Because the ginger is the important part of this. You might think it's just an aromatic. No, it is a first class vegetable in this dish.
I've had my family's stir fried ginger sitting in the back of my mind after my mom made it for me earlier this year, and I've been wanting to try making it myself. And today I finally did. And oh my god, cutting up this ginger was so tedious and my hand started cramping up.
That's about 12 oz of ginger, peeled and julienned. I told my aunt that it was so much work to cut up and she was like "it's not that much work! you need a sharper knife and you need to wet the ginger and peel it with a spoon!" Okay, noted for next time.
I used an equal amount of chicken thigh, cut up into little pieces. It is a lot of ginger to chicken. I liked it, but I don't think the average person appreciates this much ginger. So I think I might scale back the amount of ginger next time. Maybe like a 2:3 ratio of ginger to chicken.
Anyway, I turned the heat on the stove up to HIGH (because my mom insists on always cooking with high heat) and once it was hot, I added enough oil to cover the pan, and then I threw in some minced garlic, about 4 cloves.
And then I immedately lifted the pan off the stove and lowered the heat because it was way way way too hot for the garlic 🥵 The garlic quickly darkened in color, and I threw in a handful of the ginger and stirred that around.
Okay, I put the heat back on HIGH and I threw in all the chicken and stirred a little more. Once that was basically cooked, I added the rest of the ginger and stirred some more. And then it was time to add in all the sauces and seasonings. I added
And then I also added around 1/4 - 1/2 cup of water so I could keep stirring and it could cook longer and not burn. To uh, enhance the flavors some more I guess. It all basically evaporated at the end though.
I was totally just winging all the amounts. I would say that this was a tad darker and saltier (and spicier) than it needed to be, but ultimately, it was delicious. Really, the key is to just err on the side of under-seasoning, and then taste it and adjust.
After I had already eaten a bowl of this, I realized that I completely forgot to add soy sauce! The not dark soy sauce I mean. I guess I didn't need it, but next time I'll cut back on the dark soy sauce and try adding some light soy sauce.
I am honestly so so so happy with this. Maybe one day I'll put together a more nicely formatted recipe entry. For now, feel free to use my rambly paragraphs if you want to try making this yourself!