
Cooking in a wok with a hoak
A
wok (in Standard
Cantonese as ) is a versatile round-bottomed cooking vessel originating in China
. It
is used especially in
East and
Southeast Asia.
Woks are most often used for
stir
frying, but can also be used many other ways, such as in
steaming,
deep
frying,
braising,
stewing,
smoking,
or making
soup. They are commonly, almost
exclusively, cooked with a long handled
chahn (
spatula) or
hoak (
ladle). The long extensions of these utensils
allows the cook to work with the food without burning the
hand.
Regional variants
Standard Mandarin refers to woks
using a different
character,
"guō" ( ), or with the phrases "guōzi" ( ), or "chǎo cài guō" ( ).
In
Indonesia
the wok is known as a penggorengan or
wajan. In Malaysia
it is called
a kuali (small wok) or kawa (big wok).
In the
Philippines
it is known as a kawali and also called a
"wadjang". In Japan
the wok is
called a chukanabe (literally, "Chinese pot").
In
India
, two varieties of the wok exist: a more traditional
chinese style wok with a wider diameter called the " cheena chatti" (literally, "Chinese pot" in
Malayalam and Tamil) and, a similarly-shaped vessel with a
narrower diameter and is slightly deeper, known as a karahi.
Characteristics
The wok's most distinguishing feature is its shape. Classic woks
have a rounded bottom. Hand-hammered woks are sometimes flipped
inside out after being shaped, giving the wok a gentle flare to the
edge that makes it easier to push food up onto the sides of the
wok. Woks sold in western countries are sometimes found with flat
bottoms — this makes them more similar to a deep
frying pan. The flat bottom allows the wok to be
used on an
electric stove, where a rounded wok would not be able to fully
contact the stove's heating element. A round bottom wok enables the
traditional round spatula or ladle to pick all the food up at the
bottom of the wok and toss it around easily; this is difficult with
a flat bottom. With a gas hob, or traditional pit stove, the bottom
of a round wok can get hotter than a flat wok and so is better for
stir frying.
Most woks range from 30 cm to 2 meters or more in
diameter. Woks of 36 cm (14 inches)
(suitable for a family of 3 or 4) are the most common, but home
woks can be found as small as 20 cm (8") and as large as
91 cm (36"). Smaller woks are typically used for quick cooking
techniques at high heat such as
stir
frying (Chinese: chǎo, 炒 or bao, 爆). Large woks over a meter
wide are mainly used by restaurants or community kitchens for
cooking
rice or
soup, or
for boiling
water.
Handles
The handles for woks come in two styles: loops and stick. Loop
handles are the most common handle type for woks of all types and
materials, and are usually made of bare metal. Cooks needing to
hold the wok to toss the food in cooking do so by holding a loop
handle with a thick
towel (though some woks
have spool-shaped wooden or plastic covers over the metal of the
handle). Cooking with the tossing action in loop-handled woks
requires a large amount of hand, arm and wrist strength. Loop
handles typically come in pairs on the wok and are riveted, welded
or extended from the wok basin.
Stick handles are long, made of steel, and are usually welded or
riveted to the wok basin, or are an actual direct extension of the
metal of the basin. The handle is sometimes covered or ended with a
wooden or plastic hand grip, but it is not uncommon to find a bare
metal grip. This handle facilitates the tossing action for cooks
used to using western
saute pans with similar
style handles. These kinds of woks are often referred to as "Peking
pans" or "pau woks". Stick handles are normally not found on cast
iron woks since the wok is either too heavy for the handle (thick
cast iron wok), or the metal is too thin to handle the
tensile stress exerted by the handle. Larger
woks with stick type handles usually also have a loop on the other
side to aid with handling the wok as well as to counter balance the
stick type handle.
Materials
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 whether carbon steel or cast iron
woks are superior.
Currently, carbon steel is the most widely used material. Steel
woks are usually inexpensive, relatively light in weight, have
quick heat conduction, and reasonable durability. However, carbon
steel woks are more difficult to
season and the carbonized
season is easily removed in newer woks, both making food more prone
to sticking to the wok. Carbon steel woks vary widely in price,
style, and quality, which is roughly based on
ply and
forming
technique. The lowest quality woks tend to be single ply and
stamped straight from a
piece of steel. These woks have a higher tendency to deform and
misshape. Cooking with them is also more difficult and precarious
since they often have a "hot spot". Higher quality woks are almost
always "hand hammered" and made of two sheets of carbon steel which
are formed into shape by "ring-forming" or hand forging. The real
purpose of hand hammering is to create small ridges or dimples
along the sides of the wok. These ridges are used in the frying
technique of the chef.
Two types of cast iron woks can be found in the market. Chinese
cast iron woks are thin (~3 mm) and weigh about the same as a
carbon steel wok of similar size, while western cast iron woks tend
to be thick (~9 mm), tend to be heavy, and require very long
heating times. Cast iron woks are superior to carbon steel woks in
heat retention and uniform heat distribution. They also form a more
stable carbonized layer of seasoning which makes it less prone to
food sticking on the pan. However, both types of cast iron wok also
have some disadvantages compared to carbon steel woks.
Chinese-style cast iron woks, although quicker in heating and
relatively light, are relatively fragile and are prone to
shattering if dropped or mishandled. Western-type cast iron woks
are slow-heating and slow-cooling, which makes temperature control
more difficult. Furthermore, heavy western cast iron makes the
tossing action required in stir-frying and
bao difficult for smaller
chefs.
Non-stick, steel woks coated with
Teflon are common in the western
market. These woks are easily scratched and cannot be used to cook
in the high heat required for stir frying to excess of 230°C
(c.450F) since the Teflon coating will break down chemically at
these temperatures. At 350°C (660°F) the burning coating produces
vapours which, if inhaled, can cause flu-like symptoms (see
Teflon flu).
Xylan coated woks are slightly more robust,
but still cannot be used for very high heat cooking. Less commonly
found are
clad woks, which
sandwich a thick layer of aluminum or copper between two sheets of
stainless steel. These woks perform extremely well but are often
quite expensive, quite heavy and usually cook no better than carbon
steel or cast iron woks. Their biggest advantage lies in the
durability and ease of maintenance of a stainless steel exterior
and cooking surface. Many of these vessels are
dishwasher safe.
Woks can also be made from
aluminium.
Although an excellent
conductor of
heat, aluminium does not retain heat (
heat capacity) as well as cast iron or carbon
steel. Although
anodized
aluminium alloys can stand up to constant
use, plain aluminium woks are too soft and damage easily. Aluminium
is mostly used for wok lids.
Cooking
The wok can be used in a large number of cooking methods. Before
the introduction of western cookware it was often used for all
cooking techniques including:
- Boiling: For boiling water, soups, or rice. In the
latter case, guoba often forms
- Braising: Braised dishes are commonly made using woks
and is useful when one is reducing sauces.
- Deep frying: Usually accomplished with larger woks to
reduce splashing, but for deep frying less or small food smaller
items small woks are also used.
- Smoking: Food can be hot smoked by putting the smoking
material in the bottom of the wok while food is place on a rack
above.
- Steaming: Done using a dedicated wok for boiling water
in combination with steaming baskets
- Stewing: Woks are sometimes used for stewing though it
is more common in Chinese cuisine either uses stoneware or
porcelain for such purposes especially when longer stewing times
are required.
The most common use for a wok is stir-frying.
Basic stir-frying
Typically a small amount (1-3 tablespoons) of
peanut oil,
soy oil,
sunflower oil, or
canola oil is placed in the wok and heated under
full burner heat. Fresh chopped garlic and ginger are often added
to the oil to flavor it, then quickly scooped out before burning or
turning brown. The first item to be cooked, for example, sliced
meat, is stirred in the very hot oil until hot, then pushed up the
side to regulate the amount of heat on the meat or cooking items.
The meat may be returned to the oil and then flipped and pushed to
the sides several times until the cooking is done. The hammered
ridges or dimples along the side of the wok "grab" and prevent the
meat from slipping back into the oil at the bottom of the wok.
There is a misconception that the cooking items are merely pushed
around. The technique in stir frying with a wok is traditional to
flip and push the cooking items from the centre of the wok to the
edge of the wok. This technique regulates the distribution of
heat.
Once cooked, the meat is often scooped out with a Chinese strainer
to a side plate and the next ingredient such as vegetables are then
cooked in the same manner, strained out or held against the side
while any leftover cooking oil is thrown out before all of the
ingredients are typically thrown back together, with sauces,
seasonings, liquids, corn starch mixed with a little water for
thickening, stirred and covered for a final heating for a minute or
two or until smoke begins to escape from the cover. This way the
chef controls the length of cooking for each item and the food does
not cook sitting in the oil.
Skillful chefs, when stirring food in a wok, can turn the food
materials in it up-side-down as a whole by waving up the far side
of the wok a little. This waving skill can make mixing and stirring
very quickly done. This is important when cooking dishes that
require short cooking time.
Wok hei
Wok hei ( ;
romanization based
on
Cantonese; the second character is
qi in
Mandarin, and thus
wok hei is
sometimes rendered as
wok chi in Western cookbooks) is the
flavour, tastes, and "essence" imparted by a hot wok on food during
stir frying.
To impart
wok hei, the food must be cooked in a wok over a
high flame while being stirred and tossed quickly. In practical
terms, the flavour imparted by chemical compounds results from
caramelization,
Maillard reactions, and the partial
combustion of oil that come from charring and searing of the food
at very high heat in excess of . Aside from flavour there is also
the texture of the cooked items and smell involved that describes
wok qi.
Beef chow fun is a Chinese dish said
to require plenty of
wok hei to acquire
deliciousness.
Wok stoves
Traditional
Woks by design are meant to be used over a pit-style stove, where
the heat arising from the fuel is fully directed at the bottom of
the wok, with no heat escaping around the edges. These pit stoves
originally used wood or coal and part of the wok is usually sunken
below the stove top when used. Pit-style stoves are now more
typically heated by natural gas that has burners recessed below the
stove's surface, with curved grates on lip of the stove to provide
stability to the curved wok.
This type of stove allows foods to be stir-fried at a very high
heat, sometimes hot enough 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.
Gas
Traditionally-shaped woks can be used on some western-style
(flat-topped) gas stoves by removing a burner cover and replacing
it with a "wok ring," which provides stability and concentrates
heat. Although not as ideal as "pit stoves", these allow woks to be
used in a manner more suitable for their design and are good enough
for most tasks required in home cooking.

Preparing food near a wok stove.
Professional-style continuous grate stoves (where it's difficult or
impossible to remove a single burner cover) have recently become
more popular in high-end home stoves. Several manufacturers of such
stoves now include a specially-designed wok ring as part of their
standard or optional equipment.
Because of the high cost of these kitchen modifications, coupled
with increased heat and smoke generated in the kitchen, more and
more home chefs are using their wok outdoors on high-heat propane
burners with curved wok support grates. Many inexpensive propane
burners are easily capable of 60-75,000
Btu or more, easily surpassing most
in-home gas stoves.
Electric

A carbon steel wok on an electric
stove, seated on a wok ring.
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 amounts of quick even heat required for
stir-frying. However, it is possible to find round-shaped electric
stove elements that will fit the curve of a wok, which allows the
wok to be heated at its bottom along with part of its sides. A
flat-bottomed wok may also work better on an electric stove.
Coupled with the lower heat retention of woks, meals stir-fried on
electric stoves have a tendency to stew and boil when too much food
is in the wok rather than "fry" as in traditional woks, 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
use cast-iron pans for stir-frying on electric stoves, since they
hold enough heat for the required sustained high
temperatures.
A newer trend in woks is the electric wok, where no stove is
needed. This type of wok gets plugged into an electrical outlet and
the heating element is in the wok itself. Like stove-mounted
non-stick woks, these woks can also only be used at lower
temperatures than traditional woks.
Induction
Induction cookers generate heat in
induction-compatible cookware via direct magnetic stimulation of
the pan material.
[5985] While carbon steel and cast iron (the most
common wok materials) are induction-compatible metals, induction
cooking also requires close contact between the cooking vessel and
the induction burner. This presents two problems when using a wok
on an induction cooktop: traditionally shaped woks, which are
round-bottomed, don't have enough contact with the cooking surface
to generate notable heat; and the tossing technique, where the wok
is lifted off the burner and agitated, will break contact and turn
off the burner.
Flat-bottomed woks make sufficient contact to generate heat. Some
cookware makers are now offering round-bottomed woks with a small
flat spot to provide induction contact, with a specially-designed
support ring; and some induction cooktops are now also available
with a rounded burner that is able to make contact with the rounded
bottom of a traditional wok
[5986][5987]. In both cases, the food will need to be
stirred with a cooking utensil, instead of being tossed by lifting
the wok itself.
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 the food to be seared by intense heat
while using relatively little fuel. The large sloped sides 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 occurs 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,
hot peppers,
green onions, and
ginger can be essentially deep-fried in both cases
with very small amount of cooking oil.
See also
References
External links
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