I Cooked Dim Sum in My Apartment Kitchen

Culinary achievements, dim sum edition. Dim sum is so labor intensive, but readily available around these parts that it’s rarely cooked at home. But when I saw Classic Deem Sum in a used bookstore in Atwater Village I knew it was coming home with me.

In San Francisco, Yank Sing is practically a dim sum institution. My sister-in-law’s mom actually used to work at Yank Sing, and she sends over batches of red bean-filled sesame balls (jeen deuih) so crispy fresh and perfectly spherical that they don’t look like they could have come from a home kitchen. I was certainly inspired by her homemade treats when I decided I’d make something from this book. Classic Deem Sum was printed in 1985, and has recipes for just about every dim sum basic–from spring rolls to taro dumplings, pillows of beef wrapped in rice noodles and crispy turnip cakes–along with hand-drawn illustrations showing how to pleat perfect shrimp dumplings and squeeze fish paste balls out of your fist. I love everything about this book, right down to the Chinese romanization that’s intended for Cantonese speakers.

It being dim sum (or deem sum!), it’s hard to find a recipe in the book that doesn’t require making your own sheets of rice noodles or pounding out your own fish paste or firing up a pot of hot oil for deep-frying. I’ve got a few recipes marked for when I’m feeling more ambitious but in the meantime I started with stuffed tofu. The recipe is actually terribly easy. It took me about 45 minutes, start to finish, and I was just putzing around the kitchen.

Even better, this dish didn’t require anything beyond Cantonese kitchen basics to bring it to life. There was no need to haul myself over to SGV to pick up any new ingredients. I did swap out the suggested ground pork for ground turkey and left off shrimp and cilantro, but that’s all your call. It’d probably also taste great with some chopped up water chestnuts in there, too. I will say: of all the ingredients in the stuffing, the tapioca starch is probably the most important. It lightens the meat and smooths out the texture of the stuffing so it’s not like eating a meatball inside a stewed tofu triangle. It’s more like a stuffed tofu pillow. 

We’re talking serious Chinese comfort food here. Make a pot of rice, a plate of veggies and there’s dinner for two.

Stuffed Bean Curd (Yeung Daufoo), adapted from Classic Deem Sum by Henry Chan, Yukiko Haydock and Bob Haydock

Stuffing Ingredients:

4 fresh shiitake mushrooms, finely chopped

4 ounces ground turkey, minced

half of a beaten egg

2 tbsp minced green onion, green and white parts

½ tsp finely minced ginger

2 tsp tapioca starch

2 tsp Shao Hsing wine

1 ½ tsp soy sauce

1 tsp sugar

1/8 tsp salt

½ tsp sesame oil

a dash of ground white pepper

1 tbsp chicken stock

1 tbsp oyster sauce

Bean Curd Sauce Ingredients:

1 ½ tbsp oyster sauce
1 ½ tsp sugar
¼ tsp salt
a dash of white pepper
½ tsp sesame oil
¾ cup chicken stock
1 tbsp Shao Hsing wine
2 tsp cornstarch mixed with 1 tbsp water

1 container firm tofu

cornstarch for dusting
oil for pan-frying

1) Mix together stuffing ingredients thoroughly until pasty. Refrigerate until ready to stuff.

2) Prepare bean curd sauce. Combine all sauce ingredients except for cornstarch/water mixture) in a small saucepan. Bring to a simmer. Once it’s bubbling, stir in cornstarch/water mixture. Simmer while stirring until sauce thickens. Remove from heat and set aside.

3) Drain liquid from tofu container and slice tofu block in quarters, and then cut each quarter diagonally into triangles.

4) Cradle a triangle in your palm and scoop out a pocket (about 1 tbsp) along the diagonal angle.

5) Dust each cavity and cut surface with cornstarch.

6) Fill each cavity with stuffing mixture, mounding it up to cover the cut surface.

7) Heat a large heavy flat-bottomed frying pan to hot and coat the bottom with ¼ cup of oil.

8) Place the triangles, filling side down, in the pan and fry at medium heat.

9) When filled edge is brown (about 4 minutes) turn the triangles onto their flat sides and pan fry.

10) Pour bean curd sauce over the tofu. Cover and simmer for 8-10 minutes.

Food Dreams: Cafe Dulce’s Green Tea Donut

Leave it to me to make multiple trips to Cafe Dulce in Little Tokyo over the last few weeks and never take a photo of my favorite item of theirs, the green tea donut.

Their donut reminds me of the deep fried puff of cloud otherwise known as the malasada from Honolulu’s famed Leonard’s, which is to say it reminds me of deep fried dough perfection. Cafe Dulce’s is a touch yeastier though, and the green tea flavor is punchy, strong, closer to unsweetened matcha than a green tea Kit Kat in sweetness. And then there’s the custard filling…

This Fruity Pebbles Donut Hole, now, is not bad. It is a little gimmicky, a twist on Christina Tosi’s haute kitsch. And it’s fine. I like it just fine. It sure is cute. But don’t skip the green tea donut…

Movie Bites: The Fifth Element

Lately, as I’ve been looking to turn over a new leaf and stop making lunches out of the pile of m&m’s in front of me, I’ve thought often of this scene from The Fifth Element. I have a way of falling into my work and whatever deadline is in front of me so that during my work week especially, it’s a real drag to figure out what to eat three times a day. I’m fully aware that I’m extremely privileged to have these kinds of problems. Still, I’m gonna admit that when I’m swimming in browser tabs, pages of notes and interview transcripts on my desk, I wonder to myself: Where’s my bottle of microwaveable stewed chicken pills? 

Teem Gok – A Chinese New Year Dessert

January and February were filled with so much revelry. Kevin and I hosted our first Lunar New Year dinner this year and it was a wonderful comedy of errors (well worth its own story someday). I made teem gok–that’s my best romanized Cantonese for deep fried sweet wonton–to supplement store bought desserts supplied by Kevin’s mom. I’ve seen teem gok recipes on the internet that call for dates and other dried fruit as filling, but my family has always stuck by a recipe that’s simple and nutty and crunchy.

Truth be told, my favorite dessert of the night was the red bean neen go which Kevin’s mom suggested I slice into squares, lightly fry, then dust with a bit of sugar. They were so delicious, like pan-fried red bean mochi. Those crispy corners holding the soft chewy red bean cake were Chinese dessert perfection. I’ll leave off an attempt on that one for the next new year.

Teem Gok – Deep Fried Sweet Wonton

Ingredients:

1 cup grated coconut

1 cup raw skinned peanuts, roughly chopped

4 tbsp brown sugar

¼ cup toasted sesame seeds
1 package wonton skins
1 beaten egg or water for sealing1 quart oil for deep-frying
1) Mix together filling ingredients in a small bowl.
2) Take a wonton skin in the palm of your hand, put 1 teaspoon of filling in each wonton skin. With your other hand, dip a finger in your beaten egg or water and line edges of your wonton skin with egg or water.
3) Bring wonton edges together into a triangle or half circle and seal tightly with fingers.
4) Fry in hot oil until golden brown. (Your oil is hot enough when a small piece of potato dropped into the oil fries quickly and floats to the top.) Drain teem gok on paper towels.