliness

trackdemon

13,123 posts

282 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
Fish sauce

eltawater

3,377 posts

200 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
Give these a try:

Red pork powder
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Lobo-Roast-Red-Pork-Seaso...

Rice Wine Vinegar

Chili Oil

Fish sauce (salty taste)

Potato starch to coat your meat before stir frying with sauce to thicken it a bit

Chinese marinade if you like a slightly weaker soy taste to marinade your meat in
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Lee-Kum-Kee-Chinese-Marin...

Lots of lovely fresh smashed garlic and crunchy spring onion

It's not really about these though. The important thing is to have fresh meat and vegetables chopped appropriately to size and cooked quickly to retain the textures and flavours.

bazza white

3,720 posts

149 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
Box of egg noodles. supposed to be quite different to supermarket varieties.

MSG nom nom


Carbon steel wok as well. Cheap but will need seasoning.








Evoluzione

10,345 posts

264 months

Monday 20th December 2021
quotequote all
Buy a cook book.
Something like 'Chinese cooking' or similar would be a good start.

putonghua73

615 posts

149 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
As someone who has been cooking predominantly Northern Chinese food for 9 years (my Chinese partner is defective i.e. can't cook, won't cook - and not being Korean, came without a 7 year warranty), the main things you need to cook authentic, home cooked Chinese food are:
- rice cooker (majority of Chinese use rice cookers)
- wok
- Soy sauce light and dark (Lee Kum Kee)
- Chinese vinegar (Chin kiang black rice vinegar)
- Shaoxing wine (taijade)
- Aromatics (garlic, ginger and spring onion / leek)
- Salt
- Cornflour

That's it for essentials! However, you will probably need to have in stock:
- Sichuan peppercorns
- Dried lajiao
- Chili Bean Sauce (doubanjian - essential for mapodofu and twice-cooked pork)

Two YT Chinese cooking channels:
- Chinese cooking demystified
- Xiaoying Cuisine

I'd also recommend thewoksoflife on the web, and chinasichuanfood as well.

Easy dishes to get started:
- twice cooked pork
- mapo dofu
- Taiwanese beef noodle soup (will need an hour or so cooking time)
- Hunan stir-fried cauliflower

FWIW, I'm vegetarian and cook meat and fish for my partner. Homestyle Chinese cooking does not require hours slaving away making complex dishes. However, there are usually vegetable side dishes e.g. hunan cauliflower, stir-fried broccoli garlic, cucumber salad, etc.

You'll also need to do eggs Chinese style (very easy with tomatoes).

Absolutely no MSG!

Almost forgot: no self-respecting Chinese kitchen is complete without laoganma (preserved black bean in chili oil).

In terms of noodles, for simple broths, Rolin Taiwanese Knife Shave Noodles. Good lord! Absolutely delicious with simple stock, Chinese style eggs and tomato (laoganma on the side).

craigthecoupe

928 posts

225 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
school of wok is another great youtube channel.
i'm afraid i'm very ignorant of what food comes from where, and lump it all in as 'asian cuisine' but i love the clean flavours.
stake mushrooms, and star anise are current favourites to use with all the usual stuff to make a broth for slurpy noodle soups.

Mark Asread

3,176 posts

160 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Bat.

badgerade

705 posts

219 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
If you want to recreate takeaway style stuff, have a look at Ziangs Food Workshop on youtube.

As already said, MSG is what makes the difference.

Stuff like the dried Lucky Boat noodles will allow a near perfect takeaway chow mein, which is pretty much impossible using supermarket dried noodles which turn to mush.

For chicken satay (or any other satay/sate type stuff) this stuff is amazing: https://www.myjimmysate.com/home


option click

1,178 posts

247 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
In addition to most of the above, we always have a supply of fish balls, fish cakes and Ikan Bilis.

ambuletz

11,503 posts

202 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
In addition to all the above... aromat seasoning.

Murph7355

40,817 posts

277 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Mirin. (Technically Japanese. Nicer than Chinese cooking wine smile).

Star Anise.

Ginger.

Bao buns.

ambuletz

11,503 posts

202 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Also, in addition to the above youtube channels i also suggest School of Wok. based in soho, they have a restaurant, but also do cooking classes, ontop of that they teach the same thing through their youtube channel.

rsbmw

3,466 posts

126 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Jimmy's Sate sauce. About 20 years ago a friend whos parents owned a takeaway recommended it to me as something they use in the takeaway, it is phenomenal. This stuff - https://www.yaubros.co.uk/products/jimmys-sate-sau...

Thank me later.

Monkeylegend

28,255 posts

252 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Dog.

RudeBoy

405 posts

53 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Rice.

shalmaneser

6,269 posts

216 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
quotequote all
putonghua73 said:
As someone who has been cooking predominantly Northern Chinese food for 9 years (my Chinese partner is defective i.e. can't cook, won't cook - and not being Korean, came without a 7 year warranty), the main things you need to cook authentic, home cooked Chinese food are:
- rice cooker (majority of Chinese use rice cookers)
- wok
- Soy sauce light and dark (Lee Kum Kee)
- Chinese vinegar (Chin kiang black rice vinegar)
- Shaoxing wine (taijade)
- Aromatics (garlic, ginger and spring onion / leek)
- Salt
- Cornflour

That's it for essentials! However, you will probably need to have in stock:
- Sichuan peppercorns
- Dried lajiao
- Chili Bean Sauce (doubanjian - essential for mapodofu and twice-cooked pork)

Two YT Chinese cooking channels:
- Chinese cooking demystified
- Xiaoying Cuisine

I'd also recommend thewoksoflife on the web, and chinasichuanfood as well.

Easy dishes to get started:
- twice cooked pork
- mapo dofu
- Taiwanese beef noodle soup (will need an hour or so cooking time)
- Hunan stir-fried cauliflower

FWIW, I'm vegetarian and cook meat and fish for my partner. Homestyle Chinese cooking does not require hours slaving away making complex dishes. However, there are usually vegetable side dishes e.g. hunan cauliflower, stir-fried broccoli garlic, cucumber salad, etc.

You'll also need to do eggs Chinese style (very easy with tomatoes).

Absolutely no MSG!

Almost forgot: no self-respecting Chinese kitchen is complete without laoganma (preserved black bean in chili oil).

In terms of noodles, for simple broths, Rolin Taiwanese Knife Shave Noodles. Good lord! Absolutely delicious with simple stock, Chinese style eggs and tomato (laoganma on the side).
Great post.

Blown2CV

30,591 posts

224 months

Thursday 30th December 2021
quotequote all
laoganma

what's wrong with MSG? It isn't actually bad for you.