This vegetable, known simply as "kong xin tsai" (空心菜) in Mandarin Chinese, is called so many other names in America that I get really confused. I've seen it called water spinach, water convulvulus, Chinese watercress, and ongchoy . . just to name a few. It's called hollow heart vegetable in Chinese because the stems are characteristically hollow. The hollow stems have a unique crunch that makes them fun to eat.
Hollow heart vegetable is prolific in Asia, and does not even need soil to grow, profusely thriving in marshy wetlands, rivers, and streams. In parts of the US, it has become so prolific that the USDA has official designated it a "noxious weed." It grows THAT easily.
We recently had a fun filled afternoon collecting bounty from our pastor's garden. Instead of apple picking, we went "kong xin tsai" picking. It was hard work! . . bending over with scissors cutting stalks and stalks of this "noxious weed."
This stuff is so easy to grow, my friend Emily from Emily Ku Photography bought some from the supermarket, stuck some in a cup of water, and grew her own! Remember how I said it just grows in rivers in Asia?
Kong xin tsai is delicious and has nutritional benefits similar to spinach. It's my husband's favorite Chinese leafy green, and we order it at restaurants all the time. The vegetable is prepared in countless different ways in Asia. You can cook it with shrimp paste (Malaysian), fermented tofu (Cantonese), or simply saute it with some garlic, which is classic. Here is another one of my favorite ways.
Ingredients
1 bunch of kong xin tsai
2-3 cloves of garlic (smashed)
1 T Chinese BBQ Sauce (Satsa - see photo to the right)
salt to taste
Note: my veggies came from the garden so they were pretty clean. If you buy these in the market, they can be pretty dirty. You might have to wash multiple times. Soak, drain, soak, drain, etc. Treat it like you do fresh spinach.
Step 1:
Remove the thicker stems from the leaves and cut, diagonally, into 1 inch pieces. [If you see super thick stems that seem really tough, discard those!]
Step 2: Add ~ 1T oil to wok and heat on high until the oil is almost smoking. Add garlic and saute until fragrant (about 30 second or so - don't let it burn!). Add the stems first and saute until softened, maybe 2-3 minutes or so.
Step 3: Add leaves in and then quickly stir around until leaves are wilted (this won't take too long - maybe like 1 minute). Remove from heat.
Step 4: Stir 1 T of Chinese BBQ Sauce (or more, to taste) into the cooked veggies. Add salt to taste. Enjoy!
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I love cong xin cai! My mom used to make this for me as a kid all the time. Thanks for highlighting it. I hope others will give it a try.
ReplyDeletewoah seriously!! grows in water? i'ma have to try it sometime!!
ReplyDeletemy absolute fave too!
I just recently found your blog when I was searching for broccoli stalk recipes. I haven't tried your broccoli stem salad yet, but I did follow your recipe for lo bah png. It came out wonderfully!!
ReplyDeleteThese veggies are also my husband's favorite, I'm glad to hear they're so easy to grow. This looks like a tasty way to prepare them too! Thanks for posting!
Great photos! In Vietnam, we call this rau muong..but we love the malaysian/indonesion way of cooking this called kangkung belacan.
ReplyDeleteHehe, you're not going to feature the fermented tofu cooking method? Or the stinky shrimp sauce?
ReplyDeleteLivia - actually, I love fermented tofu (dofuru), but I've never actually made it before. The dried shrimp paste is not stinky at all! :) I've had it at Penang and thought it was scrumptious.
ReplyDeleteDude, me like! I've never used kong xin tsai before, but now I have the reason to do so! man... I'm hungry now...
ReplyDeletemy absolute favorite vegetable hands down. so good. just sauteed with like garlic and soy sauce is delicious....or however my mom makes it. so simple.
ReplyDeleteThis vegetable is one of my top favourites! There are 2 types...water and ground. The usual ones are water which has slender and pointy leaves. The ground species is broader and a bit shorter. Besides cooking with sambal and/or with belacan , I like to cook it with cockles + chillies. It's one of the conditments in Prawn Noodles or Hokkien Mee. Gosh, am hungry already! :-)
ReplyDeletehahahah the way I cook it (with shrimp paste), I def make sure it gets stinky! in a good way, of course!
ReplyDeleteand I'm going to try growing it in a bucket of water. crossing fingers!
Cool article! I'm going to try to grow it now!
ReplyDeleteThis is my fav veg too. I like it tender soft and crunchy. My mom who's from S'pore also fried it with red chilies. So, between the shrimp paste and chilies, pretty incredible. I always order this when it's on the menu. Didn't realize it was so easy to grow!
ReplyDeleteI used to eat this stuff with beef and garlic in Taiwan like every single day (or in the middle of the night at the night markets) Will it grow in colder areas (Utah?)
ReplyDelete