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Chinese Chow Mein Noodles | (炒面 – Chǎomiàn)

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Although food historians can’t really agree on who made the first chow mein and when, this stir-fry dish whose name comes from the Mandarin chǎomiàn and Taishanese chāu-mèing (lit. fried noodles) had probably originated in Northern China.

And even though there are as many varieties of chow mein in China as there are regional cuisines, the method of preparation is basically the same. The noodles are boiled and fried until crispy on the outside but still soft in the middle, then tossed with shredded pieces of meat (chicken, pork, beef or seafood) in a classic stir-fry sauce, which is often flavored with rice wine.

Chinese Chow Mein Noodles | (炒面 – Chǎomiàn)

Recipe by Chinese Cooking DemystifiedCourse: MainCuisine: ChineseDifficulty: Medium
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

20

minutes
Cooking time

15

minutes
Calories

300

kcal
Total time

35

minutes

Although food historians can’t really agree on who made the first chow mein and when, this stir-fry dish whose name comes from the Mandarin chǎomiàn and Taishanese chāu-mèing (lit. fried noodles) had probably originated in Northern China.

Ingredients

  • Cantonese Egg Noodles, 100g

  • Jiucai, “Chinese Chives”, 50g

  • Bean Sprouts, 70g

  • Half of a Shallot

  • Quarter of a White Onion

  • For Sauce:
  • Boiling Water, 5 TBSP.

  • Sugar, 1 TBSP.

  • Dark Soy Sauce, 1 TBSP

  • Light Soy Sauce, 2 tsp

  • Sesame Oil, 1 tsp

  • Thick Soy Sauce, ½ TBSP

  • Fish Sauce, ½ tsp

Directions

  • Prep your veggies. Cut the jiucai (“Chinese Chives”) into sections, dice your shallot, slice the onion, and (if doing so) prepare your silver sprouts.
  • Cook the noodles. Before you toss your noodles in, take 5 TBSP boiling water for the sauce in step #4.
  • Rinse, drain, and cover your noodles. Once it’s finished, in a colander rinse your noodles thoroughly under cold running water to stop the cooking process.
  • Prepare your sauce. Whisk in the sugar into those 5 TBSP of boiling water that you reserved. Then add in the rest of the ingredients for the sauce and give it a mix.
  • Sweat the jiucai and the bean sprouts.
  • Oil your wok using the longyau technique. I’m separating this into a separate step, but we’re going to be doing this three times over the next three steps.
  • The longyau technique is this: get your wok nice and hot over a high flame, pour some oil and swirl it around to coat the wok and get a nice non-stick surface, and then pour out any excess oil. The amount of oil that we drain will be different for each ingredient.
  • Fry your shallots.
  • Fry your onions.
  • Fry your noodles. for 30 seconds on low medium heat
  • Add your sauce and reduce it in the noodles.

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