The pan was piping hot, close to smoking. Hot enough to evaporate a drop of water instantly.
I swirled the oil around the pan, then sprinkled in the fresh ginger and green onions, which filled the kitchen with instant fragrance, a welcome -- and unexpected -- aromatherapy. (Can anyone be stressed when a room smells this good?)
The shrimp went in next and the sizzle alone had me caught in the magic of stir-fry. In moments, dinner was ready.
I was a convert.
No surprise to Grace Young, who has been a one-woman evangelist for the ancient culinary technique. She is a cook with a mission: to take stir-frying to the masses. Her new book, "Stir-Frying to the Sky's Edge" (Simon & Schuster, 313 pages, $35), which popped up on "best books of the year" lists across the nation, breaks the technique into easy lessons that make dinner seem fast.
Well, almost fast. You do need to chop. But that's the relaxing part of the cooking equation: chop + cook = dinner.
Though the cooking method has been used in China for more than 2,000 years, the term "stir-fry" didn't appear in print in the United States until 1945, in "How to Cook and Eat in Chinese" by Buwei Yang Chao.
Not until the late '70s, however, did the phrase seep into the American cooking vocabulary. Even Craig Claiborne, who with Virginia Lee, wrote "The Chinese Cookbook" in 1972, only referenced stir-frying in the text and not in their recipes.