A classic Sichuan dish, with my adaptation. I've never seen a classic version of this with zucchini, but I want some veggies in mine, and zucchini works well with the flavors.
Ingredients:
3 medium chicken breasts, trimmed and cubed
3 zucchini, trimmed and cut to a similar size as the chicken
8 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 cm ginger, peeled and grated
10+ dried Chinese chiles, facing heaven chiles if you can find them
6 green onions, separated, white and pale green parts thinly sliced, green parts in 1 cm lengths
1 1/2 C peanuts
Vegetable oil
Marinade:
2 T soy sauce
1 T Shaoxing rice wine
1 T cornstarch
2 t salt
Sauce:
5 t soy sauce
5 t dark soy sauce
2 T Chinkiang black vinegar
1 T sugar
2 t Sichuan pepper, toasted and ground
2 T Shaoxing rice wine
6 T chicken stock
1 T sesame oil
2 t salt
1 T cornstarch
Additional chile to desired heat (optional)
Instructions:
Combine the marinade with the chicken and set aside for at least 10 minutes.
While the chicken is marinating, combine the sauce ingredients and set aside.
Once the chicken has marinated heat 1/4 C of oil in a wok with the dried chiles over very high heat, and blacken the chiles (open windows, turn on the vent fan, and be careful you can pepper gas yourself at this point). Once the chiles are turning dark and the oil is smoking hot add in the chicken; it will splatter as it goes in. Spread the chicken out in the wok and let it sit without moving until it browns, then stir fry it until just done. Remove from the wok, reserving the oil in the wok, and set aside.
Heat the oil in the wok back up over high heat, adding more oil if needed. Add in the garlic, ginger, and white parts of the green onion, and stir continuously until fragrant 30 seconds to 1 minute. Add in the zucchini, still over high heat, and stir fry for several minutes but leaving it crunchy. Add in the peanuts and reduce the heat, then add in the sauce, the green parts of the green onions, and the chicken. Stir until the sauce is thickened, adding additional stock if needed to thin the sauce.
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