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from http://travel.cnn.com
With Chinese New
Year around the corner, Sheung Wan’s 'dried seafood street,' which stretches
along some 200 shops on Des Voeux Road West, is humming with frantic activity.
Housewives haggle over preserved sausages and delivery boys whiz past with
overloaded bikes. It’s all part of the Chinese custom of stocking up for the new
year and dried goods are in particular demand. Many of them have names that pun
on auspicious phrases, and they are prized in Cantonese cuisine. They are used
liberally in Chinese New Year dishes and also make generous traditional new year
gifts.
Here, three
vendors reveal how to identify the best produce and how to cook each
one.
Dried abalone
When it comes to
dried abalone, Amidori abalone from Japan ranks among the best, according to
Leung Wing Chiu, owner of the 91-year-old Tung Hing Tai Kee Marine Products. The
star of most Chinese banquets, dried abalone is valued for its resemblance to
the ancient Chinese ingots used as currency. The texture is like a meaty, chewy
mushroom, and it’s often cooked in a rich soy-based broth. Leung recommends home
cooks to soak the abalone in water for two to three days in the fridge, then
dunk it in boiling water for an hour, and leave it to cool in the pot. After
rinsing the abalone under running water for two hours, it’s ready to be stewed
with red meat such as ham and roasted goose.
Fish maw
Fish maw, with its
silken texture and abundant collagen, is much loved by Chinese
ladies.
“For fish maw,
it’s best if they have a deep yellow hue, as opposed to a whiter one," said
Leung Huen, owner of Yuen Hing Ho, a dried seafood shop that has been on
'seafood street' for over two decades. "A richer color means the fish maw will
maintain its texture even with prolonged cooking.” The older the fish maw is,
the better. Older fish maws have less oil and thus less of the unpleasant fishy
taste.
"It’s a really
popular item in Chinese New Year banquets because people like to eat well at the
end of the year, but not because it has any superstition attached to it,” Leung
adds. To re-hydrate dried fish maw, cook it in boiling water for half an hour.
Place the replenished fish maw under slow running water for one hour, then cut
and store in the freezer for later use.
Black moss and dried oyster
These two
delicacies are popular during Chinese New Year because of their auspicious
names. Dried oysters (bottom) are called 'ho see' which sounds like good deeds,
good fortune, or prosperity, while black moss (top) is a pun on 'faat choi'
which means 'to get rich.'
The briny dried
oyster is the perfect compliment to black moss, which is bland by itself but
soaks up flavors like a sponge. Leung Huen, says the best dried oysters are
plump ones from Japan and Korea. They should be soaked in water for half an hour
before cooking. As for black moss, keep an eye out for fakes. The best way to
tell is to soak a small section in water -- fake black moss turns the water
murky.
Conpoy
The brackish
conpoy, or dried scallop, is a versatile ingredient that can either be served
whole, or shredded in vegetable, meat and rice dishes.
“The best quality
conpoys are from Japan and should have sharp, clean edges. They are the ones
with strong aroma and flavor,” says Leung Huen. “The ones with rounded edges are
from Mainland China and are generally less fragrant with more
impurities.”
Conpoys should be
soaked for half an hour in water before cooking.
Preserved meats
Preserved
sausages, which are mildly sweet and have tiny pockets of fragrant fat, are
usually steamed, sliced and served with rice. Leung Wan, who owns the
52-year-old preserved food specialty store Man Lee Long, cautions against buying
preserved sausages that are too red in color.
“It indicates
there’s a lot of artificial coloring," says Leung. "A good quality preserved
sausage should also be free of stale smells and feel bouncy to the
touch.”
As for cured pork
belly, good ones should have alternating layers of fat and thin pork, giving it
the moniker 'five-storey meat.' Leung suggests boiling preserved meats for 15
minutes to remove the surface layer of fat before cooking or frying
them.
The information is from http://travel.cnn.com
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