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liuzhou

liuzhou

28. Fermented Beans


I’ve already mentioned some examples of fermented tofu (which is of course made from soy beans), but there are some preserved products which ferment the beans themselves along with other ingredients, usually chilli.

 

豆豉 (dòu chǐ) – Salted Black Beans

 

1089084345_Fermentedblackbeans2.thumb.jpg.1927a505298dc3082b2fc4c6e39943c7.jpg

Salted Black Beans

 

I think these are the most well-known, being the basis of many black bean sauce dishes in Chinese restaurants around the globe. I’ve mentioned before here that the jars of black bean sauce so prevalent in the west are virtually unknown here, but every supermarket and cornershop carries the fermented beans.

 

1557883667_Fermentedblackbeansbag.thumb.jpg.a74cae9108cff1f3767bbb3357dc1001.jpg

Salted Black Beans

Essential in 麻婆豆腐 (má pó dòu fǔ), but also with ribs, fish, etc. I often use them with squid or clams.

 

There is firm evidence dating the production of salted black beans to at least 173 BC and the production process remains the same. Black soy beans are salted and left to ferment. Simple.

 

1963757775_blacksoyabeans.thumb.jpg.5e1044d1700cf4a35a301533eba85563.jpg

Black Soy Beans

 

They are also occasionally flavoured as in the following image which shows 麻辣豆豉 (má là dòu chǐ), or hot and spicy salted black beans, 麻辣 referring to Sichuan peppercorn and chili.

128834842_MalaFermentedBeans.thumb.jpg.7a935717a355464df261771f14651f26.jpg

麻辣豆豉 (má là dòu chǐ)

 

There is apparently a version made using white soy beans, but I’ve never seen it. Known as 面豉 (miàn chǐ), these are brown rather than black.

 

豆瓣酱 (dòu bàn jiàng) - Broad Bean  Paste

 

Douban_jiang.thumb.jpg.877105b390a96f6193fa284faf513751.jpg.e6ac4ab7f4cfeb19cff0eee284fb109d.jpg

 

Another Sichuan essential is 豆瓣酱 (dòu bàn jiàng, literally bean piece sauce). I’ve mentioned this at length before in other topics. The most prized is that from 郫县 (pí xiàn), a county outside Chengdu city. The sauce from here has protected geographical status and is produced to precise standards. Broad beans from Sichuan or neighbouring Yunnan are fermented along with a local type of Sichuanese chilli known as 二荆条 (èr jīng tiáo). Even the water must be from Sichuan wells.

 

doubanjiang.jpg

郫县豆瓣酱 (pí xiàn dòu bàn jiàng)

 

Look out for doubanjiang labelled as 红油豆瓣酱 (hóng yóu dòu bàn jiàng), even if it from Sichuan. This is a non-fermented product. It isn’t bad but there are no standards which have to be followed.

 

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng) – Laba Sauce

 

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng) is another type of fermented bean sauce, this time made from white soy beans, garlic and chilli. It is particularly popular in Hunan. It is typically eaten with congee (rice porridge at the time of the Laba Festival, which takes place on the 8th day of the 12th month of the traditional solar-lunar calendar. This month is known as the ‘la’ month and ‘ba means eight’, hence the name of the sauce and the congee.


2097407343_LabaSauce.thumb.jpg.546158870eeb09b50d3dd8addd855ae3.jpg

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng)

I'm full of beans.
 

 

liuzhou

liuzhou

28. Fermented Beans


I’ve already mentioned some examples of fermented tofu (which is of course made from soy beans), but there are some preserved products which ferment the beans themselves along with other ingredients, usually chilli.

 

豆豉 (dòu chǐ) – Salted Black Beans

 

1089084345_Fermentedblackbeans2.thumb.jpg.1927a505298dc3082b2fc4c6e39943c7.jpg

Salted Black Beans

 

I think these are the most well-known, being the basis of many black bean sauce dishes in Chinese restaurants around the globe. I’ve mentioned before here that the jars of black bean sauce so prevalent in the west are virtually unknown here, but every supermarket and cornershop carries the fermented beans.

 

1557883667_Fermentedblackbeansbag.thumb.jpg.a74cae9108cff1f3767bbb3357dc1001.jpg

Salted Black Beans

Essential in 麻婆豆腐 (má pó dòu fǔ), but also with ribs, fish, etc. I often use them with squid or clams.

 

There is firm evidence dating the production of salted black beans to at least 173 BC and the production process remains the same. Black soy beans are salted and left to ferment. Simple.

 

1963757775_blacksoyabeans.thumb.jpg.5e1044d1700cf4a35a301533eba85563.jpg

Black Soy Beans

 

They are also occasionally flavoured as in the following image which shows 麻辣豆豉 (má là dòu chǐ), or hot and spicy salted black beans, 麻辣 referring to Sichuan peppercorn and chili.

128834842_MalaFermentedBeans.thumb.jpg.7a935717a355464df261771f14651f26.jpg

麻辣豆豉 (má là dòu chǐ)

 

There is apparently a version made using white soy beans, but I’ve never seen it. Known as 面豉 (miàn chǐ), these are brown rather than black.

 

豆瓣酱 (dòu bàn jiàng) - Broad Bean  Paste

 

Douban_jiang.thumb.jpg.877105b390a96f6193fa284faf513751.jpg.e6ac4ab7f4cfeb19cff0eee284fb109d.jpg

 

Another Sichuan essential is 豆瓣酱 (dòu bàn jiàng, literally bean piece sauce). I’ve mentioned this at length before in other topics. The most prized is that from 郫县 (pí xiàn), a county outside Chengdu city. The sauce from here has protected geographical status and is produced to precise standards. Broad beans from Sichuan or neighbouring Yunnan are fermented along with a local type of Sichuanese chilli known as 二荆条 (èr jīng tiáo). Even the water must be from Sichuan wells.

Look out for doubanjiang labelled as 红油豆瓣酱 (hóng yóu dòu bàn jiàng), even if it from Sichuan. This is a non-fermented product. It isn’t bad but there are no standards which have to be followed.

 

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng) – Laba Sauce

 

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng) is another type of fermented bean sauce, this time made from white soy beans, garlic and chilli. It is particularly popular in Hunan. It is typically eaten with congee (rice porridge at the time of the Laba Festival, which takes place on the 8th day of the 12th month of the traditional solar-lunar calendar. This month is known as the ‘la’ month and ‘ba means eight’, hence the name of the sauce and the congee.


2097407343_LabaSauce.thumb.jpg.546158870eeb09b50d3dd8addd855ae3.jpg

腊八酱 (là bā jiàng)

I'm full of beans.
 

doubanjiang.jpg

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