Fujian Soda / Lye Zongzi with Red Bean Paste

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Fujian Soda / Lye Zongzi with Red Bean Paste DILMAH RECIPES Fujian Soda / Lye Zongzi with Red Bean Paste 0 made it | 0 reviews Alkaline water (potassium carbonate and sodium bi- carbonate) turns the glutinous rice into an attractive warm yellow colour. This vegan zongzi is served plain with sugar, honey or syrup. It can also be filled with sweet paste (lotus or red bean). Sub Category Name Food Main Courses Savory Recipe Source Name Tea Inspired Festivities Festivities Name Chinese New Year Festival Dragon Boat / Duanwu Festival Glass Type Twelve Used Teas t-Series Green Tea 1 / 2 DILMAH RECIPES Ingredientswith Jasmine Flowers Fujian Soda / Lye Zongzi with Red Bean Paste 650g or 3 cups glutinous rice 2 tbsp lye/alkaline water 1,1/2 tbsp cooking oil 400g red bean paste 1 tbsp salt 28 dried bamboo leaves, soaked overnight Kitchen twine Methods and Directions Fujian Soda / Lye Zongzi with Red Bean Paste Soak the glutinous rice in five cups of water overnight. Drain thoroughly and then mix with cooking oil and lye. The rice should turn yellow. Set aside. Divide the bean paste into 12 portions of 30g. Blanch the bamboo leaves in boiling water until soft (about 10 minutes). To assemble the zongzi, form a cone using 2 bamboo leaves, placing one on top of another and fold into a cone. Place 1 tablespoon of rice into the cone. Make a small well, then place one portion of red bean paste in it. Cover with 1,1/2 tablespoons of rice. Pack all ingredients lightly, and smoothen the top with a clean wet spoon. Complete the wrapping and secure with kitchen twine. Cook submerged in boiling water for 4-5 hours. Remove the zongzi from the water and let it cool to room temperature before serving plain or with some sugar/syrup. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2021 Dilmah Recipes| Dilmah Ceylon Tea Company PLC Printed From teainspired.com/dilmah-recipes 02/10/2021 2 / 2 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org).
Recommended publications
  • Table Grill Beverages
    BULDAEGI BBQ HOUSE TABLE GRILL BEVERAGES Bottled Water — $2 Sparkling Water — $2.50 Hot Tea (Green or Earl Gray)— $1.75 Canned Soda — $1.75 Sweet /Unsweet Tea (No Refills) — $1.75 DOMESTIC BEER ­­— $4 Yuengling Blue Moon IMPORTED BEER — $5 Tsingtao (China) Heineken (Holland) Asahi (Japan) Kirin Ichiban (Japan) Sapporo (Japan) OB (Korea) APPETIZERS Potato Pancake (감자전) — S / $10, L / $14 Crispy potato pancake. Kimchi Pancake (김치전) — S / $10, L / $14 Kimchi and vegetable pancake. Spicy. Haemul Pancake (해물파전) — $16 Crispy pancake with assorted seafood, carrot, green and white onion. House Japchae (불돼지잡채) — $14 Glass noodles, carrot, white and green onion. Choose a style: Pork, Beef, or Veggie. Duk Bok Ki* (떡볶기) — $14 Rice cake, fish cake, hard-boiled egg, hot pepper paste sauce. Spicy. Dak Gangjeong (닭강정) — $16 Crispy boneless fried chicken glazed with sweet, housemade sauce. Fried Dumplings (튀김만두) — $8 Deep-fried dumplings with chicken and vegetables. 8 pieces. Tang Su Yuk (탕수육) — $18 Deep-fried meat or tofu in housemade sweet & sour sauce. Choose a style: Beef, Pork, or Tofu. Spring Rolls - $8 Shredded cabbage, carrots, tofu, onions. 6 pieces. *Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish, or egg may increase your risk of food-borne illnesses. TABLE GRILL Choose a minimum of 2 BBQ orders or 1 Combo. Includes lettuce wraps, banchan, corn cheese, steamed egg*. Extra small sides — $6 each. (See back for options) Pork Combo A — $50.50 Choose any 5 meats from Pork BBQ. Serves 2. Pork Combo B — $70.50 Choose any 7 meats from Pork BBQ. Serves 3-4.
    [Show full text]
  • Great Food, Great Stories from Korea
    GREAT FOOD, GREAT STORIE FOOD, GREAT GREAT A Tableau of a Diamond Wedding Anniversary GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS This is a picture of an older couple from the 18th century repeating their wedding ceremony in celebration of their 60th anniversary. REGISTRATION NUMBER This painting vividly depicts a tableau in which their children offer up 11-1541000-001295-01 a cup of drink, wishing them health and longevity. The authorship of the painting is unknown, and the painting is currently housed in the National Museum of Korea. Designed to help foreigners understand Korean cuisine more easily and with greater accuracy, our <Korean Menu Guide> contains information on 154 Korean dishes in 10 languages. S <Korean Restaurant Guide 2011-Tokyo> introduces 34 excellent F Korean restaurants in the Greater Tokyo Area. ROM KOREA GREAT FOOD, GREAT STORIES FROM KOREA The Korean Food Foundation is a specialized GREAT FOOD, GREAT STORIES private organization that searches for new This book tells the many stories of Korean food, the rich flavors that have evolved generation dishes and conducts research on Korean cuisine after generation, meal after meal, for over several millennia on the Korean peninsula. in order to introduce Korean food and culinary A single dish usually leads to the creation of another through the expansion of time and space, FROM KOREA culture to the world, and support related making it impossible to count the exact number of dishes in the Korean cuisine. So, for this content development and marketing. <Korean Restaurant Guide 2011-Western Europe> (5 volumes in total) book, we have only included a selection of a hundred or so of the most representative.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Our Menu In
    Appetizer Specials King Crab Salad 17 Mixture of cooked King Crab Meat, Seaweed Salad, Cucumber, Mayo and Tobiko. Jalapeño Calamari 12 Fried Calamari Served with House Jalapeño Sauce. Crispy Crab Shumai 14 Crispy Fried Shumai Skin stuffed with Sweet Blue Crab Meat and Onion. Garnished with Tobiko and Sprouts, Served with Spicy Mayo. Lady in White 17 A 3 tiered roll consisting of thinly sliced White Tuna, Avocado, Tuna and Masago. Stuffed with Spicy Tuna, Lobster Salad, Avocado, and drizzled with Yuzu Dressing. Sushi Sandwich 17 4 Pieces of Club Sandwich Styled Sushi with Tuna, Salmon, Kani, Avocado, Cucumber, Lettuce, Masago & Pink Seaweed in the Center. Topped with Wasabi Mayo. King Crab Hot Roll 19 Alaskan King Crab, Avocado and Masago Wrapped in the Center Deep Fried Until the Rice is Perfectly Soft and Chewy. Served with Chef’s Spicy Mango Salsa Coconut Shrimp Roll 17 Coconut Battered Tempura Shrimp Wrapped in a Roll, Topped w/ Lobster Salad, Masago and Thinly Sliced Avocado. Sprinkled with Fine Coconut Flakes, and Drizzled with Wasabi Dressing. Angry White Tuna Roll 17 Spicy White Tuna, Asparagus, Avocado and Tempura Flakes lnside. Topped With Seared White Tuna, Jalapeño and Chef’s Ginger Eel Sauce. Sprinkled with Crunchy Kani. Salad House Salad 5.5 Tofu Salad 8 Asparagus Salad 8 Avocado Salad 8 Bean Sprout Salad 8 Seasoned, Blanched Soy Bean Sprouts Mixed with White Sesame Seeds Hiyashi Wakame Salad 6 Seaweed Salad Hijiki 6 Cooked Seaweed Sprinkled with White Sesame Seeds in Chef's Special Light Sauce, Served Cold Edamame 5 Blanched
    [Show full text]
  • Read Book Wagashi and More: a Collection of Simple Japanese
    WAGASHI AND MORE: A COLLECTION OF SIMPLE JAPANESE DESSERT RECIPES PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Cooking Penguin | 72 pages | 07 Feb 2013 | Createspace | 9781482376364 | English | United States Wagashi and More: A Collection of Simple Japanese Dessert Recipes PDF Book Similar to mochi, it is made with glutinous rice flour or pounded glutinous rice. Tourists like to buy akafuku as a souvenir, but it should be enjoyed quickly, as it expires after only two days. I'm keeping this one a little under wraps for now but if you happen to come along on one of my tours it might be on the itinerary Next to the velvety base, it can also incorporate various additional ingredients such as sliced chestnuts or figs. For those of you who came on the inaugural Zenbu Ryori tour - shhhhhhhh! Well this was a first. This classic mochi variety combines chewy rice cakes made from glutinous rice and kinako —roasted soybean powder. More about Hishi mochi. The sweet and salty goma dango is often consumed in August as a summer delicacy at street fairs or in restaurants. The base of each mitsumame are see-through jelly cubes made with agar-agar, a thickening agent created out of seaweed. Usually the outside pancake-ish layer is plain with a traditional filling of sweet red beans. Forgot your password? The name of this treat consists of two words: bota , which is derived from botan , meaning tree peony , and mochi , meaning sticky, pounded rice. Dessert Kamome no tamago. Rakugan are traditional Japanese sweets prepared in many different colors and shapes reflecting seasonal, holiday, or regional themes.
    [Show full text]
  • Production and Analysis of Volatile Flavor Compounds in Sweet Fermented Rice (Khao Mak)
    MATEC Web of Conferences 192, 03044 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201819203044 ICEAST 2018 Production and analysis of volatile flavor compounds in sweet fermented rice (Khao Mak) Jittimon Wongsa1,*, Vilai Rungsardthong2, and Tamaki Yasutomo3 1Department of Agricultural Engineering for Industry, Faculty of Industrial Technology and Management, King Mongkut's University of Technology North Bangkok Prachinburi Campus, Prachinburi, Thailand 2Department of Agro-Industrial, Food and Environmental Technology, Faculty of Applied Science, Food and Agro-Industry Research Center, King Mongkut’s University of Technology North Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand 3Department of Bioresource Technology, National Institute of Technology, Okinawa National College of Technology, Okinawa, Japan Abstract. Khao Mak is a sweet fermented rice-based dessert with a unique flavor profile commonly found throughout Thailand. The traditional starter culture (Look Pang) contains yeast, mold and herbs, which is used to ferment cooked glutinous rice. This research studied production of Khao Mak which resulted in volatile flavor compounds that were affected by rice varieties, including white glutinous rice (Kor Khor 6), Japanese rice (Hitomebore) and black glutinous rice (Kam Doi and Leum Phua). Total soluble solids (TSS) as degree Brix, pH, and alcohol concentrations were measured daily during the fermentation period. Volatile flavor compounds were separated and identified by gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS). At the end of the fermentation, samples had pH ranging from 3.91±0.16 to 4.30±0.09, total soluble solids of 32.65±1.65 to 44.02±1.72qBrix, and alcohol concentrations between 0.33±0.03 and 0.38±0.03% (v/v). The potent odors associated with Khao Mak were alcohol, wine-like, whiskey-like, solvent-like, sweet and fruity.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Issn: 2456-8643
    International Journal of Agriculture, Environment and Bioresearch Vol. 3, No. 03; 2018 ISSN: 2456-8643 EFFECT OF THERMAL PROCESSING ON THE SENSORY QUALITY, PHYSICO- CHEMICAL PROPERTIES AND STORAGE STABILITY OF THE CANNED AND POUCHED FORMULATED CONGEE Lerjun M. Peñaflor, Florencio C. Reginio Jr., Madelle C. Maghirang, Elsa Joy T. Horiondo, Ma. Sandra Renee C. Tapia Food Engineering Division, Institute of Food Science and Technology, College of Agriculture and Food Science, University of the Philippines Los Baños, College, Los Baños, Laguna, 4031 Philippines ABSTRACT This research was conceptualized to develop locally available cheaper meat product and under- utilized grains as the main ingredient in formulating congee as a disaster food product. The potential of formulated congee packaged in tin can and retort pouch to be a suitable emergency relief food during and after disaster were studied through evaluation of its sensory quality and storage stability. But the presence of microorganism and bacteria are dangerous for human health, usually observed in canned and pouched product. It is important that strict hygienic procedures be followed when process food was packed in cans or pouches. One way to address these problems is through thermal processing. Furthermore, processed samples were analyzed for their physico-chemical and microbial properties to facilitate the factors ensuring nutritional and safety for consumption. Commercial sterility test showed negative results, indicates that samples were commercially sterile and efficient processing was achieved. The established processing schedule at 121.1ºC retort temperature were 46 and 37 minutes for canned and pouched congee, respectively. Changes in their physico-chemical properties and highly acceptable rating for sensory attributes were observed significantly after thermal processing.
    [Show full text]
  • The Case of Glutinous Rice and Waxy Cereals in the Food Cultures of Eastern Asia
    Title: Diversification and cultural construction of a crop: the case of glutinous rice and waxy cereals in the food cultures of eastern Asia. Author’s names: Dorian Q. Fuller and Cristina Castillo Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY Number of text pages: 6 single spaced plus Bibliography: +5 Figures: 2 Tables: 2 Abbreviated title: glutinous rice and waxy cereals Key words: Oryza, ritual, alcohol, archaeobotany, ethnobotany Proofs to be sent to: Dorian Q Fuller Institute of Archaeology 31-34 Gordon Square London WC1H 0PY Email: [email protected] Diversification and cultural construction of a crop: the case of glutinous rice and waxy cereals in the food cultures of eastern Asia. By Dorian Q Fuller and Cristina Castillo Institute of Archaeology, University College London Abstract While rice is one of the world’s most important and productive staple foods, it is highly diversified in uses and varieties, including East and Southeast Asian sticky (or glutinous) forms. While stickiness to some degree can be achieved by cooking methods, true sticky (or waxy) rice is the result of a genetic mutation that causes a loss of amylose starch in favour of high amylopectin content. These mutations are unknown in wild populations but have become important only amongst cultivars in East and Southeast Asia, but not in other rice growing regions, such as South Asia or West Africa. In addition, other cereals (mainly millets, but also maize, barley and in recent times wheat) have evolved parallel mutations that confer stickiness when cooked and high amylopectin content within the same region of East Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • Tangyuan Recipe
    Tangyuan with Red Bean Paste and Black Sesame Seeds Black Sesame Filling Ingredients (6 tangyuan) - 2 tbsp black sesame seeds or 2 tbsp black sesame powder - 1.5 to 2 tbsp sugar - 1 tbsp water - 2 tbsp lard or butter or margarine Instructions Skip steps 1 to 3 if you are using black sesame powder. 1. Toast the sesame seeds in a small pan over medium-low heat, while stirring the sesame seeds to avoid burning. When the moisture evaporates from the seeds, you can smell the aroma. After 2 to 3 minutes, when the sesame seeds start to pop, remove them from the heat. 2. Transfer the seeds to a food processor or a pestle. Let them cool down before grinding. 3. Grind the sesame seeds until they turn to fine powder. 4. Mix well the sesame powder with 1.5 to 2 tbsp sugar, 1 tbsp water and 2 tbsp melted lard (or butter or margarine) to make a slightly running paste. Freezer the paste until solid at least for 30 minutes. 5. Make 6 small portions of the sesame paste. Shape 1/2 tbsp paste into round balls as quickly as possible (some of the sesame paste might melt in your hand). You can dust a little bit of flour on your hands before rolling. 6. Store them in the freezer for 1 hour before wrapping. Red Bean Paste Filling Ingredient (6 tangyuan) - 3 tbsp ready-to-use red bean paste Instructions 1. Dust a small plate with glutinous flour. 2. Make 6 small portions of the red bean paste.
    [Show full text]
  • Food in China.Pdf
    Food in China Each region of China has its own type of food. Chuan food is hot and spicy; Beijing cooking is done with a lot of meat and vegetables (including the most famous Chinese dish of all, Peking Duck); Cantonese traditions include dim sum and delicacies like shark's fin soup; Shanghai cuisine is prepared with plenty of seafood and oil. Drinks Soft drinks abound in China, both foreign brands and local. You can also buy bottled water everywhere. Other than tea, soft drinks, or bottled water, beer is your best bet. Chinese beer is generally quite good, Qingdao being the best-known brand, and almost every town has its own brew which varies from watery-but-incredibly-cheap to not-bad-and-incredibly- cheap. Beware of Chinese "wine" which is actually powerful grain alcohol. Popular Dishes Jiaozi. Dumplings. These are popular all over China, and come fried, steamed or boiled, and are stuffed with just about everything. Traditionally, families make and eat jiaozi for the Chinese New Year or Spring Festival. Making jiaozi is a social event with a group of people stuffing the dumplings together, the idea being that many hands make light work, and the result is all the tastier for your having participated in the preparation! You can order a plate of jiaozi in a restaurant, or you'll find them served in little snack food joints, often in soup (jiaozi tang). Baozi Steamed buns stuffed with a variety of fillings. These are great snacks that you'll find all over China in various different sizes and varieties.
    [Show full text]
  • Food Byways: the Sugar Road by Masami Ishii
    Vol. 27 No. 3 October 2013 Kikkoman’s quarterly intercultural forum for the exchange of ideas on food SPOTLIGHT JAPAN: JAPANESE STYLE: Ohagi and Botamochi 5 MORE ABOUT JAPANESE COOKING 6 Japan’s Evolving Train Stations 4 DELECTABLE JOURNEYS: Nagano Oyaki 5 KIKKOMAN TODAY 8 THE JAPANESE TABLE Food Byways: The Sugar Road by Masami Ishii This third installment of our current Feature series traces Japan’s historical trade routes by which various foods were originally conveyed around the country. This time we look at how sugar came to make its way throughout Japan. Food Byways: The Sugar Road From Medicine to Sweets to be imported annually, and it was eventually According to a record of goods brought to Japan from disseminated throughout the towns of Hakata China by the scholar-priest Ganjin (Ch. Jianzhen; and Kokura in what is known today as Fukuoka 688–763), founder of Toshodaiji Temple in Nara, Prefecture in northern Kyushu island. As sugar cane sugar is thought to have been brought here in made its way into various regions, different ways the eighth century. Sugar was considered exceedingly of using it evolved. Reflecting this history, in the precious at that time, and until the thirteenth 1980s the Nagasaki Kaido highway connecting the century it was used solely as an ingredient in the cities of Nagasaki and Kokura was dubbed “the practice of traditional Chinese medicine. Sugar Road.” In Japan, the primary sweeteners had been After Japan adopted its national seclusion laws maltose syrup made from glutinous rice and malt, in the early seventeenth century, cutting off trade and a sweet boiled-down syrup called amazura made and contact with much of the world, Nagasaki from a Japanese ivy root.
    [Show full text]
  • Yeomiji Menu 14
    여 미 YEOMIJI 지 Korean BBQ Restaurant APPETIZERS 물만두 Steamed Dumplings 9 두부전 Seared Tofu (v, gf) 8 Steamed homemade dumplings filled with Pan-seared tofu, served with house soy sauce kimchi, tofu, bean sprouts and beef 잡채 Japchae Noodles (v, gf) 15 만두구이 Fried Dumplings 9 Potato glass noodles sautèed with spinich, carrots Pan-fried homemade dumplings filled with and ear mushrooms tofu, zucchini, carrots, mushrooms and glass noodles Choice of beef or vegetarian (v) 떡볶이 Spicy Rice Cakes (v, gf, s) 14 Rice cake sautéed with vegetables in chili sauce 새우 슈마이 Shrimp Shumai 6 Optional addition of hard boiled eggs Steamed miniature wontons filled with shrimp 호박죽 Squash Soup (v, gf) 9 닭날개 Crispy Wings 12 Kabocha squash soup topped with dried dates Battered crispy chicken wings glazed with and pine nuts garlic soy sauce 에다마메 Edamame (v, gf) 6 파전 / 김치, 야채, 해물 Korean Pancakes 13 Baby soy beans steamed and lightly salted Korean pancake with choice of kimchi (v,) (add $2), assorted vegetables (v), or seafood (add $3) SALADS 연어 샐러드 Salmon Salad (gf) 17 아보카도 망고 샐러드 Avocado Mango Salad (v, gf) 15 Mixed greens, salmon sashimi and avocado with Mixed greens, avocado, mango, sun-dried ginger dressing raisins with plum sauce KOREAN TACOS Three palm sized soft corn tortillas with lettuce, scallion, tomato-onion-avocado salsa with choice of topping 갈비 Kalbi 15 닭구이 Chicken 14 소불고기 Beef Bulgogi 14 양념닭 Spicy Chicken (s) 14 돼지불고기 Spicy or Non-Spicy Pork 14 야채 Bean Sprouts and Spinach (v, gf) 13 김치불고기 Kimchi Pork (s) 14 If you have any allergies or dietary restrictions,
    [Show full text]
  • 04Special Food.Indd
    DOI: 10.12982/CMUJNS.2014.0048 CMUJ NS Special Issue on Food and Applied Bioscience (2014) Vol.13(1) 449 Bioactive Compound Contents in Germinated Unpolished Purple Glutinous Rice from Kum Doi Saket and Kum Phayao Varieties Somchai Jomduang School of Agro-Industry, Faculty of Agro-Industry, Chiang Mai University 50100, Thailand Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT This research studied the bioactive compounds in unpolished purple glutinous rice and germinated unpolished purple rice produced from two rice varieties: Kum Doi Saket and Kum Phayao. Unpolished purple glutinous rice grains were produced by grain dehusking without polishing. The quality of their physical, chemical and bioactive compounds was analyzed. Kum Doi Saket unpolished purple glutinous rice had a statistically significant (p<0.05) higher amount of almost all compositions than Kum Phayao, except ash and reducing sugar content. Germinated unpolished purple rice was produced by soaking in water at 40°C for 3 hrs, and then incubating at 35°C. The GABA content at 40 hrs of germination had the maximum amount in both varieties and tended to decrease after this time. Thus, 40 hrs of germination time was the optimum period for germinated rice from both rice varieties. When compared before and after the 40-hr germination period, gamma-oryzanol increased, but total anthocyanins and antioxidant activity decreased slightly. Comparing the two varieties of germinated unpolished purple glutinous rice grains, Kum Doi Saket had a statistically significant (p<0.05) higher amount of bioactive compounds and antioxidant activity than Kum Phayao. Germinated unpolished purple glutinous rice provided from Kum Doi Saket had 16.31±0.34 mg/100g of GABA, 30.48±1.61mg/100g of gamma-oryzanol, 70.10±0.45 mg/100g of total anthocy- anins and 83.10±0.95% of antioxidant activity.
    [Show full text]