Recipes>Fish Recipes
Sichuan Sea Bass with Chives
by Ken Hom, Ching-He Huang from Exploring China: A Culinary Adventure: 100 recipes from our journey
Easy
Serves 2-4 to share
Spicy Sichuan seabass from Ching He Huang and Ken Hom. This recipe combines meat and fish to create a smoky but piquant Chinese dish for a main meal.
Discover more delicious Fish recipes
From simple suppers to dinner party winners
From the book
Exploring China
Buy From
Introduction
I love combining meat and fish – as used in many Chinese dishes – but this meat and fish pairing is made more delicious by adding strong Sichuan flavours. Sea bass fillets are first shallow-fried in oil and then ‘wokked’ with a fragrant spiced oil of Sichuan chillies, Sichuan peppercorns and smoky bacon lardons, then seasoned with chilli bean paste, black rice vinegar and chilli oil – all tossed with delicious Chinese chives. This is a spicy, salty, numbing, rich dish that is full of flavour and best served with jasmine rice and iced cold beer.
Tags
Ingredients
| A pinch | each of sea salt and freshly ground white pepper |
|---|---|
| 1 tbsp | cornflour |
| 400g (14oz) | sea bass fillets |
| Vegetable oil | |
| 2 | small dried Sichuan chillies |
| ¼ tsp | Sichuan peppercorns |
| 50g (2oz) | smoked bacon lardons |
| 1 tsp | chilli bean paste |
| 150g (5oz) | Chinese chives (garlic chives, or baby leeks) |
| 1 tbsp | vegetable stock (or water) |
| 1 tsp | Chinese black rice vinegar (or balsamic vinegar) |
| 1 tbsp | chilli oil |
Essential kit
You will need a wok.
Method
Put the salt, white pepper and cornflour into a bowl. Add the sea bass and toss well to coat the fish in the mixture.
Fill a wok to quarter full with vegetable oil and heat the oil to 180°C/350°F, or until a cube of bread turns golden brown in 15 seconds. Lower the fish pieces into the wok and swirl in the hot oil (the Chinese call this ‘passing it through the oil’) for 1 minute. Pour the fish into a strainer over a heatproof bowl.
Return 1 tablespoon of the oil to the wok and reheat. (The remaining oil can be reused for another fish dish at a later date.) Add the dried chillies, Sichuan peppercorns and lardons and stir-fry in the hot oil for less than 1 minute to release their flavours (the Chinese call this baosiung – ‘explode fragrants’).Add the chilli bean paste, then tip in the Chinese chives (or baby leeks) and toss well. Add the vegetable stock (or water) to help the chives cook and keep tossing all the ingredients together. When the chives are a deep, translucent green and have wilted, return the fish fillets to the wok and toss together, being careful not to break up the fish. Season with the vinegar and a drizzle of chilli oil, transfer to a serving plate and serve immediately, with jasmine rice.
Reviews
Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.
Cancel reply
Your review
Name *
Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.
Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .
Be the first to leave a review
Ingredients
Method
More Fish Recipes
View all
Alison Roman’s Tomato-Poached Fish with Crispy Chilli Oil
by Alison Roman from Something from Nothing
Mary Berry’s Skate Wing with Caper Sauce and Samphire
by Mary Berry from Mary 90: My Very Best Recipes
More Ken Hom recipes
View all
Beijing (Peking) Dumplings – Guotie and Jiaozi
by Ken Hom from Complete Chinese Cookbook
Ching’s Longevity Noodles
by Ken Hom, Ching-He Huang from Exploring China
More Chinese Recipes
View all
Bangers and Tomato Rice
by Justin Tsang from Long Day? Cook This.
Beef Chow Fun
by Emma Chung from Easy Chinese Food Anyone Can Make
Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week