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Ma po beancurd

Ma po beancurd

Ma po dou fu

This is one of the most famous dishes from Sichuan. Mrs Chen of the Qing Dynasty, who apparently was scarred with pock marks on her face, was said to be the wife of a chef but it’s her beancurd dish, with its lingering spicy and slightly numbing aftertaste that has earned her a solid celebrity status. Made with soft textured beancurd that is difficult to find outside Asia, the intensity of the flavours is usually enhanced by tiny leeks. It is a rich and warming dish on chilly winter evenings.

Ma po beancurd

Serves 8
Beancurd
50 gm   minced pork or beef
¼ cup   oil
2   cloves of garlic, very finely chopped
30 gm   Sichuan preserved vegetable, rinsed, drained and finely chopped (see note)
1-2 tbsp   chilli bean paste, or to taste
2 tsp   salted black beans (see note)
2 tsp   light soy sauce
1 tsp   sugar
1 tsp   chilli oil
1 cup   chicken stock
500 gm   soft beancurd, cut into 2cm pieces
2   baby leeks or green onions, thinly sliced
1 tbsp   potato flour or cornflour mixed with 2 tbsp cold water
½ tsp   roasted ground Sichuan pepper
Marinade
½ tsp   light soy sauce
½ tsp   Shaoxing rice wine
½ tsp   salt
½ tsp   sugar
½ tsp   sesame oil


1 Combine pork and marinade in a bowl and stand for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, heat oil in a wok, add garlic, stirring continuously over high heat until fragrant, then add pork and stir-fry for 1 minute. Reduce heat to medium and add preserved vegetable, chilli bean paste, black beans, light soy, sugar and chilli oil, and stir for another 20 seconds. Add stock, then carefully add bean curd and bring to the boil, simmer for 2 minutes or until the beancurd has absorbed the flavours.
2 Gently stir in leeks and cook for another minute or until leeks are tender, then gently stir in potato flour mixture until sauce is slightly thickened. Transfer to a serving dish and sprinkle with roasted Sichuan pepper and serve immediately.

Note Salted black beans (dou chi) are made from fermented, salted soy beans. Also called black fermented beans or preserved beans, they are savoury with a wonderful aroma reminiscent of a good soy sauce.

RECIPE Tony Tan PHOTOGRAPHY Con Poulos STYLING Rachel Brown


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