Chinese Recipes
269 recipes found

Chinese Flank Steak

Lobster With Noodles

Noodles With Hot Meat Sauce
To be made in two batches one day in advance if desired

Broccoli and Noodles In Sesame Sauce

Soft-Fried Noodles (Guangdon Chau Mein)

Steamed Eggs à la Harbin Restaurant

Stir-Fried Turkey Breast With Snap or Snow Peas and Chard
Turkey cutlets are easy to prep and cook quickly, and young snap peas can be almost as tender as the more traditional snow peas for stir-fries. Shopping for ingredients for this week’s recipes in my farmers’ market, I found young, tender snap peas that were almost as delicate as snow peas. I had part of a bunch of Swiss chard and used both vegetables. I like using turkey breast cutlets in stir-fries; they’ve already been cut to a uniform thickness, so all you need to do is slice them across the grain to get even pieces that cook in minutes.

Braised Chinese mushrooms

Hot and Sour Shrimp Soup

Chinese Steamed Fish

Deep-Fried Bean Curd With Pork and Vegetables

Yearly Surplus
Gish Jen, the author of “Mona in the Promised Land,” shared this recipe with The Times in the late 1990s. Growing up in Scarsdale, N.Y., she was “suspicious” of her mother’s cooking. “I mean, I never ate the kind of Chinese food they serve in restaurants.” But she came to love her mother’s family-style Shanghai cooking. This dish is an adaptation of a dish served at the traditional Chinese New Year feast (her mother made it with steamed carp), along with Step-by-Step Higher (rice and cabbage), High Achievement (pork and hard-boiled eggs) and Safety in All Seasons (chicken with chestnuts and ginger). To derive the maximum benefit from the feast, the author said, you have to eat absolutely everything — the sweet and the sour.

Chef Chan's Ma Paul Tofu With Minced Pork
At Wu Liang Ye in Manhattan, the Ma Paul Tofu is zippy with flavor, and yet its braised cubes melt creamily. With a little ground pork and leek for texture, the dish is simple to make, once the shopping is done, and comes together quickly. Take care not to overcook the tofu.

Shanghai Chicken In Wine Sauce

Pan-Fried Broccoli Stems
This was an experiment and now it is a keeper. Peel broccoli stems, slice them thin, and pan-fry in hot oil just until the slices are charred on the edges, then flip over and brown for just a little bit of time on the other side. If you do this just right, the medallions will have edges that are slightly crispy with that wonderful fried flavor, and tender interiors. With a little salt (or even without) they are irresistible. One stem’s worth of medallions will disappear quickly, so count on 1 per person (at least!). Although you will use a fair amount of oil for frying, it doesn’t all get absorbed by the broccoli stems.

Duck Fried Rice

Slow Cooker Short Ribs With Chinese Flavors
Slow cookers get a bad rap in the world of accomplished chefs, but Mark Bittman loves his. He calls it his "Monster of Braising," and he claims to use it every day. Here is his recipe for braised short ribs with soy sauce, honey, cinnamon, star anise and ginger.

Quick-Fried Green Beans In Onion And Garlic Sauce

Many-Flavor Duck Salad

Crystal Shrimp Tak Lee Chung, Fortune Garden

Chinese-Style Vegetable and Veal Stew

Molly O'Neill's Hot and Sour Soup

Chicken Carcass With Brown Bean Sauce
