Hetty McKinnon Archives | Saveur https://www.saveur.com/authors/hetty-mckinnon/ Eat the world. Fri, 28 Jul 2023 16:27:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.saveur.com/uploads/2021/06/22/cropped-Saveur_FAV_CRM-1.png?auto=webp&width=32&height=32 Hetty McKinnon Archives | Saveur https://www.saveur.com/authors/hetty-mckinnon/ 32 32 Seaweed Brown Butter Pasta https://www.saveur.com/recipes/seaweed-brown-butter-pasta/ Fri, 28 Jul 2023 16:27:11 +0000 /?p=160320
Seaweed Brown Butter Pasta
Photography by Hetty Lui McKinnon

'A gateway recipe for seaweed skeptics,’ according to Hetty McKinnon, this easy weeknight dish packs a briny, umami punch.

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Seaweed Brown Butter Pasta
Photography by Hetty Lui McKinnon

This recipe is brought to you by SAVEUR Cookbook Club, a passionate community of food-loving readers from around the globe featuring our favorite authors and recipes. Join us as we cook through a new book every two months, and share your food pics and vids on social media with the hashtags #SAVEURCookbookClub and #EatTheWorld.

This seaweed brown butter pasta recipe, from author Hetty McKinnon’s new book, Tenderheart: A Cookbook About Vegetables and Unbreakable Family Bonds, is all about umami. If it’s your first time cooking with dulse, the lettuce-like red seaweed, you’ll love its clean, briny flavor. Toasting it lends it a pleasant smokiness. The seaweed butter is also terrific tossed with roasted vegetables or slathered on crusty bread.

Yield: 4
Time: 30 minutes
  • ⅓ cup dried dulse flakes
  • 8 Tbsp. unsalted butter, or vegan butter, at room temperature
  • ½ tsp. fine salt, plus more to taste
  • ¼–½ tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
  • 1 lb. linguine, or other long pasta
  • 1 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 medium shallots, or 1 medium yellow onion, thinly sliced
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 3 Tbsp. white (shiro) miso
  • Grated Parmesan cheese and vegan furikake, for topping (optional)

Instructions

  1. In a small skillet set over low heat, toast the dulse, stirring frequently, until crispy and very dry, about 10 minutes. Transfer to a food processor and pulse until coarse crumbs form, 4–5 pulses. Add the butter, salt, and crushed red pepper and pulse until combined (but not completely smooth), 4–5 pulses.
  2. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and add the pasta. Boil, stirring occasionally, until al dente, according to the instructions on the package. Reserve 1 cup of the pasta water, then drain and set aside.
  3. Meanwhile, to a large skillet set over medium heat, add 1 tablespoon of the oil and the shallots and cook, stirring occasionally, until very soft, 8–10 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, about 1 minute, then add the seaweed butter and continue cooking until it’s melted and smells nutty, 2–3 minutes. Whisk in the miso paste. Add the pasta and ½ cup of the pasta water and toss until combined. If the pasta looks dry, add more pasta water. Season with salt to taste, then top with the cheese and furikake if desired. 

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Soy Pickled Tomatoes with Silken Tofu https://www.saveur.com/recipes/soy-pickled-tomatoes-silken-tofu-recipe/ Tue, 11 Jul 2023 20:43:31 +0000 /?p=159545
Soy Pickled Tomatoes with Silken Tofu
Photography by Hetty Lui McKinnon

Silken tofu serves as the ideal vessel for flavorful pickled tomatoes in this no-cook recipe from cookbook author Hetty McKinnon.

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Soy Pickled Tomatoes with Silken Tofu
Photography by Hetty Lui McKinnon

This recipe is brought to you by SAVEUR Cookbook Club, a passionate community of food-loving readers from around the globe that features our favorite authors and recipes. Join us as we cook through a new book every two months, and share your food pics and vids on social media with the hashtags #SAVEURCookbookClub and #EatTheWorld 

When the days are hot and the cherry tomatoes prolific, there’s no reason to turn on the oven or stove. Instead, gather the juiciest specimens from the farmers market and make this luscious, satisfying dish adapted from author Hetty McKinnon’s newest cookbook, Tenderheart: A Cookbook About Vegetables and Unbreakable Family Bonds. Silken tofu is the perfect vehicle for juicy tomatoes that have been luxuriating in a garlicky bath of soy sauce and vinegar and spiced up with chile oil. Best of all it’s delicious served cold from the refrigerator, topped with a handful of fresh herbs. It’s delicious on it’s own, or served with rice. — Ellen Fort

Yield: 4
Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients

For the pickled tomatoes:

  • 12 oz. cherry or grape tomatoes, halved
  • 2 Tbsp. soy sauce or tamari
  • 1 Tbsp. black or rice vinegar
  • 1 Tbsp. chile oil
  • 1 Tbsp. toasted sesame oil
  • ½ tsp. sugar
  • 1 garlic clove, finely grated

For the tofu:

  • 2 lb. cold silken tofu, drained and patted dry on all sides with paper towels
  • 1 Tbsp. white sesame seeds, toasted
  • 4 shiso leaves, thinly sliced (optional)
  • 2 scallions, tops and bottoms trimmed, thinly sliced
  • Cilantro leaves, for garnish

Instructions

  1. Make the pickled tomatoes: In a medium bowl,  stir together all the ingredients and set aside to marinate for 10–20 minutes. (Alternatively, cover and refrigerate for up to 12 hours; bring to room temperature before using.)
  2. Meanwhile, make the tofu: Place the tofu onto a platter. Without cutting through to the bottom, slice the tofu in a crosshatch pattern at 1-inch intervals (this will help the sauce penetrate).
  3. To serve, spoon the reserved tomatoes and their sauce over the tofu, then scatter with the scallion, cilantro, shiso (if using), and sesame seeds. 

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Fermented Black Beans are the Savory Superpower Every Pantry Needs https://www.saveur.com/food/the-irresistible-appeal-of-fermented-black-beans/ Wed, 12 May 2021 01:02:00 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/?p=115851
Fermented Black Bean Sauce
Dou si, or fermented black soybeans, are a quick and easy way to add savory depth to any meal. Hetty McKinnon

From classic meaty dishes to modern, plant-based fare, this ancient Chinese ingredient continues to be a must-have.

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Fermented Black Bean Sauce
Dou si, or fermented black soybeans, are a quick and easy way to add savory depth to any meal. Hetty McKinnon

When I was growing up, my mother made wok-tossed mussels on Friday nights. As she placed the platter of green-tinged shells onto the table, I would immediately push the briny shellfish aside, then covetously ladle their glossy dark sauce over my bowl of rice. For me, the mussels were never the star of this meal. Instead, it was all about that salty, spicy fermented black bean sauce. 

My mother was born in Guangdong Province in Southern China. She left her homeland on the precipice of the cultural revolution, and eventually settled in Sydney, Australia. Here, without the English language skills or education needed to find work, she cooked the food of her youth with fervor. From big breakfasts of fried rice or macaroni soup, to the fermenting pork, fish, ginger, and eggs she prepared for future meals, to her generous, banquet-style dinners, food was an unbreakable tether to her homeland. And for as long as I can remember, dou si (also known as dou chi to Mandarin speakers, or fermented black beans in English) has been a prevalent ingredient in her flavorsome Cantonese home cooking

For her favorite classic vegetable dish, she stir-fried bitter melon with dou si. For a meatier course, pai gwut, she added the beans to juicy chunks of pork spare-ribs. And for ju yook biang—her signature steamed “pork cake” and a staple throughout my childhood—tiny beads of black beans burst through tender meat with an intense and irresistible saltiness. On the few occasions my mother wasn’t up to cooking a lavish dinner, she rewarded my siblings and me with canned fried dace. The rich and oily fish packed with salty dou si right in the can was a special treat, and the only accompaniment we needed with white rice. 

The world’s oldest known soybean product, dou si is laced with history and significance to the Chinese. In 1972, it was found inside a tomb in South Central China that had been sealed since 165 BCE. The beans were also mentioned in Shiji, a monumental history of ancient China completed in the first century BCE by a Western Han Dynasty official, Sima Qian. Still today, dou si remains an important and widespread ingredient not only in China, but also throughout East and Southeast Asia. In Korea, the beloved noodle dish jajangmyeon is topped with a black bean sauce called chunjang; in the Philippines, bangus sa tausi is a tomato and fermented black bean fish stew; and in nearby Indonesia, the beans are used to season kakap tahu tausi, a dish of fried snapper and tofu. 

Made from black soybeans that have been inoculated with mold, dou si is then salted and left to dry. Time—six months or so—imparts a robust, multi-dimensional flavor, reminiscent of other aged foods like parmesan cheese and olives. In my kitchen, the ingredient is a weeknight workhorse, and a quick way to add nuance and complexity to a meal with minimal effort and ingredients. It can be added to stir-fries, stews, braises, or even salad dressings to enhance more subdued flavors. And while store-bought black bean sauce is a useful convenience, having a stash of the whole fermented black beans in your pantry is even more useful. Fortunately, fermented black beans are very shelf-stable, and making your own intensely aromatic black bean sauce at home is surprisingly easy: Simply soak the beans to rehydrate, then mash them up with a bit of water, a few seasonings, and a little oil. Here are three of my favorite ways to use this essential ingredient at home. 

Blend Dou Si Into a Fresh and Funky Vegan Dressing

My most recent discovery is incorporating dou si into salad dressings. While not a traditional use for this ancient ingredient, dou si is perfect for this purpose, as it injects both savoriness and sharpness—notes which are sometimes lacking in vegan recipes. Use the beans as you would soy sauce to add salty depth to a vinaigrette, or add to chile oil and rice vinegar for an assertive Asian-style dressing. Dou si also has a lovely dense consistency and is a great thickener for loose sauces. It blends particularly beautifully in a plant-based Caesar dressing—simply blitz the beans with silken tofu and nutritional yeast to pack a creamy punch, without the need for anchovies, eggs, or parmesan. This dressing should not be reserved for vegans, as dou si brings a confident swagger to this classic sauce which will have you rethinking the possibilities of a Caesar salad.

Punctuate Soups, Stews, and Braises with a Savory Kick

Dou si lends a lovely richness and depth to cooked vegetable dishes. My mother’s vegan mapo tofu typically features doubanjiang—the other fermented bean sauce, which is made with fava beans—but to cater to my children’s more sensitive palates, I often use dou si instead. The black beans provide plenty of savoriness without doubanjiang’s added spice. 
You can also use whole or mashed dou si as you would miso, by adding it to soups and sauces, or even to top savory oat porridge or jook (congee). It can be added at various stages of cooking to achieve different effects—incorporate at the beginning to deliver an umami note to the overall dish, or add at the end for a sharp, funky flavor.

Make Your Own Chile-Black Bean Sauce

The bold taste of dou si has a natural affinity with fresh seasonal vegetables. Steamed eggplant with black bean sauce is a classic dish, in which the savory jewels coax both sweetness and earthiness from the silky nightshade. Dou si stir-fried with fresh seasonal vegetables is a staple in my home, and one of the simplest, quickest, and most delicious weeknight meals I make. The punchy sauce lends itself well to a crisp, barely-fried vegetable like cauliflower, broccoli, asparagus, or green beans. My stir-fried green beans recipe features a black bean sauce made from scratch, and even with this extra step, it comes together in just a few minutes. So much flavor, so little effort. 


Hetty McKinnon is a Chinese Australian cook and food writer based in Brooklyn, New York. She is the author of four bestselling cookbooks, including her latest, To Asia, With Love: Everyday Asian Recipes and Stories from the Heart.She’s also the editor and publisher of multicultural food journal Peddler and the host of the podcast The House Specials.

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Green Beans with Black Bean Sauce https://www.saveur.com/recipes/green-beans-with-black-bean-sauce/ Wed, 12 May 2021 01:02:00 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/?p=115860
Green Beans Fermented Black Bean Sauce
Savory fermented black bean sauce is an irresistible condiment for just about any crisp, stir-fried vegetable. Hetty McKinnon

Super-savory dou si are the pantry stand-out in cookbook author Hetty McKinnon's vegetarian kitchen.

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Green Beans Fermented Black Bean Sauce
Savory fermented black bean sauce is an irresistible condiment for just about any crisp, stir-fried vegetable. Hetty McKinnon

Much like olives or parmesan, the flavor of fermented black beans is intoxicating, so intensely savory and salty that you immediately crave more. Fermented black beans (or dou si) are actually black soybeans that have been fermented and salted, making them soft and semidry. At the supermarket, you will most likely find the ingredient blended into black bean sauce, a spicy and flavorful condiment that can be added directly to stir-fries and greens. If you do happen to find a bag of whole fermented black beans (which are widely available in Asian grocery stores or online) then please try this homemade version, which has a fresh and complex taste. Double the recipe, as the sauce keeps well in the fridge and is just as delicious on zucchini, snake beans, or broccoli.

This recipe is adapted from Hetty McKinnon’s cookbook, To Asia, With Love: Everyday Asian Recipes and Stories from the Heart and is featured in the story “Fermented Black Beans are the Savory Superpower Every Pantry Needs.”

Yield: serves 4
Time: 15 minutes

Ingredients

For the sauce:

  • <sup>1</sup>⁄<sub>2</sub> cup (2½ oz.) fermented black beans
  • 2 tbsp. olive oil
  • 2 tbsp. Shaoxing rice wine
  • 2 medium garlic cloves, finely chopped (1 Tbsp.)
  • 2 tsp. tamari or soy sauce
  • 1 tsp. crushed red chile flakes or 1 long red chile, finely chopped
  • 1 tsp. sugar

For the green beans:

  • 2 tbsp. vegetable oil
  • 9 oz. green beans, trimmed
  • 1 tbsp. toasted white sesame seeds
  • Fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • Steamed white or brown rice, to serve (optional)

Instructions

  1. Make the sauce: Place the fermented black beans in a colander and rinse under cold running water. Drain well. Transfer the beans to a small bowl and mash with the back of a fork or spoon to form a coarse paste. Add the olive oil, Shaoxing rice wine, garlic, tamari, chile flakes, and sugar, mix well, and set aside.
  2. Place a wok or large skillet over high heat. When hot, add the oil, swirl the wok to coat the surface, then add the green beans. Using tongs to toss occasionally, cook until the beans are bright green, about 2 minutes. Add 2 tablespoon of the black bean sauce, along with about 3 tablespoons of water, and continue cooking while tossing frequently until the beans are just starting to color and are tender-crisp, 2–3 minutes more. Season to taste with sea salt and black pepper, adding more black bean sauce as needed to coat the beans. Sprinkle with sesame seeds and serve immediately with steamed white or brown rice, if desired. Transfer any remaining sauce to an airtight container and store in the fridge for up to 1 week.

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