Chinese food is one of those cooking mysteries where I always suspected that I wasn't getting the whole story. I've browsed cookbooks, watched a ton of shows, and surfed the internet trying to find out how the restaurants can get their food to taste just so. Until yesterday, I uncovered (and spread) two commonly held beliefs, and one theory:
The beliefs:
- The reason restaurant Chinese food tastes so good is because of the high-powered burners they use, which we don't have access to at home.
- The reason restaurant Chinese food tastes so good is the massive amount of MSG they use.
Is this the secret to great Chinese food? |
My alternate theory:
- The reason restaurant Chinese food tastes so good is that there are ingredients that nobody ever talks about, like some kind of closely guarded Buddhist secret that you may one day find in a fortune cookie, or learn on top of a very tall mountain. Like the place Bruce Wayne went to in Batman Begins.
So after years of hard searching, I finally was able to make an awesome Szechwan dish. The secret: I got insider help at the store and in the kitchen. And it turns out my theory was right: we used ingredients and methods I've not seen in any of my searches. Now, as to whether those other beliefs are true or not, I can't say, but all I know is that this dish is phenomenal, and I didn't have to crack into that 100 pound drum of MSG.
There's an adage that says "China is the place for food, but Sichuan is the place for flavor." And they're right - Szechwan food has crazy ingredients, heat levels, and flavor combinations unlike any of the bland Cantonese food I was used to, so naturally I have developed a healthy addiction to it. But in searching for Szechwan recipes I came up with little of substance; ingredient lists typically consisted of soy sauce, hoisin, oyster sauce, and other things that I didn't think were quite on the mark. All I knew is that there are these crazy Szechwan peppercorns which produce a numbing sensation, which I promptly bought the first time I saw them but couldn't figure out how to use.
The mystery remained until I met a friend who said she could help me. We met at a large Asian grocery store and wandered around, and while I tried to grab at ingredients I knew, she was steering me towards all of those aisles that I've never figured out. If you've ever been in an Asian grocery store (this is mostly for non-Asian people), you might agree that there are vegetables you've never seen and jars of sauces and liquids with poor English labeling, both of which you tend to breeze right past. And it turns out that these are the secret to good Chinese food, right under our noses but hidden in a sea of Chinese characters.
The dish (and the following one) presented here are both 'home-cooked' Chinese dishes; this one is Szechwan, the other one I have no idea. It is basically pork with chiles in a chile sauce, similarly named to a dish which killed all of my taste buds for two weeks at a Thai restaurant in Sydney. I was having flashbacks about the heat level, but excited to give it a go. The ingredient list is short, but if you don't know what to look for you won't find it. So I will try to help. And as always, if anyone reading this has good suggestions, additions, or substitutions, post them so we can all see.