Showing posts with label baked pork chop rice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baked pork chop rice. Show all posts

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Hong Kong Sampler (Part 2)

A nice and cozy restaurant that the fennel bulbs would almost always come back to whenever they come to Hong Kong is Delicious Kitchen along Cleveland Street in Causeway Bay. It is located in a rather quiet neighborhood, lined with apartment buildings and some speciality boutiques. Delicious Kitchen serves Chinese food, and the menu is quite an eclectic mix of entrees, soups, and noodles. The cuisine is generally Chinese, but not restricted to Cantonese, as some entrees are Shanghai-style and Sichuan-style dishes. 


Condiments are pickled cabbage which is a bit on the sweet side. They are served right after the orders have been taken. The dressing is most probably a mixture of vinegar, sugar, and sesame seeds. Acidity and sweetness are the dominant themes in this condiment, which can become quite addictive especially when one is already hungry!


A speciality of the restaurant is crispy fried dumplings. A majority of take-away orders for the restaurant are actually these fried dumplings, which are served with a sweet-spicy red dipping sauce. The wrappers are crisp and light and the filling is a very delicious mix of minced pork and some vegetables (scallions definitely included). Locals usually eat these with a big bowl of noodle soup or vegetable rice (tsoi fan) on the side. 


The dish pictured above shows a plate of Nanking-style beef and vegetable rice. The beef has been softened but not to the point of becoming mushy. This preparation is typical of Nanking cuisine, where softening of meats is done quite often in a lot of dishes. The taste is rich and suggestive of a rich beef broth for the sauce. 

The vegetable rice is also very flavorful, as the bok choy imparts a buttery flavor to the rice due to the steaming process. It is a very tasty bowl of rice indeed. 


Another delicious treat is the Sichuan-style Chili Prawns. The prawns have been consistently of the same size, which is quite big and a bit tricky to eat with a pair of chopsticks as they do tend to slide off. The sauce is a delicious mix of chili and scallions, amongst other spices, and some peppers; its texture markedly made silky by the addition of starch. The taste is not overwhelmingly spicy, but just enough to tease the palate. A hint of sweetness further enhances the cravings. 


Treats never seem to end at Delicious Kitchen. Another sumptuous dish is the beef tendons cooked on an earthen dish. The sauce is made from the juices of the tendons and perhaps the addition of stock. It is a bit sticky due to the consistency of the tendons' juices. Ginger is the dominant flavor in the sauce, though it does not overpower the dish. 


Last but not the least is the restaurant's signature dish, pork chop rice. The picture above shows only some of the pork chop. The rice is exactly the same as the bowl of vegetable rice shown earlier. The meat is tender and tasty, and the breading is crunchy. The flavor is a blend of sweet and salty, somewhat like barbecue. This is comfort food at its best, and is by all means, the best-selling dish DelIcious Kitchen has to offer. 

Prices are likewise affordable by Hong Kong standards. A meal for four hungry people sharing some viands would cost anywhere between HK$350 - HK$500. And this ends the fennel bulb's Hong Kong sampler of restaurants, at least for the time being. 





Sunday, January 30, 2011

Hong Kong Sampler (Part 1)



Hong Kong is just less than two hours away from Manila by plane and is very much a global and cosmopolitan city. It is not only a commercial hub, but it is also a centre for culture and the arts. And obviously one aspect of culture is gastronomy. A lot of people would agree that the best Chinese cuisine comes from Hong Kong. Hong Kong cuisine is just the same as Cantonese cuisine, which is Chinese haute cuisine, as it were. It is, in fact, the most popular of the Chinese cuisines that it often becomes equated with the notion of Chinese food, when there still is a plethora of regional cuisines that can be had in the vastness of the Middle Kingdom. 


The fennelbulbs' experience of Hong Kong is honestly, quite limited, being tourists as they were. But they would certainly love to share and recommend some great eats to experience fine local fare that would be quite a waste to miss. 


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First in the list is Tai Hing Restaurant which has several branches in Hong Kong. The fennelbulbs' tried the branch in Causeway Bay along Jaffe Road. Tai Hing is known for their roasts - be it roast duck, roasted suckling pig, and mouth-watering sausages. Tai Hing is also known for their baked rice toppings - another Cantonese speciality which incorporates baking, a predominantly Western influence. Tai Hing basically is a very affordable eatery serving honest-to-goodness delicious local food. 




The roast goose and duck is served over a bowl of Jasmine rice with generous servings of bok choy and kai lan vegetables on the side. The roasts are crunchy on the skin and the meat is tender and the blend of the meat's juices and the oil is very satiating to the palate. It is comfort food at its finest. 




The baked rice toppings are also a delectable treat. On the picture is a hefty plate of baked wasabi pork chop. The wasabi is incorporated into the cream sauce which is poured over the pork and the rice and then baked. The texture is gratinated and very filling. The dish is made more delicious with the addition of mushrooms. 

The price at Tai Hing is by all means affordable. Roast toppings fall under the HK$35 - HK$45 range, while the baked rice toppings fall under the HK$40 - HK$50 range. Also a variety of Western style breakfasts can be had till 10 or 11 in the morning and various equally tempting snacks such as the one below: 


Baked potatoes with a topping of pork floss and mayonnaise and a garnish of raisin which provides a breather from the richness of the two previous ingredients mentioned. 

All in all, Tai Hing probably is the kind of restaurant you may want to go to after a tiring day of shopping and sightseeing in one of Asia's premier cities. 

(...to be continued)