Similar Recipes
Stir-Fried Tripe With Pickled Mustard Greens and Fermented Black Beans
This dish, from the Hakka Chinese community, is an offal lover's dream: snappy omasum (bible) tripe stir-fried with tart mustard greens, fermented black beans, and red chiles.
Dim Sum Tripe Stew
Dim sum tripe stew, or niu za (牛雜), is a weekend dim sum classic. If you grew up this and want to learn to make it at home, give this dim sum recipe a try!
Deep-Fried Tripe
Deep-frying tripe may also be one of the easier ways to introduce offal-squeamish eaters to the joys of stomach. Its winning crispiness not only creates textural pleasure but also disguises the looks of the honeycomb, which not everyone finds to be an asset.
Very Crispy Tongue with Chili Bean Paste and Sichuan Peppercorns
Tongue simmered until tender and pan-fried to crispness.
Husband and Wife Lung Slices (or Brisket and Tripe)
Though the dish is traditionally made with lung, here in the US you're more likely to find the spicy Sichuanese sauce coating thin slices of beef brisket and tripe....
Lamb Tripe Stew
Working with offal is a wonderful way to indulge on some of the finer things in life. This recipe for tripe stew is flavored with saffron and an entire bottle of Riesling.
Sichuan Red-Braised Beef
Adapted from Land of Plenty by Fuschia Dunlop...
Spicy Stir-Fried Beef With Leeks and Onions
This quick stir-fry combines tender marinated flank steak with onions and leek greens, flavored with a simple but balanced sauce made with soy sauce, fish sauce, and sesame oil.
Sichuan Dry-Fried Beef
Dry-fried beef cooked in the style of Sichuan is both pleasantly chewy and highly seasoned, perfect for serving as part of a larger spread along with rice.
Sichuan Fuqi Feipian (夫妻肺片) - The Woks of Life
This fuqi feipian recipe is a quintessential Sichuan specialty—sliced beef and tripe in a singularly addictive, spicy, mouth-numbing sauce.
Beef tripe, stir-fried with chili bean paste and a touch of soy sauce. Add ginger, scallions, garlic. The slices will soak up the flavors and seasonings, all the while retaining their crispy edges. Serve with rice.
Serve With
Steamed Eggplant, Hunan Style - The Woks of Life
This Hunan-Style steamed eggplant is a vegan/vegetarian dish that packs a ton of flavor and can be served as an appetizer, side, or full meal with rice!
Cantonese-Style Steamed Tofu with Ginger & Scallions - The Woks of Life
This Cantonese-Style Steamed Tofu recipe has all the great flavor of a steamed fish, with a more affordable—and sustainable—protein: tofu!
Cantonese Slippery Eggs with Tofu and Peas
If you love egg drop soup, you’ll love its comforting, meal-worthy cousin.
Boiled Daikon Radish
This boiled daikon radish dish is a surprisingly tasty side that requires no oil nor a wok. It's pure daikon flavor without being bland at all!
Spicy Sichuan Boiled Tofu (水煮豆腐干)
This Sichuan boiled tofu, or shuǐzhǔ dòufu gān (水煮豆腐干) is an adapted version of Sichuan boiled beef that's vegetarian, vegan, and very tasty!
Rice Cakes with Mixed Vegetables
This delicious stir-fry of Chinese rice cakes with mixed vegetables is colorful, satisfying, and happens to be vegan and vegetarian.
Vegetable Dumplings (Potstickers!)
Vegetable dumplings - better than Din Tai Fung. Not to mention a fraction of the price! Excellent for freezing. Dumplings on demand!
Spicy Bamboo Shoot Salad
Serve this easy Chinese spicy bamboo shoot salad recipe as an appetizer (either cold or at room temperature) or as a side dish!
Eggplant Rice Bowl (Donburi)
A vegetarian rice bowl featuring savory and sweet eggplant, crisp-tender stir-fried vegetables, and quick cucumber pickles. Store-bought Japanese garnishes make it even more exciting—with no extra work.
Braised Eggplant With Tofu in Garlic Sauce
Braised Eggplant with Garlic Sauce is a classic Sichuan dish that combines soft simmered eggplant, fermented soy beans, and a sweet, garlicky sauce. For this version, I like to add a few tablespoons of chopped up preserved mustard root and incorporate the garlic in a couple of ways: first, by cooking whole smashed cloves in oil to infuse it with flavor (I discard the cooked whole cloves), as well as sliced thin and sauteed along with the other aromatics.