This dish has no fish in it. The name comes from the flavorings that are traditional used with fish in Chinese cooking. It is a sichuan style recipe is often called Yu Xiang in restaurants. This particular recipe comes from delish.com. It is one of the best that I have used, bar none.
The dish is simple, but if you don't cook Chinese food often you will need to get a lot of ingredients. I was looking for a recipe that could use up the mountain of eggplants that my CSA gave me.
Ingredients
3 Chinese eggplants, about 1.25 lbs, halved and cut into thick diagonal strips
2 t kosher salt
3 T cornstarch
Oil, divided
1 t ground sichuan peppercorns
6-12 dried sichuan chilis, stems/caps removed, cut in half and deseeded
1 T chopped pickled chili or sambal oelek or freshly sliced Thai chilis
3 T fermented chili bean paste, Pixian if possible
1 head of garlic minced, or equivalent cloves, divided
1 T minced ginger
1/2 t ground white pepper
3 green onions thinly sliced divided
1.5 T low sodium soy sauce (I used chinese light soy)
1.5 T rice wine vinegar
2 t Chinese Black vinegar
4 t granulated sugar (I used 3)
1/2 t MSG
1/2 c water or broth
2 t toasted sesame oil
Rice for serving
Method
1. In a large bowl toss eggplant evenly with salt. Let sit for 20-30 minutes, then gently squeeze out as much moisture as possible. Drain and pat dry with paper towels. Transfer to a dry bowl and then add cornstarch and toss to coat eggplant evenly.
2. Heat a large skillet or wok over medium heat and add 2-3 T oil. Heat until smoking. Working in batches add some eggplant slices to the pan and fry until lightly brown on all sides, about 3-4 minutes. Transfer to a clean bowl and set aside. Finish the rest of the eggplant in the same manner. Adding more oil if necessary.
3. After frying the eggplant, remove the oil from the pan and add wipe with a wad of paper towels. Heat pan again and add 2 T fresh oil to the pan. After the oil is hot, add Sichuan ground pepper, chilis, bean paste, half the garlic, ginger, white pepper and half the green onions, stirring constantly until fragrant and the garlic is golden. About 1 minute, do not burn.
4. Return eggplant to pan, add soy sauce, vinegar, sugar, MSG, and water or broth. I mixed all of these ingredients together in a single bowl ahead of time making sure that the sugar was dissolved. Stir occasionally until the mixture thickens and becomes glossy, only a few minutes needed. Stir in sesame oil, and remaining garlic and onions in final minute of cooking.
5. Serve with rice.
This dish was spicy but very well balanced. There was the mala heat but it was tempered by that small amount of sugar and vinegar. Absolutely delicious recipe and my thanks to the originator on delish.com,
I had a few strips of cucumber, onions, and carrots left over from a noodle dish the night before. Perfect accompaniment.
I have made this subsequently from publishing here and I had a couple of red bell peppers that I stir fried with the ginger prior to adding the hot pepper paste and seasonings. A welcome textural change. I also had a ton of zucchinis that I treated exactly like the eggplant and it too was a lovely twist.