>was referring to the difficult of making -good- fried rice.
I don't really understand, just fry your ingredients at high heat and don't stop stirring. Make sure the pan is hot before you add oil, make sure the oil's hot before you add the ingredients. Start with the meat/protein, when that's browned, if you really want it all nice and cooked well, take the meat out and put it aside then do the onions, theb mushrooms, peppers, veggies etc. Garlic and ginger and stuff last, re-add the meat, add your cooked rice, maybe an egg at that point and keep stirring until it's nice and golden brown.
Did you read the parent article? There’s a distinct smoky, rich flavor and lack of mush that great fried rice has that only occurs under those conditions.
Sure, homemade fried rice can be good (with some more work than you said) but that’s not what the parent was saying.
Oil has a smoke point of about 200 C.
The author wrote:
The trick is to ensure that the rice constantly leaves the wok, allowing it to cool a little, since the wok temperature can reach up to 1,200 degrees Celsius.
I am pretty sure that it’s a typo, it would basically melt your wok at that temperature. But also someone else here was speaking about constant temperatures of 500F that is still well over the oil smoke point. So I think that I’m missing something here.
> But also someone else here was speaking about constant temperatures of 500F that is still well over the oil smoke point.
Not “well over” for many refined oils (smoke points of 450°F+ are not uncommon for refined oils), and not even “over” for a few (e.g., avocado, safflower.)
I'm a fan of mixing a couple of egg yolks with the cold unfried rice at the beginning, gives you a texture and flavour that's very unique compared to normal fried rice.
There seem to be a few schools of thought - one is to mix some egg through the cold rice before frying, one is to add egg mixture near the end, one is to fry the egg and like an omelette and chop it up and add.
I don't really understand, just fry your ingredients at high heat and don't stop stirring. Make sure the pan is hot before you add oil, make sure the oil's hot before you add the ingredients. Start with the meat/protein, when that's browned, if you really want it all nice and cooked well, take the meat out and put it aside then do the onions, theb mushrooms, peppers, veggies etc. Garlic and ginger and stuff last, re-add the meat, add your cooked rice, maybe an egg at that point and keep stirring until it's nice and golden brown.