Stir-Fried Brown Rice With Red Chard and Carrots

- Total Time
- About 15 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1generous bunch of red chard (1 to 1¼ pounds), stemmed and washed well in 2 changes of water (retain the stems)
- 2 to 3teaspoons minced garlic (to taste)
- 2 to 3teaspoons minced fresh ginger (to taste)
- 2eggs
- Salt to taste
- 2teaspoons plus 2 tablespoons peanut, canola, rice bran or grape seed oil
- 1medium carrot, cut in 2-inch julienne
- 1bunch scallions, sliced, dark green parts separated
- 4cups cooked brown rice, either chilled or at room temperature
- 1 to 2tablespoons soy sauce (to taste)
- ¼teaspoon ground pepper
- ½cup chopped cilantro
Preparation
- Step 1
Dice the thick part of the red chard stems (discard the stringier, tapering part of the stems); you should have 1 to 1½ cups diced stems. Stack leaves and cut in slivers, or coarsely chop. You should have about 8 cups (the leaves will lose a lot of volume when they wilt in the stir-fry).
- Step 2
Combine garlic and ginger in a small bowl or ramekin and place near your wok. Beat eggs in a bowl and season with a pinch of salt. Prepare the other ingredients and place in separate bowls within arm’s reach of your wok.
- Step 3
Heat a 14-inch flat-bottomed wok or a 12-inch skillet over high heat until a drop of water evaporates within a second or two when added to the pan. Swirl in 2 teaspoons of oil by adding it to the sides of the wok and swirling the wok. Make sure that the bottom of the wok or pan is coated with oil and add eggs, swirling the wok or pan so that the eggs form a thin pancake. Cook 30 – 60 seconds, until set. Using a spatula, turn pancake over and cook for 5 to 10 more seconds, until thoroughly set, then transfer to a plate or cutting board and quickly cut into strips, using the edge of your spatula or a knife.
- Step 4
Swirl in remaining oil and add garlic and ginger. Stir-fry no more than 10 seconds and add chard stems and carrots. Stir-fry for 2 minutes, until crisp-tender, and add light part of the scallions and chard leaves. Stir-fry until leaves wilt, 1 to 2 minutes, and add rice. Stir-fry, scooping up the rice with your spatula then pressing it into the hot wok or pan and scooping it up again, for about 2 minutes. Add soy sauce, dark green part of the scallions, eggs and cilantro, stir-fry for about 30 seconds, remove from heat and serve.
- Cooked rice will keep for up to 3 days in the refrigerator. The stir-fry is a last-minute dish but the ingredients can be prepped hours ahead and refrigerated, and the leftovers are delicious; they will keep for about 3 days in the refrigerator.
Private Notes
Comments
I found that a sprinkling of coarse sea salt at the end turned this from an okay meal into a delicious one. I also upped the garlic and added a habanero pepper for extra flavor.
I had red chard in the refrigerator, so this was the perfect thing to make as a side for my meat-eating husband and as a main dish for vegetarian me. I confess I made it a much simpler way, without carrots, although I'm sure they would have been fine, and simply adding the egg to the bare center of the pan (after cooking rice, onion, garlic, ginger, and chard stems), and swirling the egg into the rice as it set. Last step was the chard leaves and soy sauce. Very good!
Wow, where's all that sodium coming from? Even if you use 2 T of regular soy sauce, you split it 4 ways, if shouldn't be over 400 mg. The person who did the nutritional analysis must be pretty liberal with their salt shaker. I used 1 T of reduced sodium soy & no extra salt & that brought it from 1146 mg of Na to around 130 mg of Na/serving. Add red pepper flakes place of salt. It was delicious.
Made as written. I need to perfect my fried rice technique, but the ingredients and flavors here are really good!
Love the use of the chard stems and scallion bulbs! The 15 minute cooking time must refer to the actual cooking and not the prep. Plan on 45 minutes or so to prep and cook the rice.
I think you could almost double the ginger, also use some sesame oil to replace some of the oil for more flavor.
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