La zi yu - Fish with Chiles and Sichuan Pepper(direct translation is Spicy Fish)
Another winning dish. Made because SueF is out this evening (she is not fond of fin-fish), and it's just Thing2 and I. Not a simple one to make, it takes three cooking processes, plus mise en place and marinade. I had time for my brown rice to cook while prepping this and as side dish of asparagus in oyster sauce.
The fish is marinated in smashed ginger, scallions, rice wine and salt. I mistakenly added the batter at this point (cornstarch and water), but I don't think it had a huge effect on the final product.
A set of "base seasonings" is stir fried in oil and toban jan (chile bean paste): more scallions, sliced garlic and ginger, a few dried chiles, sichuan peppercorns (I used the sichuan peppercorn oil my son brought back from Beijing).
The fish is then blanched in boiling water (I was supposed to drain the marinade and add the cornstarch slurry at this point, so my batter was somewhat damp).
I made the mistake at this point of starting the last step: hot oil -- I should have paid more attention to the fish. Either (a) I overcooked it, (b) sole was a bad choice, (c) the cornstarch didn't protect the fish because it was too thin, or (d) all of the above, because it fell apart into small chunks intead of the 1"x3" strips I started with. It also overboiled all over the stove. Anyway, fish them out, and prepare a hot oil: heat a lot of oil (I used a little less than called for), more toban jan, a boatload of dried chiles (1-2oz) and sichuan peppercorns until as toasty as you like 'em, and pour over the fish, served sizzling.
The flavors were fantastic, and I'm now convinced that the dishes such as Three Chile Chicken at LSC are prepared similarly (although fried): Cook the main ingredient, then pour spicy oil over it. It's got that oily sheen that I never get when I cook the food in the oil. Not blazingly spicy, but rich and delicious, even if the fish got a little mushy.
The asparagus in oyster sauce proved a nice foil for the heat, all in all a great meal.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang