Because of all the mapo tofu love in this thread, I took a trip to H-Mart after work to try it myself! Half an hour of prep, 15 minutes of intense wok work, and an incredibly smoky kitchen later, here’s what I came up with:
On the left is mapo tofu with pork. I took a tip from a recipe on recipezaar (supposedly inspired by Iron Chef Chen Kenichi…) and used two different bean pastes, doubanjan (chili bean paste) AND tenmienjan (brown bean paste), which gave it a nice, deep miso-y backing. All the other steps were basically the same as those above –- boil the cut up medium-firm tofu in salted water to firm it up a bit, stir fry, and finish with Sichuan peppercorn.
On the right is twice-cooked pork with leeks. Since I’m a cheater, and I didn’t want to wait on boiling pork belly for an hour, I started with some leftover sliced Filipino lechon -- which might actually make it thrice-cooked pork. The pork and leeks were stir-fried with doubanjan and hoisin, along the regular Chinese wok staples (soy, mirin, etc.).
The results? As often as I’ve tried to make “authentically Chinese” tasting food before, I’ve never really quite got there. Kung Pao, fried rice, everything ends up tasting very un-Chinese. These two dishes on the other hand were spot on, very Sichuanese, and probably could be served along their brethren at LSC. I think the difference this time was in using the bean pastes (thanks for the tip!) as well as a singing hot wok. Seriously, in the middle of frantically wokking the twice-cooked pork, I had to run and open up two outside doors for fear of setting off the apartment fire alarms and having to explain myself to Naperville FD.
What an excellent meal and learning experience. Thanks everyone for the suggestions and the inspiration.
mike
Stickin' together is what good waffles do!