Pickled Greens and Beans (Guizhou classic)

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 () or kidney beans (), 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 (), 100g
* Smoked Larou (/), 15g, optional
* Aromatics:
Garlic, 4 cloves, smashed;
Ginger (), ~1 inch, smashed;
Scallion, white and green part separated, white smashed and greens sliced
* Spicy dried chilis, e.g. Heaven facing or Thai birds eye, ~3, halved
* Lard (preferably), 2 tbsp, for frying
* Baijiu () or Shaoxing wine (/), 1 tbsp
* Oil, 1.5 tbsp, for frying the mashed beans
* Soy sauce (), tbsp
* Ingredients to season the cooking liquid:
Salt, tsp;
Sugar, tsp;
Chicken bouillon powder (), tsp
* Final seasoning:
MSG (), tsp;
Dark Chinese vinegar (/), 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 its 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 () or kidney beans (), 110g
* Chinese pickled mustard greens (), 100g
* Aromatics:
Garlic, 2 cloves, sliced;
Scallion, 1, white and green part separated, both sliced
* Spicy dried chilis, e.g. Heaven facing or Thai birds eye, ~3, cut into ~1cm sections
* To coat the beans:
Cornstarch (), 2-3 tbsp
Salt, 1/8 tsp
* Seasoning:
Salt, tsp;
Sugar, tsp;
MSG (), tsp
* Soy sauce (), 1 tsp
* Five spice powder (), 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!
http://www.patreon.com/ChineseCookingDemystified

Outro Music: by
Found via My Analog Journal (great channel): https://youtu.be/GHaL5H-VYRg
Share this Post:

Related Posts: