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Cooking Notes
A Mayer
I add 1 T of soy sauce and 1 T of White wine vinegar ( or sherry vinegar) for a minute, before the ginger and garlic. Delicious.
ravelle
I never boil beans! They should actually be steamed. Bring the beans to a boil, then immediately turn off the heat and cover the pot. Let them sit for a few minutes, taste one to test, then drain.
If you do this, they will be perfect when reheated the next day.
J. David Nelson
At four minutes of boiling, I had already overcooked the beans. Check well before then.
Boxplayer
We keep bags of fresh ginger in the freezer. When we want to use it in a finely-shredded way, we use a microplane. No need to thaw or peel -- just grate from frozen.
Neal
Don't understand why one would ever boil the beans. Boiling them changes the taste (dilutes the carbohydrates and thus the sweetness) and leaches out vitamins and other nutrients. Steaming cooks them more quickly because steam has a higher temperature than boiling water.
Janet
I stop cooking as soon as the color turns bright. Since garlic burns and turns bitter very quickly on high heat I get the beans heated through, then add ginger to warm up, add the garlic last, just to warm up and scent the air. For best flavor, do not let garlic color beyond golden, remove from pan immediately.
Edward Baker
With 2 1/2 lbs of beans, this works very well in a wok, do the whole thing in one shot. And if you throw in a few mushrooms it works even better.
LL
Cook beans 3 minutes and Test for doneness.
LuckyJustLucky
Cooked bean 2 minutes Added soy sauce to ginger and garlic, cut the oil in half
Steve
I enjoy lightly steaming the beans, not cook them through, then saute them at high heat, adding the garlic, etc. toward the end as not to scorch.
Tommi-Grace
I agree with the other posters, the beans get tender VERY quickly and I would start checking even after 1 minute. Also, I melted down a touch of butter in a small sauce pan and added the ginger/garlic mixture- heating and stirring for maybe 2 minutes. I then combined it with the beans in the skillet. Delicious results!
Cypridopsis
Added a little toasted sesame oil to make it more blatantly Asian. Might try adding chopped fermented black beans next time for more umami.
Ellie
This was awesome! Will make again and again. I added a bit of fresh lemon zest right before serving:)
Arlene Becker
These were great! I thought that maybe the recipe was calling for too much ginger but it married to the garlic and beans wonderfully. To save time, I used packaged--Yes, more expensive-- green beans that had already been cleaned and the stems cut off.
Stephanie
Ginger is fiber and juice, so pressing it won't get you the intensity of flavor because, as you said, you'll get juice. Grating it on a box grater will work for incorporation of the flavor, or finely chopping it will give you bits of intense flavor.
diana
Delicious and super easy.
Susan
Remember Graham Kerr, "The Galloping Gourmet"? He had a similar recipe using butter instead of vegetable oil and nutmeg instead of ginger. It's very French and sophisticated, if that's not redundant.
Bess
Made this at Thanksgiving, Christmas and a dinner party. My BF is addicted!
G.V.
Loved this recipe, made just as is and was delicious. Thanks NYT!
EurekaZeke
4 minutes blanch was too long. I will try 2 min next time
catherine
This so so delicious! I added some sambal oleak (chili paste) just as it was finishing. I will make this again and again!
sharon
Awful. Garlic was basically raw when recipe was completed.
wardo
NYT simplicity, I made as written but added some red and orange bell peppers and the garlic and ginger added a delightful zing. Great snap with parboiling the haricots. Will make again!
sparklefern
Made this for Thanksgiving and it was a big hit, mainly bec. everyone loved the surprise of ginger. I liked the dish ok and will try it again BUT, next time: either boil beans 2 minutes no more and then ice bath them; use wayyyyyyy less oil or maybe use a spicy olive oil; use more garlic and add it at the last minute - no one including me could really taste the garlic (perhaps that was because most of it burned on the pan).
Nancy S
Something was missing when I got ready to serve the beans at Thanksgiving. It was Meyer Lemon juice squeezed on just before dinner! We are in California, where it was possible to pick a Meyer Lemon. at our hosts'. It made the dish.
Ash
SO fresh! SO green! SO flavourful! Perfect for a quick green side dish for any meal, but especially great with mac and cheese and salmon!
bluerroses
Drained beans after 3 minutes. I was ready to serve (didn't need to store in the fridge), so I put them back in the pan with minced garlic, grated ginger and butter. Tossed frequently till garlic and ginger began to cook and lost their raw edge. A favorite on my thanksgiving table!
Margy
I added shredded parmesan to it at the very end, and we had it for a very light dinner. Very tasty and satisfying.
Name Deborah
I have no idea why anyone turns on a burner to boil or steam beans. Just put them in the microwave, covered, with a few drops of water, and check them after a minute, adding 30 seconds once or twice if necessary. Shock in ice water to stop cooking. I do this with beans, sugar snap peas, carrots, asparagus, any vegetable, really. Potatoes and other root veggies require longer cooking times, but I do them in the microwave as well.
Kevin
I sautéed this in a wok, with a little grapeseed oil. I probably didn’t salt the water enough because it needed salt at the end. The suggestion of a little soy sauce is interesting, but I wonder if it would interfere with the wonderful ginger and garlic flavors. Boiling green beans allows you to get salt into them. There are recipes for dry-fried beans that might be good with this combination as well.
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