4tbsprice wine (chinese cooking wine).If unavailable, just use some of the water from the black bean can, or stock, or sherry, or whatever you have on hand!
1/2red chilli, chopped thinly at an angle. Add a whole one if you like it spicy!
2heaped tspcornflour
1tbspFermented black bean sauce
1tbsphoney or other sweetener of choice
Freshly ground black pepperor Szechuan peppercorns, if you have them!
Veggies
1medium aubergine, cut into bite-sized pieces Microwave for 5 minutes, covered, to pre-cook
2medium onions, chopped into wedges
4garlic cloves, smashed and chopped
4cmpiece of ginger, cut into matchsticks
2mediumcarrots, halved and sliced thinly at an angle
1broccoli head, stem thinly sliced and florets separated
1/2cupcashews
1canblack beans, drained, water separate
1cupmangetout or snap peas
1limehalved
Toasted sesame seeds for garnish
Instructions
Do all your chopping and prep work. Pre-cook the aubs in the microwave. Mix all the sauce ingredients together and set aside.
Heat the sesame oil in a wok on the hottest your stovetop can do. Add the onions and toss around to sizzle for 30 seconds. Add the garlic, ginger, drained black beans, aubergine pieces and cashew nuts and toss around another 60 seconds or so, until the aubergine is cooking. Use a spatula to keep everything in motion - don't let it sit and burn on. If you stovetop isn't extremely hot, then add the aubergines earier (or cook them longer in the microwave) - the aubergines need very high heat to cook. Bear in mind though that if you add them earlier they'll absorb the sesame oil, preventing it from spreading its flavour through the dish.
Add the brocolli and sear around the pan a bit. Add about 1/4 cup of water from the black bean can (or stock) and continue stir-frying to steam the brocolli for about 30 seconds, then add the carrots, mangetout, and any other fast-cooking veggies you might be adding.Add the sauce and toss around for 60-90 seconds, making sure that the sauce coats all the vegetables and cooks the cornflour without sticking and burning on to the pan. Continuous movement is the key here. Add a little extra bean water or stock if the sauce seems too think - it should thinly coat all the veggies.
As soon as you are happy that the brocolli is crisp-tender and the sauce is cooked, remove from heat, taste and adjust salt, squeeze in half a lime's juice, top with sesame seeds and serve immediately.