The soy-chilli-vinegar fried rice of Indian takeaways โ maximum heat, day-old rice, bolder spicing than Chinese fried rice. The wok technique in 15 minutes.
Indo-Chinese fried rice is bolder, spicier and more pungent than Chinese fried rice. The three differences: much more garlic and ginger (3โ4 times the Chinese quantity), chilli sauce added to the wok (absent in Chinese), and vinegar for the characteristic sharp sourness that Chinese fried rice does not have. The technique is identical โ maximum heat, day-old rice, quick toss โ but the flavour profile is a distinctly Indian interpretation of a Chinese technique.
Heat wok to smoking. Add oil. Add garlic, ginger, green chilli โ 15 seconds only. Add spring onion whites. Add all vegetables except corn โ toss on maximum heat 3 minutes until edges char slightly.
The 15-second garlic-ginger window is critical โ at 300ยฐC, allicin and gingerol extract into the oil within seconds and begin degrading within 30 seconds. Beyond 30 seconds, the volatile aromatics vaporise rather than staying in the oil. This rapid extraction followed by immediate next-ingredient addition is the fundamental wok technique โ each aromatic gets exactly its optimal extraction time.
Add cold rice and corn. Spread flat โ do not move for 60 seconds. The bottom layer will develop Maillard browning. Toss vigorously. Add sauce around wok edges. Add white pepper. Toss. Add spring onion greens.
The 60-second undisturbed contact creates the characteristic slightly charred, nutty base note of good Indo-Chinese fried rice. The retrograded starch in cold rice allows individual grain surfaces to exceed 140ยฐC โ the Maillard threshold โ before softening. Warm fresh rice would soften and stick before Maillard browning could occur. White pepper provides heat through piperine without the dark colour of black pepper โ preserving the golden appearance of the dish.