香煎腊味萝卜糕 – Pan Fried “Carrot” Cake
Mum makes a terrific version of 腊味èåœç³• or Steamed Chinese “Carrot” Cake back home, usually nice enough (and with better ingredients) to rival even those that are sold in dim-sum restaurants back home. The term “carrot cake” is actually a misnomer — the carrot used is actually a kind of Asian radish that is commonly called Daikon (å¤§æ ¹ – literally big root!) in Japan or Mooli in India. Mum’s version of 腊味èåœç³• is made the traditional way — wok-steamed in a baking tray. I attempted to make a similar version in London using some recipes I found on the internet but was let down because my wok and wok cover was not large enough to allow me to steam the carrot cake properly! My brother has had some success with making 腊味èåœç³• using the microwave but was not able to give me an exact recipe. I came up with my own after some experimentation and modification of recipes that I found online. I may be biased, but I think my version with the microwave is a sufficiently close imitation of what Mum does traditionally :p
Ingredients (serves 2-3 persons)
- Â 1 bowl of grated Chinese radish or mooli (approximately 250g)
- 1 bowl of rice flour (approximately 250g)
- 2 bowls of boiling water (500mls)
- 1 length of Chinese sausage lap cheong – chopped and diced into small bits
- 5-7 small dried scallops (pre-soaked in water to soften it, and then chopped & diced). Use dried shrimp as an alternative
- 1/2 to 1 tsp of Chicken or ikan bilis stock granules
- Salt, cooking oil and pepper to taste
- Optional: chopped spring onions (scallions) and coriander leaves for garnishing, sweet sauce and chilli to taste
Method
Prepare grated Chinese radish first
- Add chicken or ikan bills stock granules with 1 1/2 tbsp of cooking oil and pepper to taste to grated Chinese radish and mix well.
- Cover bowl with microwave-save clear wrap. Puncture wrap over several areas with a fork to allow steam to escape.
- Cook on “high” in the microwave oven for 2 minutes
- Remove the bowl from the microwave, uncover, and stir the contents before resealing the wrap and cooking on “high” for a further 2 minutes
- Leave to stand
Mix the flour and ingredients
- Use a microwave-safe glass dish — I use a rectangular Pyrex-grade one that fits just nicely into my microwave oven
- Add rice flour to dish
- Boil 500mls of water and pour into the dish.
- Mix the hot water well into the rice flour. Bits of it may start turning doughy but it’s important to continue stirring the mixture constantly. You should get a uniform yoghurt-like consistency if you do it well.
- To the flour and hot-water mixture, add Chinese sausage, dried scallops and microwave-cooked Chinese radish.
- Add 1 tbsp of cooking oil and approximately 1 tsp of salt and mix thoroughly.
- The final mixture should like like concentrated coleslaw. Smoothen the surface of the mixture as much as possible.
Steaming the “carrot” cake
- Cover glass dish with microwave-safe clear wrap, puncturing the wrap at several places with a fork to allow escape of steam
- Microwave on “high” for 4 minutes and then on “medium” for 17 – 20 minutes
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