Asian Recipes
467 recipes found

Jean-Georges's Sesame Noodles

Watercress Salad With Soy-Sesame Dressing

Beef Tenderloin In Caramelized Sugar

Shrimp in Spiced Carrot Juice

Fish With Shiitakes
This dish is the kind that, with a little experience, many good cooks could assemble from scratch, without consulting a recipe. The aromatic triumvirate of garlic, ginger and scallions is matched with soy sauce, rice vinegar and fish sauce. Shiitake mushrooms give substance and flavor, cornstarch thickens and sesame oil adds a whiff of toasty richness. Though I spooned the sauce over simply poached fish, it would work just as well with grilled, pan-seared or broiled fish, or on stir-fried strips of chicken breast, slivers of pork or beef, shrimp or scallops. Steamed rice could help sop up the sauce, but I served boiled fingerling potatoes. Potatoes with Asian food? Don't scoff. Chinese restaurants here do not serve them, but potatoes are a major crop in China, where they are eaten with gusto, especially in the center and north. Besides, potatoes are certainly favored in the countries that produce the best pilsners, the beverage to drink while eating this.

Sesame Noodle Soup With Ginger and Chilies

Chicken and Noodles With Sesame-Ginger Dressing

Lemon Grass, Chili and Mint Steaming Liquid

Cabbage and Cucumber Slaw

Sesame-Crusted Fish With Butter and Ginger Sauce
This recipe came out of a 2005 kitchen cage match between Mark Bittman and the chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, in which Bittman, the home cook, sought to cook Chef Vongerichten's food more simply and perhaps just as deliciously. Judging by the quality of this particular dish, he succeeded.

Striped Bass Poached In Spicy Soy Sauce
Poaching fish in a mixture of soy sauce and water is a simple, fast method that adds gorgeous flavor to fillets, which emerge moist and succulent. It is also flexible and forgiving, with a cooking liquid that can accommodate a host of seasonings. Here those seasonings are sugar (to cut the saltiness of the soy sauce), scallions and an optional fresh or dried chile pepper (either minced or put in whole), but you could experiment with ginger, garlic, lime juice or other flavors. Combine all the ingredients, except the bass, in a skillet. Bring to a boil, add the fish flesh-side-down, and adjust the heat so that the mixture does not bubble too aggressively. The fish cooks in 8 to 10 minutes, until its flesh is mahogany-colored and doesn’t resist when you slice in with a thin-bladed knife. Serve on top of rice, garnished with the cooking liquid and the scallions, which are now limp and tender. Other fish, like cod, halibut, monkfish and salmon, also work, but keep an eye on it as it poaches — you will likely need to adjust the cooking time slightly.

Ginger Fried Rice
This recipe comes to The Times from the fertile mind of the chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Like all fried-rice dishes it begins with leftover rice (freshly cooked rice is too moist to fry well). It’s jasmine rice here, but white from Chinese takeout works nearly as well and is more convenient. Perhaps unsurprisingly — this is a chef’s recipe, after all — separate cooking processes are called for: ginger and garlic are crisped, leeks softened, rice and eggs fried. But no step takes more than a few minutes, and the results are absolutely worth the effort.

Basmati Rice With Coconut Milk And Ginger
A perfectly cooked pot of plain white rice is a beautiful thing indeed. But basmati rice that's been cooked in a mixture of chicken broth and coconut milk then seasoned with a little chopped fresh ginger and scallions? That's borderline transcendent. The ginger doesn't overpower the rice here – you'll taste the mellow coconut first and the kicky notes of ginger second – so it makes an ideal accompaniment to stir-fries and braises.

Curried Duck Legs With Ginger and Rhubarb

Asparagus Soup With Shrimp

Dan Dan Noodles

Sea Bass in Black Bean Sauce
Do not be alarmed by this list of ingredients. This dish is much simpler to prepare than it may seem.

Stir-Fried Venison

Asian Duck Salad

Savory Sticky Rice Bowls (or Stir-Fried Sticky Rice)

Sesame Sauce on Broccoli

Peanut and Cilantro Noodle Salad

Hirame With Spicy Cucumber Vinaigrette
