by Jenise » Fri Oct 15, 2021 1:27 pm
We were off in British Columbia on vacay last week with Bill Spohn and his wife and another couple. We were in three separate condos all with kitchens in two different buildings of the same complex. We were in various places during the day, separate or together, but together every night for a shared dinner, in one place or the other, including Canadian Thanksgiving for our first evening there. I contributed four dishes, and I also had to transport four wine glasses, several wine bottles and a decanter, and since we were in a different building with quite a bit of real estate to hoof to get to the Cooper's condo, so I sent Bob down to the lobby for a conveyance, and so we brought all our goods for Thanksgiving dinner on a full-on brass luggage mover. Wish I had a picture.
Tonight I'm finally back in the saddle at home, and am making a birthday dinner for my brother. The menu is "Chinese-ish" and will be full of references to our childhood Chinese restaurant favorites. Only the Chicken in black bean sauce is conventional, everything else is coming out of my head. I'm serving:
fried shrimp, Chinese restaurant style*
shrimp wontons**
Korean leek pancakes
Black mushrooms in oyster sauce with macadamia nuts***
Chicken in black bean sauce
Beef Chow Yuk (Flank steak with pea pods and water chestnuts)****
***** Star anise braised flank steak (should have been short ribs, but)
Bok choy fried rice
Scallops and bamboo in red chili vinaigrette
Daikon radish pickled in cherry juice and bourbon
* Refers to the Chinese restaurants of our childhood. The dipping sauce will be ketchup with a puddle of hot mustard.
** Wanted to make gyoza but could not find round wrappers, so won tons it is
*** This is a copy of a favorite childhood dish, served only at Yee Mi Loo's in downtown L.A. The whole family loved them and we'd have to get two orders as one was never enough for six people. You would call them Shitakes but there they were simply called Black Mushrooms, so I must use that term
**** My grandmother and I shared a favorite dish called BBQ Pork Chow Yuk. Chris doesn't eat pork, so flank steak
***** I bought the flank steak at Costco and they're packaged two-per, so I'm going to create another dish that will fill the house with good smells with the 2nd steak.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov