Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Rice Dumplings 棕子

Dumplings boiled for at least 2 hours.
 Some dumplings are triangle shaped, but these are rectangular.
 The rectangular ones can be cut using the strings they were tied with.
Savory dumplings cut with a fork. Contrast with the clean lines below when dumplilngs are cut with a string.
Sweet rice dumplings with red bean paste, cut using string.
Dried bamboo leaves have to be soaked in boiling water to soften them before use.

Rice dumplings are eaten traditionally eaten once a year on the fifth day of the fifth month of the lunar calendar.  It is to celebrate a festival called 端午节 which commemorates the death of Qu Yuan, poet and statesman of the Chu kingdom during the Warring States period . Celebrations include dragon boat racing.

The dumplings are glutinous rice filled with either sweet red beans or savory meat with mushrooms, salted egg yolks and mung beans wrapped in bamboo leaves and boiled for a few hours. I remember my mom used to make hundreds of them and they will be given as gifts to neighbors, friends and relatives.  Of course we will get our fair share back from them, resulting in a wide variety of dumplings for everyone.  My mom used to tie the dumplings by the dozens on a long bamboo stick hung across two chairs or tables. Boiling hundreds of dumplings was quite a task and huge empty metal oil containers were used.

Method for Savory Dumplings:
Boil a large pot of water and put in the dried bamboo leaves.  Boil leaves for 10 min until soft and remove, keep the water for boiling dumplings.
Soak glutinous rice in water for an hour.
Drain rice and season with dark soy, light soy, some sugar and oil.
(Use more light soy since dumplings will be boiled in water for a long time and will lose some saltiness. Alternatively, you can salt the water instead.)

Filling Ingredients:
fatty pork cut into chunks and seasoned with dark and light soy sauce, some sugar and sesame oil
shitake mushrooms, sliced and seasoned with light soy and sugar
yellow mung beans
roasted chestnuts (these can now be bought shelled and cooked and in a bag)
salted egg yolks (these can now be bought with just the yolks vacuum packed in a bag)
boiled quail eggs (optional)
five spice powder (optional)

Put rice on leaves, add fillings, cover with rice and wrap with strings into pyramid or rectangular shapes.  Boil dumplings for 2 hours if water covers all dumplings.  If water in pot is only half full, boil 3-4 hours, shifting top dumplings to the bottom after 1-2 hours.

For the red bean paste recipe, see here Red Bean Paste Filling.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

2-4-6-Pork Ribs

Ribs look pale in the beginning, but as it cooks and sauce thickens, will turn brown.
This is an easy recipe to remember due to the seasonings being in a ratio of 2:4:6

2 lbs pork short ribs
2 tablespoons sugar
4 tablespoons black vinegar 折江醋
6 tablespoons soy sauce
1/4 cup water
drizzle of dark soy (optional)

Simmer everything together in a pot for about 45 min until meat is tender and sauce is reduced.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Melon Sago Drink 蜜瓜西米露

A sweet refreshing drink for hot days, also served as a dessert sometimes.

Ingredients:
2 cantaloupes
1/4 cup sago
2 cups water
sugar
1 can coconut cream

Boil water and add sago, bring to a boil again and turn off heat.  Let sago stand until plump.  Drain off excess water if any.  Rinse with cold water.

Peel and cut sago in chunks and push through juicer to extract juice. (Some juicers cannot juice soft fruit, in which case you will need to blend it well in a blender and sieve if nec.)
Add sago and sugar to taste (remember the cantaloupe is already sweet).
Add coconut cream.
Chill until cold, add some ice and serve.
(In Hong Kong, some restaurants also add pomelo segments.)

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Cold Chicken Noodles with Sesame Sauce



Great on a hot day and a great way to use up those leftover roasted chicken, especially the drier breast meat.
The sauce can also be used as a dressing for regular salads.

Ingredients:
Leftover roasted chicken, shredded
One cucumber, peeled and shredded (can substitute with lettuce)
Bean sprouts, blanched
Cooked Chinese noodles or spaghetti, drained under cold water.

Sauce Recipe:
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 tablespoon sesame paste
1/2 tablespoon sesame oil
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoon rice or apple cider vinegar
3 tablespoons soy sauce
1 finely minced garlic clove
1/4 to 1/2 cup hot water
1 teaspoon chilli oil or chille sauce (optional)
chopped green onions or cilantro for garnish

Mix above with enough hot water to form heavy cream consistency.
Sauce is enough for 2-3 people if serving as a complete dinner.

Put cold noodles on plate.  Top with cucumber and bean sprouts, then chicken.  Pour sauce over, garnish with cilantro and serve.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Disney World 2010

Click on photo to enlarge.

Note:  This post is still a work in progress, more photos to load
Click on any photo to enlarge.

I guess it's a little strange to start a blog on Disney World with food, but we had a package deal that included meals (1 breakfast, 1 quick service,1 sit-down dining, and 2 snacks a day), so food was a BIG part of our Disney experience.  You do have to pay additional 18% tips on the meals, which can be quite a hit on the pocket, as the restaurants are very pricey, so the tips came out to be quite a lot. 

After this experience, I think I would at most do the 2 quick-service meal plan and pay to go to a few select good restaurants.  This is because our schedule was quite restricted by our restaurant reservations - all the fine dining restaurants are very popular and fully booked, so we had to have advance reservations and can't just show up at a restaurant.  Therefore we had to plan our activities around those dining reservations and often cut short our plans in order to not miss the reservation.
As my child said, everything's "Mickefied" - those crackers are shaped like Mickey.

These Zebra Domes are Kahlua-laced coffee mousse robed in white chocolate, with a thing layer of sponge cake to hold it all up - delish!  The recipe is available at: http://allears.net/din/recipes/rec_zebra.htm.  The domes can be found at Animal Kingdom Lodge eateries.

Lunch at Animal Kingdom Lodge - the African stew was very good.




Desserts included with quick service and sit-down meals.  Tons of food with the meal plan.



Gourmet cupcakes are so popular now.
In Magic Kingdom.
 Kids line up to get autographs from all the characters.

 Mid-day parade.


 This is a psycho egret.  Other egrets gather by the river eating fish.  This one wanders in the MK park looking for little birds to eat!  After catching a bird, it would fly to the most crowded place and eat the bird in plain view, traumatizing the young ones who make up most of MK's visitors. 

Groups of young rich Brazilian kids on a teens-only tour group.
Lunch at San Angel at Epcot - Mexican food.
Churros with hot chooclate
Mexican flan.
Desserts at dinner buffet at Boma in Animal Kingdom Lodge.




Those two kids are real - they're so cute.
At an Irish restaurant - Raglan Road - soda bread with sweet reduced beer dipping sauce.
Raglan Road served the most so-so food during our whole Disney trip.
Shepherd's Pie - looks good but I can make better - the meat was really salty.

 Grilled salmon - okay, but nothing special.

 Raglan Road is famous for this Bread Pudding dessert with two kinds of sauce - butterscotch and vanilla.  Only the sauce was good, the pudding was too mushy.
Apple crumble.
Outside Le Cellier Steakhouse in Epcot



The warm salad at Le Cellier Steakhouse at Epcot, served in a little skillet.  The warm dressing was to die for!
Le Cellier's Steakhouse - best burger in the world!  My most memorable food at Disney - believe it or not.  A good deal for lunch, big enough to serve two people.  Drooling just thinking about this burger, and I never order burgers, but took the suggestion of the helpful waiter and he was right on with all his recommendations.  Le Cellier's was the best restaurant we ate at in Disney and had the best service.


Epcot Center - Living with the Land attraction - consists of a boat ride through a huge greenhouse growing amazing fruits, veggies, fish, that they serve in the restaurants.  They also do research work.




Banana trees.
Huge white melons.








Brussel sprouts, in case you're wondering.

Dole Whip - available only from a few quick service areas in the park. It's pineapple juice topped with pineapple soft serve ice cream.



We stayed at Disney's Port Orleans - French Quarter Resort.  It's a small resort, so all rooms are close to the bus stop, pool, and cafeteria.



French Quarter's New Orleans style hotel rooms.
 This is actually it's neighbor, the Port Orleans - Riverside Resort - just 10 min walk away.
 This is Riverside's boat ride to Downtown Disney.
 Riverside's hotel rooms - a nicer one, the rest don't look as nice.
 The walk between the two resorts.
 Dragon slide at French Quarter's pool.


 Mickey waffles.

Port Orleans Resort also has convenient boat rides to Downtown Disney.
 View when approaching Downtown. The blue globe is Planet Hollywood restaurant.

Restaurant in Downtown featuring dinosaurs.
 MGM Studio
The magician's hat is the center of the park.  Each park has a central landmark for easier navigation.





 Tower of Terror ride - my child's cap flew off during this ride.
This is an indoor ride that has upside down loops.







Walt Disney and Mickey.

Epcot Center at night.








This was at the Italian restaurant in Epcot - Tutto Italia - food was good there.





Quite a few days, there will be an airplane making Christian messages in the sky above Disney.

Five ducks sitting in a row.
Huge turkey legs - never tried one myself, but heard it's good.




 The central landmark for Animal Kingdom - Tree of Life.
 Waiting line goes through a mini museum/exhibit - which also serves to cool you off in the summer heat. 



 Line for Mt. Everest ride goes thru Himalayan scene.