Chinese Meat Sauce
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Roujiang, Chinese meat sauce!
0:00 - What's Roujiang?
0:24 - Don't Mapo-ify, Roujiang-ize!
1:34 - The culture of meat sauce in China
2:42 - Recipe for Hokkien Pork & Mushroom Sauce
5:10 - Our strategy for a Mala Beef Sauce
6:11 - Recipe for Mala Beef Sauce
10:50 - How to Use Roujiangs
11:37 - Mala Beef Hotdog Taste Test
FUJIAN PORK & MUSHROOM
* Dried shiitake mushroom (冬菇), 4
* Oil for frying, preferably peanut, ~1/3 cup
* Ground pork, 300g
* Shallots (干葱), 60g
* Sugar, 1 tbsp
* Slab sugar (片糖) or dark brown sugar, 50g
* Yellow bean sauce (黄豆酱), aka Taucho, 6 tbsp
* Soy sauce (生抽), 2 tbsp
* Sweet chili sauce (甜辣酱), 2 tbsp
* Dark soy sauce (老抽), ¼ tsp
* Chicken bouillon powder (鸡粉), 2 tsp
* Five spice powder (五香粉), 1 tsp
* Salt, ¼ tsp
* Reserved mushroom soaking liquid, ~1/2 cup
Thoroughly rinse the shiitakes, then soak overnight in cool water. Next day, squeeze the mushrooms, slice out the stems, and dice.
Mince the shallots. To make your mise easier, you can also combine all the ingredients after the sugar into one bowl and add them all in together.
Longyau with that 1/3 cup of oil. Over a medium flame, add the pork and fry until it changes color. Add the shiitakes and the shallot. Fry for ~15-20 minutes, or until the pork has started to brown, and render out a bit of oil. Add in the sugars, melt into the meat sauce. Once melted, add the remaining ingredients, and cook for ~5 minutes or so to sort of ‘combine’ the flavors.
MALA BEEF SAUCE
Making the Sichuan peppercorn powder and chili powder (optional):
For the Sichuan peppercorn powder and chili powder below, you can either use a store bought powder or make it yourself. Of the two, I would more strongly recommend toasting/grinding the peppercorns, but it’s totally up to you.
For the peppercorns, toast one tablespoons worth over a medium-low flame for ~3 minutes, or until they begin to glisten and leave little oil splotches on your wok. Then grind in a mortar or spice grinder.
For the chili powder, we’re using a mix of ~7.5g of spicy chilis (Xiaomila ‘millet’ chilis, but you could use Tien Tsin or Thai birds eye) and ~15g of a red, fragrant chili (Sichuan Erjingtiao ‘two vixen’ chili, but you could use Guajillo or Kashmiri). Slice up the chilis into your wok, discarding the stems, then toast over a medium-low flame. After ~10 minutes or so, the chilis should be brittle enough that you could break them apart with your fingers. Transfer to a spider or a colander, jiggle out most of the seeds. Grind into a powder.
Ingredients:
* Soybeans (黄豆), 120g
* Ingredients to cook the soybean: salt, ½ tbsp; dried bay leaves (香叶), 2; star anise (八角), 1; chili pepper, 1; Sichuan peppercorns (花椒), ~7
* Oil for frying, ~2/3 cup
* Spices to infuse the oil: cinnamon (桂皮), ~1/2 stick; star anise (八角), 2; fennel seed (小茴香), ½ tsp; tsaoko a.k.a. Chinese black cardamon (草果), 1
* Pixian doubanjiang a.k.a. chili bean paste (红油郫县豆瓣酱), 2.5 tbsp
* Aromatics: garlic, 8 cloves, minced; ginger, ~2 inches, minced; onion, ½ medium, minced; scallion, 150g, white and green parts separated and both sliced (greens are used later in the recipe)
* Ground beef, 500g
* Douchi, fermented black soybeans (豆豉), 1.5 tbsp. aka Yangjiang preserved beans
* Chili powder from above or a mix of 2 tbsp cayenne pepper and 2 tbsp of a not spicy chili powder like gochugaru or Kashmiri (feel free to use less cayenne/more mild chili if you want it less spicy)
* Soybean cooking liquid, 1.5 cups
* Liaojiu a.k.a. Shaoxing wine (料酒/绍酒), 1.5 tbsp
* Soy sauce (生抽), 4 tbsp
* Sugar, ½ tbsp
* Chicken bouillon powder (鸡粉), 1 tsp
* Final seasoning: salt, ¼ tsp; white pepper powder (白胡椒粉), 1 tsp; MSG (味精), 1 tsp; dark Chinese vinegar (陈醋/香醋), ½ tbsp; Sichuan peppercorn powder, from above or 1 tbsp
Wash the soybeans, then soak with hot, boiled water overnight - covered. The next day, drain, then add to a pot together with water and the ‘ingredients to cook the soybean’. Bring up to a boil, then down to a simmer.
The length of time will depend on the age of the soybean. In China, 1 hour would be enough to cook. In Thailand, we got older soybeans and after some poking around it seems to be the same case in the west. In this case, the soybeans NEED TO BE COOKED FOR 3-4 HOURS, not one. Apologies. For a way to speed things up, check out the pinned note below.
Once soft, strain and reserve the soybean cooking liquid.
For frying, I’m running out of space, so follow the video starting from 8:24.
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Outro Music: คิดถึงคุณจัง by ธานินทร์ อินทรเทพ
Found via My Analog Journal (great channel): • Live Stream: Favourite...
Пікірлер: 360
Hey guys, a few notes, and an important correction re soybean cooking time: 1. You will likely need longer than one hour to cook your soybeans until soft - probably at least three hours. We found that the soybeans in Thailand were older than the ones we would get in China, and needed longer to cook. We assumed that the situation in the West would be closer to our experience in China, but after poking around it seems that the western standard is something like 3-6 hours. Apologies. 2. If you’re short on time, you can use the following trick: first, drain out that 1.5 cups of soybean cooking liquid that we’ll want to use for the meat sauce later. Add additional water to the soybeans if needed. Then, add in ¼ tsp of either Kansui lye water -or- sodium carbonate. Bring to a rapid boil and boil it for 10-15 minutes - this should significantly soften the beans. This process will give the beans a slight greyish hue - slightly unattractive, but not really an issue in this particular dish. 3. Definitely check out Xiajie’s meat sauce recipe too: kzread.info/dash/bejne/lmejo9ODlM-yk5s.html Xiajie’s obviously pretty big - and has English subs! - so I’m the algorithm’s brought most of you to her already… but she’s one of our absolute favorites in the ‘village cooking’ genre. 4. I do want to reiterate that we *like* those ‘creative mapo tofu’ applications from the introduction - sometimes I feel like people can read a little bit too much into ‘critiques’. In particular, Matt’s (the Dumpling King) Mapo Tofu chili dog was one of the primary inspirations for this video. But all of that stuff - Andrea’s nachos, Mandy’s tofummus, Alex Blood’s mapo meat pie, Haikan’s mapo poutine - I want them all. We just feel that if mapo tofu can have so many applications, a mala roujiang would be even *more* versatile! 5. As an aside, I just learned about the existence of Mabo Tofu Ramen from researching this video, and was very happy to find a Japanese place in Bangkok that served it. It’s… awesome. It aggressively breaks the shape rule in a way that feels like it might not work, but totally does. 6. Oh, for the chili powders in the mala roujiang… definitely feel free to adjust the heat level to your tastes. I feel like the dish should be ‘obviously spicy’, but not uncomfortably so. If 2 tbsp of cayenne seems a little intimidating to your tastes, try using 3 tbsp gochugaru/Kashmiri and 1 tbsp cayenne… or even just all gochugaru/Kashmiri - you can always add more cayenne to taste later. And for those China-based, you can use Shaanxi chili powder for the ‘not spicy’ chili powder (i.e. in place of Gochugaru or Kashmiri). 7. If you accidentally made your sauce too spicy, balance it with more MSG, sugar, and Sichuan peppercorn powder. 8. For the curious, that bar that we were at in the outro is called "Fatty's Bar & Restaurant" - big thank you to them for letting us film there/get creative with their hot dog. If you're Bangkok-based and haven't heard of them, definitely check them out: goo.gl/maps/kKCw2Kvmy963vkyV9 . And while we're at it, two other Bangkok bar recommendations for those in the market: (1) United People's Brewery, goo.gl/maps/9Fy9jjerHs27RYov8 and (2) Yod Bar, g.page/YodBarBangkok?share . Fatty's is a fun place but it's definitely more of an expat haunch (so probably more relevant to people living in Bangkok than people traveling here) - United People's Brewery and Yod Bar are two of the focal points of Bangkok's nascent craft beer scene. 9. Something that we absolutely should have talked about in the video, and I'm now kicking myself for - Zhajiang (of Zhajiangmian/Jajangmyeon fame) *absolutely* also belongs to the same category of meat sauces. So besides the Fujian Pork & Mushroom, Zhajiang another roujiang 'standardized to dishhood' - and is definitely the most famous of the sort. That’s all for now. Might edit this a bit more later with more notes.
@ropro9817
Жыл бұрын
Yummmm... so, it's like a Chinese Bolognese sauce 🤠😋
@masstwitter4748
Жыл бұрын
I use XO sauce in this way - a kind of fancier version (given the cost of the ingredients 😳) but delicious on noodles and various western mash-ups eg as a burger sauce, on green beans, etc. Definitely intrigued by your Mala concoction!
@KrKrp0n3
Жыл бұрын
I cook basically all types of beans in a pressure cooker - significantly reduces cooking time and energy wastage. Had great results with soy beans too. Cook on heat for maybe 20 minutes, wait until it cools down, done.
@mmmmaximilian
Жыл бұрын
Hey! I'm Bangkok-based, would love to know where you went for Mabo tofu ramen! Sounds delicious
@NathanTAK
Жыл бұрын
I really want a video on the shape rule. It would satisfy my brain. I want to know about all the exceptions.
You guys might be the biggest resource for English Language Chinese cooking at this point. So if there is no accepted translation for an ingredient you could put one forward. Also have you considered creating a master list of all Chinese ingredients and sauces and their translations, identifications and substitutions because I think you're the most at liberty to do so.
@ChineseCookingDemystified
Жыл бұрын
Haha I feel it'd be be pretty arrogant to embark on that project ourselves... but I wonder if we could wrangle up some of the bigger names in the space (Woks of Life, SoupedUp, Made with Lau, etc etc) and together sort of formulate some standardized names? Might be cool to work on, but I'm also... a little lazy :)
@Grilnid
Жыл бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystified Cue the XKCD comic n.927
@swirlingabyss
Жыл бұрын
@@Grilnid Yes. Let's never attempt to standardize anything.
@paulg6778
Жыл бұрын
At first blush, some standardization of ingredient translations does sound cool. As I think about it, though, I realize that my main challenge with ingredients isn’t when reading Steph/Chris’ recipes - it’s while I’m in my local Chinese market, trying to identify the many bean sauces in front of me. In that situation, I find it much more reliable to reference the Chinese characters for the ingredient that Steph and Chris usually include in their recipes. Anyone who’s having trouble identifying an ingredient, I’d recommend they try and get comfortable with reading the alphabet of the package’s original labeling.
@thegreengatsby9803
Жыл бұрын
I have noticed the pan-asian cooking (the asian continent) is really unique to the region you are cooking the food from based on historical trade, climate and geography. As an Easterner (South Asian) with a mixed upbringing of both East and West, Westerners do like to classify and categorize everything. It’s not an insult, a mere observation 👀✌🏽
So I'm from Cincinnati. When Greek immigrants came over and settled in our city, they brought over this meat sauce that was eventually dubbed "chili" (even though it is not). This reminds me of it, and I like the cultural convergence.
@abydosianchulac2
Жыл бұрын
Oh, is _that_ why this chili everyone raved about had the consistency of water and I didn't understand it? This totally makes sense now.
@purple-flowers
Жыл бұрын
@@abydosianchulac2 yeah it's more of a pasta sauce that ignorant Americans decided to call chili. It's Mediterranean inspired and has cinnamon and other spices. Some recipes even call for dark chocolate. Not necessarily the most chili like thing lol.
@abydosianchulac2
Жыл бұрын
@@purple-flowers Now I'm craving a dish of gnocchi slathered with the stuff...
@purple-flowers
Жыл бұрын
@@abydosianchulac2 the "traditional" way is spaghetti, the Cincinnati "chili," and shredded cheddar cheese. You can also add diced onion, hot sauce, and other fun stuff. People also put them on hot dogs. Never tried it with gnocchi but I'm sure it's delicious.
@pastashack3517
Жыл бұрын
Yes!! I had the same thought. I'm sure you could serve either of these up exactly how you'd serve up chili
Proper taucheo / yellow bean sauce (wow it sounds weird saying this in English) is pretty much impossible to find outside of parts of China and Southeast Asia, but a really good sub for it is red miso, the more fermented the better. None of my fellow overseas Southeast Asians can tell the difference when I use red miso instead!
@aintmisbehavin7400
Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for that tip!
@ukguy
Жыл бұрын
They sell it in most chinese grocery stores I have been to.
@fajarsetiawan8665
Жыл бұрын
I second this as a SEAsian
@Juleru
Жыл бұрын
I found something in an asian store here (not Asia): It looked like a mix between soybean paste and the soybean sauce shown in the video, in terms of liquid-ness. It's the same brand ("Healthy Boy") but it's in a glass jar, not a bottle (just google "healthy boy soybean" and you'll find it). Do you know if you can also use that one too (and just add a little bit of e.g. water)?
@TheSilverwing999
Жыл бұрын
Good tip!
All I kept thinking is that it feels very "ragù" without the tomatoes, so it would be a very nice way to do a substitute spaghetti bolognese fusion. Roujiang feels very versatile, so thank you both for posting this!
@stefanmadansingh1966
Жыл бұрын
There are a handful of deliciously blasphemous mapo ragu recipes floating around, NYT Cooking has one and they’re way better than they should be… on noodles and nachos alike!
@WolfeBTV
Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same--this is somewhere around chili or bolognese, and damn the spices and schezuan peppercorns work so well with it. Gonna try my leftovers on some noodles or pasta, with a fried egg and maybe some green scallions and sesame oil on top 😋
@commenter4898
Жыл бұрын
Yes! And there's a joke here in Taiwan that meat sauce with rice (滷肉飯 luroufan) is just our version of spaghetti bolognese.
@sarahb3989
Жыл бұрын
Makes perfect sense! In Italian cuisine ragú doesn’t always mean tomatoes! Plenty of regional versions bianchi
@antonioscendrategattico2302
Жыл бұрын
I think it's a spicy bit of convergent evolution. Faced with very similar but slightly different situations, Chinese home cooks came up with something similar to what Italian home cooks came up with. And the rest is history.
I've been doing "mapo" udon for years, and had no idea people actually left the tofu in for stuff like that. It does seem superfluous!
@mannagrynet
Жыл бұрын
Some of us just really love tofu ok? ;__;
@alexaez2946
Жыл бұрын
You don't watch a lot of youtube channel, don't you
@FabbrizioPlays
Жыл бұрын
@@mannagrynet I love tofu too, but soft braised tofu is too fragile for anything other than soup. It makes no sense.
@FabbrizioPlays
Жыл бұрын
@@alexaez2946 it's very easy to watch a lot of youtube without ever seeing a mapo tofu burger
@mannagrynet
Жыл бұрын
@@FabbrizioPlays I sometimes add a larger piece instead of an egg to my ramen, but if you made actual mapu tofu and put that on ramen I can see it being difficult.
As a someone from a family who have no chefs in the family tree and don't care about subtle flavors, our meat sauce for topping noodles is just ground pork and half a packet of store-bought ... some sort of sauce. My personal favorite is a product called 香其酱, but generic 豆瓣酱 or northeastern 大酱 are also something my family or extended family sometimes use. Other than the packet of sauce, we don't really add anything else to the wok (no sugar no soy no five spice or whatever). Eggs instead of meat is also sometimes what my family cook up, if we happened to not have ground meat or when they feel like going a healthier route.
Just made the Ma-La version, it came out super tasty. I may have eased off a bit too much on the spicy, but its my meal prep for the week, so I didn't want it getting hotter in the fridge and going to waste. Serving it with rice and stir-fried oyster mushrooms and gai-lan
for people asking about the yellow bean sauce, because there's a number of "bean sauce/paste" with similar names it's easy to order the wrong one online or at your local asian market, you can look specifically for "puning bean sauce/paste" (普宁豆酱) that's the Chaozhou/Shantou (aka Chaoshan/Teo-swa/Chiusan) style mildly fermented yellow soybean sauce that goes really well with Chaozhou style cold fish(typically grey mullet 烏頭 is the best).
@beautenaturelle9989
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion. Do you have an online store that carries this brand?
When I was on exchange in late 2017, my favourite thing to eat at the cafeteria at Tsinghua University was a thing called Roujian ban-mian. it was a whole ordeal to figure out how to order it from a cafeteria stall that had several other lesser noodles, and whenever I ordered it successfully it was a massive treat. When I came home, I was still obsessed but I couldn't find a recipe anywhere (I think I actually found this channel looking for it). I assumed from the name ( and as Chris and Steph confirmed here) that the reason I couldn't find the recipe was because a dish called something as obvious as "meat-sauce mixed-noodle" was about as likely to have a fixed recipe as it sounds. That being said, without the intuition of a Aiyi, I knew I couldn't puzzle this one out on my own. I'm so excited that after five years, I can put my search to rest and finally get back to eating god's-own breakfast noodle. Thank you for doing the lord's work Chris and Steph!
I had something that was probably really similar to this meat sauce over spaghetti noodles at a Taiwanese bubble tea restaurant in the midwestern USA! It was like a mala kind of spaghetti, really interesting.
Something my family has made for ages is a jidanjiang, like chinese miso paste (not sure what to call it in english) and egg curd sauce that we serve atop vegetables or noodles. I would love to see an exploration of that from yall since I don't actually know anything about the history or if there are other regional variations.
@jingzheng1388
Жыл бұрын
Me too! My grandma and my mom used to make that when we didn’t have anything else at home and it’s so simple and quick and tasty. I love eating the sauce with congee or noodle.
I love how you show the front labels of all of the brands of ingredients you use and also write them in Chinese in your description. Years before your channel existed, I used to go to websites to find recipes for Asian foods that did the same thing before going to San Francisco and the surrounding cities where there were Chinatowns and Asian markets. I'd both memorize what the containers of ingredients looked like and write down the Chinese characters for them in a little note book and how they were pronounced in case the store didn't have the pictured brands, and I would try to get hotels with kitchenettes (this was before Airbnb existed too) and cook my own Chinese food. Several times I inspired tourists who saw me doing this to do it too, I even cooked someone dinner in their hotel with a kitchenette sometime around 2010 who asked me what I was buying, it was bitter melons and some asian sauces. Some KZreadrs turn the labels backwards because they are afraid to show the brand labels on KZread and I love that you show them. If possible put links to where people can buy them online, some of these items are not sold at the small Asian markets at my house and I cannot drive my car to San Francisco (its like 7 hours away) at this time because it is a antique diesel car and the doors do not lock and only one window rolls down fully. Some of this stuff is on Amazon for $27 dollars but on other sites for $2 if someone takes the time to find a link.
This channel has made me so happy since I found it. Very precise recipes.
Thank you guys as always, your videos are the best! I feel blessed every time
So glad I stumbled on this the same day I got ground pork in my CSA box. Far more exciting than my typical family polpetti recipe, and from the best English language resource for Chinese Christine I’ve found outside of Dunlop’s books! You’re both invaluable educators and wonderfully practical resource!!
this channel is incredible. thanks so much you two for sharing all of this. its been so much fun bonding with my mom over cooking these dishes. whenever i visit her, we try something new or keep it lazy and cook something familiar.
I appreciate y'alls dedication to the channel and craft that you would continue to produce a video when the rain is pouring down around you, thank you guys so much for the content.
Yay sister Xia! She was my gateway into "Chinese people cooking Chinese food"! I believe your channel got suggested to me from watching everything of hers
Mapo tofu is a masterpiece. The delicacy of the tofu is the star. Why would you do that? So glad we have this meat sauce to try. Love this channel so much 💛
I travel a lot for work and cook Korean Bulgogi using ground beef or small dice chicken a couple kilos at a time and package in vacuumed 230 ml jars, freezing until needed. It makes a great "sloppy joe", noodle / rice topping and even works over mashed or sliced potatoes. This looks like a great alternative and a totally different flavor profile; thank you for sharing!
I have been obsessed with making chili sauces lately so I cannot wait to try these recipes.
Dang Xiajie clip inside! Loooove her! Great video again guys
Will definitely try this out! I recently made a SE asian inspired spaghetti sauce that an American expat in Vietnam (much like yourselves) had made on tiktok for his kids. I used ground pork with shrimp paste, fish sauce, lemongrass, garlic and lime. Added in a bunch of tomatoes from my garden and it was pretty good! Definitely an interesting funky flavor from the shrimp paste and fish sauce that I appreciated. Anyways, these look immaculate, and I like to use your recipes bc it gives me a guide to what I need to look for at my local chinese/asian markets here in the midwest. Thanks!
New to the channel and had to make this--I made the beef sauce and it's amazing! I used a small frying pan to fry the spices (tipping it up a bit so the oil pooled to one side), then moved over to a 12" frying pan for the rest of it, and followed the instructions to a T. Definitely going to make this again and the only thing I'm going to adjust is cranking up the hot peppers, I love fire. Looking forward to trying more of your recipes!
this is the best cooking channel!
One of those pantry/fridge ready flavor mixes that I will definitely add to my collection :) Honestly our fridge is filled with prepped flavors and stocks that cooking something on a weeknight is fast and delicious!
This channel is fantastic 💜
Oh! So happy you used Xia Jie's weejios... I love her so much; she is so cute! I've learned so much about Shaanxi cuisine from her channel.
Nice video as always. btw Steph's hair looks amazing in this video for some reason
Love your channel! And the recipes of course! And your 'tauco' pronounciation is pretty good too 👍 Just want to kindly clarify that 'bahasa' literally means 'language' if you translate it to English. So it is more accurate (and makes me, this particular Indonesian, happy 😊) if you say 'bahasa Indonesia' instead. I know it's much longer but there you go 😁
@arraufsulaimanadi
Жыл бұрын
Or maybe just say "Indonesian" instead cuz, when you translate the word "bahasa indonesia" to english, it means Indonesian (CMIIW)
@welovephilippineswithmylov5419
Жыл бұрын
😱
I learned so much watching this one video! Thank you for your work, and 祝你有幸福的一天. 💖 (Excuse me if the Chinese is wrong. I used a translator but wanted to wish your team a blessed day.)
I like the Heretic sign in the back ground, used to go to their brewery in the Bay Area for years when I lived there. I really enjoy y'alls videos and have learned a lot from you 2. Thank you and Cheers from South Carolina.
Thank you! this is exactly how i feel about ma po fusion foods. I wanted to add that in Ma po tofu, the tofu itself is playing the role that a starch based ingredient normally does (to absorb flavor and dilute saltiness) so the tofu seems almost redundant in a lot of these ma po fusion foods.
nice recipe also the background at the end was really cool
As usual, great video!
Ha, then ending was great! 😂 I actually have some tsaoko pods. Really looking forward to trying this out. Thanks for all your hard work and taste testing. 😊
You knew I needed this in my life before I did. This is added to my list of things I want to try. And it also reminded me of my resolution to cook more mapo tofu. XD
Thanks for the video!
I'm so glad you made a chili dog with this. It was literally the first thing I thought of when I saw the thumbnail.
Really interesting mixing of flavors
We love my moms pork sauce on everything! Thx for this video. I’ve never had the beef sauce!
you have to try Mandy Lee's mapo to-fummus, seriously. she's an amazing cook. and the to-fummus (or whatever we want to call it) is cooling and complements the dish perfectly. her recipes are fussy, for sure, but she gets it right. her mochi bread (milk bread with a rice tangzhong) is amazing, too, and I'm generally NOT a fussy cook. sometimes, though, it's worth it. that said, I'm happy to see a roujiang recipe, even as someone who rarely eats meat! I do eat it sometimes, though, and when I don't, Impossible burger would work great for something like this. thank you, as always, Chris and Steph!
dude this and congee sounds so good..
Mapo tofu is super good. My go to is twice cooked pork. As always awesome channel
We used to call this chinese spaghetti sauce when we were young. This is so good to stir into pasta or rice!
this looks delicious, i can't wait to make this
Thanks so much for this recipe! I’m Indonesian and I confirm your pronunciation for tauco is correct 👌🏻
Mala hotdog topping sounds amazing!
Omg, looks so mouth watering. Thanks for the detailed instructions. Eat over noodles 🍜
The comment sections is always filled with people's wonderful insights to possible substituted and various life experience with the dishes. Makes it feel like one big happy family
it's quite funny that last week i was in the mood for mapo tofu -type flavours but definitely didnt want tofu, so i made a meat sauce very similar to the second recipe here, frying some pixian douban, aromatic vegetables, fried beef, though I used a ton of onion (because I had a lot of extra onion to use) and finished it off with chicken stock and oyster sauce for body and umami. I served it with chili oil on the plate to mix in so I could tool the spiciness because my partner does can't handle as much spiciness as me, keeping the sauce itself very sweet and savory and salty
I love it, it's the Chinese answer to spaghetti bolognese (the UK version, obviously) I'm definitely making this to smother over noodles.
As some one who can’t eat spicy food- thank you for including a non-spicy version of this “dish”!!🥰🥰
They both sound great, I kind of do the mala beef slop already and it's good.
The mala beef sauce is *amazing* in quesadillas! I'm blown away!
感谢您的食谱
Great stuff
Everyone is talking about using this meat sauce in different dishes. For me it looks a bit like the seasoned meat I use in Dan Dan Noodles. Pork, seasoning, sechwan peppercorn, bean paste, green onion. If I make this I will try it as a slightly more complex meat sauce for Dan Dan. Also thank you for clearly showing the yellow bean sauce. I know I can find it in one of the 2 Chinatown shopping districts nearby, but some of those stores care hundreds of different jars of sauces so seeing it will help immensely when trying to look at a couple hundred jars on the shelf.
that's a brilliant way to steep the spices in the oil
I've been gradually approaching my regular mapo tofu recipe to something like this over time, and good to know it's a totally valid template, but I am still good keeping the tofu in, as it is still a good and accessible filler if done right. I've been cutting it smaller and frying them early until crisp, then they absorb the sauce as it cooks and become chewy bits of flavor
"ma la beef slop" sounds SUPER appetising!
I recently discovered Mabo tofu and fell in love with the premade mix from the 168 market here in Vegas. The batch I made was heavy on the tofu but I've found it's as good without tofu or a lot less for me. Great video!
@giuseppelogiurato5718
Жыл бұрын
Getting from Carson City! ✌️
Oh my god, mala beef slop has me excited like wow. Mala beef slop noodles here I come.
Omg...the word choice of "Mala Beef Slop" 🤣 I zoned out a bit during the explanation of the recipe but was startled with laughter as I heard "mala beef slop...done"
I found it so fun when the analogy of a chili dog was used here to explain because I was starting to think the same thing. LOL
This Mala meat sauce is genius. A bit in the wok with left over rice, egg and veggies and in record time I have a delicious breakfast.
Living in the countryside of northern Japan, I found mapo ramen and mapo tenshinhan, both of which were amazing and would leave you in a food coma for hours.
I made this and served it with smashed cucumbers. Talk about delicious!!!!!😊😊😊
You almost pronounced "tauco" perfectly except the "u" should sounds like "u" in tofu. Great show as always!
That mapo tofu hummus sounded nasty until I saw it. That actually looks really delicious, and I love that it follows the classic guide of Silk Road cuisine. I know that's not at all what this video was about, I'm just impressed. I never saw that before.
So u basically made Chinese chilli!!! Yummy
Thanks!
Looks good! Chinese food is the best.
Love your videos, have cooked many things and tried many new dishes at restaurants after seeing them posted here. Curious about this recipe; any idea about carb content?
Will definitely give both of these recipes a go, and since lots of Chinese cooking typically combines pork with shrimp, I have a mindset to try the first recipe with shrimp instead of pork (for someone with a weird diet). As for the second recipe, minus the black beans (like you did...Freudian Slip? XD), it's similar to an American/Mexican chili recipe; we may not fry chili in a wok, and our recipes are all over the place, but for the most part, it's a very similar recipe.
mapo tofu ramen is awesome! when ever I have left over I will cook up some shin ramen and add mapo tofu to it.
Huh, I attempted a sort of mala "mapo noodle" thing last week and I felt it was missing something. Think I'll give your version a go soon!
rice and meat slop does taste good. In college I combined leftover white rice with manwich beef in desperation and it was great.
We have followed you since 2018 and love all the dishes. We wanted to show family the dry pot recipe but we couldn’t find it anywhere!? Was that video taken off? The seasoned spice mix made that dish!
Definitely going to make the mala option.
I’d never heard of mapo tofu before this actually.. I was vegan for 3 years and developed an affinity for tofu but I love mixing it was meats these days. I know what’s on my meal planning next week now 🎃
This inspired to try this as a pasta dish.
Chinese chili I love it!
Can highly recommend Mandy Lee’s Mapo tofummus! It was delicious
Im Indonesian Chinese and Your tauco pronunciation is pretty accurate!
Realizing i made somerhing very similar to this with hot paprika and a more tomato and red wine based sauce that I eat over rice, mostly. My folks were Italian and Hungarian immigrants, so it's a bit of a mix of both flavors. Ill have to add in some five spice powder and sechuan pepper to the next batch!
fun fact. Au pied de cochon in montreal (famous resteraunt here in canada) has a mapo tofu with fois gras and its DELICIOUS
Cool. I have that exact dark soy sauce at home. Lee kum Kee premium dark soy sauce.
Love the mobcraft sticker in your background!
i can't imagine adding msg to a dish that already has douban; such strong flavors already
Mabo tofu ramen is so sweet and wonderfully mild in Japan.
Thanks for allowing me to find my ancestor dialect name. Been trying to search for it for decades. Teochew from Chaozhou. 😂
Oooh this would be really good on poutine!
This reminds me of last night's dinner lol I made a non spicy beef slop ala pepper steak and dumped it on a baked potato. Tomorrow it's going on some rice or udon.
Kenji has one of these in his Wok book. He calls it "Pepperoni XO Sauce." It's good.
I watched this thinking at first it was going to be more similar to an Italian American meat sauce. But then by the mala version I was like...this is more akin to chili. The chili dog idea at the end has me wanting to try this out.
@PhatTrumpet2
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Agreed. For much of the video all I could think of was, "That would be amazing on a hot dog or baked potato."
@abydosianchulac2
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I really want to make a chili with sichuan peppercorns now
This is like the Chinese version of BBQ cookout beans with ground beef. I eat that as a rice topper too.
I tried this after watching the video a few month ago. We loved it and it's now part of our standarts. Came back to the video because I keep forgetting the name.. We just called it Chinese Bolognese 😬
2nd sauce. Can use soft canned red beans (without the brime tomato sauce). Beans ideal because its soft. Can use the egg omelette wrap mince meat. Good with rice and stir fried water spinach (mince meat)