Chow mein from Tahiti 1985 revisited
Table of contents
Chow mein (炒面) is a dish from Cantonese cuisine (southeast China). It consists of wheat noodles, vegetables, meat and/or seafood, often accompanied by a soy sauce-based sauce.According to Chinese tradition, this dish was brought to North America by the first immigrants from China in the 19th century, and is now a very popular specialty in the United States and Canada, as well as in other countries with large Chinese communities as in Southeast Asia, India, Reunion Island, Mauritius and Tahiti.
I first discovered this recipe in 1985, when my parents and I went to eat in the food-trucs on the port of Papeete in Tahiti. So, after 40 years, I’ve tried to rediscover the taste I loved so much back then and offer you a Chow mein revisited in 2024.
Special utensils
- A wok or large frying pan
Ingredients for 3 persons
- 150 g « Large (2mm) » soft wheat Chinese noodles
- Vegetable oil
- A few drops of sesame oil
- 80 g chicken breast, finely diced
- 80 g peeled shrimp, cut into 2 cm pieces
- 80 g pork loin, finely diced
- 1/2 chicken bouillon cube delayed in a glass of water.
- 1 teaspoon rice starch
- 1 teaspoon sugar or honey
- 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger
- 1 teaspoon minced garlic
- 3 tablespoons light soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon oyster sauce.
- Pepper.
- 100 g onion, thinly sliced
- 80 g carrot sticks
- 80 g Chinese cabbage leaf strips.
- 80 g peas
Preparation of Chow mein
- Pre-cook Chinese noodles according to package instructions. Rinse in cold water, drain well and set aside.
- To prepare the marinade: mix the 1 tablespoon of oyster sauce, the 3 tablespoons of dark soy sauce, the teaspoon of ginger, the teaspoon of garlic, the teaspoon of rice starch, the teaspoon of sugar, pepper and a tablespoon of oil.
- Marinate meat and shrimp.
- Dry the noodles for a minute in hot oil flavored with a few drops of sesame oil and keep warm.
Cooking Chow mein
- Pan-fry the meat and shrimp for a few minutes, then add the remaining marinade to cook the chicken and pork. Set aside.
- Deglaze pan with chicken stock and set aside.
- Heat the vegetable oil in a large wok or frying pan over medium-high heat.
- Add the carrot sticks and minced onion and cook until translucent.
- Add the Chinese cabbage to the pan and moisten with the deglazing and chicken stock mixture.
- Add the chow mein meat.
- Simmer for about 2 minutes until vegetables are crisp-tender.
- Add the noodles and stir-fry the Chow mein for about 2 minutes, until the noodles are well coated with the sauce.
Tips
- Rinsing pasta is essential if you want to deep-fry it in the back of an Asian recipe. Too much starch can make them sticky and difficult to fry. In this case, rinse the pasta for a few minutes as soon as it comes out of the pan.
Original ideas (Anthony corner)
- Broad pasta can be replaced by thin pasta, or rice pasta can be used for frying.
- You can add crunch with crushed peanuts.
- Chow mein can be sweetened with Chinese sausages, or pork loin can be substituted.
« Classic or modern, there’s only one kitchen…The right one. »
Paul Bocuse
French chef named « Chef of the Century » in 1989
On the channel, there are already chicken wings with Coca-Cola, and as I love Asian recipes, I propose this Chow-mein from 40 years ago. I made this Chow-mein inspired by some Tahitian recipes, while keeping the Chinese base with soy sauce and oyster sauce. I quickly eliminated the ingredients that weren’t present at the time and tested several marinades and variations with sesame oil. I kept the sesame oil in the pasta.
As for the vegetables, my family remembered peas, so I added them to the basic vegetables of onions, carrots and cabbage. As the cook was Chinese at the time, I preferred Chinese cabbage to white cabbage. The result is close to the Chow-Mein of my childhood.
Feel free to comment on my Youtube channel. If you have made this recipe.
Follow my recipe for Chow mein on Youtube