Having *finally* found a worthy-enough
Pixian douban paste I decided that it was finally time to attempt a Real True Niu Rou Mien. I looked at the various recipies on this thread, searched the web and finally decided that
this recipe looked very interesting. I especially looked forward to trying tendon, which I'd never used before. A conversation with the blogger herself told me how to look for it at my nearby friendly neighboord Asian butcher. Tendon obtained, it was time to start. Here's the ingredients:

Note the lots and lots of Sichuan peppercorns. *Next* time, they go in cheesecloth! The tendon is in the pkg on the top right. My repackaged Pixian douban is in the jar. This recipe calls for
mei ching choi ['baby' bok choi], but, as noted above, greens vary considerably according to choice.
Browned the beef shank:

Can't imagine a better pot than the LeCrueset for this task. Following some serious chopping, I had ready to add

sugar, finely chopped douban, ginger, peppercorns and garlic. Then came several hours of simmering gently. The pot at the top contains the pound of tendon, chopped into one-inch segments.

After four hours, I gathered the boil-at-the-last-minute ingredients: the choi leaves, noodles, and match-sticked Sichuan mustard.

After roughly ten minutes, I prepared the bowls with noodles and choi.

And here's the final result:

Looks better than it tasted.

High point: the beef was perfectly stewed. And it had picked up a nice heat from the douban. And there was a nice weight to the broth from the dissolved tendon. But I didn't like the texture of the undissolved chunks of tendon. Next time, less tendon, cut into much thinner slices. The broth had good numbing power, but not enough anise, and waaaay too little beefyness. So I started to play with it off the stove: some phô paste, beef base, more chili paste. The Sichuan vegetable was nice and crunchy but was too gross-sized and needed soaked—it was waaay salty.
In the end, as Debbie The Other Dr. Gale said "tastes way overworked", which was exactly right.
Enjoyable, but not great effort. But this is one classic that I've got to re-visit a number of times until I get it right.
Geo
Sooo, you like wine and are looking for something good to read? Maybe
*this* will do the trick!
