Orange Chicken With Red Chilies, Szechuan Style -- Dave Dewitt

"This is from Dave DeWitt's Fiery Foods web site. Dave was the publisher of Chile Pepper magazine and is now the publisher of Fiery Foods ... as well as a number of books on growing, preserving, cooking peppers. The recipe is for a traditional western Chinese dish. The combination of citrus and chicken is common in this region."
 
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Ready In:
35mins
Ingredients:
15
Serves:
2
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ingredients

  • For the marinade

  • 7.39 ml cornstarch
  • 14.79 ml dry vermouth or 14.79 ml white wine
  • 226.79 g boneless chicken breast, cut into 1/2 inch pieces
  • For the sauce

  • 7.39 ml minced ginger (peeled)
  • 7.39 ml minced garlic (peeled)
  • 1 minced scallion (green onion, spring onion)
  • 2.46 ml ground szechuan peppercorns
  • 14.79 ml dry vermouth or 14.79 ml white wine
  • 29.58 ml soy sauce
  • 14.79 ml szechuan hot bean sauce
  • 29.58 ml dried orange peel, prepared as indicated below
  • 9.85 ml sugar or 9.85 ml honey
  • 2.46 ml sesame oil
  • For the stir fry

  • 29.58 ml frying oil (peanut, corn, or canola)
  • 6 small dried hot red chilies (Japones or de Arbol)
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directions

  • Combine the ingredients for the marinade in a bowl large enough to hold the chicken, stir the liquid ingredients well, and then add the chicken.
  • Leave the chicken in the marinade for 30 minutes.
  • Take the dried orange peel, soak it in hot water for 30 minutes, then shred it.
  • Combine all the sauce ingredients in a bowl, stir well, and set aside.
  • Heat the wok over high heat. Add the oil (must be an oil with high smoking point -- peanut, corn or canola are all good; don't use olive oil), swirl it around to coat the wok cooking surface.
  • When the oil just begins to smoke, add the chilies and the marinated chicken.
  • Stir fry for about 1 minute, until the chicken begins to take on color.
  • Add the sauce and stir fry for another 30-45 seconds.
  • Remove the chilies before serving, or tell your guests not to eat them!
  • Serve over steamed rice or a pilaf.
  • Heat scale depends entirely on the peppers, but should be medium for authenticity.
  • Notes on special ingredients:

  • If you can't get Szechuan peppercorns, you can substitute "bird of paradise" peppercorns. Szechuan peppercorns are NOT truly members of the pepper family (they are in the citrus family), so do NOT substitute with black peppercorns.
  • Hot bean sauce is available in Chinese markets. The most authentic and best quality is made with broad beans, but soy bean paste is an acceptable alternative.
  • Do not use habanero or tsin-tsin chiles -- they will overpower the other flavors in the dish.

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Reviews

  1. This made a quick and enjoyable meal for us this evening. I had intended to use at least close to the specified amounts of hot bean sauce and dried red chilies. The arrival of an unexpected dinner guest forced me to cut back on the firey stuff. Other than using Chinese rice wine instead of vermouth or white wine, I kept to the recipe in all other instances. The szechuan peppercorns and dried orange peel give the chicken a very nice citrus flavor. Thank you very much for posting this recipe. I will definitely try it again when I can increase the heat.
     
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Tweaks

  1. This made a quick and enjoyable meal for us this evening. I had intended to use at least close to the specified amounts of hot bean sauce and dried red chilies. The arrival of an unexpected dinner guest forced me to cut back on the firey stuff. Other than using Chinese rice wine instead of vermouth or white wine, I kept to the recipe in all other instances. The szechuan peppercorns and dried orange peel give the chicken a very nice citrus flavor. Thank you very much for posting this recipe. I will definitely try it again when I can increase the heat.
     

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