Bud chives with beef
Bud chives
There are western chives, which look like spring onions but are more delicate with a hollow center and there are Chinese chives, which are flat. Chinese chives are more pungent in flavor than western chives, especially the flat Chinese chives while the bud chives are less so. The flat chives flourish in our weather, and my patch of flat chives has been with me for about 10 years. These perennials can be cut down to the soil level and within 3 days they will put up an inch of new shoots. They never get eaten by snails or any insects and I suspect that they keep my veg plot free from pests. They do need a lot of fertilizers or they begin to look like weeds.
Flat Chinese chives in the middle.
Flat chives are usually cut finely for making omelettes. A special version of flat chives is the jiu hwang, light yellow chives, which are grown like white asparagus--under cover and deprived of sunlight so there is no color pigment in them. These are more delicate and sweet but not easily available because they deteriorate within hours of cutting. Bud chives are from China and are sweet with a nice bite. I suspect that bud chives are just the budding stems from the ordinary flat chives but Chinese farmers have a way of growing only stems with buds. My flat chives grow stems with buds too if I don't harvest them but those stems are too hard to eat. As a simple veg dish, you can fry up a plate of plain bud chives or better still, add some meat such as prawns, chicken or pork but they go best with beef. Like we all know, sometimes the simplest dishes are the most delicious, and this is one of them.
Bud Chives With Beef
120 g bud chives (about 2 bundles)
250 g beef tenderloin or sirloin
Prep: Snap the chive from the bottom. It will break at the point where the stem is too hard for eating. Throw that part away (into the compost!) and either cut or snap the younger stem into 4 cm ( 1 1/2 inches) lengths. Cut the beef into thin strips and marinade with: 2 t light soy sauce, 1 t oyster sauce, 2 heaped t corn flour, 2 T water, 1 T rice wine, 1/2 t fine sugar, some freshly ground pepper, 1/8 t salt and a splash of good (Korean is best) sesame oil. Leave for 5 minutes.
1. Heat 1 T veg oil into a wok, add the chives and a pinch of salt and stir-fry until chives are bright green or half-cooked, or fully cooked as preferred. Splash 1 T shao xin wine or rice wine over the chives, stir and remove onto a plate. All at medium high heat.
2. In the same wok, add 2 T veg oil, coat the surface of the wok up to halfway. Add the beef and use your frying ladle to spread the beef into a single layer. Let it fry at high heat without stirring for about 1/2 minute. Now use your ladle to turn the beef over and let it cook another 30-40 seconds without stirring. Too much stirring toughens the beef. Now the beef should have turned mostly pale instead of red. Use your ladle and stir the beef to mix well and add about 2 T water or stock, then either a) add the fried chives to mix & fry a couple more seconds (high heat) and remove onto a plate or b) arrange the beef on top of the fried chives.
Bud chives
There are western chives, which look like spring onions but are more delicate with a hollow center and there are Chinese chives, which are flat. Chinese chives are more pungent in flavor than western chives, especially the flat Chinese chives while the bud chives are less so. The flat chives flourish in our weather, and my patch of flat chives has been with me for about 10 years. These perennials can be cut down to the soil level and within 3 days they will put up an inch of new shoots. They never get eaten by snails or any insects and I suspect that they keep my veg plot free from pests. They do need a lot of fertilizers or they begin to look like weeds.
Flat Chinese chives in the middle.
Flat chives are usually cut finely for making omelettes. A special version of flat chives is the jiu hwang, light yellow chives, which are grown like white asparagus--under cover and deprived of sunlight so there is no color pigment in them. These are more delicate and sweet but not easily available because they deteriorate within hours of cutting. Bud chives are from China and are sweet with a nice bite. I suspect that bud chives are just the budding stems from the ordinary flat chives but Chinese farmers have a way of growing only stems with buds. My flat chives grow stems with buds too if I don't harvest them but those stems are too hard to eat. As a simple veg dish, you can fry up a plate of plain bud chives or better still, add some meat such as prawns, chicken or pork but they go best with beef. Like we all know, sometimes the simplest dishes are the most delicious, and this is one of them.
Bud Chives With Beef
120 g bud chives (about 2 bundles)
250 g beef tenderloin or sirloin
Prep: Snap the chive from the bottom. It will break at the point where the stem is too hard for eating. Throw that part away (into the compost!) and either cut or snap the younger stem into 4 cm ( 1 1/2 inches) lengths. Cut the beef into thin strips and marinade with: 2 t light soy sauce, 1 t oyster sauce, 2 heaped t corn flour, 2 T water, 1 T rice wine, 1/2 t fine sugar, some freshly ground pepper, 1/8 t salt and a splash of good (Korean is best) sesame oil. Leave for 5 minutes.
1. Heat 1 T veg oil into a wok, add the chives and a pinch of salt and stir-fry until chives are bright green or half-cooked, or fully cooked as preferred. Splash 1 T shao xin wine or rice wine over the chives, stir and remove onto a plate. All at medium high heat.
2. In the same wok, add 2 T veg oil, coat the surface of the wok up to halfway. Add the beef and use your frying ladle to spread the beef into a single layer. Let it fry at high heat without stirring for about 1/2 minute. Now use your ladle to turn the beef over and let it cook another 30-40 seconds without stirring. Too much stirring toughens the beef. Now the beef should have turned mostly pale instead of red. Use your ladle and stir the beef to mix well and add about 2 T water or stock, then either a) add the fried chives to mix & fry a couple more seconds (high heat) and remove onto a plate or b) arrange the beef on top of the fried chives.
10 comments:
Hi Terri,
I have enjoyed reading your blog for the past few months!
Although this is an unrelated post, I was wondering if you had any recommendation of soups or drinks that can help prevent pimples! I currently reside in Sydney and occasionally I have nasty zits popping out!
Thanks a million!
Hi Terri,
I love reading your blog! Lots of fun reading and useful tips.
By the way, I love your garden patch that you have shown here. It is so healthy. I am just wondering where do you buy the seeds to grow this vegetable? Or rather, how do you grow this vege?
I WANT YOUR VEGGIE PATCH!!!! Is that choy sum behind those chives?? Wow...10 years! Last time I pulled the whole thing out when I harvested it...stupid me!
I want to have that dish EVERY NIGHT. Going to Singapore this weekend and am gonna request Tasha to cook this.
melissa: thank u, it's always a pleasure when a reader tells me tt :D
ah, soup to ward off pimples. i wish i know tt too bc my kids r pimply too. unfortunately i just threw away a recipe a chinese medicine lady gave me. it wasn;t tt there were about 15 items on the list. it wasn;t tt the kids need to drink the soup 40 times. it was tt two of the ingredients were sea horses n something else tt looks like sea horse but doesn;'t have a curled tail.
bunnies: thanks, dear. which veg do u mean? i get my basil n rocket seeds frm australia, n local veg seeds frm lian kee in sunny garden. to grow, find a sun-lit patch and get some good top soil, mix with peat or compost. i make my own compost with grass cuttings, cow dung n veg, fruits peels.
pp: i think it's easier to grow veg in australia bc the veg thrive better in cool weather than in sizzling heat like here. but do u still hav water restrictions?
bryan: hey, u shd be cooking for tasha by now! have fun in sing!
Hi Terri,
I am referring to the bud chives seeds. I live in Kuala Lumpur and was wondering if I can grow this vege.
Cooking for Tasha? I have MUCH to learn! Are you going to hold cooking classes? *wink wink*
That looks so goooood! My mouth is watering! :) I'm going to have to try that out...thanks so much for sharing!
Olivia
Tasha cooked this for me over the weekend, it was great!
bryan: yes, i bet she cooks great. but just be careful u don't annoy her ah...what do they use now, not chloroform anymore ya?
Post a Comment