• 氣炸茄子 | Spicy Grilled Eggplant

    I went to Chinese BBQ restaurant, I had spicy grilled eggplant for the first time. I don’t know how to cook many eggplant dishes as they usually taste mushy, but as my chopsticks kept scoping out that grilled eggplant, I knew I have to learn how to make it and also, diversify my veggie cooking.. and show others who don’t like eggplant that it could be tasty, if cooked right!

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  • 葱油拌麵 | Cold Noodles with Scallion Oil

    Honestly I have never had this dish back home in China, I think this is a northern specialty? There are different ways to cook cold noodles, one of the most famous is sesame noodles, the subtle flavor of sesame and the numbing spice make you sweat but at the same time hard to stop slurping noodles down your throat. Similarly, today’s cold noodle with scallion oil is another irresistible dish, especially in the hot summer!

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  • 土豆燜鷄 | Braised Chicken with Potato

    Different areas might cook the combination of potatoes and chicken in different ways. In Korea, this could be spicy chicken stew. In China, people from Xinjiang cook them as Big Pan Chicken (大盤鷄), southern Chinese / Cantonese cook them with scallion, ginger, garlic, areas that can take spice would add jalapenos like this recipe. As I try to decrease red meat intake and cook as many chicken and fish as possible, I am also trying new recipes for chicken. As a chicken and potato lover, I am sharing this recipe as a new addition to my “menu”!

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  • 3D Latte Art (Progress Journey~)

    Not sure if the thought to make and improve 3D latte art is whimsical or just long-planned and waited till we have an expresso machine, but documenting how my partner progressed on 3D art journey.

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  • 虎皮鳳爪 | Dim Sum Style Chicken Feet / Phoenix Claw

    There are many ways we eat chicken feet in restaurant. One of the two main ways dim sum restaurants serve is with wrinkly skin / “tiger skin” pattern. The wrinkly skin is separated from the bone and meat, easier to chew off and much softer, catering to main eaters of dim sum — older generation’s need for soft food. Traditional method to make the wrinkles / “tiger skin” pattern is to deep fry in hot oil to extract moist and create air in between skin and bone, but this method could be dangerous as hot oil might splash. Air-fryer provides a simpler option allowing to re-create this traditional way to cook chicken feet!

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  • 醬油雞 | Soy Sauce Chicken

    This is a second soy sauce chicken recipe I tried. The first one boils chicken in hot water first, while this one directly cook chicken in sauce, needs some time to pour sauce over skin to color and the chicken is much more tender.

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  • Air-Fried Miso Honey Glazed Seabass

    Miso honey glazed seabass / cod is common as appetizer in Japanese restaurants / Izakaya, it is easier and quicker to make than I thought. I am very sensitive to the fishy taste, but miso and honey under high temperature covers that taste really well. It air-fry longer, the meat even tastes like crab / scallop! After a few trials and errors, finally found the perfect time and temperature (for my air fryer? and hopefully yours too!)

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  • 香煎帶魚 | Pan-fried Belt Fish

    my dad’s best dishes as he always can make it not fishy and crispy. The process is not as complicated, but personally I like the thin belt fish chunks that are crisp rather than the thick belt fish chunks that are still moist. Cooking simply-marinated belt fish for a longer time over low heat will help!

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  • 蒜蓉粉絲蒸鮑魚 | Steamed Abalone with Vermicelli and Garlic

    Cantonese likes the origin flavor of foods, especially seafood, and this dish is another classic example. When I was back home, I used to go to local market with mom and she would choose the large, live abalone; we went home, made simple sauce with soy sauce, oyster sauce, cooking wine and sugar. Along with garlic we poured the sauce over abalone on top of vermicelli. Within a short time, steamed abalone with garlic and vermicelli would be ready! Every bite of that tastes like ocean.

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  • 三杯鴨 | Three Cup Duck

    Last weekend I ordered takeout from China Bee restaurant in San Mateo, one of the dishes was Three Cup Chicken. The slight kick of spice and thai basil, brought out the chicken flavor and it was DELICIOUS. I knew this dish but I never made it before; I thought it was complicated but it turns out to be quite simple and straightforward — the three cups literally just mean three main most commonly-used sauces: dark soy sauce, soy sauce and rice / cooking wine or water.

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