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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Celebrating Chinese New Year

yee sang and prosperity dish of oysters and fatt choy


Thank you for all the well wishes! Hope everyone had a wonderful long weekend of feasting at home, restaurants, friends and relatives' homes. I was down in Singapore for the festive celebrations.

lap mei fan with crispy crusts, tender waxed meats and aromatic fried garlic

It was a quick weekend trip that kicked off with lunch at an old family favourite - Hua Ting at Orchard Boulevard Hotel, just off Orchard Road. Here we ordered traditional must-haves a.k.a. yee sang, lap mei fan (waxed meat rice) and nien gao.

prawns fried with lily bulbs and asparagus

I had fun noting down how different things are done in Singapore vs Kuala Lumpur eateries. Here you're given seperate chopsticks (longer ones) to help you toss the colourful vegetable strands for yee sang. It means a longer arm stretch but don't worry, it still gets messy as we must The waitresses are eloquent when they are prepping yee sang for you to toss - every addition of an ingredient is followed by a prosperity or good luck saying.

the gorgeous sunflower agar agar made by my auntie

Even the lap mei fan is different here - the waxed meats are tender when bitten into (no hard lap yoke or waxed meats) and they seperate the crusts from the fluffy rice. I didn't know that bit or else I would have held out for the crispy burnt crusts - one of my favourite bits of lap mei fan. They also add fried garlic into the rice, giving an added fragrance and aroma. We also had a prawns fried with lily bulbs - no need to peel ones since we were all lazy to get the fingers dirty and a Chinese prosperity dish, fresh yuba or tofu skin stuffed with an assortment of goodies such as oysters or hoe see, fatt choy and Chinese mushrooms. Dessert was nien gao - they make a pumpkin version that tasted weird, probably because I am more used to the traditional versions which I liked fried with a thin piece of yam.

cookies galore - love letters, kuih bangkit, pineapple tarts and curly bamboo with cherry blossoms

No Chinese New Year celebration will be complete without cookies and we have an assortment of nibbles that you can't resist - homemade pineapple tarts, peanut cookies that melt in the mouth when you pop one, crispy keropok and arrowroot crisps made by my auntie, large pineapple balls and crispy shrimp rolls from Le Cafe in Singapore, kuih bangkit from Bengawan Solo, milky tasting dragon biscuits from the sisters who run the wantan noodles stall in Jalan Batai, almond rounds, love letters from Tong Kee and etc!

yellow skinned dragon fruit to refresh the soul

To balance off all the unhealthy feasting, we did attempt some healthy measures like eating loads of fruits - juicy Tasmanian cherries and these gorgeous yellow skinned dragon fruits that yielded refreshing flesh that was not cloyingly sweet compared to the usual pink skinned dragon fruits. Traditionally the first day saw us cooking "chai", an assortment of vegetables to my mother's instructions. Even the fried beehoon was pseudo vegetarian with the luxe addiction of abalone (we didn't have any eggs!). All this was paired with rendang tok and rendang Perak I bought from my favourite Shah Alam lady. Simply yummy stuff that we stuffed ourselves silly. I reckon the kids (my twin nephews and niece) had the most fun, as they got to eat everything in sight (cookies, Nespresso chocolates, ice cream, fruits and etc!). More pictures are found in my Flickr set.

So how was your celebrations? Anything eventful???

18 comments:

  1. Looks like a really yummy celebration! And so muhibbah too with the addition of rendang...
    :)

    Gong xi fatt chai to you Boo!

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  2. great looking food! the shrimp dish looks so heavenly!

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  3. Wow, that sunflower agar-agar is gorgeous! Your auntie has some serious skills!

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  4. Happy Chinese New Year to you & your family. And have a wonderful holiday.

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  5. OMG everything looked so good here! I love lap mei fan!!! And the kuih kapit... oh dear!!! Happy CNY to you boo!

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  6. GOng Xi Fa Chai! Omg, that sunflower agar looks amazing!!! How I wish I am in Malaysia now eating to my hearts content. Instead, I had to cook it for myself and friends... sigh.....

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  7. Happy and Prosperous CNY to you!

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  8. I have been pigging out on junks, and cutting down my caffeine.
    Most meals at the wrong-est hours, and most spent at kopitiams.

    This IS CNY ...after all. :)

    Enjoy what's remaining of it, Boo.

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  9. I spy Pineapple tarts with lots and lots of fillings. 'Ong' sure 'lai' to you one this year. You better be careful. I'm coming to rob your home. Tee hee.

    Gong Xi Fa Cai.

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  10. wao.. 1st time visiting your blog, Im so so impressed with that sunflower agar agar! And all other cny food you have there. The quality of the pictures look great too!! SLR cam eh? great stuff. im new in blogging, do drop by to support ok!!

    www.mysavourylife.com

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  11. the sun flower definitely caught my attention!!

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  12. Kung Hei Fat Choi! I've missed Taiwan, and hope to get back there someday. If I would be the one who will decide, I'm already there now. The photos makes me crave for more food, though I just finished my dinner. - used le creuset

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  13. Gong Xi Fa Cai!!! I've gained at least 2kg during CNY... time to cut down my food intake, eat more green + fruits.. and exercise more often. Otherwise I have to change my set of pants :P

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  14. ohh looks yummy!

    oh yeah, china treasures also utters the good luck phrases during the yee sang ceremony..

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  15. eh, here oso got use long chopsticks to lou sang wat....
    i thought lou sang was unique to msia? singies copied liao ah? chis! the lap mei fan looks yummmmy

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  16. Hi, my name is Ivan from Go Communications, a PR agency, we gone through your blog and your review of some food you mentioned in your blog. Can you provide us your contact number and e-mail address? Hopefully we might have some tie up in future for featuring of our client stories. You can reply me via my e-mail address: ivan_chung0214@hotmail.com

    best regards,
    Ivan

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  17. hello there,

    i have been a reader for sometime and some of your reviews have resulted in some gluttony outings for me and my friends, TQ

    if it's ok with you, i would like to use some of your CNY food pics for my doggie blog. appreciate your response Before i dare use them BOL...

    here's the link to my blog

    http://luvbeingachihuahua.blogspot.com/

    i'd wanted to explain 'yee sang' and show pics of the food in my next post

    i will respectfully NOT use them if you're not comfortable

    thanks and chikisses
    lilian

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  18. and of course i would link it back to your blog

    chikisses

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