Party Posts · Recipe Roundup

Catching Up- Lunar New Year Party

I had good intentions to write this post for the last couple days and then had very bad news at work and a couple of migraines. I’m feeling better today, luckily.

Our Lunar New Year Party was lots of fun! We had planned to watch Crazy Rich Asians, but I went a little large on the guest list and we just don’t have comfy seating for 13 people! So we’ll have to watch it another time.

We had a Dim Sum theme this year and didn’t have a big main dish, just a bunch of smaller ones. But there was still lots of food. I went to the Asian market and got huge bags of produce, which we are now eating in everything to use up. I foisted some off on my in-laws today though, so hopefully we can finish off the rest of it.

We did have some store bought things this year. I’ve given up trying to make egg rolls or spring rolls. They just aren’t worth the work for me and never seem to come out right. We bought veggie spring rolls from Costco this time.

I also used these rice packet things from the Asian market. We get these for Dim Sum, but I can’t eat them because of the pork sausage that is in them. These ones just had dried shrimp, so I picked them up. They have some lovely spices too and were nice for lunch. They are wrapped in tea leaves, so you only eat the inside.

Another Dim Sum favorite of mine is the steamed Chinese Broccoli, or Gai Lan. It’s very much like broccoli in taste, but has leaves instead of the the florets. I’m sure I was the only one to eat it, but it made my heart happy. 🙂

I did make two kinds of bao, although these are just the pork ones. I had 5 spice chicken bao as well, but they got eaten up quick. These were both made up recipes, although I did use a recipe for the Bao dough from The Food of China. I think I posted the recipe last year in the party post, but can repost it if you’d like it.

I roasted a whole pork loin in thinned out char sai sauce (Chinese bbq sauce) and chopped that for the pork filling. The chicken filling was ground chicken, sauces, bamboo shoots, garlic, and scallions in them.

We had pork shao mai, which was from the Husband’s family recipe book! According to the Husband, his mom and dad may have collected the recipes from his paternal grandma. Most of them are typed, but there are a couple that are handwritten. The shao mai were eaten before I started taking pictures.

The crab stuffed mushrooms were also from the book and were delicious! They called for a “creamy white sauce” so I made one to go in it. Fake crab was used. We’ve discovered that we don’t always need real crab. It was exciting to use it and there will certainly be some dinners from there as well.

The lettuce wraps look a little sad in this picture, as we had eaten most of them. These were made with ground turkey. These were my own recipe, meaning I threw a bunch of sauces and sauce ingredients at them until the filling tasted good. 🙂

A new recipe, that I may not make again, was fried pork ribs. I texted the Husband from the Asian Market and he was very enthusiastic. I was, of course, thinking I didn’t have enough pork and would need one more dish. I was told they were good, but only fried half of them. They spit at me a lot and burned me.

The Husband baked the rest of them for dinner during the week and said that worked too. They marinated for a long time in a 5 spice based marinade and were then battered and fried, or baked. These were from the Food of China.

We had Clementine Cakes from The Woks of Life. https://thewoksoflife.com/2014/10/clementine-cakes/

I highly recommend this website, as it has so many recipes and information on it for all your Asian culinary dreams. Someday I’ll get brave enough to make the coconut buns!

Back to the cakes though. I used blood oranges. The clementines were hard to find and I didn’t want to use them. I also didn’t glaze them and intended to make a frosting, but they didn’t get frosted. I did use super cute silicone cupcake molds though that had fortunes on the bottom!

Traditional almond cookies were also served. I used the recipe from my Food of China book and didn’t have blanched almonds and just left them off the tops. These didn’t brown, except on the bottoms, so be aware of that if you make them.

I think that was all the food! We didn’t manage a picture of the whole table, but I do have a picture of a table to share!

I found this Lego version of a Lunar New Year Dinner on Amazon really randomly while looking for the lucky coins we gave as favors this year. It was only available in Malaysia, but was somehow being sold by a toy company in New Jersey. I had no idea of any of this, the Husband found out after I gave it to him. 🙂 One of his superpowers is research. It was perfect for us though! It even has the Chinese broccoli!!

Here’s a close up of the table.

We also have started collecting the Lego zodiac sets, so here’s last year’s dog and this year’s pig.

I’ll leave you with some other pretty pictures of our decor. I nerded out a little and made the bookshelf display Firefly themed. I couldn’t help myself!

It was very fun and next year we’ll have to do some experimenting with how we want to run it. I made all of the fillings ahead of time, which helped, but I still need to rethink how we do this party. I end up making everyone feel awkward, I think, while I’m racing around trying to finish things. When I suggested a potluck idea to the Husband, he said “I’m surprised you can even say those words!” Ha.. Ha.. Ha..

I’ll let you know how it turns out. 🙂 Have a great weekend!

Party Posts

Chinese New Year Party Post

We had a lovely smaller Chinese New Year party this year. This party we tend to keep to around 6-8 people. It gets too crazy otherwise. I’m still occasionally weird about asking people to make or bring foods.

Fancy even got into the spirit, since it’s the Year of the Dog. I made her a little bow for her party harness. This picture was taken after the party. She was so sleepy!

Fancy got some beef scraps and a large amount of carrots. She my have even gotten her pets and belly rubs quota filled, although she would tell you otherwise.

I made a pretty table runner for us, but forgot to take a picture of the table. It currently is waiting to be washed, as it got some cheesecake on it. Whoops! You can see a little of it in the featured picture.

We completely forgot to give out red packets! Traditionally they contain money, but we filled them with other things as well. I may mail them out, or just use it as an excuse to go see people again. 🙂

Now, on to the food!

We had a beef hotpot for the main. We had a bunch of veggies out and then cooked the meat in the broth. I added keffir lime leaves, lemon grass, garlic powder, white pepper, and soy sauce to chicken broth. The meat was marinated with sesame oil, soy sauce, and sherry.

I was told by a reliable source that cheesecake is a perfectly acceptable dessert, if you don’t want to make traditional dishes, so I ran with it. I made a blood orange cheesecake with a blood orange caramel sauce. I also attempted to candy blood orange slices, but it didn’t go as well as planned. I think my water/sugar ratio was off. The recipe is from New River Groves. http://newrivergroves.com/orange-cheesecake-recipe

I have one bone to pick with this recipe. It had me cook it in a water bath and then immediately put it in the fridge to cool. It wasn’t supposed to crack, but take a look….

This was maybe an hour after putting it in the fridge! I was incredibly upset and annoyed. The Husband was probably shocked at the unladylike language that was issuing from the kitchen. I covered up the crack with orange slices and poured caramel over it and it still tasted good. I would recommend leaving it to cool in the oven for at least an hour before pulling it. That’s what I’ve done in the past.

I used the Chicken and Shrimp Jaozi from the Dumplings book from the kit we got for Christmas. We ate the dumplings too fast for me to remember a picture. Here is a picture of when you forget that the flames from a gas stove may, in fact, catch things on fire…

We’ll stick to using our rice cooker as a steamer thank you! The dumplings were delicious though and we have a bunch of them in the freezer. I was originally concerned that they wouldn’t be as flavorful as I would want them to be, but it turned out the recipe was right!

I was brave and made spring rolls! We made them veggie, as the recipe called for pork, but I wanted to be able to eat them. They were  little dark, but were still good. These were from The Food Of China by Deh-Ta Hsiung and Nina Simonds. 

We also used the same book to make char sui bao, or barbecued steamed buns. We had pork and chicken. These are the chicken buns.

I had help putting them together and we marked the pork ones with red food coloring. Technically, that would mean they were sweet in a restaurant, bur my other choice was blue and that would be weird…The pork ones were gone in a flash! I ate the rest of the chicken buns yesterday. They were delicious!

To make the pork for it, I combined soy sauce, char sui bbq sauce, white pepper, and garlic powder. I poured it over 4 pork loin chops and turned them until they were coated and then baked them at 350 for maybe half an hour? Then I chopped them up very small and stuck the pieces back in the cooking dish.

I used this recipe for the chicken buns: http://www.taste.com.au/recipes/steamed-chinese-five-spice-chicken-buns/0a40c00f-7750-4e31-935a-c5bd156f44b7

Mmm… they were good!

So I had a request to share the steamed bun dough recipe as well. It’s kind of a weird dough. It raises for 3 hours and you knead baking powder into it right before you form them, which activates and make it very fluffy. I used The Food of China’s basic yeast dough. I will write it out, as I’m not sure where to find the book. No copyright infringement intended.

“Ingredients:

3 T sugar

1 C warm water

1 1/2 tsp dried yeast

3 1/4 C flour

2 T oil- I used half canola/ half sesame

1 1/2 tsp baking powder

“Makes 1 quantity” – roughly 24 small, 12 large

Method:

Dissolve the sugar in the water, then add the yeast. Stir lightly, then set aside for 10 minutes, or until foamy.

Sift the flour into a bowl and add the yeast mixture and the oil. Using a wooden spoon, mix the ingredients into a rough dough. Turn the mixture out unto a lightly floured surface, and knead for 8-10 minutes, or until the dough is smooth and elastic. If it is very sticky, knead in a little more flour-the dough should be soft. Lightly grease a bowl with the oil. Place dough in the bowl and turn it so that all the sides of the dough are coated. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth and set aside to rise in a draft-free place for 3 hours.

Uncover the dough, punch it down, and turn it out onto a lightly floured surface. If you are not using the dough right away, cover it with plastic wrap and refrigerate.

When you are ready to use the dough, flatten it and make a well in the center. Place the baking powder in the well and gather up the edges to enclose the baking powder. Pinch the edges together to seal. Lightly knead the dough for several minutes to evenly incorporate the baking powder, which will activate immediately.

Use the prepared dough as directed.”

So if you follow it, you too can have delicious fresh bao! Let me know how it works if you try it! Happy Lunar New Year!