Burton Mail

USE YOUR NOODLE

ELLA WALKER learns how to be a wok star with food writer and cookbook author Pippa Middlehurs­t

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THERE are far, far more variations of soy sauce than the average supermarke­t would have you believe. Your local newsagent will likely be better supplied, beaten only by the Technicolo­ur cornucopia of your nearest Chinese supermarke­t.

I spend a good 20 minutes in mine – mask on, fishmonger at the entrance rattling through orders, intricatel­y designed packets of instant noodles in towers where walls would be – just reading hundreds of soy sauce bottle labels.

It’s tough not to scoop the lot into a basket and take it all home – which is likely what Pippa Middlehurs­t would do.

“If I go to a Chinese supermarke­t now and I see an ingredient I don’t have in my pantry, I want it, and I want to know what to do with it, and I want to know how it tastes,” explains the Manchester-based food writer, and author of new cookbook, Dumplings And Noodles.

A paean to its namesakes, if you’re brand new to pleating your own gyoza, and making bao, biang biang noodles and ramen, the book will have you escaping the limited condiments aisle in Tesco and Sainsbury’s, and tracking down ingredient­s like Chinkiang black vinegar, Shaoxing rice wine, dried shrimps, shiro miso paste and doubanjian­g (broad bean chilli sauce).

And once you’ve loaded up on those, Pippa will then have you making huge vats of your own chilli oil – hers is spiked with cardamom, fennel and ginger.

On Zoom, Pippa’s tied up the corkscrew curls you’d recognise from her stint on Britain’s Best Home Cook, which she won in 2018.

A cancer research scientist, she’s currently focusing on food full-time, writing recipes, running cookery classes, and is set to open a culinary community space, called Noodlehaus, this autumn. She makes the idea of throwing a bowl of noodles together for lunch seem not only achievable, but wholly sensible.

We make her charred broccoli soba with a crispy fried egg on top (for adequate crispiness, Pippa says a wok is a must – and yes, you would be forgiven for looking at her Instagram page @pippyeats, and thinking she has a fried egg with everything).

Separately but together, we char branches of tenderstem broccoli, frazzle garlic and chilli in a pan, and douse soba noodles in soy sauce and Chinkiang black vinegar. The fried egg oozes yellow-yolk over pink-edged radish slices and angular slivers of spring onion.

While for quick meals, dried noodles are the go-to, in the book, Pippa also explains the science of hand pulling noodles and the graft required to make them, which she experience­d at noodle school in China where she spent two solid days kneading dough, hour after hour.

Pippa’s interest in Asian cuisines stems from her granddad’s pursuit of excellence.

“It wasn’t that he loved only Chinese food, but he loved fine things, good things, and he would pride himself on where to find the best restaurant­s,” she remembers.

“He smoked a pipe for a few years, but he didn’t just smoke tobacco, he smoked organic tobacco; when he had a walking stick, he’d have it made by the best walking stick maker.”

He would take Pippa and her siblings for dim sum at a restaurant stacked on top of a Chinese supermarke­t on an industrial estate: “It was really traditiona­l, with Hong Kong dim sum trollies.”

She found the supermarke­t as fascinatin­g as the dim sum.

“I was just so intrigued by all the ingredient­s and what they tasted like, and how they were used,” she explains.

“That giddiness and intrigue has never really left me.”

Dumplings And Noodles by Pippa Middlehurs­t, photograph­y by India Hobson, is published by Quadrille, £16.99.

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Pippa Middlehurs­t

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