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Chinese New Year

Chinese New Year 2014, Progressive Feasts

February 16, 2014 By Eleanor Hoh 4 Comments

Chinese New Year 2014 is the Year of the Wood Horse and my year, I share it with Oprah Winfrey!  Wood Horse only occurs every 60 years, so it’s very special. The New Year celebrations continues for 2 weeks concluding February 14 and coincided with Valentine’s Day.  How fortuitous because it means double happiness!!!

horse-200 horse-buddhas tablesetting

It’s the time of year to ‘thank‘ all the people who’ve helped you and there’s no better way  to do that than to celebrate at home with family and friends!  I’m continuing the brilliant idea I started last year of hiring an assistant to help prep, decorate and get ready! It’s really the secret to throwing a good party. You’re less stressed and can enjoy your friends more.
This year, I did three rounds of Chinese New Year Progressive Feasts with dishes like Pineapple Fried Rice which signify long life and dumplings which signify prosperity and fortune, red and gold to signify luck. I really like the ‘progressive feast’ idea where I cook a meat dish and veggie dish, eat those while it’s fresh and hot before proceeding to the next few dishes.  The downtime allows your palette to savor the food and settle in your tummy before starting on another taste journey. The most important point is that you eat the dishes while they’re still hot instead of having them warming in the oven (drying out) or serving them all at once and get cold at the table! Next time you throw a dinner party, try this progressive concept!

  WokStar-wok-redfriedrice-200WokStar-wok-broccoli-200WokStar-lapcheong-wokfry-200

Stir fry red rice, broccoli stir fry, lap cheong (Chinese sausage) secret is to fry these at low heat so it doesn’t get tough and chewy and remain soft.

As a Horse, I’m energetic, active and start too many projects, so true!  2014 has started off with a bang and I’m very excited to see how the rest of the year unfolds. Go check out your zodiac predictions here.

Hope you get some ideas for your next progressive feast…remember it’s always about taste, texture and color in that order…

WokStar-CNY-Feast3-shrimp-TigerBeer-550
Feast three…uh, forgot to take photos of 1st course which were crispy dumplings with 3 dips. 3rd course: Buy some ready roast duck and char siu which just needs warming under the grill. Fry a simple shrimp dish with multi colored mini sweet peppers and sugar snap, lovely bright colors and went well with the roast meats and ice cold Tiger Beer. Dessert: Chinese cakes and Cara Cara sliced oranges, important to have oranges present, brings luck!
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Underground chef, Shelley brought wonderful prezzies of homemade beets and beeswax lip balm decorated in red and gold, the 2 colors that signify luck! Sze, my web and online marketing goddess poses in my sister’s original, beautiful handmade vest, she looked adorable in it! Super my sister and her hubby could join us for Chinese New Year especially as it was freezing in NC!
WokStar-CNY-Feast3-bokchoy-Hoisinribs-550
Feast three…2nd course: There’s nothing better than fresh oyster and shitake mushrooms, simply stir fried with baby bok choy. This was a perfect complement to my signature Spicy Hoisin Ribs!
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Feast two…1st course: Beef pho; 2nd course: Grilled Spicy Hoisin Ribs; Chinese Broccoli and red bell peppers; 3rd course: Buddha’s Delight with Chinese mushrooms, sugar snap, tofu and red bell peppers with Pineapple Fried Rice with Lap Cheong and lots of crunchy veggies. Dessert: Chinese cakes. So much fun with chatchowtv founders, Gio and Lauren and designers, Chris and Yumi.
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Feast One…1st course: Beef pho soup; 2nd course: Grilled Spicy Hoisin Ribs and Ginger, Garlic Baby Bok Choy; 3rd Course: Pineapple Fried Rice and Kimchi; Dessert: Lychees, berries and Italian Ginger ice cream and special snacks like candied ginger, lotus seeds, lotus root only available during Chinese New Year. I was so glad to have gallery owners, Marian and Adam who we knew from Key West celebrate Chinese New Year with us! So good to catch up.
 
 

Filed Under: blog, Chinese New Year Tagged With: "year of the Horse", Chinese New Year, Feast, homecooked

Chinese New Year of Horse 2014

January 31, 2014 By Eleanor Hoh 3 Comments

Kung Hei Fat Choy everyone! Today is Chinese New Year of the Horse and celebrations continue for 2 weeks!
This is a good time to start a clean slate, remember no sweeping today or you’ll sweep away good luck, great excuse for no housework. Wear something red or gold to signify prosperity and good luck. Eat dumplings/wontons or gyozas which resemble gold ingots.
20140131-162534.jpgIt is my year, yay, though some predictions are not that good. I’m not superstitious and many positive things have happened already. If you’re a Horse, here’s everything you want to know!
I’ll be celebrating 3 dinners at home with friends, here are some easy dishes to cook up.
I’ll post up after the dinners and hope I remember to take food photos this year. It’s so easy to stir fry a few dishes to eat at home, important thing is to share with family and friends, enjoy!

Filed Under: blog, Chinese New Year, Culture, Year of the Horse Tagged With: "year of the Horse", Chinese New Year, Eleanor Hoh, predictions, zodiac

Year of Snake, Feasts

February 23, 2013 By Eleanor Hoh 5 Comments

Year of the Snake is working out so well for me that I’m not going to listen to its forecast, you can read it here!  Two Chinese New Year Feasts later, I’m happy with how well they turned out. The best secret I’ll share is to have an assistant prep everything day before and stick with same menu for both Feasts so there are no surprises!  Another secret is to rope your friends in to help and voila, you have a FEAST!  This Sunday, February 24 is the end of the 2 week Chinese New Year celebrations. My New Year resolution to sleep earlier is not going so well, any tips?
Kung Hei Fat Choy everyone, share with us your favorite Chinese New Year dish or tradition you look forward to every year!
Here are Tips that will make your Chinese New Year Feast memorable…
Menu
Work your menu so there is not much ‘cooking’.  Purchase as many precooked meats as possible because those take the most effort.  Do a stir fry dish, a steamed dish, a stew. Get the picture? Keep it SIMPLE. Many dishes or are symbols of money, wealth, health and good luck or sound like it.
Stir fry your veggies ahead but undercook them and just warm through last minute and add your seasonings. I have a wonderful double steamer (great gift from my sister) so I could steam the corvina which was a life saver!
Guest Lists
Hone your guest lists (I so wanted to fit more friends in, and you will get a chance one of these years) I’ve always warned my friends they may get rotated so new friends can experience Chinese New Year at my home.  It was a nice mix of old and new friends which made the conversations quite interesting!
Cleaning
Hire a cleaning lady, it’s so worth it, it takes the stress away completely.  It’s too much to clean, decorate and cook.  Tradition says not to sweep on Chinese New Year day cause you’ll sweep away the good luck.  There are a lot more traditions on what’s lucky or not here.
I had to get everything done BEFORE New Year’s Day, so it was a perfect incentive to clear out my apartment.
Decorating
Buy potted orchids and sprays if you can find them!  They instantly give your space an Asian look and so stylish.  Have lots of red, yellow and gold.  Here’s more on how to decorate a festive table setting.
Redecorating our apartment in time for the Chinese New Year went like clock work and I’m thrilled with the results but I’m exhausted. I’ve mixed new furniture with an old Chinese camphor wood chest my mom gave me and I think it looks spiffy together.
So here’s what I served, it was miraculous that I ended up with 13 total in each party, whew because the no.4 is actually unlucky, sounds too close to ‘death’.

Appetizers:
Sesame noodles with cucumber and carrot garnish, Crispy grilled wontons with 3 dips and Cucumber pickles.
These are always a big hit, all carbs but everyone enjoys them!

Second course:
Steamed Corvina with ginger and scallions
Stir fried Chinese Broccoli

Third course:
Buddha’s Delight: snow peas, mini sweet peppers, wood ear mushrooms, tofu.
Roast Duck, Soy sauce chicken, Char Siu
(store bought roast meats arranged on large platters)
Pork stew with Chinese mushrooms served in clay pot it was cooked in. Didn’t manage to get photo, boo!
(This dish got cut in second round cause my sister thought I had too much food!  The truth is, she wanted to eat the leftovers.)

Dessert:
Chinese cakes all store bought: melon pastry, coconut tart, almond cookies
Lacquer box:
Coconut chunks, candied lotus seeds, licorice plums, fortune cookies.
I forgot to serve Cara Cara oranges and Asian pears which I specifically bought for this dinner!
Drinks:
Fiji Water, wines, Tiger beer, Tsing Tao

L to R: Dining table setup was tight squeeze, I made everyone sit with someone they didn’t come with.
I love those Indonesian masks my hubby’s sister gave us.
Gift bags under console were not so obvious and I forgot to give them to some friends, oops.

Oh, and I received many lovely gifts, lots of teas for some reason.

I was so touched with Mary’s lovely gift basket full of exotic fruits from her own garden, guava, pomegranate & star fruit (carambola), also she dried carambola and kale with sesame seeds, they were delish, comes in handy and goes with everything!  Mary also made “lean go”, a very traditional Chinese New Year Cake that took 4 hours to make and she steamed in her cast iron wok! Can’t believe she forgot to take a photo!

Chopsticks galore! Did my friends really have to use SO many?

Some behind the scene shot my friend, Irene took of me cooking, notice double steamer on left and on right, my wok and gas stove setup ontop of electric coil cooktop.

Best part of Feasts, I get to use leftovers in many creative ways, you can see them on Instagram where I post daily.

Filed Under: blog, Chinese New Year, new year resolutions, Year of Snake Tagged With: Chinese New Year, Feast, tradition

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