7 Essential Cooking Equipment For Asian Recipes

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Once you start with a love for cooking, you need more than just passion. Home and restaurant cooks will tell you how one also needs the right ingredients and equipment. This holds even truer with Asian cooking, which has many more complexities regarding cooking style, flavour, and seasoning. That said, Asian cuisine is one of the best in the world, with each dish very carefully thought of, and often passed down from one generation of family recipes to the next.  

Truth be told, you can cook Asian dishes with just about any kitchen tool and equipment you may have. But, if you want to level up your meals, it’s worth having a few of the basics. Just imagine that wok which many Asian families may have, preserved for many years of cooking and stir-frying. That is only the beginning. 

The most successful Asian restaurants use the finest ingredients. Their cuisines, whether Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Korean, or Indian, strongly emphasize using fresh produce, spices, herbs, and proteins to create authentic and flavourful meals. They also emphasize using premium quality cooking equipment and furniture, such as commercial stainless steel benches.  

The diversity and richness of Asian cuisine make it a vibrant and exciting culinary landscape appreciated by food lovers worldwide. Each country or region boasts its own dishes showcasing its culture and traditions.

 

With that said, note that Asia is quite a vast and expansive continent. Don’t expect this list to be exhaustive, but you can be sure it’s one of the great resources that covers the essentials. Use this as a guide to help you get started.  

1. A Wok 

A wok is perhaps one of the most popular kitchen equipment for Asian cooking. Asians love a good stir-fry and noodles, many of which have been carefully seasoned and prepared in a good wok. 

Dishes like pad thai from Thailand, chow mein from China, and char kway teow from Malaysia/Singapore are made by stir-frying noodles in a wok. The noodles are quickly cooked with a combination of proteins, vegetables, sauces, and seasonings, resulting in a flavourful and satisfying dish. 

Another popular Chinese dish, General Tso's Chicken, involves deep-frying battered chicken pieces and stir-frying them in a wok with a tangy, slightly sweet sauce.

Woks have a deep, untreated metal surface and a round bottom pan which enables a wide range of cooking temperatures in one pan, a feature that comes in handy in stir-frying. In addition, unlike an ordinary frying pan, a wok has to be properly seasoned before use. This is a special process that adds flavour, makes the wok non-stick, and prevents it from rusting.  

2. Metal Wok Spatula 

Now you have a wok, you need an accompanying tool to actually cook. Your work may be good, but it will not do all the stir-frying on its own. Thus, you need to pair it with a metal wok spatula.  

A metal wok spatula is indispensable when preparing fried rice in a wok. It breaks up and separates the cooked rice, ensuring each grain is coated with the seasonings and other ingredients in the wok.

Generally, you can use any run-of-the-mill lying around your kitchen for as long as it’s made of wood or metal. But, if you’re cooking glutinous rice cakes or fried rice, you need something more ‘heavy duty’ to scrape the bits from the bottom of the pan. 

3. Wok Brush 

While called a wok brush, this can also be used for cleaning up other pans. When you’ve invested in good-quality work, you’ll also need to maintain it by cleaning up after use.  

Unlike any other brush, a wok brush is made of thin strips of bamboo. This makes removing any stubborn food sticking to the pan easier, particularly sticky sauces often prevalent in Asian dishes.

4. Big Chopping Knife 

Asians are known for dishes with a lot of finely chopped ingredients. And, this has to be emphasized, as when they say a lot, it’s quite plentiful. They don’t like skimping on spices and vegetables, all of which add a lot of taste and flavour to dishes. 

This is why cooking Asian dishes also entails hefty hard work and a long process of meal prepping, particularly chopping. You need a big chopping knife to withstand all that work. 

The chopping knife has to be big, as it’s not meant to chop just vegetables. It can also be used to slice fine pieces of meat, particularly those in soups and noodles, that call for smaller chunks instead of the bigger ones.

5. Heavy Duty Chopping Board 

As mentioned above, Asian cooking has a lot of chopping. So, surely, you need a board to hold up all the weight from your chopping knife. There are plastic ones, but those aren’t the best in terms of quality. A solid, thick wooden chopping board is still supreme. Once you start switching to wood, you’ll notice how much difference it makes when preparing and chopping ingredients.

6. Spider Strainer 

What’s Asian cooking without dumplings? You’ll also have to strain them quite well when preparing them, which you can do effectively with a spider strainer. This is a tool you can also use to scoop out spring rolls from the heat, gather egg rolls from the fryer, and even drain noodles after boiling.

Tempura is a popular Japanese dish consisting of battered and deep-fried seafood, vegetables, and other ingredients. A spider strainer carefully lowers the battered items into hot oil and retrieves them once they are cooked to a crispy golden brown. Its wide, shallow basket and long handle allow easy manoeuvring.

Asian hot pot dishes, such as Chinese hot pot or shabu-shabu from Japan, involve cooking various ingredients in a bubbling broth. A spider strainer is again used to fish out ingredients like meat slices, seafood, tofu, and vegetables from the pot for serving.

7. Mortar And Pestle 

Lastly, the mortar and pestle. You need this to pulverize spices and herbs, among other exotic ingredients, to turn them into paste and sauces. Once you start with Asian cooking, you’ll realize there’ll be plenty of this!  

Look for a non-porous mortar and pestle, so it won’t wind up absorbing the oils and spices. Even if you have a dishwasher, handwashing your mortar and pestle after use is most recommended. 

Conclusion  

Whether you’re an aspiring cook, a person trying to be the best homemaker or an expert chef for Asian cooking, the list above uniformly applies to all of you as the essentials. It would be best if you had those in your kitchen. As you experiment with more Asian dishes, that’s when you can start investing in more to lengthen your list of Asian equipment to have.

Like the nature of many Asian households, you should also invest in good kitchen equipment to last through many years of cooking. For many Asian families, their food becomes more distinct and flavourful when prepared with tools that have gone through years of cooking, seasoned in time, than a brand new one. From Vietnamese pho to Chinese noodles and everything in between, now you can feel more confident with your Asian cooking as you’re armed with the right equipment. 

 

 

 

 

 



7 Essential Cooking Equipment For Asian Recipes
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