#61
Posted 28 November 2006 - 01:01 PM
In the stir-fried cos lettuce with gai chee, were they fresh berries or rehydrated ones? I don't have any fresh ones at the moment.
I've never used gai chee in this manner. It's always been in simple soup by itself, or with a million other herbs.
www.hillmanweb.com
#62
Posted 28 November 2006 - 01:24 PM
Steamed egg/soya milk, garnished with tiny sweet crispy shrimps from Pangkor Island.
Tepee,
Do these shrimps come crispy, or did you fry them somehow to get the texture? I made a similar version of this just the other day, but I just rehydrated some dry shrimps (not from Pangkor) in warm water, then chopped into tiny bits. I like the idea of the texture contrast with crispy shrimps.
#63
Posted 28 November 2006 - 03:31 PM
Peony is from S'pore, Michael. That's taugeh, alright, but it has to be from Ipoh before it can be labelled Ipoh beansprouts (which are nice and sweet and plump and crunchy).
Beansprouts that have a private label? That must be some beansprouts! I thought they are quite generic.
I did some Google search. I thinik Ma yau 馬友 is:Shallow-fried ma yau fish (what's the english name?) with prawn crackers also from Pangkor Island.
Threadfin
Eleutheronema tetradactylum
(Some pictures on Google)
#65
Posted 28 November 2006 - 03:38 PM
We are already on page 3. I think we are on our way to set a record in the China forum and this will be the longest thread ever!I'm also enjoying this thread...I'm wondering why we never thought of it before.
Dai gah jeh, nei hai taak geh!
#66
Posted 28 November 2006 - 04:53 PM
#67
Posted 28 November 2006 - 05:21 PM
shengcai, it comes crispy...it's a snack by itself.
Thanks, Ah Leung gaw, you are a google king! Do you have ma yau there? It's one of the more pricey fish here. Good meat and no small fine bones. That's garlic (I'm the garlic queen, remember?) on top of the fish. I fished some out when I was sautee-ing as aromatics for the veg. About the beansprouts, they say it must be the water in Ipoh. The cheong fun there is also very smooth, and the girls are known to be fair maidens. Hmm....peony, you said you hail from Ipoh?
sheetz, that's a new dinner idea for me.
Where's the rest of the dinners??? I'll probably not cook chinese tonight...the cat's away.
Edited by Tepee, 28 November 2006 - 05:27 PM.
Food Pix (plus others)
Please take pictures of all the food you get to try (and if you can, the food at the next tables)............................Dejah
#68
Posted 28 November 2006 - 06:05 PM
This dish looks absolutely scrumptious! I love that slightly-chewy rice stick texture, and every time I look at this picture I can just feel my teeth sliding into one of them.
learn to cook these dry rice sticks about 2 weeks back...my daughter bought these tteokbokgi from Japan.
I should have another picture for this topic in about an hour or so ...
#69
Posted 28 November 2006 - 06:16 PM
#70
Posted 28 November 2006 - 07:22 PM
The pot just out of the oven:

The reveal!

I put some chunks of onion, carrot, and daikon in to braise with the turkey and seasonings (light and dark soy sauce, shao zhing wine, star anise, and ginger, plus a scant cupful of water).
#71
Posted 28 November 2006 - 07:40 PM
Chinese meal by mom
Still trying to pick up all her techniques.
#72
Posted 28 November 2006 - 07:46 PM
Mizducky: I've never heard of turkey tails. Is it more like the rump on a chicken?
I wonder how popular turkey has become in China. I don't recall seeing it anywhere -- on menus or at supermarkets -- when I visited earlier this year.
#73
Posted 28 November 2006 - 08:17 PM
#74
Posted 28 November 2006 - 08:39 PM
Wow! That's quite the feast your mom whipped up!My mom came to visit for the Thanksgiving weekend. Here is what she cooked for us!
Chinese meal by mom
Still trying to pick up all her techniques.
It's the actual tail of the bird--the turkey, being a bigger bird, will have a much more substantial tail (plus I think the turkey just evolved a sturdier tail in order to hold up its big beautiful plume of tail feathers). In English the chicken or turkey tail is often nicknamed the "pope's nose" (pity the poor pontif who has a nose shaped like that!Mizducky: I've never heard of turkey tails. Is it more like the rump on a chicken?
I wonder how popular turkey has become in China. I don't recall seeing it anywhere -- on menus or at supermarkets -- when I visited earlier this year.
Some random Googling suggests that turkey hasn't made much of an inroad into Chinese cuisine yet--all the recipes I found seem to be adaptations of dishes traditionally made with other types of poultry. But the turkey tails did take to the red-cooking treatment really well--turkey's a good blank canvas for all kinds of flavorings.
Edited by mizducky, 28 November 2006 - 08:40 PM.
#75
Posted 28 November 2006 - 09:24 PM
We're so far behind the Dinner! thread it's not even funny! I think everyone here needs to hurry up and whip up twelve different batches of fried rice.
Considering that the Dinner! thread was started in 2002, I think we are doing very well!
I am trying to upload the image of tonight's supper, but it wasn't working for me. I got a message to contact the eGullet team, so must wait to see what I did wrong.
It's still snowing, and we must have had about a foot of snow! I was teaching also, so we had bo jai fan.
As for the rice sticks, I have not seen this shape, but I do have the flat ones that are about 2" long with rounded ends. They are like the ones my mom used to make for New Years. She used to make them different shapes: some long, some like the old ingots, some round, etc. These were made with rice flour, steamed and kept in pails of water in a cool place. The water must be changed frequently. I loved it when Mom would slice some up, brown them in the pan, then mixed with lap yook and vegetables.
I am going to cook the package I have tomorrow. They are soaking in water now to soften up. The directions said to soak for 12 hours!
www.hillmanweb.com
#76
Posted 28 November 2006 - 09:29 PM
Gota have ma la oil for dipping.
www.hillmanweb.com
#77
Posted 28 November 2006 - 10:04 PM
Anyway, here's what we had for supper: velvetized chicken, ginger, lap cheung, and slivers of acouple of left over mushrooms. I used a mixture of half long grain jasmine and half glutinous rice. It was made in my cast iron pot on top of the stove. Very comforting on a blizzardy evening.
www.hillmanweb.com
#78
Posted 29 November 2006 - 01:41 AM
Food Pix (plus others)
Please take pictures of all the food you get to try (and if you can, the food at the next tables)............................Dejah
#79
Posted 29 November 2006 - 02:45 AM
Yep--one whole tail, probably about 4-5 ounces of meat. Plus the broth, which is pretty intense -- in a good way. I was thinking of having the tail meat with some congee tomorrow. And saving the broth for the next time I red cook something.Any leftovers, mizducky? Would be yummy, overnight, with some noodles.
#80
Posted 29 November 2006 - 04:46 AM
Yep--one whole tail, probably about 4-5 ounces of meat. Plus the broth, which is pretty intense -- in a good way. I was thinking of having the tail meat with some congee tomorrow. And saving the broth for the next time I red cook something.Any leftovers, mizducky? Would be yummy, overnight, with some noodles.
That broth is the best, isn't it? Mizducky. I like to just ladle a spoonful onto my rice. Yummy.
To be honest, I haven't gotten up enough nerve to eat the "pope's nose" yet. Of course, I also say that's reserved for the elders in the family, but then, I'll soon be in that catagory and may not be able to escape what awaits me.
www.hillmanweb.com
#82
Posted 29 November 2006 - 06:46 AM
Food Pix (plus others)
Please take pictures of all the food you get to try (and if you can, the food at the next tables)............................Dejah
#83
Posted 29 November 2006 - 07:40 AM

Frog leg soup
the legs are cooked with Chinese wine, ginger and kei zhi ( small red berries )
#84
Posted 29 November 2006 - 03:25 PM
maybe next time. It's so unhealthy I don't make it often.
#85
Posted 29 November 2006 - 09:44 PM

String beans sauteed with onion wedges, garlic, salt, and... the small pieces scattered around are reconstituted dried oysters cut into 1/4 inch slices. Very simple.
#86
Posted 29 November 2006 - 11:57 PM
TP: hav u 8 dinR yet? Where r d pics? want 2 c em. hurE! ttyl
I hEr u.
Ta-paued Malay spice chicken with nasi lemak (coconut milk rice) for dinner last night. Yum. I marinated some char siu overnight and just had it for a simple lunch. Excuse the blurry pic...hubby took my 'real' cam with him and I've forgotten how to use this one.

Dinner tonite is probably fried rice with a fish ball/amaranth soup made with dried ikan bilis (whitebait?) stock.
Food Pix (plus others)
Please take pictures of all the food you get to try (and if you can, the food at the next tables)............................Dejah
#87
Posted 30 November 2006 - 02:37 AM
#88
Posted 30 November 2006 - 05:24 AM
Here's tonight's dinner for me and the girls.

Clockwise from top left: Tempoyak Paku-Pakis. Paku-pakis is fern in malay. Tempoyak is fermented durian cooked with chili, sweet-sourish in taste. Fortunately, my whole family love this tempoyak bought from a stall near my house. It also has ikan-bilis(whitebait) and petai(stinky beans) in it.
Oops, just realized that this isn't a 100% chinese meal....at most it's 50%
Edited by Tepee, 30 November 2006 - 05:40 AM.
Food Pix (plus others)
Please take pictures of all the food you get to try (and if you can, the food at the next tables)............................Dejah
#89
Posted 30 November 2006 - 12:56 PM
I have those same exact dishes.
#90
Posted 30 November 2006 - 01:20 PM
Hey, at least you know when you're doing mix-and-match ... a lot of the time I'm totally unsure as to whether I've just committed "fusion" or not!Oops, just realized that this isn't a 100% chinese meal....at most it's 50%
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