Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Put down that takeout menu: Here are some stirfry basics

- By Katie Workman ASSOCIATED PRESS

For every home cook happily tossing together a stir fry at home, there are a dozen wouldbe stir fryers wanting to make chickenbro­ccolisugar­snappea stir fry and then sheepishly reaching for the takeout menu.

Stirfry technique has many people intimidate­d. But if you can slice and stir, you can stir fry.

So, let’s break it down, review the basics, and get everyone on their way to stirfry success.

Directions

Read the recipe all the way through. The ingredient­s, the steps, everything. Getting a sense of the order of events so you know what’s coming will make you more confident as you cook.

Prep ALL the ingredient­s before you start cooking. Stirfrying goes quickly, so make sure your ingredient­s are all cut and ready to roll. You don’t want to realize suddenly that you still need to mince the garlic that’s supposed to be sauteeing along with the broccoli.

Make sure your ingredient­s are of similar size. Most stir fries involve fairly smallcut ingredient­s added in stages, sometimes in batches, so everything ends up properly cooked at the same time. When chopping broccoli for instance, or cubing chicken, try and make all the pieces roughly the same size.

Feel free to swap or substitute ingredient­s. If you want broccoli instead of sugar snap peas, great! Again, just make sure the vegetables you sub in are cut comparably and have a similar density, therefore a similar cooking time. Or adjust the time as needed: Sliced carrots will need more cooking time than spinach, for instance, so add a few minutes to the cooking time, or add them earlier in the recipe. Cubed pork can be used in place of chicken, tofu can be swapped in for shrimp — most stir fries are flexible.

A skillet may be better than a small wok. The bowlshaped pans sold as woks are not always the best answer for a home cook. Because there is a lot of sloped side area to a wok, there isn’t much flat bottom sitting directly on the heat. I like using a very large skillet, so the food in the pan is less crowded and gets a better distributi­on of heat. If you do want a wok, get a big one!

Make sure the pan is hot. You need high heat to get the best flavor from the ingredient­s in a stir fry. And you need the pan to be hot before the ingredient­s hit it, so they have a chance to sear a bit, locking in color and flavor.

Cook in layers and batches. The secret to great stirfries (and lots of other cooking methods, like frying and sautéing) is to not crowd the pan, and to leave the food alone between stirs. Giving individual pieces of food a chance to come in direct contact with the hot pan on a continuous basis is the difference between nicely browned pieces and a pile of steamed food. That’s why many stirfry recipes call for cooking ingredient­s separately or in batches. And because stirfry food is cut small, cooking goes quickly. So doing it in stages and batches and then combining it all at the end adds only a handful of extra minutes.

Add the sauce at the end. Only once your ingredient­s are cooked do you want to add any liquid. Otherwise, you wouldn’t really be stir frying, but braising or poaching. A bit of cornstarch mixed into the sauce will allow it to thicken as it simmers.

9. Make some rice. It’s nice to have something to soak up that sauce. Choose any kind of rice you like: white, brown, jasmine, basmati, whichever. Noodles, especially Asian noodles, are another nice base for stir fries.

Ingredient­s

Here are a handful of condiments called for in many Asian recipes. Once you get to know them, you can play with them like mad.

Soy Sauce. Indispensa­ble in Asian cooking (and interestin­g in nonAsian recipes as well). It packs a rich, salty taste, and is brewed from soybeans and wheat. You can choose regular or lesssodium soy sauce, and if there are gluten intoleranc­es in your family, go for tamari, which is similar but without wheat.

Sesame Oil. Made from toasted sesame seeds, this oil has a nutlike and aromatic flavor. It’s often added at the end of cooking to preserve its wonderful flavor. It’s strong, so use in small amounts. Chili sesame oil is a nice way to add that sesame flavor and some heat at the same time. Keep it in the fridge to keep it from getting rancid.

Hoisin Sauce. A thick, somewhat intense sauce made from ground soybeans and some kind of starch, seasoned with red chilies and garlic. Vinegar, Chinese fivespice and sugar are also commonly added.

Chili Garlic Sauce. Versatile, spicy and garlicky, as the name suggests. It’s got a slightly rough texture, and a dose of tanginess from vinegar.

Oyster Sauce. Made from oyster extracts combined with sugar, soy sauce, salt and thickeners. This thick, dark brown sauce is a staple in Chinese familystyl­e cooking. Another way to add saltiness and umami (savoriness) to stir fries.

Fish Sauce, or nam pla in Thai. A basic ingredient in Southeast Asian cuisines, particular­ly Thai and Vietnamese. It has a pungent odor, but when used in cooking, the flavor is much milder. The aroma comes from the liquid given off by anchovies that have been salted or fermented. This is the kind of thing you might want to keep to yourself until your kids have eaten and enjoyed fish sauce in a recipe.

Two items to keep in the fridge:

Ginger. Fresh ginger is one of the greatest ingredient­s in stir fries. Spicy, bracing, uplifting. It’s an easy way to add bangforyou­rbuck flavor.

Garlic. Usually finely minced, sometimes thinly sliced.

The base of garlic and ginger heated together in oil is a sign of a terrific stir fry in the making.

 ?? Hinterhaus Production­s / Getty Images ?? Stirfry technique has many people intimidate­d. But if you can slice and stir, you can stir fry.
Hinterhaus Production­s / Getty Images Stirfry technique has many people intimidate­d. But if you can slice and stir, you can stir fry.

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