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A Vietnamese Stir-Fry

Of all the flavors that seem to bring out the rest of the cabbage family’s earthy greenness, few work as effectively as those of Southeast Asia. Ginger, green onion, and garlic have a natural affinity with chlorophyll-rich vegetables of any sort, but the saltiness of the fish sauces with which Thai and Vietnamese cooks season their food does much for cabbage leaves. I often serve this with roast duck, which appreciates such seasoning, or as a side order for a mushroom stir-fry hot with chiles and soy.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    enough for 2 as a side dish

Ingredients

Chinese greens or small cabbage leaves – 12 stems or small leaves
garlic – 2 large cloves
ginger – a thumb-sized piece
green onions – 6
peanut oil – 2 tablespoons
nam pla (Thai fish sauce) – a tablespoon

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Bring a saucepan of deep water to a boil and salt it lightly. Wash the greens thoroughly. Peel the garlic and ginger, finely chop the garlic, and shred the ginger into matchsticklike strips. Trim the green onions and cut each into two or three.

    Step 2

    Warm the oil in a shallow pan or wok. Toss the garlic, ginger, and green onions in the oil until deep gold, verging on being lightly browned and fragrant. Drop the greens, whole or shredded as you wish, into the boiling water. Leave for only a minute or so before draining. Pour the fish sauce in with the garlic and ginger—it will spit and sizzle—then toss with the greens and eat.

Tender
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