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Cooking in a wok
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Cooking in a wok

The wok is a versatile round-bottomed cooking vessel (see cooking utensil) originating in China. It is used especially in East Asia and Southeast Asia. The word "wok" comes from the Cantonese Chinese word for the item: "wok6" (鑊). Standard Mandarin refers to woks by using the word "gūo" (锅, a different Hanzi), or the phrases "gūozi" (锅子), or "chǎo cài gūo" (炒菜锅). Although the word "gūo" in Mandarin refers to any type of cooking vessel, using the word on its own typically means a Chinese wok.

In Indonesia the wok is known as a wadjang, kuali in Malaysia, and kawali (small wok) and kawa (big wok) in the Philippines.

Characteristics

Size

Woks are traditionally round-bottomed pans that can be made from a wide variety of materials, in a wide variety of sizes. Most woks range from 30 cm to a 2 meters or more in diameter. Smaller woks of 36cm (14 inches) are the most common, but woks can commonly be found as small as 20cm (8") and as large as 91cm (36"). They are suitable for a family of 3 or 4 and are typically used for quick cooking techniques at high heat such as stir frying (Chinese: chǎo, or bao, ). Large woks over a meter wide are mainly used by restaurants or community kitchens for cooking rice, soup, or for boiling water.

Material

A carbon steel wok on an electric stove
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A carbon steel wok on an electric stove

The most common materials used in making woks today are carbon steel and cast iron, although the latter was the most common type used in the past. Cooks tend to be divided on the whether carbon steel or cast iron woks are superior to the other.

Handle

The handles for woks come in two styles: loops and stick. Woks with stick type handles usually also have a loop on the other end to aid with handling the wok.

Form and use

Woks by design are meant to be used over a gas stove which has either concentrically sloped grates or burners that are recessed below a round "pit" in order to encompass the wok's shape. Sloped grates on a stove provide stability to the curved wok. A recessed "pit" stove provides not only stability for the wok, it also concentrates heat by directing all the hot gases produced onto the wok instead of allowing it to escape around the wok. This allows foods to be stir-fried at a very high heat, sometimes hot enought to deform the woks themselves. Pit stoves are typically used by professional chefs in most Chinese restaurants, since they have the heating power to give food an alluring "wok hei".

Woks are also sold in western countries, where they are sometimes found with flat bottoms, this makes them more similar to a deep frying pan. Flat bottom on woks allows them to be used on a western gas stove which usually has flat grates that does not allow enough stability for a round wok. For this reason, woks with curved bottoms sometimes come with metal rings to stabilize them.

Woks, be they round or flat bottomed, do not generally work well for stir-frying or other quick cooking methods when used on an electric cooker. These stoves do not produce the large and quick amounts of heat required for stir-frying. Coupled with the lower heat retention of woks, most stir-frys done in traditional woks on electric stoves have a tendency to stew and boil rather then "fry", thus not producing wok hei. However, a wok can benefit from the slow steady heating of electric stoves when used for slower cooking methods such as stewing, braising, and steaming, and immersion cooking techniques such as frying and boiling. Most chinese cooks used cast-iron pans for stirfrying on electric stoves since they hold enough heat for the required sustained high temperatures.

Advantages

The main advantage of wok beyond its constructed material is its curved concave shape. The shape produces a small, hot area at the bottom which allows some of to food to be seared by intense heat while using relatively little fuel. The large sloped sides are also make it easier for chefs to employ the tossing cooking technique on solid and thick liquid food with less spillage and a greater margin of safety. Curved sides also allows a person to cook without having to "chase the food around the pan" since bite-sized or finely chopped stir-fry ingredients usually tumble back to the center of the wok when agitated.

The curve also provides a larger usable cooking surface versus western-styled pots and pans, which typically have vertical edges. This allows large pieces of food seared at the bottom of the wok to be pushed up the gently sloped sides to continue cooking at a slower rate. While this occures another ingredient for the same dish needing high heat is being cooked at the bottom. The pointed bottom also allows even small amounts of oil to pool. As such large food items can be shallow fried, while finely chopped garlic, green onions, and ginger can be essentially deep-fried in both cases with very small amount of cooking oil.

Almost all Chinese families own at least one wok. It is most often used for stir frying, but can also be used many other ways, such as in steaming, deep frying, braising, stewing, or making soup.

Trivia

In the joke sport wok racing introduced by the German comedian Stefan Raab, woks are used to carry people down a bobsleigh track. In November 2003 the first "official" championship was held in Winterberg, Germany.

See also

References

External links

 


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