Traditional Mandarin Fried Rice

  4.9 – 15 reviews  • Wok Recipes
It is recommended to use day-old rice so that the drier rice can soak up the flavors.
Level: Easy
Total: 17 min
Prep: 5 min
Cook: 12 min
Yield: 4 servings
Level: Easy
Total: 17 min
Prep: 5 min
Cook: 12 min
Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients

  1. Canola oil
  2. 3 eggs
  3. 2 tablespoons minced garlic
  4. 2 tablespoons minced ginger
  5. 1 bunch chopped scallions, green and white separated
  6. 1 lapchang, diced (Chinese sausage), can substitute with 4 strips of cooked bacon
  7. 8 cups cooked, day-old long grain rice
  8. 3 tablespoons thin soy sauce
  9. 1/2 teaspoon white pepper
  10. Salt to taste

Instructions

  1. In a wok, add 2 tablespoons of oil and quickly soft-scramble the eggs. Remove the eggs. In the same wok, coat with oil and stir-fry garlic and ginger. Add white scallions and lapchang. Add rice and mix thoroughly. Add soy sauce, white pepper and scrambled eggs. Check for seasoning. Serve immediately. 

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 4 servings
Calories 2049
Total Fat 76 g
Saturated Fat 8 g
Carbohydrates 301 g
Dietary Fiber 6 g
Sugar 1 g
Protein 33 g
Cholesterol 125 mg
Sodium 1208 mg
Serving Size 1 of 4 servings
Calories 2049
Total Fat 76 g
Saturated Fat 8 g
Carbohydrates 301 g
Dietary Fiber 6 g
Sugar 1 g
Protein 33 g
Cholesterol 125 mg
Sodium 1208 mg

Reviews

Robert Mitchell
this recipe was great. We enjoyed making it we enjoyed eating it even more. Thanks.
Grace Stevenson
I added more garlic and ginger and onion
Mary Stewart
FINALLY! I have been looking for authentic Chinese recipes for fried rice, being particularly interested in the exact spices favored in the several Chinese cuisines (there is more than a single Chinese “brand” of cuisine). Until I read this recipe, everyone else was saying that BUTTER is a must. No! Butter is NOT Chinese, gives a distinctly WESTERN flavor to “authentic” (putting that in quotes is intended as irony) Chinese food. Butter is heavy-handed when it comes to the subtleties of Asian cuisine (who use neutral-flavored lipids like soy oil (canola works as well, for those not having the good fortune to shop in stores that actually sell soy oil). In Asia, WHAT you are cooking determines the flavor, not what you cook it IN.
What I was “missing” in my recipe searches was ginger…which I actually have in my kitchen. I love cooking authentic Asian cuisine, and ginger gives a uniquely sharp accent to foods. You have to be “gentle” with it, though: It’s an accent, not a main flavor, so you have to be careful with it, as ginger is quite strong.
I also [always] have white pepper in my pantry. It has a sharp bite, too, but is very differently-nuanced from the black pepper favored in the West.
Interesting thing: Both ginger and white pepper are ingredients necessary to cook genuine Kentucky-Fried Chicken, ingredients westerners generally don’t use in their foods.
James Myers
Simple and very flavorful recipe. Easy to make and quick to actually cook. Give yourself some prep time though.
Angela Page
Godly
Michelle Bauer
I was on shore leave in Singapore when I purchased fried rice from a food truck. This recipe takes me back to that time. There were some Green Peas in the Malaysian rice I loved so much. I added a little Sesame Oil to mine also. Great recipe. Nothing else I’ve tried comes close.
Christopher Holt
great recipe
Matthew Brown
Wonderful basic fried rice recipe. Always the option of adding the extra something you enjoy in fried rice.
Jennifer Brown
This is exactly how I make fried rice at home. So you know I love it.
Kristina Thomas
So easy. So good!

 

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