Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (2024)

RECIPE VIDEO PRINT

4.87 from 23 votes

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This Chop Suey recipe is not just visually stunning with its myriad of vegetables and meats, it is also delicious and so healthy! It's easy a stir-fry of colorful vegetables with thick yummy sauce good for special occasions or for an everyday healthy meal.

Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (1)
  • History of Chop Suey
  • What Ingredients to use?
  • Foxy Tips for a Vibrant and Delicious Chop Suey
  • Printable Recipe
  • Easy Chop Suey Recipe

History of Chop Suey

As I was doing my research on this recipe, I was surprised to learn that the exact origin of this famous dish is still unknown! Yes, we know that it is an American-Chinese cuisine but there were so many accounts of how, when, and who started this dish that until now, are still left unproven.

Nevertheless, I saw a common trend in those stories. This dish was somewhat made haphazardly by mixing whatever available ingredients or leftovers were at that time and tossing it into a thick sauce- then viola! - Chop suey was invented!

Some historians claimed that this dish is originally noodle-based kind of like Chow Mein. But I have always known this dish to be paired with rice. The one I made, of course, is the Filipino way of making this mouth-watering dish that we eat with steamed with rice.

Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (2)

What Ingredients to use?

The good thing about cooking Chop Suey is that you can use as many varieties of vegetables, meat, seafood, and other additions as you like. You can choose whatever you want or omit the ones you do not like.

This is the reason why Chop Suey has no exact formal definition. It is mostly described as a "stir-fry of vegetables, meat, and seafood that comes with a thick sauce."

Vegetable Options- You can use leftover vegetables on your fridge that needs to be cooked soon or harvest them fresh from your own veggie garden! The most common vegetables used for this dish are cabbage, carrots, onions, celery, bell pepper, cauliflower, broccoli, garlic, young corn, mushrooms, beans, bamboo shoots, and bean sprouts. On this recipe, I also used Pak Choi and Sugar snaps freshly picked from my backyard garden.

Meat Options- there are also several meat options that you can choose from. Pork, beef, and chicken being the most favored ones. The ones made here in the Philippines usually include pork or chicken liver, chicken heart, and gizzard.

Seafood Options- If you opt to add seafood on the already flavorful mix of your Chop Suey, the best options would be shrimps, prawns, scallops, squid, and mussels. You can also add fish meat cut in cubes.

Other Options- as if having a counter-full of veggies, meat and seafood are not enough, some also like adding hard-boiled quail eggs, and fried firm tofu.

Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (3)

Foxy Tips for a Vibrant and Delicious Chop Suey

Do not overcook your veggies! This is a big no-no when making this dish, you want vibrant and tender-crisp, not soggy and gray vegetables. So make sure to be mindful of the cooking time. It's best to always cook the ones that take longer to soften then add the ones that cook quicker later.

Keep them vibrant and crisp. Another good tip that you can use is to parboil (to drop your vegetables in boiling water for a minute) then blanch (submerge them in ice-cold water) them. This process will preserve the vibrancy, flavor, and nutrients of these.

Use the right wok or skillet. Make sure that the size of your wok or skillet is big enough to accommodate all the ingredients. Over-crowding your pan while cooking will result in steaming versus frying or sauteing and will make them soggy.

Still inspired to make more easy vegetable dishes? Try these:

Printable Recipe

Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (7)

Print Review

Easy Chop Suey Recipe

4.87 from 23 votes

This Chop Suey recipe is not just visually stunning with its myriad of vegetables and meats, it is also delicious and so healthy! It's an easy stir-fry of colorful vegetables with thick yummy sauce good for special occasions or for an everyday healthy meal.

Prep Time: 10 minutes mins

Cook Time: 10 minutes mins

Total Time: 20 minutes mins

Course :Side Dish

Servings =6

Print Recipe Rate this Recipe

Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 cup pork belly or chicken - sliced into thin strips
  • 1 cup shrimps
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch - dissolved in 1 cup water
  • 3-4 tablespoons oyster sauce
  • ¼ teaspoon ground pepper
  • 1 cup cauliflower florets
  • 1 cup broccoli florets
  • 1 medium carrot - sliced diagonally
  • 1 cup sugar snap or snow peas
  • 1 small bell pepper - cut into diagonal cubes
  • 1 bunch pak choi - cut into smaller pieces
  • 1 medium red onion - cut into 4
  • 3-4 pieces mushroom - each cut into 3-4 slices
  • 5 pieces young corn - each cut diagonally into 2
  • salt as needed

Instructions

  • In a wok or big skillet, heat oil over medium heat. Saute garlic until softened. Add the pork belly slices and cook, stirring regularly, until all sides are done. Add the shrimps and do the same.

  • Pour the cornstarch mixture into the wok and add the oyster sauce and ground pepper and bring to a boil. Doing this from the beginning keeps the veggies crisp and helps prevents over-cooking them. Take out the shrimps.

  • Add the first batch of vegetables: broccoli, cauliflower, carrots and sugar snap peas and cook covered for about 2-3 minutes.

  • Add the rest of the vegetables and cook for another 2-3 minutes or until vegetables are tender-crisp and the sauce has thickened. Add the shrimp back. Season with salt if still needed. Serve hot.

Nutrition

Calories: 340kcalCarbohydrates: 15gProtein: 13gFat: 27gSaturated Fat: 12gCholesterol: 82mgSodium: 536mgPotassium: 770mgFiber: 4gSugar: 5gVitamin A: 8612IUVitamin C: 114mgCalcium: 210mgIron: 3mg

Have you tried this recipe?Mention @foxyfolksy or tag #FoxyFolksyRecipes!

This recipe was originally published in July 2016. Updated in August 2020 to include new photos, more tips, and a recipe video.

Easy Chop Suey Recipe - Foxy Folksy (2024)

FAQs

What is chop suey sauce made of? ›

Chop suey sauce is made of soy sauce, oyster sauce, Shaoxing wine, sesame oil, cornstarch, white pepper, and water.

What is difference between chow mein and chop suey? ›

With chow mein, you cook noodles and add them to your wok of other ingredients, cooking everything together in one pan. However, with a chop suey recipe, you will cook the noodles or rice and other ingredients separately before combining them in a bowl, serving up the noodles or rice with the sauce served over the top.

What is the difference between American chop suey and Chinese chop suey? ›

The American Chopsuey is sweet and sour with a bright orangish-red colour. It is like a one-pot macaroni pasta meal cooked with beef and vegetables in a sweet tomato sauce. Whereas the Chinese Chop Suey is savoury and spicy, served with rice or noodles.

What is chow mein sauce made of? ›

Combine soy sauce, light sesame oil, oyster sauce, granulated sugar, cornstarch, and chicken broth to make the signature sweet and savory sauce that makes chow mein taste authentic.

What are the different types of chop suey? ›

The difference between Chinese Chop Suey and American Chop Suey is that the Chinese one is an Asian-style cooking dish made of meat, eggs, and vegetables combined with a thick sauce and served with noodles or rice. The American Chop Suey has an Italian-style of cooking.

What was chop suey originally called? ›

The song was originally titled either "Suicide" (according to the bassist, Shavo Odadjian) or "Self-Righteous Suicide" (according to Rubin), but the name was changed in response to real or anticipated pushback from Columbia Records.

Is chop suey actually Chinese? ›

Chop suey is a dish you'll see on almost any Chinese takeout menu—but that doesn't mean it comes from China. According to culinary legend, the dish of stir-fried meat, egg, and vegetables was invented on August 29, 1896, in New York City.

Which is healthier chow mein or chop suey? ›

Chop suey can be healthier if it's made with steamed vegetable and rice opposed to chow mein made with fried noodles. You can, of course, alter the chow mein using boiled noodles for a better option.

What is Subgum chop suey? ›

Subgum or sub gum (traditional: 什錦; simplified: 什锦; Cantonese: sap6 gam2; pinyin: shí jǐn; literally "ten brocades", metaphorically "numerous and varied") is a type of Chinese dish in which one or more meats or seafood are mixed with vegetables and sometimes also noodles, rice, or soup.

Why do American people chop suey? ›

Though this comfort food is influenced by Italian-American cuisine as well as older New England quick and practical meals like the "potato bargain" and "necessity mess," it is known as "American chop suey" both because it is a sometimes-haphazard hodgepodge of meat, vegetables and Italian seasonings, and because it ...

What does Chow Yoke mean? ›

Chow yuk in Cantonese means stir-fried. This dish is a broad term for stir-fried vegetables with any protein you like. The main focus is on the variety of vegetables.

What is similar to chop suey? ›

Chow mein and chop suey are both Chinese stir-fry dishes often found on restaurant and take-out menus. The two may seem similar, but the ingredients, preparation, and origins are different.

Does chop suey taste good? ›

At its core, chop suey is a glorious meat and vegetable stir fry with American ingredients. Chop suey is a stir fry of too many vegetables (some canned), a not-quite-authentic Chinese stir fry sauce, way more meat than they'd ever use in China, and way more delicious than it has any right to be.

What is inside oyster sauce? ›

Traditionally, oysters are slowly simmered in water until the liquid caramelizes into a viscous, dark black-brown sauce. But to speed up the process, some commercialized versions are instead made with oyster extracts, plus salt, sugar, corn starch and caramel coloring.

What's the difference between lo mein and chow mein? ›

The sauce: Chow mein is more of a dry noodle dish with an extremely light and delicate sauce — if any sauce at all. Lo mein is a saucy noodle dish that depends on a rich sauce for much of its flavor. The texture: Chow mein noodles tend to be crunchier than lo mein noodles due to the way they are cooked.

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