Read The Everything Chinese Cookbook Online
Authors: Rhonda Lauret Parkinson
When steaming fruit, it's important to remove the fruit from the pot immediately, so that it doesn't continue cooking in the hot liquid and become mushy.
This is a perfect treat for cold winter days, providing a healthy alternative to snack foods.
1 cup canned pineapple chunks
2 tablespoons margarine or butter, softened
cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons reserved pineapple juice
1 teaspoon Chinese rice wine or dry sherry
3 bananas, cut in half lengthwise
2 tablespoons untoasted sesame seeds
Children love this sweet treat. For an added touch, serve with a tropical fruit–flavored ice cream.
Watch the oil temperature in the wok — if it gets too high, the walnuts will turn black before the sugar has a chance to melt.
½ cup chopped walnut pieces
¼ cup sugar
3 cups oil for deep-frying
The world's first sweetener, honey has been used in China since ancient times. When sugarcane was introduced, the Chinese originally called it “stone honey.”
4 pears
2 tablespoons honey
4 Chinese honey dates
This healthy dessert lets you indulge and fight off illness at the same time. According to traditional Chinese medicine, pears lower cholesterol and reduce high blood pressure, while honey dates build up the blood.
2 teaspoons baking powder
3 cups flour
¾ cup lard
½ cup finely chopped walnuts
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1¼ cups white sugar
3 eggs
1 egg, lightly beaten
Need a little inspiration before you're ready to get out the rolling pin and start mixing and measuring? Try visiting a Chinese bakery. Classic treats like Mango Pudding and Sesame Seed Balls share space with sticky rice dumplings, foot-long doughnuts, and buns filled with everything from pineapple and taro to red bean paste. All reflect the Chinese belief that no one flavor should upstage any other. Indulge, and you'll leave feeling pleasantly satisfied but without a case of “sugar hangover.”
These sweet cookies are a popular feature in Chinese bakeries. Food coloring is sometimes used to give them a yellow color.
Add water slowly until you are sure how much is needed. Everything from altitude to the age of the flour can affect the amount required.