* Liang Fen – Cold Mung Bean Jelly Noodles

Posted on October 12th, 2009 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Chinese, Course, Cuisine, Green onions, Mung beans, Noodles, Sichuan Peppercorn, Sichuanese.


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Once upon a time, a very long time ago, I used to sell toothpaste in China. We were introducing the Colgate Red into China and I was tasked with the “smaller” markets — those cities with less than 5 million population.  On our launch into Chongqing, I remember walking the slopes of the city (it’s as hilly as San Francisco), supposedly to check out the toothpaste market, but I was mesmerized by the spice markets.  Mounds and mounds of chili and peppers — bright red, dark red, fiery red everywhere.  The air was even spicy! Then we came across this street peddler who was dishing out Liang Fen.  Using a hand grater, he “grated” noodles out of a basin of rice jello, and ladled on a red spicy sauce on top.   That was totally ingenious the way he made the noodles.

Liang Fen is a great starter dish and my favorite Sichuan dish.  Slippery, cool and slightly springy, it’s the canvas for the fiery and numbing sauce.  Sichuan or more commonly misspelt Szechuan cuisine is distinctly unique for its use of hot, numbing spices and lots of fresh vegetables as the province is the vegetable bowl for China.  The Sichuan peppercorn is really a prickly ash, not at all related to regular black pepper.  It has a floral and woody aroma, but its most outstanding feature is how it gives a numbing feeling to your mouth.  One may wonder why in the world would you want that feeling in your food, I find it hard to explain or describe but it does give a nice kick, and an addictive one indeed.  Once banned from the United States, you can now easily find the spice even in your local Wholefoods, or at least local to the Bay Area, thanks to a fusion foods fad a couple of years ago pushing the spice to a ranking in the top 10 must try for the year by Bon Appetit or one of those magazines.

Chef’s tip: Mung bean starch has good nutritional value.  You can easily find it at Korean grocery stores.  To cook it, make sure you stir continuously till it become translucent, otherwise, it will still be raw.  I prefer to use the Sichuan peppercorn oil, too.  It gives the same effect without the coarseness of the peppercorn.  You can omit the tahini for a cleaner tasting sauce.

Noodles

4 cups + 2 tablespoons water

¾ cup mung bean starch*

Sauce

3 tablespoons tahini + 3 tablespoons water (more if tahini is thick)

1 tablespoon light soy sauce

1 tablespoon Chinkiang vinegar

1 tablespoon sugar

½ teaspoon kosher salt

1 teaspoon ground toasted Sichuan peppercorn, or Sichuan peppercorn oil

1 teaspoon ginger juice

1 clove garlic, minced

1 tablespoon Asian chili oil

½ tablespoon sesame oil

1 stalk green onions, green parts only, julienned into 1 inch strips

Finishing oil:

1 teaspoon Asian chili oil

½ teaspoon sesame oil

Preparing the noodle

  1. Mix starch with 1 ½ cups of water till starch is fully dissolved.  Mix in remaining water.
  2. Bring to boil, stirring constantly till the mixture thickens.  It’s easiest to stir from the center out. Stir until the mixture is clear and translucent.  About 4 minutes total.
  3. Immediately pour mixture into a wet, glass or ceramic dish, about 9X12 inch, making a thin 3/8 inch layer.
  4. Leave to cool for 45 minutes in the fridge or 2 hours at room temperature.
  5. When set, cut noodles 6 X ½ X ¼ inch strips

Preparing the sauce

  1. Mix together the sauce ingredients in a bowl.

Assembly:

  1. Pour sauce over the noodles and toss to coat.  Finish with a little chili oil and sesame oil.  Garnish with green onions.

Serves: 6

Note: To make your own chili oil, use the recipe below:

Chili oil with chili flakes

½ cup of dried chili flakes

2 cups of peanut oil

  1. Put chili flakes in a glass preserving jar (or pyrex)
  2. Heat the oil until smoking hot
  3. Allow to cool 5 mins
  4. Pour into the jar

* Can be found in Asian stores

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2 Responses to “Liang Fen – Cold Mung Bean Jelly Noodles”

  1. Linda Says:

    I love this paragraph in today’s NYT article that aptly describes Sichuan ‘ma’ numbing flavor — Anyone looking for proof that pain and pleasure share a common neural pathway will find it at this bleak-looking restaurant, where the eyes weep and gums thrum as the capsaicins free every last endorphin from its cellular prison.

  2. tigerfish Says:

    Love and hate relationship with Sichuan peppercorn. Love it cos of the “numbing” heat but hate it cos I can’t seem to taste any other food after my buds are numbed :O

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