📅 May 8, 2025⏱ 7 min read🏷️ Technique

The stir-fry looks simple — vegetables and protein in a hot pan, tossed with sauce. But there's a gap between "technically stir-fried" and the restaurant-quality result with that elusive wok hei (breath of the wok) — the slightly charred, smoky quality that makes Chinese takeout taste like it does. You can get there at home with the right understanding.

The Wok

A proper carbon steel wok is the ideal tool. More responsive than cast iron, cheaper, lighter, and once seasoned, naturally non-stick. The curved shape allows food to slide back to the center while the sloped sides provide cool areas where food can rest as you work.

What to buy: A 14-inch carbon steel wok with a long handle. Round-bottom woks require a gas burner ring; flat-bottom woks work on all stovetop types.

Seasoning your wok: Heat the wok until it smokes. Rub with oil using paper towels. Repeat 3-4 times until the wok takes on a dark patina. Never wash with soap — just hot water and a brush.

The Wok Hei Problem (and Partial Solution)

True wok hei requires the enormous BTU output of restaurant burners (100,000+ BTU vs. your home stove's 10,000-20,000 BTU). Home cooks will never fully replicate it. But you can get close:

Mise en Place is Non-Negotiable

Stir-frying moves at a pace that makes mid-cook prep impossible. Everything must be prepped and arranged before the wok goes on the heat:

The Stir-Fry Order

  1. Heat the wok until smoking, add oil
  2. Aromatics (garlic, ginger): 15-20 seconds — until fragrant, not brown
  3. Protein: Cook until almost done; remove from wok and set aside
  4. Dense vegetables first: Broccoli, carrots, bell peppers — 2-3 minutes
  5. Delicate vegetables: Leafy greens, bean sprouts, snap peas — 30-60 seconds
  6. Return protein to wok
  7. Add sauce and toss to coat
  8. Finish with sesame oil and scallions

Basic Stir-Fry Sauce Template

Mix before cooking: 2 tbsp soy sauce + 1 tbsp oyster sauce + 1 tsp sesame oil + 1 tsp sugar + 1 tbsp Shaoxing rice wine + 1 tsp cornstarch. Adjust ratios and add chili, ginger, or garlic as desired.

💡 Stir-Fry Tips

  • Small batches are the most important rule — the temperature must stay high
  • Velvet your protein: marinate in cornstarch, egg white, and a little oil for silky, tender results
  • All ingredients should be at room temperature before cooking
  • Use high smoke-point oil: avocado, refined coconut, or peanut oil
  • Have everything at the stove before you start — you'll have no time to search
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Written by Elena

Elena learned stir-frying from a Cantonese chef and has been perfecting her wok technique ever since.