Tag Archives: hong kong food

DIY DIM SUM

When I visited my parents in Hong Kong over the holidays, I was blown away by the delicate and very beautiful dim sum. They were honestly works of art.

Here in Montreal, dim sum is not as impressive, but it’s still an important part of weekend rituals for a lot of Chinese families. Though I love going out for dim sum too, I wanted to see if I could replicate the event at home instead. (I prefer a good dinner party over going to a fancy restaurant any day!)

I wrote about making dim sum at home for the Montreal Gazette this week. It includes (my own!) recipes for har gow, shumai, and gai lan. It was so much fun to do the research for this story, and I’ve been encouraging absolutely everyone I know to give this a whirl the next time they get a craving for dim sum. It’s easier than it looks, and so fun!

Read the story here.

(Thank you Marie-France Coallier for your stunning photos!)

DIM SUM PARADISE

I bet you thought the Hong Kong posts were over. Wrong! I can’t believe I haven’t posted any dim sum photos yet, as it’s such an iconic Hong Kong meal. On my second to last day in the city, my parents picked a fancy spot (there are no ladies walking around with dim sum carts — dishes are delivered from the kitchen to  your table) known for its more unusual, delicate dishes. We tried a lot of weird stuff, including pickled duck tongues (they have bones!), white fungus (it has a crunchy-yet-gelatinous mouthfeel), and the “goldfish” dumplings in the first photo (no actual goldfish inside, they’re just painted to look like cute little fishes). My favorite dish, though, was a delicious, savory mince of mushrooms wrapped in delicate tofu skins and fried until crispy. We use the same tofu skins to make our veggie pulled porc at the Dep, and it was really fascinating and inspiring to see them used in another way.

SHEUNG HING CHIU CHOW PT. 2

At Sheung Hing Chiu Chow, meals begin bitterly. You have no choice, you’re just along for the ride. A small, plastic tray bearing tiny cups of steaming brown liquid are unceremoniously placed on the table, alongside the usual salted boiled peanuts and pickled cabbage.

I drank the tea, waiting for the mild caffeine kick of the usual black Chinese brew, but was met with a lukewarm, bitter shot that reminded me of roots, dirt, and rotting leaves. What I swallowed was Gongfu tea, or the ‘espresso’ of Chinese teas, so called for its formidable kick, anti-thirst-quenching qualities, and palate-cleaning effects.

Our feast was a terrific introduction to traditional Chiu Chow-style cuisine. Sheung Hing is famous for its chilled braised goose, which arrives heaped high, shining with fat, and cleverly hiding a nest of tender, fresh tofu underneath. Not everyone loves the rich, gamey flavors of goose, but it’s hard not to obsess over the tender sheets of breast meat, which we doused in a garlicky vinegar sauce, or the cold, pimply skin, which coagulated into a velvety, supple slick of fat that dissolved in my mouth.

We also ordered the braised goose “web and wing,” which was a little freaky in texture (rubbery, chewy, hard) and appearance (is that a foot? Am I eating a foot?), but intensely satisfying in a salty meat lollipop kind of way.

There are a million other mouthwatering dishes to try at Sheung Hing, like the tender, succulent baby oyster omelet, which reminded me a crisp frittata, or the stewed winter vegetables with glass noodles, our only virtuous dish of the night. Then there was the lemon soup — which we ordered on the good word of Gary Shteyngart — enriched with a golden duck leg that bobbed in the clear, daffodil-hued broth.

My dad surprised everyone by ordering the hit dish of the night: braised duck with taro root complete with a feather-light, crispy coating. This dish totally blew my mind, both in construction and in taste — imagine deep-fried duck-confit-mashed-potatoes. Picture a mouthful that explodes with silky, buttery, sweet and earthy flavors and textures. I’ve never had anything like it in my life.

At the close of our meal, the owner brought out a crispy, deep-fried noodle cake and a jar of white sugar. We shook liberal amounts of the grainy sugar over the cake and dipped it in a tar-like saucer of black vinegar. (Here’s a great story on the history of the dish, and how to make it).

The freebies didn’t end there. We finished the meal, sated beyond recognition, with warm, cozy bowls of corn porridge, mildly sweet and deliciously gelatinous.

RETURNING TO SPRING DEER

For my first proper dinner back in Hong Kong, my parents took me to Spring Deer, a restaurant that my dad has been going to since he was a grad student in the early 1970s. I went there, too, in the mid 90s, and it’s exactly how I remember it, right down to the gracious elderly waiters who will bring you fresh bowls of boiled peanuts when you crave them (they just don’t make ‘em the same Stateside!). At least a dozen luscious, crispy Peking Ducks were wheeled out of the kitchen while we were there, making me seriously plead for one of our own. My dad wisely advised me that ordering a full duck in addition to all of our other dishes would be food suicide. (Actually, we compromised: we’ll be returning to try that duck).

At Spring Deer, the focus is on Beijing-style Northern Chinese food, so we ended up ordering a lot of the homey, comforting classics that my whole family grew up with. The food is simple, but sensational — we ordered tender, supple water spinach shoots sauteed in garlic and peanut oil; braised pork knuckle, served cold and with a savory ginger-garlicky sauce; tender dumplings stuffed with pork and fresh Hong Kong crab; spicy, sweet chicken coated in a sticky vermillion sauce; winter melon soup soaking in a salty, smoky ham broth; and my old childhood favorite, cong you bing, or tender, flaky layers of pastry coiled into a pancake and laced with fresh scallions and garlic soaking in oil. Man, I forgot how great Hong Kong is. So happy to be back.