I love pickles in the summer time. They’re crisp and refreshing and really whet your appetite. Everything tastes better with pickles! My Hot and Sour Hunan Green Beans are an homage to a classic dish from Hunan. Diced pickled long beans with ground pork 酸豆角炒肉末 (suān dòu jiǎo chǎo ròu mò) are an unforgettable flavor from my childhood. Although it’s been 20 years since my friend’s grandmother made this dish for us, the crunchy, savory, spicy, tart flavor is unforgettable.
豆角 (dòu jiǎo) Chinese long beans (aka asparagus beans) are similar to green beans, which can be substituted in this recipe. The traditional Hunan version uses pickled long beans, lacto-fermented pickles that many Chinese families make at home. I’ve eliminated the fermentation process for this easy stir fry that comes together in under 15 minutes.
Ingredients: Hot & Sour Hunan Green Beans
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This is a super straightforward stir fry of long beans with ground pork. For aromatics, we only need garlic, ginger, and fresh chilies (red or green). As with many Hunan dishes, we use fresh chili peppers for a bright, spicy flavor. I also added 剁椒 (duò jiāo) Chinese pickled red pepper relish for color and extra-authentic flavor. I finish with a drizzle of chili oil (or substitute oil from a jar of Laoganma chili crisp).
To replicate the tart crunch of pickled long beans, I use a good dose of plain distilled white vinegar. I like my Hunan green beans quite hot and quite sour, but this dish is easily customized to your own taste.
Instructions: Hot & Sour Hunan Green Beans
To start, I used a method similar to my Sichuan dry-fried green beans. By blanching the finely diced green beans in salted water for 30 seconds, we can reduce cooking time and improve flavor absorption. We then stir fry ground pork / beef in a wok on medium-low heat (280°F = 5.0 on my Duxtop induction) until the fat renders out and the meat is golden brown. Add the garlic, ginger, and fresh chilies, continue stir frying until fragrant.
Turn up the heat to medium-high (340°F = 6.5 on the Duxtop). Add in the blanched green beans, and keep tossing until the excess moisture has cooked off and the long beans are cooked through. Because we blanched them first, the beans stay crunchy and bright green. At this point, we can add all the seasonings to the pan: vinegar, pickled red peppers, salt, a splash of light soy sauce, and sugar. Give everything a few good tosses to evenly combine, taste for seasonings, and adjust as desired.
Wine Pairing
Leon Beyer Pinot Gris 2016, serve at 43-46°F / 6-8°C
Dr. Loosen Urziger Wurzgarten Kabinett 2019, serve at 43-46°F / 6-8°C
Robert Weil Estate Riesling Spatlese 2015, serve at 43-46°F / 6-8°C
For spicy, tart dishes like hot and sour Hunan green beans, I like a white wine with some residual sugar. Two great choices are off-dry riesling or rich pinot gris. The sugar helps contrast the acid in the food. Look for minerality to give it some structure.
Pinot gris is the French name for the same grape as pinot grigio. The pinot gris of Alsace tend be fuller-bodied and richer than most pinot grigios on the market. Look for a rich golden-yellow color, a good indication of a wine with some body. I love pinot gris with spicy, sour, or rich foods, and Alsatian pinot gris is particularly good with pork.
Alternatively, I would turn to Germany for riesling with some residual sugar. A late harvest Spätlese riesling or an off-dry Kabinett would pair well with the heat of this dish and stand up to the acid. Of the two, the the spätlese will be richer and sweeter because late-harvest grapes contain more sugar. It would be perfect alongside a cured meat like 腊肉 (là ròu). If the other dishes in the meal are lighter or more vegetable-forward, I would try the Kabinett.
Did you try this dish?
Please let us know what you thought in the comments below, and share your results #thericelover on Instagram!
These Hunan green beans are a classic 下饭菜 (xià fàn cài) — a super flavorful dish that’s great over rice (literal translation “dish for downing rice”). They are also phenomenal atop a bowl of congee, mixed with noodles, or as a relish served with my savory chickpea flour pancakes. No matter what you’re eating, the brightness, spice, and crunch will instantly perk up any meal!
Hot and Sour Hunan Green Beans 酸豆角炒肉末
Equipment
- wok (or 3qt+ stir fry pan) + wok spoon or spatula
Ingredients
- 12 oz long beans or green beans 长豆角或四季豆,350克
- 6 oz ground pork or ground beef 碎猪肉,150克
- 2 fresh hot chilies red or green, minced (to taste) 青红辣椒,适量,切碎
- 2 tsp minced garlic 2颗大蒜,切碎
- 1 tsp minced ginger 2克姜,切碎
- 2 Tbsp distilled white vinegar to taste 白醋,30克
- 1½ tsp
light soy sauce 生抽酱油,8克 - 2 Tbsp
pickled red pepper relish optional 剁椒,2汤勺 - 1 Tbsp neutral cooking oil like avocado or canola 菜油,10克
- ¼ tsp salt to taste 食用盐,2克
- ⅛ tsp sugar 白糖,2克
- 1 tsp
chili oil optional 辣椒油,5可
Instructions
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil, adding ~1 tsp of salt per quart of water. Chop long beans or green beans into 1/8" segments. Blanch green bean segments in the salted water for 30 seconds. Set aside.把豆角切碎,盐水焯30秒,沥干备用。
- Heat stir fry pan to medium heat (280°F) and add the oil. Saute ground pork, breaking it up into small pieces, until the meat is cooked through and the fat has rendered. Add in aromatics (garlic, ginger, fresh chilies) and saute until fragrant.油锅烧至140°C,将肉末炒至金黄。锅里加入切碎的姜蒜辣椒,爆香。
- Add in blanched green beans, tossing continuously, until cooked through but still crisp, 3-5 minutes. Add vinegar, soy sauce, pepper relish, chili oil, sugar, and salt to taste. Toss until thoroughly combined.转中大火(170°C)。加入豆角,不停翻炒至熟透,约3-5分钟。调味:以个人口味加白醋,生抽,白糖,剁椒,盐。翻炒均匀即可出锅装盘。
Comments
Yum I will need to add this to the list of things to cook!
你的刀功真不错。好多人没有耐心和方法这样切细碎的食材的。你改良了酸豆角版的炒碎肉,真接用新鲜的豆角。赞!
Author
我的刀工勉强过关,但是我真的特别喜欢切菜。我真的觉听听音乐做做饭非常享受。大概只要是自己喜欢的事情都有耐心吧!
是呀,做自己喜欢的事,那是可以沉浸在其中,个中的欢愉有时只能意会,不能言传的。一如你妈妈喜欢种菜,你爸爸喜欢摄影,我喜欢种花花草草一样。
这世上不是怕痴迷,就怕没有什么事情可以让自己痴迷。