Blanched celery

My love affair with Fuchsia Dunlop and Chinese food continues unabated. My latest discovery: how to use up that pesky bunch of celery stalks you're forced to buy when you need but a single one. Ooh, how I hate the sight of those pale green stalks down in the crisper, how they fill me with regret and fury, taking up precious space, growing limp and moldy by the day, an affront to my self-regard as a resourceful, responsible cook! But no more. Thanks to Fuchsia, I've actually gone out and bought a bunch of celery on several occasions now, to use up in one fell swoop, no less. It's nothing short of a culinary miracle.

The dish has the lyrical name of "Send the Rice Down" in Chinese and the slightly more prosaic "chopped celery with beef" in English. But never mind the names – what you need to know is that this dish is one of the more addictive things to ever issue from my kitchen. Eating it is deeply pleasurable and almost painful because you cannot possibly eat as much of it as you would like to, lest you pop your trouser button after your third or fourth plate.

Stirfrying celery and beef

To make the dish, you need only two special ingredients (and special is a relative term depending on where you live): Sichuan chili bean paste, a reddish paste of fermented fava beans and chilis, and Chinkiang vinegar, a black, savory vinegar that you might recognize from your local dumpling shop. Buying both will only set you back a few dollars and will render you richer in the powerful-ingredient department. Besides, it can be fun to see what having these things in your home does to the people who live in it. Take, for example, my husband, who glances longingly, why almost lustfully, at the Chinkiang vinegar every time he passes it. If it were up to him, he'd be doing daily shots of the stuff.

Sichuanese chopped celery with ground beef

The rest of the work is a walk in the park. There is the slightly fussy step of blanching the celery, but after that tell your eating companions to hoof it to the table, because once you start cooking the beef and the chili-bean paste and ginger hits the pan and goes incredibly fragrant, you won't want to waste any more time with extraneous breaths when you could be eating (or shoveling) this fabulous meal into your mouth.

Oh, and one more thing: It should go without saying that this recipe is easily doubled. I think you'll need to do that.

Fuchsia Dunlop's Sichuanese Chopped Celery with Beef
Adapted from Every Grain of Rice
Serves 2 as main with rice or 4 as part of a larger Chinese meal with other dishes

300 grams (11 ounces) celery
3 tablespoons cooking oil
100 grams (4 ounces) ground beef
1 1/2 tablespoons Sichuan chili bean paste
1 1/2 tablespoons finely chopped ginger
Light soy sauce to taste (optional)
1 teaspoon Chinkiang vinegar

1. Destring the celery, if necessary, and cut lengthwise into 1/2-inch strips. Finely dice the strips. Bring some water to the boil and blanch the celery for 30 seconds. Drain well.

2. Heat the oil in a seasoned wok or pan over high heat. Add the ground beef and stir-fry until it is cooked and fragrant, stirring and pressing it to separate the strands. Add the chili bean paste and continue to stir until the oil has reddened. Add the ginger and stir-fry for a few seconds to release its fragrance, then add all the celery.

3. Continue to stir-fry until the celery is piping hot and well-combined. Season with a little soy sauce, if desired. Finally, stir in the vinegar and serve immediately.

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69 responses to “Fuchsia Dunlop’s Sichuanese Chopped Celery with Beef”

  1. Luisa Avatar

    I buy my Asian ingredients at Go Asia on Kantstrasse (corner of Kaiser-Friedrich). They have one or two other stores in the city. In general, I find the Asian grocers on Kantstrasse and in other parts of Charlottenburg to be pretty good. As for good Thai food, have you not been to Dao Thai on Kantstrasse? It’s wonderful. I also wrote about Samakki Talad Thai on Kaiser Friedrich on my Berlin blog – it’s more homestyle and grungy but also very good. I guess I’m trying to say: come west! 🙂

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  2. Luisa Avatar

    Hulu, those jerks! Can’t access it at all. Will have to track it down elsewhere!

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  3. Sarah G. Avatar
    Sarah G.

    Can you access youtube? It was posted, like, one minute ago. 🙂
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRQ-HnSIY2s

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  4. ruth Avatar
    ruth

    Hi, Luisa,
    This is delish; I’ve made it twice in four days!
    I was wondering: Have you found any
    quality differences in Chinkiang vinegars? Is it ideally supposed to have the rich, viscous quality of balsamic? I got a big bottle in Chinatown for about a buck; it’s works, but it’s less flavorful than sharply acidic. THANK you so much!! All the best from NYC,
    Ruth F.

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  5. Luisa Avatar

    It’s definitely not viscous like good balsamic – I find it less acidic than something like a French wine vinegar. I read recently that Andrea Nguyen, the food writer, really likes the Plum brand of Chinkiang vinegar, but my closest Asian grocer doesn’t carry that. Maybe it’s available at your Chinese market? x

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  6. looa Avatar

    A nice and easy recipe that looks like it’s full of flavour. Beef is one of my guilty pleasures. I could eat a dish such as this every day for a month and not tire of it. Unfortunately I think I’d have a hard time finding the seasoning ingredients where I live and and I assume they really make the dish pop. Can you suggest any replacements for the Sichuan Chili bean paste and Chinkiang vinegar?

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  7. Luisa Avatar

    Some people say that Chinkiang vinegar can be replaced with balsamic. I don’t know. If you can’t find the ingredients locally, have a look online!

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  8. Gerlinde Avatar

    When I was a first grade teacher my children loved it when we made our own snacks. One of those snacks was stuffing celery with peanut butter and decorating it with raisins. I never had enough celery.
    I will look for the book , the vinegar and chili bean paste , it sounds wonderful.

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  9. John Avatar
    John

    This was fantastic. I had to order the vinegar and the bean paste from Amazon, but the wait was worth it. I did have to make it twice, though, because – stupidly – I had all the ingredients except for vegetable oil, so I used butter. That was a mistake; it ended up making the dish too salty and a bit too rich. Once I made it correctly, though, it was outstanding. There’s definitely some heat, but I wouldn’t say it was overly spicy. And it looks so good on the plate, too. Total winner.

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  10. Abbey Avatar

    This looks SO good! xoxo from NYC, Abbey

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  11. Kaffiknopf Avatar

    Celary and hackfleisch are ordered and coming in today with the biokiste – that dish sounds PERFECT for me. THANK YOU!!

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  12. ruth Avatar
    ruth

    Thanks, Luisa, great tip! Real difference in flavor.
    (Re-reading MBK; even better the 2nd time!).
    Warm regards, RF

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  13. Betsy Avatar
    Betsy

    Luisa: Often times a reader, never a commenter. I love this dish. Easy enough for a Friday night. All gone! Delicious. Thank you!

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  14. katc Avatar
    katc

    I made this a couple days ago and it was delicious! Thanks, Luisa.

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  15. Frances Avatar

    A portion of this, in a little plastic box with some rice, makes the best freezer-to-microwave meals I have ever had. So much so that I am more excited about celery than the frozen cookie dough in that same compartment. That’s NOT NORMAL. But thank-you!

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  16. Slugga_78@hotmail.com Avatar
    Slugga_78@hotmail.com

    Hi Sandra
    If you’re in Sydney, you can get it at the Market City IGA in Chinatown (I’m on the way home from there with it, and the vinegar, in my greedy hands).
    Cheers and good luck
    Wendy

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  17. anna @ annamayeveryday Avatar

    This sounds delicious, looks it too. I love things like this and am always keen to try something new – haven’t heard of Chinkiang vinegar before so will look out for that.

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  18. Frances Avatar
    Frances

    Made this tonight and it was SO good! Added more beef as 50g per person didn’t seem enough so we increased to 100g per person, keeping the other ingredients the same. Found that 3tbsp was a little too much, but I guess that depends on the fattiness of your meat; ours was 12%.

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