February 28, 2021
We are approaching the conclusion of Lunar New Year celebrations for 2021. Lunar New Year this year was a much smaller celebration with just Kevin and I. We jumpstarted the holiday celebration by joining a family zoom call with Kevin’s family. There were over 20 people popping in and out of the zoom call to share updates and send auspicious wishes to family members across the globe. Kevin and I also made personalized phone calls to members of our families just to wish them a lot of good luck and success in the upcoming year. In between catching up with family, I recreated many of my favorite foods over the last few weeks. We spent some days enjoying my mom’s sweet tang yuan recipe. I whipped up multiple variations of dumplings including our tried-and-true pork and cabbage dumplings. I even made a citrus roasted chicken over a bed of charred greens and served it alongside some steamed jasmine rice. Any leftovers were repurposed into stir-fried noodles (for longevity) and soups (including a pho inspired variation). We ate tons of oranges, mandarins, and tangerines for luck and homemade fortune cookies for added luck. With Lunar New Year celebrations coming to an end this weekend, I took the opportunity to make one more family favorite dish, my mom’s savory tang yuan. Most people know of my mom for her sweet tang yuan. She often makes her sweet tang yuan for special occasions and celebrations. Anyone who has had the opportunity to eat her homemade tang yuan always raves about it. What most people don’t know is my mom makes an equally delicious savory tang yuan. Her version often features thinly sliced pork, dried baby shrimps, thickly sliced radish, sliced scallions, chicken bouillon powder, water, and glutinous rice balls. The soup comes together quickly as she cooks everything in a wok – from the soup to the glutinous rice balls. It was the perfect lucky meal to make over Lunar New Year. Since I didn’t get the opportunity to see my family in person this year, I FaceTimed my mom to learn how to make her savory tang yuan. The hardest part about learning my mom’s recipes is she never measures anything. Every ingredient is approximate. Sometimes, she would say just a couple scoops of this or a heavy pinch of that. Getting exact measurements for anything my mom makes is nearly impossible. A lot of the times when I recreate my mom’s recipes, I rely on memory and taste to help me get the recipes just right. Over the last couple of weeks, I played around with her savory tang yuan recipe and made a few changes based on the ingredients I had on hand. My mom insists on adding dried baby shrimps because the dried baby shrimp adds a distinctly salty, savory flavor to the soup base. The dried baby shrimps work almost like fish sauce in a dish. Its salty, savory flavor adds a punch to a dish. You don’t often know it’s there, but you definitely know something is missing in a dish if it’s omitted. Instead of thinly sliced salted pork, I swapped in sweet, smoky, and savory lap cheung, a Chinese-style sausage. Lap cheung is one of those key ingredients my family always had in stock at home. Kevin and I had to drive to the nearest local Asian grocery store to get our hands on these ingredients. Many of these ingredients keep well in the fridge and pantry, so one trip to the Asian grocery store can usually last us a few months. True to my mom’s original recipe, I picked up a radish from the supermarket to use in the savory tang yuan. I also used this opportunity to restock on the glutinous rice flour as well – the main ingredient necessary for any type of tang yuan. With these ingredients in hand, I set out to make savory tang yuan inspired by my mom’s recipe. The savory tang yuan was super easy to make and was oh so delicious, nostalgic, and comforting. Starting Lunar New Year with sweet tang yuan and ending Lunar New Year with savory tang yuan was a great way to keep our family traditions alive even from afar. Here is to many more traditions and food celebrations!
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