Tag Archives: chinese

Friday Splurge – Chinese

As I mentioned before, the other dishes that we ordered on my latest visit to Satay Inn were Chinese, or I suppose Australian-Chinese. First came the sizzling chilli lamb, that came on a hotplate. It wasn’t overly hot, and although tasty, not a dish that really got me excited.

Sizzling Chilli Lamb

That wasn’t the case with the salt and pepper calamari, which was really wonderful. I’d tasted their salt and pepper eggplant before, and the calamari was cooked in the same way – lightly battered, perfectly spiced, with a little crunch. My friends were quite impressed and the whole dish was devoured in less than ten minutes.

Salt and pepper calamari

Favourite Feeds – Yum Cha

Living in Sydney, one starts to take good, cheap yum cha for granted. Yum cha is the Cantonese ceremony of taking tea and snacks while gathering with family. In Sydney it’s no longer only Chinese families that gather for yum cha but literally everyone, judging by the clientele of a typical Chinatown establishment on a Sunday.

There isn’t any ceremony when I go though. My parents not actually liking this style of food my visits are usually with friends or work colleagues, and these visits most resemble feeding frenzies as we greedily sample plate after plate off the passing carts until everyone’s hunger is sated. And my favourites are the more traditional steamed dumplings and rice noodle dishes, especially those that contain whole prawns, like the one below. It is simply prawns, wrapped in delicate sheets of rice noodles, finished with soy and peanut oil.

Prawn in rice noodle

Yum Cha – Part 1

Haven’t been to yum cha in ages, so I was quite excited to go to Zilver for my fix. Yum cha, the Cantonese art of taking tea and assorted morsels, has really been embraced by Sydneysiders of all backgrounds. I was really surprised by the variety of clientele – Western and Asian families, couples, girly catch-ups, even what looked like the beginnings of an Aussie boys bucks day out.

This dish, har gow, is a staple. It’s a steamed dumpling of prawn wrapped in rice paper. Simplicity itself.

Har gow