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Ingredients Jump to Instructions ↓

  1. 6 smalls Crabs

  2. 150 grams Potato

  3. Cornstarch

  4. Cooking oil

  5. 100 grams Shelled prawns

  6. 100 grams Raw chicken meat

  7. 100 grams Water chestnuts (or canned water chestnuts, or celery)

  8. 100 grams Soaked sea cucumber

  9. 100 grams Mushrooms

  10. 1 tablespoon Chinese yellow wine (or sherry)

  11. 1 teaspoon Sesame oil

  12. 1/4 teaspoon Salt

  13. 1/4 teaspoon Sugar

  14. 50 grams Bamboo shoots (or carrots)

  15. 300 grams Pork caul lining (or bean curd skin, or edible rice paper)

  16. 100 grams Chinese cured ham

  17. 10 grams Coriander (12 sprigs)

  18. 4 Egg whites

  19. 1 tablespoon Cornflour

  20. 2 tablespoons Water

  21. 1 tablespoon Hoisin (barbecue) sauce

  22. 1/2 cup Water

Instructions Jump to Ingredients ↑

  1. BASKET GARNISH (OPTIONAL FILLING SEASONING MIXTURE LEGS COATING SWEET SAUCE Here's another of the Winners series. This one might be a bit time consuming, buy there aren't any really exotic ingredients and, unless you get into garnishing it the way it shows in the book, not too much hassle. These are "mock" chicken legs++a minced mixture of meat and seafood rolled up and deep fried. I'd use the rice paper option for wrappers as they are readily available, at least around here. The basket garnish is an incredibly fussy little number actually woven from strips of potatoes. I'd use the two seive potato nest trick for that part if I bothered at all. The small crabs that go into the basket really are small crabs++ about two inches across the shell. They look neat, but add nothing to the dish aside from that. Establishment. Bui Hang Village Restaurant hotel Miramar) UG/F., Princess Wing, Hotel Miramar, 130 Nathan Road, @Tsimshatsui, Kowloon. Chinese Cuisine Practical Class Platinum Award - Meat "South of the Yangtse River Crispy Leg" sounds prosaic in English, but to a Chinese the geographic description has many happy associations++ scenic beauty, ancient traditions, a land where poets found peace. The promise of crispy legs in the dish evokes the image of Cantonese favorite - crispy chicken drumsticks yet the diner senses that there is a surprise treat in the dish.

  2. Optional basket garnish: Steam crabs and put aside. Form potatoes into basket shapes. This can be done by peeling them into long strips, which are then interwoven', and sealed with cornstarch paste. Deep-fry baskets over medium flame until golden.

  3. Slice all filling ingredients at an angle, and cut into dia- mond shapes (which creates a better texture). Season with seasoning mixture.

  4. Slice bamboo shoots into 12 strips each 5 cms long and ½ cms wide.

  5. Divide pork caul lining into 12 triangular pieces (large enough to wrap "legs"). Cut ham into 24 strips. On to each pork caul lining lay one sprig of coriander, 2 strips of ham, and 1/12 of the diamond-cut filling ingredients. Place one strip of bamboo shoot on top, with half of it left outside wrapping. Fold and mould each filled pork caul lining into leg shape.

  6. Mix coating ingredients with 2 tbs water, and coat each "leg" with the paste.

  7. Mix Hoisin sauce with water, and simmer till thickened. To cook Carefully slide "legs" into medium-hot oil (sufficient to deep-fry all twelve at same time), with folded "leg" ends facing centre of wok. Deep-fry for 3 minutes, then increase heat a little and continue deep- frying for a further 3 minutes. To present 1. Lay "legs" on a paper doily in serving dish, arranging the potato baskets and crabs as a central garnish.

  8. Serve the Hoisin sauce mixture on the side. From "Champion Recipes of the 1986 Hong Kong Food Festival". Hong Kong Tourist Association, 1986. Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; October 27 1992.

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