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A Simple Recipe for Oyster-Sauce Scallops to Make at Home

Here is how you can make Oyster-Sauce Scallops at home. A recipe by Ching He Huang.

A Simple Recipe for Oyster-Sauce Scallops to Make at Home
Oyster sauce scallops and mangetout by Ching He Huang from her book Stir Crazy. (Photographer: Tamin Jones)  

Ching He Huang is the face of Chinese cooking for many TV viewers. In the U.K., she’s known for shows such as Exploring China, while her programs in the U.S. include Easy Chinese: New York & L.A., for which she received a Daytime Emmy Award nomination.

She was born into a farming community in southern Taiwan, where she learned to cook at her grandmother’s knee, and then raised in South Africa and the U.K., where she started a catering company. As well as being in demand on TV, appearing with other chefs including Rachael Ray and Ken Hom, she has published nine cookbooks, with a 10th, Asian Green, scheduled for January.

A Simple Recipe for Oyster-Sauce Scallops to Make at Home

For Bloomberg, she supplied a simple recipe for Oyster-Sauce Scallops and Mangetout that first appeared in her book, Stir Crazy

“This is a super-easy and delicious Cantonese-inspired seafood dish that uses only a few fresh ingredients,” she says. “If you can get fresh scallops from the fish counter, that’s perfect: They are super-sweet and absorb the delicate gingery notes, umami savoriness from buying a good-quality oyster sauce and the rich subtle hits of Shaoxing rice wine that adds a silky sweetness.

“When I cook for a dinner party this is what I love to do at the last minute. I’ll have some fish steaming, some rice in the rice cooker, something roasting in the oven, some veggie tofu stew, and then just wok this little number out. It’s as reliable and as classic as your trusted little black dress.”

The recipe is straightforward but you need to be very fast. The initial cooking time on the scallops is just five seconds, for example, and ditto for the mangetout, so you should have your ingredients lined up in order and ready to go. The wok must be very hot , and Ching suggests a total cooking time of five minutes. (I capped it at four, but checked the scallops were ready so as not to poison myself.) It serves four as a side, but I ate it all myself in a single seating. Yes, I’m greedy.

A Simple Recipe for Oyster-Sauce Scallops to Make at Home

Ingredients:

1 tablespoon rapeseed oil

knob of fresh root ginger, peeled and grated

10 medium-sized scallops

1 tablespoon Shaoxing rice wine or dry sherry

100 grams (3.4 ounces) mangetout, leave whole

1 tablespoon oyster sauce

1 tablespoon low-sodium light soy sauce or Lee Kum Kee Double Deluxe Soy Sauce

1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil

Garnish: 

1 pinch of ground toasted Sichuan pepper (optional)

1 small drizzle of Lee Kum Kee Chiu Chow Chilli Oil 

Preparation:

Heat a wok over a high heat until smoking and add the rapeseed oil. Add the ginger and toss for a few seconds to release its flavor.

Add the scallops and cook for 5 seconds until seared and browned, then flip them over.

Season with the Shaoxing rice wine or dry sherry, then add the mangetout and stir-fry for 5 seconds.

Add a small splash of water around the edge of the wok to create some steam to help cook the mangetout, then season with the oyster sauce and light soy sauce and toss to coat well. The total cooking time is about five minutes.

Drizzle in the toasted sesame oil, then transfer to a serving bowl. 

Sprinkle over some ground Sichuan pepper and a small drizzle of Chiu Chow Chilli Oil and serve immediately.

Richard Vines is Chief Food Critic at Bloomberg. Follow him on Twitter @richardvines and Instagram @richard.vines.

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