The Insufficient Kitchen

Hot and Sour Soup

with guidance from Fuchsia Dunlop’s Land of Plenty, Grace Young’s The Wisdom of The Chinese Kitchen, and Barbara Tropp’s The Modern Art of Chinese Cooking

Yield: Six Cups/1.4 liters

Preparation time: about an hour to prepare ingredients, less if you’re an accomplished Chinese cook. Once the ingredients are ready, the soup cooks in minutes.

Please read notes, below, before starting to cook.

2 tablespoons dried shiitake mushrooms

2 tablespoons dried lily bulbs

2 tablespoons dried cloud ear mushrooms

2-4 ounces/56-114grams firm tofu

1 teaspoon sesame oil

2 teaspoons soy sauce

1 tablespoon Shaoxing rice wine (or dry sherry)

1 teaspoon white pepper (black if you have no white)

2-6 ounces/56-118grams pork or beef-boneless loin, belly, or chop (flank steak if beef)

Marinade for pork:

-pinch salt, two tablespoons water, 1 tablespoon Shaoxing rice wine

small piece of ginger

2-3 scallions

2-4 garlic cloves, peeled and minced

6 cups/1.4 liters unsalted chicken stock

6-9 tablespoons cornstarch and cold water, kept separated; you may not use all of it

6-9 tablespoons vinegar: ideally Chinkiang or black vinegar. Unseasoned rice vinegar will also work, or even cider vinegar.

More white pepper, to taste

Optional: 1 egg, cracked into a small bowl and blended with a fork

Before starting, have ready a stack of small bowls or dishes, a large cutting board, and a cleaver or other large, sharp, heavy knife. You will also need a medium bowl to marinade the pork and a medium-sized soup bowl.

I like eating hot and sour soup with white rice. If you share my preference, start a pot of rice.

Heat 2 cups/800g water in the microwave. Add the lily bulbs, dried shiitakes, and cloud ear mushrooms to the cup. The bulbs tend to float, so I hold everything down with a clean spoon. Set aside.

Wrap the tofu in a clean dish towel or paper towels and set on a plate to drain. Set aside.

In another small bowl (I know, I know), blend the sesame oil, soy sauce, Shaoxing rice wine, and the white pepper with a fork.

In a bowl large enough to marinate the pork, blend pinch salt, two tablespoons water, and a tablespoon rice wine.

Slice the beef or pork into small pieces–think about eating them with a spoon–and add them to the rice wine mixture. I blend this with clean hands, but a fork works, too.

Slice the tofu into strips and set them in a small bowl or dish.

Slice the ginger, garlic, and scallions and set them in a small bowl or dish. Again, think about eating them with a soup spoon.

Drain the mushrooms. I do this by setting small colander over a bowl and leaving it to drip. If they’re large, you can either cut with a knife, or just scissor them in the colander. Again, think eating with a spoon.

Heat the broth to a simmer. Add the colander of mushrooms, allowing them to cook for a few minutes. Tip in the small bowl of soy sauce, rice wine, and white pepper.

Now wash up so you don’t hate me.

Okay. Add the pork in its marinade. Stir. Add the garlic, ginger, and scallions. Carefully add the tofu; it is fragile.

Wash some dishes.

In a small bowl, blend one tablespoon of cornstarch with one tablespoon cold water. Add to the soup, stirring. Now add one tablespoon vinegar. Taste, taste, taste. Keep stirring up cornstarch/water and adding it to the soup, along with white pepper, until you reach a thickness/flavor balance you like. You may get there with one tablespoon. PLEASE MAKE SURE YOUR PORK IS COOKED BEFORE SAMPLING. Don’t get food poisoning and sue me. You have been warned.

You want a nice velvety texture, with a balance of hot and sour flavors: neither should dominate.  Once the soup is balanced, add in the optional egg, if desired: crack it into a small bowl, blend with a fork. Then tip into the soup and stir in one direction until it “threads” into rags.

Serve with rice. Or not.

Although this is not at all traditional, I bought some spicy Japanese rice crackers and sprinkled them over a serving of the soup yesterday, and they were delicious.

Hot and sour soup will keep well, refrigerated, up to five days. It may be frozen up to two months, but I don’t recommend you do so, as soup’s flavor and texture will suffer.

Notes:

Amounts of dried ingredients are suggested; I am running low on dried ingredients due to the pandemic. Hence the disparities between photographs and suggested recipe amounts.

Dried shiitake mushrooms are easily found in most Western markets, as are cloud ears. Cloud ears may be labeled “Black Fungus” and are sold in various sizes. Smaller are better, but if the larger are all you can buy, go with it.

I’ve never seen dried lily bulbs for sale in Western markets. Order online, or buy them in your local Chinese market.

99ranchmarket

Black vinegar is becoming more widely available in Western markets. It is also sold as “diluted black vinegar.” You can use this, Chinkiang Vinegar (my preference), unseasoned rice wine vinegar, or even cider vinegar.

Most recipes use a scant amount of protein–4-6 ounces. This is up to you.

Some hot and sour recipes marinate meat; others eschew this step. The late, great Barbara Tropp, writing in The Modern Art Of Chinese Cooking, writes:

“Marinating the meat, for even five minutes, changes its texture remarkably. It becomes plush and slippery on account of the cornstarch and oil, which creates an impenetrable flavor seal for the beef when it enters the hot stock.”

Some recipes include egg in the soup, others do not. To add egg, just before serving, crack one egg into a small bowl. Blend vigorously with fork. Tip into the soup pot, stir briskly in one direction so it threads into “rags.”

Bamboo shoots are traditionally included in hot and sour soup; they do not appear here as I had run out.

A final note about tofu: unfinished portions may be frozen. Slice into squares, lay flat on a tray, and open freeze overnight. Transfer to sealed container or ziploc freezer bag. The texture will change, but the tofu will be suitable for soups or stews. I learned this trick from Naomi Duguid and Jeffrey Alford’s Seductions of Rice.

The Insufficient Kitchen © 2015
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