What I love most about this stir-fry is how quickly everything comes together. By the time you’ve rinsed your jasmine rice and got it cooking away, the prawns will have ‘velveted’ (a technique that brings the bounce factor to everything from seafood to sizzling beef ), and the rest of the ingredients will be ready to roll. If asparagus isn’t in season, I’ve popped some suggestions in the Subs. The prawns can be replaced by other seafood, or even firm tofu. It’s the kind of dish you’ll have memorised and added to your repertoire in no time. A real winner.

Serves 4

Ingerdients:

  • 250 g (9 oz) peeled raw prawn (shrimp) tails (see Subs)
  • 3/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
  • 1 generous thumb-sized knob fresh ginger, peeled
  • 2–3 garlic cloves, peeled
  • 2 tablespoons oyster sauce (see Subs)
  • 1 tablespoon light soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon shaoxing rice wine
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon cornflour (cornstarch)
  • ½ cup (125 ml) water, plus an extra ½ cup (125 ml) water on standby
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 bunches of asparagus, cut into 5 cm (2 inch) lengths (see Subs)
  • 6 spring onions (scallions), white and green bits cut into 5 cm (2 inch) lengths, plus extra thinly sliced spring onion to serve
  • 1 cup (150 g) roasted macadamias (see Subs)
  • Steamed jasmine rice, to serve

Method:

  1. To ‘velvet’ the prawns, slice the tails in half through the centre and massage the bicarbonate of soda into the flesh, then leave to rest for 15 minutes. Sounds weird, I know, but go with me here.
  2. Finely grate half the ginger and all the garlic. Slice the other ginger half into rough chunks and reserve.
  3. In a bowl, whisk together the grated ginger, garlic, oyster sauce, soy sauce, rice wine, sesame oil, cornflour and ½ cup (125 ml) water until combined. Set aside as your stir-fry sauce.
  4. Rinse the prawns thoroughly in a colander and pat dry with paper towel.
  5. Heat 1 tablespoon of the vegetable oil in a wok or large frying pan until very hot. Add the prawn meat and stir-fry for 30–60 seconds, or until it just changes colour; remove from the wok and set aside. Wipe out the wok with paper towel and reheat the remaining oil.
  6. Boil a kettle. Pop the asparagus and spring onion into a colander and into the sink, then pour boiled water over them. Drain well, then add to the hot wok and stir-fry for 2 minutes.
  7. Give your stir-fry sauce another whisk to reincorporate everything, then pour it into the hot wok and bring to the boil. Toss the prawns and nuts through. The sauce should be silky and glossy, which will happen almost instantly. If you find the liquid gets absorbed way too fast, splash in another ½ cup (125 ml) water and allow this to incorporate, too. Taste for seasoning.
  8. Serve topped with extra spring onion, with bowls of steamed jasmine rice, and add this to the weekly rotation.

Subs

Asparagus is so seasonal, but this is the kind of stir-fry you’re going to want to make all year round, so for any time that isn’t spring, use baby broccoli (broccolini) or even broccoli florets chopped into fork-sized bits instead. Snow peas (mange tout) would be fantastic here, too.

No macadamias? Use cashews. If using raw nuts, toast them in a dry pan until golden and pull out before cooking the prawns.

For a nut-free alternative, you could try tinned water chestnuts, rinsed and chopped into chunks.

Go fully plant-based by subbing the oyster sauce out for mushroom sauce (Megachef is my favourite brand for this) and the prawns for firm or even extra-firm tofu. This doesn’t need to be silkened, just boiled as a whole block (out of the pack) for 2 minutes or so, drained of liquid, chopped, pre-seasoned with plenty of soy sauce and other spices of choice, then tossed with cornflour (cornstarch) to coat each cube before searing as you would the prawns.

AliceZaslavsky

Images and text from The Joy of Better Cooking by Alice Zaslavsky, photography by Ben Dearnley. Murdoch Books RRP $49.99. Learn more at www.thejoyofbettercooking.com