Thursday, December 30, 2010

full steam ahead


One of my favourite Chinese food utensils is the bamboo steamer. We bought one ages ago and have rarely ever used it. Luckily for me J kept it in the move. I busted it out for my next 2 recipes from Kylie: steamed fish fillets with ginger and spring onions and steamed silken tofu with ginger and spring onions. Both were very similar in technique and had the signature Chinese flavours of ginger, spring onions and soy sauce. Both were light and tasty but the fish was definitely an eye opener for me more than the tofu. The tofu was a bit plain.

I live in the burbs so finding a good fishmonger can be hard and then you throw in the Sustainable Seafood Guide and you choice of fish becomes even more limited (for the better of course). The local Chinese supermarket has an excellent fish counter but I have a thing about live fish. When I was in grade 7 my parents took us back to Hong Kong to visit the Motherland. My grandma hustled my sister and I out to the Chinese market to buy the freshest of ingredients. Amongst the squawks of the chickens and the yelling of the stall vendors were rows of fish all iced. I believe the vendor meant to show us how fresh everything was but instead he traumatized me. He grabbed a live one, sliced it in half as if it was paper and splayed the fish out for all to see. The organs were still moving. I have avoided fish counters at Chinese supermarkets for that reason, although I doubt that behaviour would be permissible in a suburban supermarket. But with my new attempt at cooking I needed to overcome that. But this recipe was not the one to alleviate my fears. I ordered a nice little fish no head this time and headed home. The recipe was easy since it was filets. Hey i'm working in baby steps people.

Kylie's book is filled with amazing how-to images and it's good for a home cook. The instructions are simple and easy to follow. It helps that that book is larger than most cookbooks and the paper is amazing. This is how all cookbooks should be made.

There is one major thing I learned from this recipe: the heating of oil. After everything is cooked you plate your food then heat peanut oil in a small frying pan until moderately hot. Then you pour it over the fish releasing the flavours and giving it an extra punch. It was a revelation for me and when I mentioned it to my Dad he shrugged and said that's how it's always been done. Now I happily carry this tip in my heart as a sign that I'm finding my way to my inner Chinese cook. A for the fish, a B for the tofu.

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