Délice Céleste de Choi Sum & Ail Poché Soyeux

Délice Céleste de Choi Sum & Ail Poché Soyeux

(Celestial Choi Sum & Silky Poached Garlic Bliss)

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Portions
2
Taille de portion
1 assiette (200g)
Temps de préparation
10 Minutes
Temps de cuisson
15 Minutes
Temps total
25 Minutes
Délice Céleste de Choi Sum & Ail Poché Soyeux
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Vues de page
94
Mise à jour
juin 11, 2025

Ingrédients

Nutrition

  • Portions: 2
  • Taille de portion: 1 assiette (200g)
  • Calories: 210 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 33 g
  • Protein: 6 g
  • Fat: 8 g
  • Fiber: 7 g
  • Sugar: 5 g
  • Sodium: 800 mg
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg
  • Calcium: 180 mg
  • Iron: 3.2 mg

Instructions

  • 1 - Poach Garlic:
    In a small saucepan, add garlic cloves, cover with cold water. Bring to a gentle simmer and poach for 7-8 minutes until soft. Drain and set aside.
  • 2 - Prep Choi Sum:
    Wash choi sum thoroughly, trim stalks if large. Leave small whole, halve thick stems.
  • 3 - Stir-Fry Base Aromatics:
    Heat 1 tbsp olive oil in wok over medium flame. Add drained poached garlic cloves, sauté gently for 30 seconds until fragrant but not browned.
  • 4 - Sauté Choi Sum:
    Increase heat. Toss in choi sum, stir-fry briskly to coat leaves in oil and garlic for about 1 minute.
  • 5 - Add Flavor Balance:
    Drizzle in Shaoxing wine, soy sauce, and sprinkle in salt and a pinch of white pepper. Stir; add 2 tbsp water if needed to prevent sticking. Cook just till leaves wilt and stalks turn luminous green.
  • 6 - Garnish and Serve:
    Remove from heat. Finish with 1 tbsp olive oil and sesame oil. Pile onto plate, scatter with spring onions and a pinch of chili flakes for heat if desired.

En savoir plus sur: Délice Céleste de Choi Sum & Ail Poché Soyeux

Delicate choi sum, gently stir-fried and crowned with sweet-smoky poached garlic.

Celestial Choi Sum with Poached Garlic: An Ode to the Humble Green

Choi sum—sometimes called "Chinese flowering cabbage"—is often overlooked in Western kitchens, yet its delicate flavor and lightly crunchy embrace have made it a household staple throughout countless Asian tables for generations. British cuisine, ever receptive to global influences, found itself enchanted by this green with the rise of cosmopolitan London’s Chinatowns and pan-Asian eateries. This recipe mingles Far East technique with a subtle British cool: rosa-tinged, sweet garlic cloves are gently poached, infusing the stirring with a mellow, earthy base that never overpowers.

Recipe Origins & Cultural Significance

A signature in home-cooked and restaurant fare, choi sum symbolizes renewal and vitality—a fitting motif for celebrations and everyday suppers alike. Garlic, with its ancient ties to British and Chinese folk medicine, grounds the dish with both sweetness and supple bite. Immigrants brought the tradition of eating plates of stir-fried leafy greens with swirls of fragrant oil and seasoned broth, fostering a gentle revolution in home cooking across the UK from the late 20th century onwards.

In many Chinese regions, poaching garlic first is seen as a technique to unlock its sweetness—creating aromatic harmony instead of clashing pungency. Gently cooking avoids scorching, which can often make greens and aromatics bitter or tannic. In this “celestial” rendering, it’s that cloudlike, silky garlic which binds the emerald-green stalks in savory sunlight.

Complexity That’s Deceptively Simple

One of the fantastic attributes of this dish is how approachable and quick it is, yet it rewards you for small refinements. A careful wash to remove every speck of soil from the choi sum, slicing stems on a steep angle for even cooking, or draping with droplets of extra virgin olive oil—all elevate the end result. The aromatic, lush, but never overpowering, sauce comes together with minimal agitation, letting even beginner home cooks discover the glory of textures: crunchy yet yielding stems next to slippery, saucy leaves and flutter-soft garlic.

Personal Touches & Home Variations

Having made versions of this dish for Chinese New Year, autumn lunch boxes, and midweek suppers alike, I love how adaptable it is. Use British-grown choi sum if you can source it, substituting with seasonal broccoli or sprouting greens if need be. The swirling of sesame and olive oil—a tip I learned from a London-based Cantonese chef—adds an unexpected, layered finish. Adding chili heats things if you wish for a bolder punch, or swap the soy with gluten-free tamari.

Tips & Serving Suggestions

  • For deeper flavor, let the poached garlic cool slightly, then flatten gently with a spoon before stir-frying, so each clove disperses its scent through the oil.
  • Minimal water is key when stir-frying; excess liquid steams (not fries) the greens. Only splash as needed!
  • This pairs beautifully as a side with steamed jasmine rice, crispy tofu, or pan-seared fish for fusion main courses.
  • To make ahead, poach the garlic a day in advance and store in cool olive oil—a nod to Mediterranean preservation.

Unique Aspects

This “celestial” creation stands apart for its layering of subtlety and character—a dish that elevates everyday greens and beloved garlic into a small feast. For those experimenting with vegetable-centric cuisine, or simply wishing to invoke light, comfort, and brightness at the table, it’s an invitation to taste what lies beyond the ordinary. A celebration not just of fusion cooking but of new tradition being woven on British kitchen tables day after day.

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