Preserved mustard cabbage or syut-choi in
Cantonese (雪菜 – lit. means snow – vegetable) is a salted
vegetable commonly found at wet markets in Hong Kong.
Syut choi
also
called syut-lèih-hùhng/syut-léuih-hùhng 雪黎红,雪里红
|
Syut-choi is is chopped thinly and added in some Cantonese stir-fries. It is also
used as a topping for noodle soups.
I usually used it myself in the following recipe that was given to me by a friend.
Bamboo shoots with preserved mustard cabbage
Bamboo shoots with preserved mustard cabbage
- 100 g preserved mustard cabbage
- 2 cups salted water (to blanch carrots and bamboo shoots)
- 100 g carrot, shredded
- 2 large fresh bamboo shoots sliced
- 15g black fungus (once dehydrated they will expand to ~ 1 rice bowl)
- 3 Tbsps. vegetable oil
- 1 clove of garlic, sliced thinly
- 2 sprigs of spring onion
- Salt and black pepper, to taste
Seasoning:
2 tsps. Sugar
1 Tbsps. rice wine
¼ cup water
2 Tbsps. light soy sauce
1/8 tsp. ground black pepper¼ cup water
2 Tbsps. light soy sauce
Sauce:
½ tsp. corn-starch
½ Tbsp. water
1 Tbsp. dark soy sauce
1 tsp. sesame oil
Bamboo shoots - Jûk-séun
Black fungus –cloud
ear - wàhn-yíh 雲耳
-
Soak the preserved vegetables in water for 2 hours. Rinse and drain. Cut into 5 cm pieces; parch in a hot frying pan over low heat until dried.
- Blanch the carrots and bamboo shoots in salted boiling water.
- Soak black fungus in water for ½ hour. Rinse and drain. Cut into small sections if too big.
- In a frying pan add oil and sauté the garlic until fragrant. Add the preserved vegetables, and stir well. Add the carrots, black fungus, and bamboo shoots.
- Add seasoning ingredients; stir well. Cook for a few minutes or until carrots are tender, stirring continuously.
- Add the sauce and stir well.
- Season to taste and transfer to a dish. Scatter the chopped spring onions, toss thors thoroughly and serve hot.
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