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Dejah

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Posts posted by Dejah

  1. When I was a kid - I HATED those chestnut cakes.  Now I am older and love them - I don't know where you could get one or if they are made over here in Canada.

    There are a lot of Chinese bakeries in the GVA that make the chestnut cakes. I myself do not care for the texture of the chestnut paste in the cake, but my mom loves it and we always order it for her birthday. She likes the bakery in Richmond that is situated across from Richmond Centre (in the same strip mall as Staples). Hope that helps!

    Hmm, I'll have to place an order with my sister to bring some when she comes in the summer. This will add to her list of wife cookies, gai jai bang, pai dan so, dan tat, etc, etc.

    What's happened to member char sui bao? I thought he was going to give us a recipe for gai jie bang? :angry::smile:

  2. This was posted in the Winnipeg Free Press, March 23, 2005:

    Chef is Winnipeg Convention Centre executive chef Quentin Harty.

    And as Harty can attest, dinner for 1,300 requires a lot more than multiplying a few loaves and fish. Try 600 pounds of fish, 700 pounds of beef and a mountain of Manitoba wild rice and vegetables.

    2005 Juno Awards Gala Dinner Menu

    Bread sticks, focaccia, lavash (large, flat Middle Eastern bread) & cocktail rolls

    Ginger and butternut squash bisque

    Gran Padano cheese straw, eggplant crisp and fine herbs

    Market greens set in a parmesan and asiago cheese bowl with roma tomato and bocconcini cheese and crostini roasted red pepper vinaigrette

    Canadian mixed grill

    Tarragon and blue cheese roasted filet of beef with Cafe de Paris butter and Marchand de Vin sauce

    Grilled marinated fillet of salmon crusted in pesto and glazed with fire-roasted tomato and garlic sauce

    Sweet potato galette with Manitoba wild rice

    Baby carrots with stems and butter-glazed asparagus

    Dessert

    Twin chocolate pillars with a duo of chocolate mousses served with Kahlua sauce and pralines

    The recipe for the dessert was also included in the article.

  3. Thank you to BOTH TP and Nondual1! My neice and I really appreciate your efforts. :wub: The photos are great and I will attempt to make them (once I can eat rice and flour again - trying a diet to get ready for summer :wink: ). I will remain her favourite auntie because of you two!

    I've copied all the pictures to entice her. :laugh:

  4. Thanks.. but I have it on expert advice that there are olives in china.. I also thought they were jujubees.

    I am doing a presentation on Olives in Dallas at IACP and we are getting Chinese Olives for the tasting!

    I will let you know

    There was a discussion of this in another thread? or forum? I believe we talked about olives in the candy thread in this forum: preserved olives with licorice flavours, or salt and vinegar, etc. They are probably used more for snacks in China. I also remember eating them fresh; these were green. I hadn't eaten them for years when my dad on a visit to HK brought some back. I had wonderful memories of them so I gorged myself. Man! Did I have a stomachache. :sad:

    Will look froward to your report, divina. :smile:

  5. No, this was different - the chicken was cut up into pieces, marinated then battered and fried - it wasn't fried whole. And it was never sold in restaurants, only in Chinese fast food take-away places. but as I said before, this stuff was much better.

    If anybody would know, it would be Louisa because she knows everything.  :biggrin:  Louisa, do you know this Chinese fried chicken?

    Okay, I have had deep fried chicken wings from Chinese take-out places here in NY that have a thin and crispy coating of batter, but I don't recall tasting in the chicken any of the marinade ingredients you mentioned. Maybe I just wasn't paying attention.

    My mum makes a deep fried chicken dish that uses the "Kentucky" brand seasoned flour coating :biggrin:, so I don't think anyone would think of that as being Chinese style. It's nothing like KFC either.

    I guess you're talking about Chinese take-out places in LA?

    Let's wait for what Louisa has to say.

    Helen Burke's book Chinese Cooking for Pleasure (one of my first books) gave a recipe for stuffed chicken wings. I wonder if you used her "batter" if it would be close to what you are looking for. She dipped the pieces in beaten egg then into self rising flour flour before deep frying. That should produce a lighter and crispy batter.

    I use a half and half of flour and cornstarch with some baking powder and a touch of oil. The mix is activated with a tbsp. of vinegar then mixed into batter with water.

    I suppose you can marinate the chicken in a number of different ways...wine, soya, ginger, five-spice powder, etc...

  6. One other thing that was made a little different was the "joong".  She used to soak the leaves in our bath tub for about a week before using them.  There was always a large chestnut, a piece of fat about the size of your index finger and the bright orange egg inside.  She also used to make the square sweet one with the red jelly topping inside.  Does anyone know what that red material was or was it just food colouring?  I never ate it as a kid much preferring the traditional joong.

    That's all I can think of for now.

    agog:

    Check out my site for joong. http://www.hillmans.soupbo.com/soos/joongzi.html

    I soak my bamboo leaves for acouple of days, then boil then in vinegar and water to keep them pliable. They are kept in water until I am ready to make the joong. Someone on the forum accused me of using alot of "lieu"! :laugh: I use pork butt as one of the fillers. This is cut into 2 finger-size pieces and rubbed with coarse salt to "yeap-marinate" at room temp. for 3-4 days before they can be used.

    I only make about a dozen of the sweet ones for my Mom for "boi seen". She uses gon suy and a piece of red stick in the middle - called doong slem (here's where Ben's explanation of thl sound comes into play) or doong heart. Other times, she may use red bean paste. I am not fond of it, but I love the savory one.

  7. The one I'm familiar with is the crispy skin style that has been par-boiled in some kind of strong lo chap marinade, then hung to dry before deep-frying.

    The recipe that I've learned and have tried calls for marinating the inside of the chicken with salt and five spice powder. Then par-boiled in straight red vinegar to about half cooked. (5-10 minutes) Hung up to chicken to dry for half a day. When ready to eat, deep-fry the chicken to fully cooked.

    I think the vinegar (acid) extracts the water out of the skin, and hunging up the chicken helps to drain the excess moisture under the skin. So the result after deep-frying is a very crispy skin on the chicken.

    BTW: This is my 500th post. A big mark. What prize do I get? :raz::raz:

    That seems like a lot of red vinegar? :unsure: Would it not flavour the chicken?

    I have used about 1/4 cup of vinegar to enough water to cover the chicken for the first step. The vinegar does make the skin crispy. I add a couple tablespoons of honey to the water also. This helps to produce a nice golden colour without having to deep fry for a long period of time.

    Welcome! agog!

    Speaking of fan noong, did your parents ever scrape it up, then gently squeeze it into a ball so your little hands can hold it and nibble on as you leave the table to go and play?

    Or, cook fon see (sweet potato) chunks with the rice, then mash acouple pieces into the fan noong before adding water to make fan jeu? :wub:

    Or, in lap mai fan, cook taro with lap yook, lap ap, then eat the meat sandwiched between slices of taro?

    GuangdongRen = here comes your Cantonese and Mandarin, hzrt! :raz: And I get my Cantonese and Toisanese mixed together! :rolleyes:

    Guangdong YUN...Gongung geen...people of Canton (Guangdong). Right? Ben Gaw Gaw?

    You really explained the Toisanese sounds well, Ben. I knew the sounds but never tried to express them in writing. You did say when you were visiting that you have made the study of our culture a lifetime effort. It really shows in your sharing of information. Thank you! :smile:

    I noticed that, although many of us speak "Toisanese", there are also variants within this dialect. It all depends on where your village is in Guangdong. I must ask my Mom when she comes on Sunday for the "exact description" of our home.

    LAKSA et all: Do you often cook with clay pot? I got a new one for Xmas and haven't used it yet. :sad: Any suggestions on how to prep. it for the first use? and how to keep it from cracking? No high heat...etc

  8. And a blette is bok choy?  (sorry for the silly questions but this is an education.  :huh:

    Soba

    Nope. It's Swiss chard. The two are related, though. :smile:

    [Edited because I can't type.]

    Hmmm, I could have sworn it was bok choy. The stalk looks too white, too firm and too smooth to be swiss chard. Usually chard has a slight curl to the leave as well. But then, there may be many varieties of swiss chard.

    I want to add my words of admiration for your finess in all aspects of blogging! :wub:

    I have so much to learn from you!

  9. Oh boy, do I have egg (roll) on my face.  That's the last time I relate any story my Fujianese friend tells me.  And you know what?  He comes across as such a paragon of innocence and virtue... *shake head*

    As penance, I shall now go to eat a boxful of stale love letters.  And I won't even crisp them up in the oven first.

    I believe I may need to take the gai mo so to all of you! :angry::rolleyes::laugh:

  10. That's a cool story!

    I remember the love letters now that I've seen the picture. Thanks, Tepee et al.

    In one of the other threads...perhaps in Chinese candy, I mentioned about a treat made with eggs etc, like a very thin pancake with cilantro on top. It may have been the same ingredients as love letters, except it was flat and not folded. Once, the wind caught it as I left the shop and it all blew away except for what was between my fingers :sad:

  11. BC,

    As Ben said, don't underestimate the Causacian half of relationships.My hubby is Scottish/English and he eats everything and always insists on using chopsticks.

    :rolleyes:

    I also came to Canada in the 50s. Smuggled out of China when I was 2, left HK when I was 10. Been here ever since.

    I just met another Toisanese from another forum. She lives in Winnipeg! I have invited her to join eGullet. She's excited to hear about our "family" here.

    She's coming out sometime for a visit, probably when my Mom and I make doong. Her family didn't agree with her bi-racial marriage so she is missing the Chinese part of her life. It is a painful split, but we will try to help her heal and rediscover her roots again. She misses Chinese food! May have to educate her husband as well;-)

    I am still waiting for a recipe for ham sui gok! Any help with that? Ling?

    Gastro, where have you been?! Say nui bow! :laugh::laugh: Where's the gai mo so

  12. What is rubitan? or is that rambutan? The "hairy lycee"?

    I haven't been able to get durian past my nose! I promised myself I will REALLY try again this summer. My mouth waters everytime someone tries to describe how wonderful durian tastes. I've even tried durian candy. My mouth just clamps shut and my nose turns into itself. (Think of someone gurning) Hubby handled it ( the candy) but we will both scrounge up the strength this summer for the real thing.

    BTW, we have 3 neighbors, 2 on the west side and one on the east side who have sold their homes since last week. When did this talk of stinky dofu start? :unsure::shock::rolleyes::laugh:

  13. Can you tell me the name of the little sprouts in the chowder and the grilled spring salmon.

    I had them in England and loved them...haven't seen them around here. Are they mustard sprouts? I like them because they are more "substantial" then alfalfa, onion, etc. Love them in sandwiches, wraps, salads, etc.

    Pam, I wasn't complaining about BBQ in the snow, I was sorta bragging that we are a tough lot here in Manitoba! :wink::laugh:

  14. QUOTE(Dejah @ Mar 17 2005, 08:26 PM)

    How about some Tim Horton's or Timbits, eh? wink.gif

    Daddy-A

    Timmy Ho's?? You know Dejah, ever since Winnipeg lost the Jets, you guys have just been mean! laugh.gif

    :laugh:

    Well, I'm not one for donuts anymore. We just buy TH's coffee when we can't get "others".

    There's halibut on sale this week, but frozen doesn't look too appealing. Salmon fillet looked great so may do that on the grill . . . in the snow! :angry:

    Love your kitchen!

  15. How COULD you! Irwin, at this hour and when there is no way I can ever taste stinky dofu here on the Canadian prairies. :angry: ( Dej throwing a tantrum)

    It's been 47 years.........................................Wonder if I would still enjoy it...

    Dejah:

    If I convince any one to bring me some again I will send some to Brandon. Why isn't anyone making this delicacy in Toronto or Vancouver. I bet it would sell well in Flushing, New York located near the street side Kabob Stand.

    Irwin :wacko:

    Irwin, If you sent me some chow dufu, you'd be my hero for life!

    Might be a way to get rid of unwanted neighbors. :hmmm:

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