Congee and Deep-Fried Sugar Taro
(I can’t believe the month is two-thirds over and I haven’t posted any recipes yet! Oops!)
I hosted a book club for a novel that took place in turn-of-the-century China, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See. To make the book club fun, I made two foods that were mentioned in the book.
The first was Congee, which the main character, Lily served to her children and in-laws during a local outbreak of typhoid. While the other people ate diseased chicken and subsequently died, Lily kept her family alive with this simple rice dish.
I don’t think Lily’s congee was anything more than water and rice, but I added vegetables to mine, based on a recipe I found at the website Appetite for China. It was very good, although I put in too many sliced scallions. It was also easy; most of the work was slicing the vegetables, and then it simmered for a long time. I intend to make it again!
Get the recipe from Appetite for China >>>
For desert, I made Deep-Fried Sugared Taro. In the book, Lily met her friend Snow-Flower at a village every year, and they always ended their trip with a serving of this delicious desert.
Taro root is not a vegetable I’ve ever tried before. It tasted a little bit like potato, and so the deep-frying method made it a bit like French Fries. I then placed it in melted sugar, and so it was a sweet treat. Unfortunately when I made it, the sugar had been warmed for a little too long and had started to solidify again; it subsequently did not coat the fries very well. While I probably won’t ever try it again, I am nevertheless glad I gave it a try. Note that leftovers did not keep well as they got all soggy.
I got the recipe from Lisa See’s site. It was a fun way of making the book real for the book club meeting.
Get the recipe from Lisa See >>>
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Tags: Chinese food, Dinner, Main Dish, rice
This entry was posted on Monday, September 21st, 2009 at 1:27 pm and is filed under books and cookbooks, yummy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
