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  2. 20 Traditional Chinese Food Dishes You Need to Try ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-traditional-chinese-food-dishes...

    They’re usually steamed—which makes the buns delightfully squishy and soft—and served with dipping sauces like soy sauce, vinegar, sesame oil and chile pastes. Get the recipe 10.

  3. Steamed Wild Striped Bass with Ginger and Scallions

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/steamed-wild-striped...

    In a bowl, whisk the soy sauce with the rice wine, sugar and sesame oil. Set a bamboo steamer over a wok or an open steamer over a large, deep skillet. Add 2 inches of water to the wok and bring ...

  4. Shumai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shumai

    Ginger, Chinese rice wine, soy sauce, sesame oil, and white pepper are common seasonings to the farce. Water chestnuts and carrots are sometimes added. The outer covering is made of a thin yellow or white dough. Pork hash in Hawaii is fairly large, often the size of a large chicken egg. It is often served with soy sauce mixed with hot mustard ...

  5. Rice noodle roll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_noodle_roll

    Guangdong-style rice noodle roll. A rice noodle roll, also known as a steamed rice roll and cheung fun (Chinese: 腸粉), and as look funn or look fun in Hawaii, is a Cantonese dish originating from Guangdong Province in southern China, commonly served as either a snack, small meal or variety of dim sum. [1]

  6. Orange cuttlefish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_cuttlefish

    It has a unique soft-crisp (Chinese: 爽; Cantonese Yale: sóng) texture, generally not found in any other meat. When served, it is usually sliced into tiny pieces. It comes with a black soy sauce-based dipping gravy called (Chinese: 鹵水; Cantonese Yale: lóuh séui) that gives it a mildly salty flavor.

  7. Teochew porridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teochew_porridge

    Steamed fish, seasoned with soy sauce Omelet. Steamed fish, a fish dish seasoned with soy sauce, spring onion, slices of ginger and freshly crushed red pepper; Salted egg, a Chinese preserved food product made by soaking duck eggs in brine, or packing each egg in damp, salted charcoal; Fishcake, minced fish meat

  8. Teochew cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teochew_cuisine

    In addition to soy sauce (widely used in all Chinese cuisines), Teochew people also use fish sauce in their cooking. Teochew chefs often use a special stock called siang teng (上汤; 上湯; shàngtāng), literally translates from the Teochew dialect as "superior broth". This stock remains on the stove and is continuously replenished.

  9. List of steamed foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_steamed_foods

    Chinese steamed eggs – eggs are beaten to a consistency similar to that used for an omelette and then steamed; Corunda; Couscous; Dhokla; Jjim – a Korean cuisine term referring to dishes made by steaming or boiling [2] meat, chicken, fish, or shellfish which have been marinated in a sauce or soup Agujjim; Andong jjimdak