Ruth Paget is a cookbook reviewer, game developer, and freelance restaurant critic. She is the author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France.
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Abe Books is selling my books China Hand and Eating Soup with Chopsticks by Ruth Paget
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Asian Cultural Experience Salinas - 4/26/25 by Ruth Paget
The 26th Asian Cultural Experience is happening in April 26, 2025 in Salinas. This event is organized by the Chinese, Filipino, and Japanese communities in Salinas.
For more information click on the press release link below:
Asian Cultural Experience information
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Wednesday, April 9, 2025
The Poppy War Reviewed by Ruth Paget
The Poppy War Reviewed by Ruth Paget R.F. Kuang’s
The Poppy War is a fantasy-historical fiction novel that is loosely based on the period of Chinese (Nikara in the novel) history called The Rape of Nanjing or the Nanjing Massacre by Japan (The Federation of Mugen in the novel) during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937 – 1945).
Rin, the book’s main character, a dark-skinned peasant girl from the South, tests in the military academy at Sinegard, which rigorously prepares its students for a war that has not happened yet, but that will according to daily reminders from professors.
The entire school becomes mired in war much sooner than the characters think. The horrific atrocities induce many of the soldiers and leaders to use opium to continue fighting, particularly as food supplies dwindle and to invoke warrior deities.
In the two Opium Wars prior to the Sino-Japanese Wars, the Chinese fought to keep opium out of the country. However, by the time of The Poppy War that Kuang writes about, the Chinese population had begun to widely use opium (derived from poppies like heroin) despite its being illegal. As you read through The Poppy War, you can see its varying effects on soldiers, especially leaders.
One of the great lessons of The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang is that despite efforts to prepare for defensive war, a country can still suffer greatly and be invaded by other countries seeking land and/or wealth.
The Poppy War illustrates in devastating detail the atrocities of war in Nikara. This makes for difficult yet important reading for readers who are interested in real-life careers as:
-diplomats -war crimes assessors
-translators
-military personnel
-psychologist, especially for therapists dealing with victims of gang rape by enemy troops
The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang uses the fantasy format to relate a historical incident like The Rape of Nanjing to make it supportable for readers who probably would have trouble reading about it in history books.
In the end, The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang acts as an excellent introduction to 20th century Chinese history.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Wednesday, April 2, 2025
Surviving Babel - a review by Ruth Paget
Surviving Babel – a review by Ruth Paget
Babel by R.F. Kuang is a highly readable story about how racism in 19th century Great Britain affected its foreign policy.
Kuang’s anti-hero is Robin Swift, an Anglo-Chinese student at the Royal Institute of Translation, called Babel, at Oxford University. Kuang’s novel is set in 1830s England where silver makes the British Empire run. Babel’s translations create magical silver that fund the student stipends and contribute to the British Empire’s wealth.
The British Empire’s problem in Babel is that the silver is running out due to buying luxury goods from India and China. These two countries want nothing that England produces making the Indians and Chinese accumulate vast reserves of silvers as the British silver funds are being depleted.
This situation creates the need for certain languages to be taught at Babel and the economic argument to promote the Opium Drug Wars between England and China.
Robin Swift and his classmates learned languages to fill needs of the British Empire with no other perceived alternatives offered for employment. This negative learning environment brings in Babel’s crime element, which is threaded throughout Robin Swift’s student years and “career.”
Learning about the traditions and lifestyle at Babel and Oxford University keeps Kuang’s novel from being a pessimistic reading experience. I liked learning about the insider names of the various academic quarters at Oxford and about the third and fourth year qualifying exams, the internships, the immersive language experiences, and profitable languages for translation.
That students could work during the social upheaval of 19th century Great Britain illustrates the strength of Oxford University as an institution that it still benefits from today as the training ground for the United Kingdom’s leaders.
Readers who might enjoy Babel by R.F. Kuang include:
-diplomats
-translators
-military intelligence officers
-economists
-students applying for fellowships to study at Oxford
-travelers
I enjoyed Babel by R.F. Kuang because I was an undergraduate student in East Asian Studies. This novel is definitely a book I would have discussed with my classmates over coffee and pastries at the University of Chicago in the Regenstein Library’s coffee shop.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Saturday, March 15, 2025
Curried Fried Rice Meal by Ruth Paget
Curried Fried Rice Meal by Ruth Paget
A fast lunch I prepare for myself is curried fried rice. The inspiration for this meal is Chinese. However, the Chinese add more ingredients like peas and ham or shrimp, especially in restaurants.
For everyday lunches, I use the following recipe:
Serves 1
Ingredients:
-2 tablespoons olive oil
-2 teaspoons Madras curry powder or another brand
(Look for turmeric in the curry ingredients. It is a good antioxidant.)
-1 (7.4 ounce) container of cooked Bibigo sticky Korean rice
-2 beaten eggs
-salt and pepper to taste
Steps:
1-Heat olive oil and curry in a sauce pan till steaming.
2-Add the cooked sticky rice. Break up the rice and turn it to coat with the yellow cooking oil.
3-When the rice is steaming, add the beaten eggs and turn for 2 to 3 minutes or until cooked.
4-Remove the rice and eggs from the heat. Season them with salt and pepper and serve.
As a dessert, I eat two or three clementines after the curry rice and drink a small carton of whole milk.
This meal is fast and easy and still relatively inexpensive even with the higher price of eggs.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Chinese Buffet Strategy at Chow King in Marietta, Georgia by Ruth Paget
Chinese Buffet Strategy at Chow King in Marietta, Georgia by Ruth Paget
There is so much food available at Chinese buffets on the East Coast like Chow King in Marietta, Georgia that you need a strategy to navigate them, especially as they now have pan-Asian offerings like Vietnamese phô soup, Japanese hibachi grilled food, and sushi in addition to piles of Chinese fried and stir-fried food.
People from the West Coast should know that before going wild on all the sushi that the white they see in the maki rolled sushi is not octopus, but Philadelphia Cream Cheese. I like sushi and cream cheese, but not together. I ate what I took, but will pass the next time I see them.
For the buffet offerings, I have taken my cue from Chinese senior citizens about what to eat. Most buffets have mounds of seafood refried rice and lo mein egg noodles that I always head for. The seafood rice is made with seafood broth, which gives it a bright orange color. It is then refried with egg, peas, and carrots. I fill half my plate with this item.
The other half of my plate I fill with lo mein egg noodles that have been stir-fried in peanut oil with soy sauce, oyster sauce, and sesame oil added at the end.
On top of the rice and lo mein noodles, I fill ¾ of the plate with stir-fried broccoli, mushrooms, and carrots flavored with nuoc nam or nam pla salty fish sauces from Vietnam and Thailand. The remaining ¼ of my plate, I fill with tangy orange chicken, which I consider dessert.
I do two rounds of this combination and then eat chocolate pudding for dessert.
Almost all Chinese buffets have these delicious items like the ones at Chow King in Marietta, Georgia by joint base Clay-Dobbins Air Force Base. Chow King has five large rooms, plenty of parking, and air conditioning, which add to the reasons for trying Chinese food.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Thursday, July 4, 2024
5-Spice Powder Shrimp Stir-Fry at Golden Star Chinese Restaurant in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
5-Spice Shrimp Stir-Fry at Golden Star Chinese Restaurant in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
I ordered shrimp vegetable stir-fry from Golden Star Chinese Restaurant in Salinas, California and knew from the wonderful aroma that the restaurant used 5-spice powder to make this dish. Golden Star combines 5-spice powder shrimp with thin, bite-size pieces of broccoli, cabbage, carrots, zucchini, and mushrooms to make this delicious “food as medicine” stir-fry.
5-spice powder appeals to the following Chinese flavor profile:
-sweet
-bitter
-sour
-salty
-savory
The typical 5-spice powder blend is made with the following ingredients. Several of these ingredients contain strong antioxidants that help remove free radicals that can cause cancer from the body:
-star anise
-cloves
-Chinese cinnamon
-Sichuan pepper
-fennel seed
These flavors blend with the usual Chinese seasonings of fresh garlic and fresh ginger that go in with the peanut oil to start a stir-fry. The shrimp is then added and cooked a few minutes and followed by the vegetables. The hot oil draws out moisture from the shrimp and vegetables. The moisture is hot and is perfect to cook seasonings without burning them.
At this point, many Chinese restaurants will add in a mixture of cornstarch and water to give the food a glowing sheen. Golden Star does not appear to do this, which I do not mind. The vegetables in the shrimp vegetable stir-fry I ate were bright and tender as they were.
The nutrient powerhouse in this dish at Golden Star was the broccoli with Vitamin C (an antioxidant), potassium, and vitamin B6 (nutrition information from the USDA – US Department of Agriculture website).
Cabbage has large amounts of vitamin C as well (nutrition information from the USDA – US Department of Agriculture website). Carrots contain large amounts of vitamin A (from the WebMD.com website). Mushrooms contain antioxidants (from the Medical News Today website).
What is nice about this highly nutritious 5-spice powder shrimp vegetable stir-fry is that it is very flavorful without being spicy hot. The Sichuan peppercorns in the 5-spice powder made the dish refreshing without the numbing heat that they are famous for.
People trying Chinese food for the first time might enjoy this shrimp vegetable stir-fry at Golden Star Chinese Restaurant in Salinas, California on South Main Street.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Tea Lunch at Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
Tea Lunch at Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
I first learned about tea lunch with bite-size dim sum dumplings made with seafood, pork, and vegetables in Hong Kong as a teenager before going on a 3-week study tour in the People’s Republic of China with the Detroit Youth Tour to China in 1979.
I loved it that the waiters in Hong Kong all spoke English and could tell me what the dim sum in the steam carts they rolled among the tables were. They also showed me how the billing worked by placing a red ink round mark on the bill with the number of dim sum taken of each kind. At the end of the meal, they would total up everything along with the tea and you would pay at the table. That was a first-class introduction to tea lunch with dim sum dumplings in Hong Kong.
Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California continues this type of positive intercultural food experience. The menu has a photo of each dim sum, which is sold 4 to a basket along with a description of what the dim sum is in English. The dim sum arrive in a waiter robot powered by a waiter in so-close-to-Silicon-Valley Salinas.
My daughter Florence Paget and I shared the following dim sum and jasmine tea:
-shrimp dumplings steamed in rice flour pastry shells that looked like small, squinched, clutch coin purses. The gooey rice flour pastry makes the shrimp inside retain its salty, sweet flavor, but the texture of the steamed pastry shell might put off people trying dim sum for the first time.
-deep-fried shrimp balls
-pork dumplings coated in creamy and spicy hot peanut and red pepper sauce from Sichuan
-Chinese donuts that resemble long Mexican churro donuts. The donuts come with a super sweet dipping sauce.
The dumplings at Dim Sum Inn are not bite-size like the ones in Hong Kong. It takes about two bites to eat the dumplings in this great deal restaurant in Salinas, California that has:
-a large parking lot
-a large banquet room
-easy to understand menus with photos
-vegetarian dim sum and lunch items
-easy access from Highway 101 and Highway 68
Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California merits a detour as the Michelin guidebooks say.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Vegetarian Singapore Rice Noodles at Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
Vegetarian Singapore Noodles at Dim Sum Inn in Salinas, California by Ruth Paget
I chose to order vegetarian Singapore rice noodles at Dim Sum Inn on North Main Street in Salinas, California to try a Hong Kong classic dish that probably refers to a light lunch you can eat in Singapore’s heat using exotic curry powder from India. (Singapore is not in China though most of its inhabitants have Chinese ancestry.)
Singapore rice noodles usually come with meat or shrimp, but I chose a lacto-ovo vegetarian version that came with scrambled eggs stir-fried into the mix.
I consulted www.recipetineats.com for a Singapore rice noodles recipe. According to this site, to stir-fry Singapore rice noodles, you heat sesame and peanut oil and add fresh ginger, fresh garlic, green onions, hot red chiile peppers, curry powder, and white pepper to the hot oil.
Once the oil is thoroughly impregnated with those flavors, you add bite-size pieces of the following vegetables:
-baby bok choy (similar to cabbage, but bulb shaped)
-broccoli
-celery
-carrots
-green peppers
-green beans
Once those vegetables are blazing hot you add in the eggs to stir-fry scramble them. The rice noodles come last to be stir-fried. Rice noodles just need to be hydrated in warm water and drained before adding them to the stir-fry.
This fragrant dish arrived hot on a waiter robot for a Silicon Valley touch at the table. The robot is operated by a waiter, which liberates the waiter’s arms to safely bring additional dishes.
The Singapore rice noodles are a lunch special at Dim Sum Inn, which come with egg flower soup or hot and sour soup. I drank a strongly perfumed jasmine tea with my meal for the perfect afternoon lunch.
Dim Sum Inn serves dim sum tea lunch daily in addition to lunch specials except Tuesdays when the restaurant is closed. Dim Sum Inn is in a large shopping center opposite Northridge Mall with lots of parking. The restaurant also has a large banquet room and an equally large menu for planning banquets and dim lunches for private parties in a friendly atmosphere.
By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Friday, April 14, 2023
Nutritious Chinese Vegetables by Ruth Paget
Nutritious Chinese Vegetables by Ruth Paget
The appearance of more and more Chinese vegetables in supermarkets prompted me to purchase The Chinese Kitchen Garden: Growing Techniques and Family Recipes from a Classic Cuisine by Wendy Kiang-Spray.
This cookbook lists 38 Chinese vegetables with photos, nutrients, best growing conditions, and a recipe for each vegetable. Three stand-out recipes for their ease of preparation and important nutrients follow:
1-Chinese Garlic Chives
These are eaten as vegetables in Chinese cuisine and not just as flavorings according to Kiang-Spray. The author writes that garlic chives have the following nutrients and properties:
-fiber
-vitamins A and C
-folates
-beta-carotene
-anti-bacterial properties
-anti-fungal properties
Kiang-Spray provides a quick recipe to make the best use of plentiful garlic chives – stir-fried flowered chives with roast duck. (You could easily substitute roast chicken in this recipe.)
The recipe calls for one roasted duck breast, oil, hoisin, chives, and ginger. You cut the duck breast into 2-inch sections and then cut these sections into thin julienne strips. Next you heat oil in a wok to stir fry the duck and chives. It takes 6 minutes to cooks this dish after minimal preparation work. Serve this economical dish with steamed rice.
2-Snow Peas and Sugar Snaps
Kiang-Spray lists the following nutrients and properties in snow peas and sugar snaps:
-protein
-fiber
-vitamins C and K
-folates
-iron
-antioxidants
-anti-inflammatory properties
Kiang-Spray provides another easy recipe full of nutrition called chow fun, which is made with 4 cups of vegetables, soy sauce, shaoxing wine, oyster sauce, peanut oil, and noodles.
To make chow fun, cut the noodles into ¾-inch strips. Stir fry the noodles in a wok and set aside. Add more oil to the wok and the 4 cups of sugar snaps and other hard vegetables. Cook the vegetables until tender and serve over the noodles.
3-Bitter Melon
Kiang-Spray lists the following properties in bitter melons:
-anti-viral properties
-antioxidants
The recipe the author provides features just the peeled skin of the bitter melon along with garlic, tofu, and fermented black beans. These ingredients are stir-fried together and served with steamed rice. The tofu is marinated beforehand in shaoxing rice wine, soy sauce, sesame oil, white pepper, and salt.
The complete recipes for these three dishes are in the cookbook along with others for the 38 Chinese vegetables that Kiang-Spray writes about. Each vegetable entry has a photo, growing notes, nutrients, and cultural background for some entries.
Gardeners might be interested in learning how to design a Chinese garden, grow vegetables using raised beds and container gardens, and Chinese gardening tools. Kiang-Spray also discusses compost and how it helps soil for growing produce.
I like the easy recipes in The Chinese Kitchen Garden: Growing Techniques and Family Recipes from a Classic Cuisine by Wendy Kiang-Spray as well as the information about how to grow a vegetable garden in a variety of soils and climactic conditions.
By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Wednesday, April 12, 2023
Chinese Hot Pot Meals by Ruth Paget
Chinese Hot Pot Meals by Ruth Paget
Jeff Mao writes that his family looks forward to weekly hot pot dinners like Americans do barbecue in The Essential Chinese Hot Pot Cookbook: Everything You Need to Enjoy and Entertain at Home.
Mao writes that hot pot cooking is usually done with two broths at the dining table with sauce and beverage tables set around the dining room table. You use spider strainers to dunk thinly sliced meats, greens, seafood, mushroom, noodles, and store-bought dumplings and fish balls in the broth to cook before dipping the food item in sauce to eat says Mao in his mini lesson on hot pot etiquette.
Mao continues to write that hot pot meals usually feature two cooking broths – one spicy and one mild. These broths can simmer in a cooking pot with compartments that look like the yin and yang symbol (photo in book).
Mao has 20 different recipes for broths, but the lists the following as the most popular:
1-Ma La Broth
The most popular nation-wide broth is from Chongqing in Central Sichuan Province of China. Ma La is a numbing hot and fiery red broth. This broth also contains ginger, fermented black beans, and scallions in the recipe Mao provides.
2-Mandarin Duck Broth
This broth is vegan and uses no duck. It is the usual accompanying broth to go with Ma La Broth. It is made with shiitake mushrooms, garlic, scallions, ginger, dried Chinese dates, dried goji beans, sugar, and salt Mao writes.
3-Tomato Broth
This is another mild and vegan broth.
4-Mandarin Lamb Broth
This broth is mild and is popular in Northern and Western China.
5-Yunnan Mushroom Broth
This is another mild broth with an earthy flavor Mao writes.
Mao lists 20 broths that come from around China. Two of these regional broths that appear easy and delicious include:
-Heilongjiang Broth
This broth comes from China’s northeast bordering Inner Mongolia and Russia. It is made with garlic, chives, scallions, ginger, dried shrimp, and goji berries.
-Hainan Chicken Broth
This broth comes from China’s southernmost point on the Island of Hainan. It is made with chicken, coconut water, coconut flakes, ginger, and scallions. Mao notes that the heat in the broths comes from dried chili peppers.
If numbing heat does not appeal to you, remove some of the dried chili peppers.
Mao provides recipes for 20 hot pot combination meals using basic broths along with vegetables only or with seafood and meat. An added plus is Mao’s recipe for making homemade Lo Mein noodles that only take 45 minutes to make with most of the time resting.
Finally, among Mao’s homemade sauces are some that you could use on American grilled foods as well:
-ginger-scallion oil
-Sichuan-chili oil
-chili-lime sauce
There is something for beginners to advanced cooks in The Essential Chinese Hot Pot: Everything You Need to Enjoy and Entertain at Home by Jeff Mao that makes it worth the purchase if you like Chinese food and would like a glimpse into Chinese home life.
By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Tuesday, August 2, 2022
Chinese Food in Smyrna, Georgia by Ruth Paget
Chinese Food in Smyrna, Georgia by Ruth Paget
When my husband Laurent and I go to Atlanta (Georgia), we love searching out neighborhood Chinese restaurants for plump, briny shrimp dishes.
One of the best meals we have eaten in Atlanta was at the The Peking Garden, which was built to look like a Chinese house with red doors in Smyrna, Georgia.
The Peking Garden is unassuming outside, but has some nice artwork inside - a bubbling and spotlessly clean aquarium by the entryway is a 5-foot porcelain vase, a wall-size bas relief sculpture painting of diners at a garden tea pavilion, paintings of feather-rich birds turning their heads sitting on top of bushes with flowers, and curling dragon sculptures rippling across the walls. I like Chinese art, so the effect of all the art on me was to make me serene and happy.
Many East Coast city people seek out high quality Chinese food. When we ate at Peking Garden, there were Latino families, Chinese families, African-American couples, policemen, and Laurent and me in the restaurant for a late Sunday lunch. I felt like a cross-section of Atlanta’s population was out for a delicious and pleasurable meal.
The Chinese are experts at cooking seafood and do wonders with Georgia’s incomparable plump shrimp. We chose a simple dish that really lets the shrimp shine – kung pao shrimp. Laurent chose the mild sauce for his order, and I ordered a spicy sauce for mine.
Kung pao shrimp’s main ingredients are shrimp, green peppers, onions, mushrooms, carrots, and peanuts. The sauce is what really makes this dish delicious. It is made with dark and light soy sauces, fresh ginger, Sichuan peppers (numbing yet delicious), vinegar, water, and a little sugar.
Kung pao shrimp fills you up when you eat it with an order of white rice for each person. It also clears your sinuses, so brink some tissue with you.
The kung pao shrimp was about $13 for each order. I think that price is very fair for the delicious and healthy meal we ate.
Peking Garden Restaurant
2526 S. Cobb Drive SE
Smyrna, Georgia
By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Yunnan China's Food as Medicine by Ruth Paget
Yunnan China’s Food as Medicine by Ruth Paget
The people of Yunnan China are reputed to be very healthy and long- lived writes Georgia Freedman in Cooking South of the Clouds: Recipes and Stories from China’s Yunnan Province.
This southwestern Chinese province extends from snowy, southern Tibet in the north to tropical borders in the south with Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam.
There are 24 minority groups in this province with distinct cooking styles that make use of some common ingredients including:
-mushrooms (there are 800 varieties in this region)
-Yunnan ham (this is similar to Spanish Serrano ham)
-pickled vegetables (especially pickled mustard greens, which Freedman provides a recipe for)
-spicy chili peppers -garlic
-Yak meat (beef is a substitute)
The following five dishes give a flavor for the types of recipes in Cooking South of the Clouds:
*mushrooms stir-fried with Thai chilies and garlic cloves that is seasoned with soy sauce
*fried rice with ham, potato cubes, and peas
*stir-fried beef with pickled mushroom greens and garlic chives
*fried beef with fresh lettuce (the beef here is served on a bed of lettuce leaves with chopped spring onions on top. Raw vegetables are usually found in Thai and Vietnamese cuisine not what you typically associate with Chinese food.)
*dried Mushroom Salad – dried mushrooms are rehydrated and drained and then seasoned with vinegar, light soy sauce, and chopped coriander.
The complete recipes are in Cooking South of the Clouds: Recipes and Stories from China’s Yunnan Province by Georgia Freedman.
People who like spicy foods might enjoy trying these recipes from one of China’s lesser-known provinces.
By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Chicago Dim Sum by Ruth Paget
Chicago Dim Sum by Ruth Paget
Eating Chinese dim sum was one of the money hacks I used to lead an urbane existence in Chicago on a budget as a young woman.
On Sunday mornings, my husband Laurent and I would leave our apartment in Marina City and walk up Michigan Avenue to Water Tower Place Shopping Center. Our destination was Rizzoli Bookstore. At Rizzoli’s we would buy Le Monde and Financial Times newspapers. I would sometimes buy art books or novels by Nadine Gordimer and Salman Rushdie.
We would check out upcoming movies on the way out and walk down to the Chinese restaurant with dim sum tea lunch, which is what I think is the Shanghai Terrace of the Peninsula Hotel now. I liked the circular booths in the restaurant.
We ordered fragrant jasmine tea to start as waitresses wheeled carts of steaming dim sum by our table. We pointed at many of them, and waitresses noted our choices with a Chinese stamp and wrote how many we chose.
There is a very good book for ordering dim sum called Dim Sum Field Guide by Carolyn Phillips. Her book is not a cookbook, but has line drawings of various dim sum, dim sum tea etiquette, Chinese characters for the various dim sum, alphabet spellings for Mandarin character pronunciations, and dim sum ingredients.
I used the cookbook Dim Sum and Other Chinese Street Food to find ingredients used in three dim sum “dumplings” that you can order in almost all dim sum restaurants:
*jiaozu – ravioli-like coin purse pasta made with minced pork, Napa cabbage, bok choy, and garlic chives
*Siu Mai – egg dough cups that are squeezed and twirled before steaming that are made with minced pork and shrimp, bamboo shoots, black mushrooms, and water chestnuts
*Har Gau – Crescent shaped dumplings stuffed with minced shrimp, water chestnuts, pork fat, and sherry
Leung’s cookbook shows hot to set up bamboo steamers in a wok over boiling water as well.
Pre-made dim sum would be welcome to many people who are working at home, because you would just have to steam them or heat them up in an oven. H Mart in California just might have all you need to set up dim sum tea lunches from tea to chopsticks.
By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
Wine and Chinese Food Pairings Suggested by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget
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Monday, December 24, 2018
Egg Foo Yuck by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget
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