Showing posts with label chinese new year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chinese new year. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 February 2021

Chapter 6: Food for Special Occasions

Growing up in England, we celebrated special occasions with a mix of different foods. As a treat for Saturday supper, our family would have sirloin steak with rice when the takeaway closed. This was a family tradition, dating back to my grandfather! This was the day all the workers got paid as well. Dad will pan-fry the steaks with onions and mushrooms. Aside from salt, Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce was used to add piquancy. It was eaten with white rice with dollops of Coleman’s English mustard.

At Christmas or sometimes as a Sunday treat, Mum would roast a Leg of Lamb. We would eat this with steamed savoy cabbage, sweetcorn and white rice. She would make a gravy from the drippings in the pan and slice up some of the lamb meat to put in it. We would enjoy our plate of Roast Lamb with lashings of mint sauce from a jar!

Chinese feast food was often served at Christmas and Lunar New Year. When preparing a Chinese feast, care was taken to have a lucky number of dishes - for example 3, 8, 9 or 10. These numbers symbolize health, prosperity, longevity and perfection respectively. You can even include the soup when counting or split a dish into 2 plates to make the count work for you! Whatever you do, don’t make 4 dishes. 

Avoid white ingredients such as tofu as white is worn at funerals and ingredients such as squid which sounds like "getting fired from a job". Lucky dishes and ingredients include: 

  • Braised shittake mushrooms and "fat choi" with dried oysters and scallops on bed of lettuce
  • Lucky shrimp for laughter
  • Whole fish to keep all your luck (retain head and tail)
  • Whole chicken or duck for luck
  • Hakka speciality dish - taro with pork belly
  • Vegetables
  • A soup
  • Stir-fried lobster with spring onions, ginger and garlic in XO tomato sauce


Braised dried scallops and oysters on bed of lettuce

Sunday, 7 September 2014

Epic Family Meals - CNY 2014 version


This blog would not be complete without a post on this topic - the epic Chinese New Year family meals Paul and I enjoyed in Hong Kong earlier this year. With the Law family re-united under one roof, my mum wasted no time in utilizing her formidable cooking skills. Here is an example of a regular family meal:

Mum's home cooking at its best
These dishes may look simple but are fairly complex - made up of several steps. The pork-stuffed tofu would have required:

-  mincing and marinating the pork with shittake mushrooms and scallions
- scooping out the tofu centers
- pan-frying the tofu packets meat-down
- braising the whole dish in an oyster sauce.

This dish would been made first and kept warm in a clay pot while other dishes such as the pan-fried fish are prepared. There is also a slow-cooked soup which needs at least three hours of careful simmering. From the soup ingredients on the table, it was a pork and watercress, corn and water chestnut soup. My mother's cooking gets better every time I visit - and she is also adding new dishes to her repertoire which I have not tried before. This time, it was a steamed fish dish topped with marinated dried wood ears, chinese chives and pork (on the right in the photo).
During the Lunar New Year, there are several key moments where a family comes together for food. Some occasions may vary according to household tradition but the last meal of the old Year is universally important in Hong Kong. It is an absolute no-no to eat alone and local workers leave work early to ensure they are back home for this meal. For our New Year's Eve meal, we came together with the Wan family (my mother's side) where my uncle cooked up the necessary number of dishes. There is always a lucky number of dishes - eight (the word eight sounds similar to wealth) or nine (sounds similar to longevity) dishes is popular.


The table is groaning
Our line-up included a whole chicken, a whole duck, braised dried conpoy and dried oysters, two vegetable dishes, roasted pork belly, the family's famed braised pork belly and taro dish, shrimp and a whole fish. It's important that the fish is kept whole (including the head and tail) so that no luck is lost. For auspicious meals such as this one, certain foods such as the whole chicken and whole fish are always featured. Shrimp is also a popular lucky dish as the word sounds like laughter in Chinese. White-colored foods such as tofu is not a good idea as white is the color of death nor is squid (as the word for squid sounds like losing your job in Chinese).

Braised dried conpoy and oysters on a bed of lettuce
My favorite finger-licking dish was cooked by my uncle - his "secret recipe" for  sweet and tangy shrimp. Although I don't have the full recipe, I'm told Lea & Perrins worcestershire sauce is his magic ingredient.

Uncle's tangy whole shrimp
After the huge New Year's Eve dinner, neither meat nor fish is consumed in the first meal of the first day of Chinese New Year, as per our family tradition. This requires a bit more creativity but again, my mother had it covered by cooking up the following:
- corn soup (made from fresh corn kernels)
- Buddha's delight (vegan lotus root, water chestnut and Chinese celery stir fry)
- braised tofu skin with gingko nuts and wood ear fungus
- two leafy greens dishes

Vegan for the 1st day of the Year

The 2nd day of Chinese New Year is another blow-out family meal. With so many people around this year, we decided to have "poon choi" - a Hakka speciality whereby all the various dishes are layered upon each other in a large bowl. Obviously, we didn't think the ordered "poon choi" was luxurious enough so we added our own braised abalone!


The poon choi - we added our own abalone!
 Usually, one "poon choi" is enough for the meal but as we are talking about this excessively food-loving family, all kinds of additional dishes also appeared. Namely, a steamed whole fish, roast duck, chicken, a vegetarian stir-fry, shrimp and more leafy greens. Needless, to say there was plenty of leftovers.

One big bowl is not enough for the family

Chinese New Year is a wonderfully festive time - when the family comes together through various traditions and rich celebratory foods. Unsurprisingly, after three days of excessive gluttony, palates get jaded and fearing for our arteries, we yearn for the simple and reach for that oatmeal breakfast....










Sunday, 11 April 2010

CNY - Tiger Year 2010


This year, had our usual Chinese New Year gathering. As always, had to cook up at least 8 dishes - this is one of my favorites - pork-stuffed zucchini with dried scallops. Secret to making the pork stuffing is to make sure your pork is not too lean (pork butt is a great cut for this). Dried shittake mushrooms, scallions, water chestnuts, sesame oil all add to the flavour of the stuffing. And of course, having a food processor makes this very very easy! For the dried scallops in the sauce, you need to soak these and then steam them for 20 mins.

Monday, 16 February 2009

Chinese New Year Dinner at My Place







This event totally encapsulates the Law family tradition! For the start of the New Year of the Ox, it is traditional to have a big "hoi neen fan" with at least 8- 9 dishes. There is no way I can cook so many (I am not my Uncle Wan!) so roped in a few friends and voila! 9 dishes in 2 and a half hours - not bad. Or 11 if you count the soup and dessert...The menu was as follows:
- Shark's Fin and Chicken Broth
- Pork-Stuffed Fuzzy Melon
- Soya Chicken
- Spicy King Prawns
- Pan-Fried Fish
- Ginger Beef
- Steamed Silken Tofu with Prawns
- Homestyle Tofu and Pork
- Braised Chinese Mushrooms on Bed of Romaine
- Baby Bok Choi in Garlic