|
For all those celebrating the start of the Lunisolar Calendar have a great week and be prosperous!
For instant answers to more than one hundred common FCP questions, check out the LAFCPUG FAQ Wiki here : [www.lafcpug.org]
I believe those are the giant rabbits that were bred in Germany or somewhere like that. There was a follow up story of the breeder being visited by suits from North Korea who wanted some breeding pairs to start a rabbits for food program in NK as a way out of one of their terrible famines.
Don't know if anything came of it. The QI show in the UK (Stephen Fry, yay!) had a question about rabbits and the answer contained the fact that if you ate only rabbit meat you would eventually die because the human body can absorb no vitamins or nutrients other than a little protein from rabbit meat. Pointless dribs and drabs of useless info. That's what the internet is for. I am going to hit some Dim Sum this weekend something fierce. 2 plates of egg custard tarts to myself. ak Sleeplings, AWAKE!
Yep. Thems the one Derek.
Have we discussed my concept for extreme food based slothfulness? I call it Dim Sum High Tea Tapas. One whole day, eating small plate foods and drinking tons of tea. First, chinese style Dim Sum with Jasmine or Green tea then on to UK style High Tea with sandwiches and cakes with Ceylon or Earl Grey, and finally ending with Spanish tapas and Sangria which I count as a fruit tisane using wine instead of water. Bingo bongo there's your day. It's probably not a good restaurant concept but I might set up some sort of tour here in Toronto where we skip from Dim Sum dive to Fancy hotel and end up at a Tapas bar. Who's with me? ak Sleeplings, AWAKE!
Actually, "Chinese egg tarts" may not have been native Chinese:
[en.wikipedia.org] Many bakeries in the Asian communities around L.A. sell two styles of egg tarts -- one with a crispy, flaky, greasy crust (as above) and one with a hard, starchy, crunchy crust. But both may have originated in England (not surprising, since apparently the tart didn't appear in Hong Kong until the 20th Century, well into English colonial rule). It's consistent with my impression of Chinese cuisine -- Chinese desserts tend to be light and watery rather than heavy and cake-like, and I can't think of any native Chinese custards. www.derekmok.com
I live in a part of Toronto that is a few minutes walk away from Little Portugal, Little Italy and Chinatown.
The Portuguese custard tart and Chinese egg tart divide comes up at any pot luck party where someone will inevitably forget to make something and stop off at a Portuguese bakery an get a tray of tarts. Portuguese tarts have a thin brulee style top on them and the filling is more custard than egg with a starchy mouthfeel. The crust tends toward crumbly. I am not a big fan of these. Chinese egg tarts are quite eggy, less sweet, and the crust is very light and flakey. The dessert places in Chinatown have lots of cakes and tarts but their quality is not the same as the desserts you can get at the better dim sum places. Chinese style of desserts is an acquired taste and there are a few I like but my heart and stomach will always lie with the Austrian style of cakes and pastries. It's almost Dim Sum time... ak Sleeplings, AWAKE!
After being thwarted entry to two places this morning due to renovations and a power outage in a kitchen, my wife and I found our way to a previously untried dim sum restaurant across the street from our favourite. I made a promise earlier in this thread,
and voila.. Shot, edited and uploaded on an iPhone. ak Sleeplings, AWAKE!
Derek they were fine. Not THIS good or THIS good but we were beggars not choosers this morning. Garlic green beens were very tasty and bamboo fungus and mushroom dumplings were well done.
Damn, I am hungry again. Meal number 4 coming up. Keeping this rig on the road takes a lot of fuel... ak Sleeplings, AWAKE!
I took an old friend to dinner on Chinese New Year. I was laughing at myself because I ordered Kung Pao Chicken...but it turned out to be great.
Watch out if you ever have to take somebody from Hong Kong to any kind of food. They's some real snobs out there when it comes to dining out. www.derekmok.com
Ohhh egg tarts. I so want dim sum now. We have an excellent one near us in the city, but there's no reservations, so there's always about 50 people standing outside waiting to get called in to eat. And the place is HUGE. I also really love the coconut milk jelly cubes.
Happy Rabbits to all!
Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.
|
|