Showing posts with label dumplings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dumplings. Show all posts

Wontons

When I was a kid there were much less Chinese eating options in Chinatown, let alone in the suburbs. Plus the options that were available tended to be more for dinner dining; you know, ordering various dishes to be shared and eaten with rice. But what of the more quick lunch options of noodles, congee and the like? Well, that was not to come for many years which meant that these were often recreated at home instead.

I spent a lot of time making wontons with Mum as a child all the way through to when I left home. It felt like a craft project when I was younger and, although slow, my little hands and stubby fingers found it easy to pleat neat little dumpling parcels without tearing the delicate wrappers. (Apparently it was also a good way to keep me quiet and occupied.) Mum, on the other hand, would be either short on patience, greedy for greater amounts of filling or both, and ended up with many exploding wontons instead.


Mum’s go-to recipe was a beef one and any leftover mince filling was great used in an omelette. I’ve made a pork version here, with minced prawns, wood ear fungus and bamboo shoots, which is more reminiscent of the first ones I ever tried on trips to Hong Kong. Through repeated trips there to visit relatives, I also discovered that wontons didn’t have to be pleated (although the repetitive actions to produce neat results appealed to my Virgo nature) and that the trails of “hanging” wrapper pastry when cooked were meant to make the wontons resemble fat goldfish. A definite bonus to know they’re meant to look a little messy, and each a little different, when time and/or patience are a premium. And, as opposed to Northern Chinese dumplings, wontons are eaten with red vinegar.

The broth that Mum made for the wontons was always from stock cubes. Time spent on slow simmering was reserved for Chinese (medicinal) soups instead. I’ve used a chicken stock paste diluted with water and thrown in some ginger for a more Chinese flavour, but spring onions or coriander could be added too. Unless you’re lazy/disorganised like me and realise you have neither until you start cooking, ahem.


Pork & Prawn Wontons (makes 60, with some leftover filling)

Ingredients:
·  450g pork mince (with a small amount of fat)
·  3 tbs light soy sauce
·  1 ½ tbs dark soy sauce
·  pinch of ground white pepper
·  8 medium prawns, peeled & deveined
·  1 piece of dried wood ear fungus (available from Asian grocers)
·  handful of bamboo shoot slices (available from Asian grocers in cans)
·  1 pack of egg wonton wrappers (60 sheets)
·  4 tbs chicken stock paste (I used Campbell’s Real Stock Paste)
·  1.5L water, plus extra for cooking wontons
·  ginger slices, spring onions and coriander to taste
·  fresh or dried egg noodles, Asian greens, red vinegar to serve (optional)

Method:
  1. Combine pork mince with light soy, dark soy and a sprinkling of ground white pepper. Mix thoroughly and set aside to marinate.
  2. Soak wood ear fungus in a bowl of water for about 30 minutes, making sure it is completely covered. Drain and chop into short, thin shreds.
Wood ear fungus - before and after soaking
  
  1. In the meantime, chop bamboo shoots into similar short, thin shreds.
  2. Roughly chop prawns until they resemble a mince and the mixture is slightly sticky.
  3. Mix pork mince thoroughly with other chopped ingredients. Place approximately 1 teaspoonful of filling mixture in the centre of a wonton wrapper and pinch together to close. Repeat with remaining wrapper sheets until all used. 

  1. Bring 1.5L water to the boil and dissolve the stock paste into it. Add ginger and any herbs (if using) and allow to reboil before adding salt to taste. Reduce to a simmer and keep hot.
  2. Bring a pot of water to the boil. Drop in wontons in batches and they are cooked when they float to the top and water reboils. Take care not to overcrowd the pot. Remove with a slotted spoon and ladle over hot stock to serve. 
Extra wontons can be frozen flat on a tray or plate and transferred to a freezer bag once completely frozen. Excess mince filling can be flattened into a shallow dish, steamed for about 8 minutes on high heat and served with rice - tada, steamed Chinese meatloaf!


happy cooking!

Mademoiselle Délicieuse received samples of Campbell’s Real Stock Paste courtesy of Nuffnang Australia.

Umami cocktails and canapés at Saké Restaurant & Bar

It’s always exciting to be invited to dine somewhere which you haven’t, but also slightly intriguing when you read “Umami Cocktail/Canapé” as being offered on the evening. A cocktail is a cocktail, right? And though I know little about specific cocktails, I do know what flavours I tend to like in mine. However, paired with my limited knowledge of foods high in umami, my imaginings for what we would be treated to went a little something like this:


I would’ve actually found it quite funny had we been presented with a mushroom-flavoured martini, but thankfully a lot more creative thought and work had gone into these new menu items created by Saké’s Head Sushi Chef Shimpei Hatanake and Bar Manager Wayne Shennen. Much like food and wine pairings, the Umami Cocktail & Canapé menu offerings ($25 each) are designed so that the drink and food flavours balance and complement each other but whilst maximising umami-ness.


‘The Nightingale Song’ made with umeshu, pear vodka, white wine, bianco vermouth and lemon juice gets my vote for the evening with its sweet, fruity flavours and slightly dry finish. Savoury flavours aren’t really encountered in the cocktail until you get to the settled umeboshi bits at the bottom, whose flavours remind me of dried Chinese plums “wah mui/hua mei” (話梅). This cocktail is flanked by a delicate ‘Scallop Ume Spoon’ with scallop sashimi dressed with grape seed oil, white soy, lime, pickled plum paste and finely cut shiso leaf, sitting on a paper-thin cucumber slice providing crunch. ‘Yuzu Snapper’ is the other accompaniment where snow pea sprouts have been rolled into a slice of snapper sashimi dressed with olive oil, yuzu, shio-kombu (salted kelp) and tobiko.


‘The Honey Dragon’ is what I can only describe as a manly cocktail with its combination of honey, single malt Scottish whiskey, cinnamon, lemon zest and hint of chilli. Whiskey and I have yet to get to know each other beyond acquaintance level, but I am more than happy to devour the pieces of salmon belly served with yuzu soy alongside.


We are served a selection of food from Executive Chef Shaun Presland for the rest of the evening which is great for picking at alongside some drinks. Little portions of ‘Char-grilled Octopus Sunomono’ are tender and dressed with a kiwi sauce which surprisingly doesn’t taste of kiwi, and ‘Steamed Prawn Dumplings’ are a light “har-gow”/”siu-mai” hybrid but with a shaggy, shredded-skin outer.


The ‘Teriyaki Burger Balls’ are tender, meaty fun on sticks with an ever so more-ish sweet teriyaki glaze. And who can ever say no to crispy, deep-fried chicken? Served with jalapeño oil, spicy mayo and tomato salsa, it is the perfect partner to a Hitachino Nest Beer White Ale. I’m not a beer-drinker but this is light and smooth enough for me not to be turned off by what I usually perceive as a yeastiness about beer, plus the bottle sports a cute owl logo (heh!).


A DIY hand roll sushi session ensues with an array of ingredients at our disposal and leaves us wondering whether we can nab the idea for use at future dinner parties. We are shown the basic technique for making a hand roll and are told that the result should be tight enough to not fall apart but loose enough to (theoretically) let smoke through! This is, of course, much easier when watching it being done by a professional and more of a challenge when it’s our turn, and in maximising our fillings end up with exploding sushi.


Mini portions of ‘Buttermilk pannacotta with raspberry coulis’ topped with toasty coconut round off the evening of umami cocktails, with more innovative pairings to come soon. A concept bloody Mary and a miso/yakult combination were mentioned – both quirky and exciting to look forward to!

Mademoiselle Délicieuse dined as a guest of Saké Restaurant & Bar and Lindy Thompson.

12 Argyle St (near cnr Harrington St), The Rocks NSW
Tel: (02) 9259 5656

Opening Hours:  Mon-Thurs  12pm-3pm (lunch)
                                          6pm-10:30pm (dinner)
                        Fri  12pm-3pm (lunch)
                              6pm-12 midnight (dinner)
                        Sat  12pm-3pm (lunch)
                               5:30pm-11:30pm (dinner)
                        Sun  12pm-3pm (lunch)
                                5pm-10pm (dinner)

Sake Restaurant & Bar on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Jang-Gun, 4 April 2010



It’s cold and windy and you feel the chill from the surrounding air as well as seemingly from within your bones. No matter how much you bundle yourself in layers of clothes, you still can’t seem to keep warm enough. In times like this, what you need is something hot, something comforting, and something that warms your soul from within.

In our continuing bid to eat closer to home, and actually try places instead of constantly walking past them, Monsieur Poisson and I decide to try a local Korean restaurant which has been around for a while but unfortunately has been long-neglected by us. It is a cold evening and our minds immediately turn to spicy foods and Korean hotpot.

The restaurant, on the first level of Victoria Plaza overlooking Victoria Avenue, is quite busy when we wander in and it seems that everyone has the same notion of warming food to beat the cold. The tables are a little sticky and most are fitted with barbeque hotplates, although not all. The décor is simple with the walls decorated by framed pictures of dishes, some of which don’t even appear in the dine-in menu itself!


As usual with dining in a Korean restaurant, we are treated to an array of complimentary side dishes – spring onion fritters, konbu seaweed, green salad, bean sprouts, agar-agar jelly with chilli soy and, of course, kimchi. (True story: Nella’s holiday snaps from South Korea last year included that of a meal with two ordered main dishes, and upwards of ten complimentary sides dishes – all for only two people!) We also order a serve of deep-fried dumplings to start with.


I don’t particularly like deep-fried dumplings but I was having a dumpling craving so I was looking for a fix. Not overly oily and with a nice plump filling, this felt like a larger serving than its looks would convey. Water is complimentary and comes pre-chilled in reusable plastic bottles.


And then what we came for – hotpot! Monsieur Poisson has chosen the ‘Ham and vegies hotpot’ which has all manner of tinned ham, corned beef and sausage pieces in amongst zucchini, cabbage, enoki, bamboo shoots, tofu and rice cake slices in a mildly spicy soup. We mix some of this soup in with the rice which comes on the side while we wait for the square of instant noodles poised in the middle of the soup to cook, along with the egg which has been cracked over the top.


We return for dinner again soon after, on another cold evening, and are encouragingly met with a slightly differing selection of side dishes. It’s nice to know that there is variety in what the kitchen presents, even in a smaller place as this. I am intrigued by a plate of soy-flavoured legume-looking things which are chewy in texture, have a mild nutty flavour and are somewhat more-ish. An enquiry with the waiter yields no answers though.


We order the ‘Barbeque beef tongue’ as we didn’t get a chance to try any of their stir-fried dishes last time. It is presented sizzling on a hotplate interspersed with onion, spring onion, chilli and sesame seeds. The dish has a beautiful garlicky meaty flavour but unfortunately gets greasier as it cools down.

We order the same hotpot as previous but this time the square of instant noodles has a couple of slices of plastic cheese placed on top, which melts into a gooey layer as the noodles cook. More fascinating however, is the single burner portable stove placed on our table for the purposes of the hotpot – ‘solar power’? Would love to know what it says underneath in Korean!


Jang-Gun
Shop 27, Victoria Plaza, 269 Victoria Ave, Chatswood NSW
Tel: (02) 9412 1816

Opening Hours:  Mon-Sat  11:30am-10pm
Sun  5-10pm (dinner only)

Jang Gun (Korean) Restaurant on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Fook Yuen (馥苑), 24 Jan 2010


I have a confession to make: sometimes I crave Chinese food.

This may seem weird as my background is Chinese. As a child I wanted little more in the way of food than to try a homemade roast dinner (reference: multitudes of sitcoms) or lasagne (reference: Garfield) as, to this day, neither of these things are in my mother’s cooking repertoire. I grew up eating Chinese food and, as an adult, I probably spend at least half of my cooking hours devoted to Chinese cuisine as well. But be it stemming from an honest food craving or searching for something familiar in smell, taste and texture, I do sometimes get a hankering for Chinese food. Usually it’s for something specific such as rice, congee, noodles or dumplings, and sometimes it is for the whole dining experience that is yum cha (飲茶).

Yum cha for me, like food experiences for many people, is not just about the neat little steamed and deep-fried morsels on offer left, right and centre in their glorious shapes and colours. Yum cha is typically something that’s been done with family either here or when visiting extended family overseas, and involves hours of sitting, drinking tea, waiting (or, these days, selecting off a ‘dim sum’ (點心) sheet), chatting, laughing and eating. It is a process by where we exchange information and gossip, and makes for happy times amongst the often raucous environment.

Yum cha literally means ‘drink tea’ and is not really restricted to any particular time of the day but does tend to be consumed during daylight hours. The focus was originally on the tea, with ‘dim sum’ dishes designed to complement the tea rather than the other way around. Tea houses tended to be frequented by well-off men with a caged bird in hand to while away the hours with other men who had the time to boast stories as well as to listen – much like a pub or bar but without the alcohol. My grandfather was one of these men and my mother, being the youngest of thirteen children, used to accompany him to yum cha in his older years. She recalls the corridor-like tea houses with their booth seats against the window side, linoleum or tile flooring throughout, and wooden ceiling fans spinning overhead. She remembers the ‘dai bao’ (大包) or big buns that were filled with a combination of pork, chicken and green vegetables that were larger than her child’s fist and that were steamed in their own individual saucer dish. The ‘dim sum’ were sold by men with trays supported by a strap around their neck (think popcorn or hotdog seller at an American football game) as the now popular trolleys were yet to become affordable with their individual gas heaters, and women did not partake in this line of work due to having to be around so many men. One of these ‘dai bao’ plus a spring roll at least an inch wide and 5 inches long and my mother would be full. These are images of an era gone-by but, if you look hard enough, there are still a few in this vein nestled in older suburbs throughout Asia.

Much more locally though, Monsieur Poisson and I like to frequent Fook Yuen. The décor is a bit 80s Chinese but, hey, aren’t the 80s back in fashion? That aside, the food is honest and, although there may not be as great a range of ‘dim sum’ as at other places, the food is definitely done well. The steamed ‘dim sum’ have thin translucent wrappers that manage to hold the non-overloaded fillings and manage to not rip open when the dumpling is removed from its steamer basket – a true sign of a ‘dim sum’ that is well-made. Of course the taste doesn’t disappoint either, which is why we’re here for lunch with Kiki and Dr King this particular day.

We start with some steamed beef mince dumplings (乾蒸牛肉燒賣 – ‘ngau yuk siu mai’) which somehow appeal to me much more than their larger, meatball-type counterparts (山竹牛肉 – ‘saan juk ngau yuk’), although I do like the layer of beancurd skin which is found underneath. Essentially the two have the same filling and both are served with Worcestershire sauce, but being smaller and differently shaped makes these easier to eat for me.


Next we have steamed beancurd rolls (鮮竹卷 – ‘sin juk guen’) which feature beancurd skin (made by skimming the ‘skin’ layer off heated soy milk and allowing to hang dry) wrapped around a filling of minced pork and finely chopped carrot and wood-ear fungus. Sometimes you will also find bamboo shoots or bean thread/green bean/glass vermicelli/noodles in amongst the filling.


This is followed up by the almost infamous ‘Phoenix claws’ (鳳爪 – ‘fung jau’) or braised chicken’s feet. For those of you grossed out by the ‘dirty’ concept of feet, this is how the dish is prepared: the feet have a tough ‘outer’ skin removed before being either deep or shallow fried prior to being stewed in a spicy black bean sauce. Perhaps I am just used to seeing them and am therefore immune to their ‘offensiveness’, but think of the cultures which consume pigs’ trotters (this includes the Chinese) and I really don’t see the difference. Granted there is almost no meat on chicken’s feet and what you are eating is pretty much skin and tendons; touted as being high in collagen and good for hair, skin and nails.


I am excited when I hear a ‘dim sum’ lady call out ‘lap cheong’ buns (臘腸卷 – ‘lap cheong guen’). These simple steamed buns which are wrapped around a Chinese dried sausage segment are increasingly hard to find at yum cha due to people – particularly, young females – ‘watching their weight’. This is one of those ‘dim sum’ that really takes me back to my childhood and you can still find some places that roll the bun dough into a long rod before wrapping it around the sausage in a spiral fashion to give a rippled appearance. The sweet bun outer is the perfect vessel for the fatty, sweet and distinct flavour of the dried sausage.


When I was a kid the steamed glutinous rice with chicken in lotus leaf (糯米雞 – ‘loh mai gai’) were square and at least the size of sliced sandwich bread, if not larger. The rice was also steamed almost from raw within the lotus leaf, allowing for much more of the lotus leaf fragrance to permeate the rice. These days the parcels tend to be individually-sized and the rice is much more subtly fragranced due to the rice being cooked first then wrapped in the leaf only for the final stage of steaming. Nonetheless they are sticky, filling and warming and offer masses of comfort. Depending on the chef, you will also find salted duck egg yolk, dried shiitake mushroom and/or dried scallop in amongst the chicken filling.


And although we are not yet ready for sweets, we still order the steamed Malay cake (馬拉糕) when we see it approaching. A light and airy sponge cake with a batter featuring heavily in eggs, I have never known of its origins although its name suggests it is Malay. None of my relatives have been able to enlighten me on this matter either, but what’s important is that it tastes good! We have ours snipped into quarters.


Steamed Teochew/Chiu-Chau dumplings (潮州粉果) aren’t very popular amongst my family, apart from an uncle whose own family hails from the area. But I love the filling of finely minced pork with crunchy water chestnuts and celery with the sweetness of roasted peanuts. When I was much younger in Hong Kong, you could find large versions of these at roadside stalls where, upon purchase, the stallholder would stab a couple of bamboo skewers through one before placing it in a small, brown paper bag. Perfect with some chilli oil too.


For the most of us, a yum cha meal is not complete without steamed prawn dumplings (蝦餃 – ‘har gau’). The ones here are the perfect size for me – definitely not a case of bigger is better. You don’t want to bite in and be overwhelmed with filling that explodes everywhere leaving you with the contents (hopefully) in your bowl and no outer wrapping to go with it. After all, it’s all about the filling to wrapper ratio.


One of Monsieur Poisson and Dr King’s favourites then happen to pass by and it is the steamed garlic chive dumplings ( 韮菜餃 – ‘gau choi gau’). The garlickly contents often include some lard or small prawns these days, so what was originally intended as a vegetarian dumpling is not quite these days.


Then it really is time for sweets. There’s mango pancakes which have eggy crêpes enclosing a filling of sweetened whipped cream and mango slices. My husband, not enjoying mango, declines having one of these which can only mean more for the rest of us!


And there’s sweet tofu dessert (豆腐花 – ‘dau fu fa’) which features a lighter version of silken tofu swathed by sugar syrup often scented with ginger. You want the tofu to be in thin slices, rather than chunks and the less breakage the better.


For our finale we have that all-time favourite loved by young and old, Chinese and non-Chinese: egg tarts (蛋撻 – ‘daan tart’)! The ones here are made with flaky pastry and sometimes, like on this day, there are miniature versions available which just ups the pastry to filling ratio. Mmmm…


For those of you who are unfamiliar, a final tip: look around you next time you’re at yum cha and you will see teapots with the lid left ajar on diners’ tables. This is the universal acknowledged Chinese sign to signal to waitstaff that their pots need refilling. I have no idea where this gesture hails from but it makes for effective, silent communication in a noisy dining environment!

Fook Yuen (馥苑)
Level 1, 7 Help St, Chatswood NSW
Tel: (02) 9413 2688

Opening Hours:  7 days  around 10am-3pm (yum cha lunch)
            around 5pm-11pm (dinner)

Fook Yuen Seafood on Urbanspoon

happy eating!


PS. I once saw Bill Granger eating here with his family!

New Shanghai Chatswood (新上海) (again!), 31 Dec 2009

After a particularly late but enjoyable night catching up with a childhood friend visiting from London, which culminated in us getting home not long after sunrise, Monsieur Poisson and I understandably did not awake until the early afternoon. Lunch ended up being at around 3pm that day and instead of the usual oily, fried breakfasts in which I usually seek comfort after a big night out, our appetites were drawn towards the soul-restoring comforts of dumplings.

As we were not feeling very energetic, we only got as far as New Shanghai Chatswood and not the newer one at Chatswood Chase. We start off with the requisite Shanghainese soup dumplings, ‘xiao long bao’ (小籠包) which we happily slurp up easily as they require little chewing.


This is followed by Shanghainese stir-fried noodles (上海粗炒麵) which appears as a larger than expected serve. A mound of thick noodles flavoured with soy sauce are intertwined with strips of pork and ‘choy sum’ (菜心).


Strangely the dish that we order first is the last to be served. The savoury ‘Shallot Pancake’ (蔥油餅) makes for a great flaky, pastry snack and also satisfies our need for something a little oily. So I may not be indulging in a fried breakfast but I never said I was foregoing oiliness altogether!


New Shanghai Chatswood (新上海)
Shop 20, Lemon Grove Shopping Centre, 427-441 Victoria Ave, Chatswood NSW
Tel: (02) 9415 3536

Opening Hours:  Mon-Wed  10am-8pm
                        Thurs-Sun  10am-8:30pm

New Shanghai Chinese Restaurant on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Céci, 21 Nov 2009


After a sweaty afternoon of rock-climbing, a group of friends and I find ourselves at Céci to fix our collective hunger. I have been recommended this Korean eatery by multiple sources, mainly for its value-for-money large serving sizes. The décor is decidedly eighties with many splashes of peach and floral prints but what we’re here for is the food.

Mistress and I are the first to arrive after parking her car and we are lucky to secure a table for eight after the staff ask a couple to relocate to a table elsewhere. Following our being seated, a queue quickly begins to grow at the doorway. The eatery is small and the service swift. We are asked several times how long our friends will be and whether we would like to order first. I leave the ordering to Mistress as she has eaten here previously. We decide to choose a few items and double up on serves so as to cover our long rectangular table.

As usual, there is an array of Korean side dishes but I’m disappointed that there’s no cold, creamy pasta. Something I like to eat on its own and also something that helps take the heat away from other dishes!


We start the evening with ‘Spicy Dumplings’ and ‘Seafood Pie’. The dumplings are large, plump and filled with minced pork and vegetables. They taste to have been deep-fried prior to being stewed in a spicy sauce.


The ‘Seafood Pie’ is your usual Korean seafood pancake but is thicker and features a lot more filling than I’m used to seeing elsewhere.

Up one end of the table we have a serve of ‘Barbequed Beef’ where thin slices of beef are brought out to be cooked atop a hotplate on an individual gas burner. Up the other end of the table we have the ‘Barbequed Chicken’ (not pictured) which is in a spicy sauce. Both feature a mixture of vegetables as well as curiously thick slabs of white onion.


Mistress tells us the ‘Sweet & Sour Chicken’ is quite a well-known dish at Céci but what surprises us about it is its resemblance in taste to Cantonese-style sweet and sour pork! The chicken pieces are encased in batter before being tossed in a sticky sweet and tart sauce.


And, our only dish devoid of any heat of the evening is the ‘Japchae’ (potato noodles) which is a lovely mix of springy noodles with crunchy vegetables, including my favourite cloud ear fungus, and thin strips of beef.


The food was served in quick succession and we barely had enough room to put all of it. Despite our rock-climbing induced hungers, there was too much food to finish and two plastic containers’ worth were taken away. And like normal, sane people full of dinner, we ventured to the Gelatissimo nearby for dessert almost immediately afterwards!

Céci
37 The Boulevarde, Strathfield NSW
Tel: (02) 9746 7710

Opening Hours:  7 days  10:30am-10:30pm

Ceci on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

New Shanghai Chatswood (新上海), 2 Oct 2009


After many reinventions of this corner shop space at Lemon Grove Shopping Centre, an outlet of Ashfield’s famed New Shanghai has taken up residence. Mistress and I find ourselves here for lunch one day before a spot of shopping. We add our names to the growing list of people waiting for tables and peel off a numbered ticket.

Whilst loitering around outside we get a good view of the dumpling preparation window at the doorway which is piled high with columns of bamboo steamer baskets. Although it’s no Din Tai Fung, it still makes for compelling viewing to watch the ladies’ nimble fingers rolling out rounds of dough, filling them with pork mince mixture and deftly enclosing them into dumplings. The funniest thing is the wearing of face-masks to convey hygiene – more often than not these are worn under the chin by the ladies as opposed to over their mouths and noses! This is completely understandable however, due to the heat and moisture circulating within the small, enclosed space.


The glass window of the dumpling preparation kitchen bears a laminated sign printed with “OPENING SPECIAL MENU PRICE”. When we are seated about 10 minutes later we do not receive a specials menu, nor are we told of a discount when we settle our bill so the sign leaves us confounded. Table service is minimal, which is expected of an economical eatery, but here sometimes borders on being blunt. We order two dishes (in Mandarin) and instead of the usual, “Anything else?” we are met with, “Is that all?” Luckily the food is good when it arrives.

We order an obligatory serve of Shanghainese soup dumplings, ‘xiao long bao’ (小籠包). The dumpling skins are thin and even all the way around, and the dumplings themselves are equally sized. Once popped, the dumplings contain ample meat juices inside to allow for satisfied slurping. When Mistress flags someone down to ask for saucers to hold the black vinegar, we are told to just pour the vinegar into our bowls. We have to hassle another two waitstaff before we receive the requested sauce dishes.


Our other dish is ‘Shanghainese new year’s cake stir-fried with XO sauce’ (XO醬炒上海年糕). The chewy and sticky glutinous rice ‘noodles’ are cooked to be nicely separated and are all coated with some of the spicy sauce. Threads of pork are tossed throughout, along with Chinese broccoli, ‘kai laan’ (芥蘭).


We have been here on other occasions and I can also recommend the flakily layered ‘Shallot Pancake’ (蔥油餅). Unfortunately I didn’t take any photos but, despite the service, I will be back again for the food so eventually there will be!

New Shanghai Chatswood (新上海)
Shop 20, Lemon Grove Shopping Centre, 427-441 Victoria Ave, Chatswood NSW
Tel: (02) 9415 3536

Opening Hours:  Mon-Wed  10am-8pm
                        Thurs-Sun  10am-8:30pm

New Shanghai Chinese Restaurant on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

LATEST UPDATE: New Shanghai has opened yet another outlet in Chatswood, at Chatswood Chase’s newly revamped ‘Dining Court’. The store has its own internal seating and looks out over the food court. The colour scheme and renovations are completely unlike its other outlets – check it out when you get a chance!

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