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Hakka cuisine is the cooking style of the Hakka people, and it may also be found in parts of Taiwan and in countries with significant overseas Hakka communities. [1] There are many restaurants in mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, as well as in the United States and Canada, that serve Hakka food.
Abacus seeds (Chinese: 算盘子) or abacus beads is a Hakka Chinese dish consisting of dimpled, disc-shaped dumplings made with taro and tapioca flour.The dumplings are boiled then stir-fried with minced pork, shiitake or wood ear mushrooms, dried shrimp, dried cuttlefish and firm bean curd.
Hee pan (Chinese: 喜粄; pinyin: xǐbǎn) is a type of steamed rice cake of Chinese origin from the Hakka people. Traditional Hakka hee pan is made from rice milk ( 米浆 ) and red sugar. This gives hee pan its distinctive red coloring, chewy texture, and sweet taste.
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Hakka-style dish of bitter gourd stuffed with shrimp and fish paste [9] Rice Tangyuan: 汤圆 (tangyuan) Glutinous rice ball [11] Sticky rice with lotus leaf: 荷葉糯米飯 Zong: Zongzi Zongzi: Two types: sweet (Hakka-style) and salty (Cantonese-style); the sweet version is eaten with peanut powder. Wrapped in fatak leaves. [12] Tofu Teofu
Yong tau foo (simplified Chinese: 酿豆腐; traditional Chinese: 釀豆腐; also spelled yong tao foo, yong tau fu, yong tau hu or yong tofu; ก๋วยเตี๋ยวแคะ in Thailand) is a Hakka Chinese dish consisting primarily of tofu filled with ground meat mixture or fish paste. Variations on this dish feature — instead of ...
Chilli chicken is a popular Indo-Chinese dish that uses chicken, and is of Hakka Chinese heritage. [1] [2] In India, this may include a variety of dry chicken preparations. [3] Though mainly boneless chicken is used in this dish, some recipes also use bone-in chicken.
Poon choi or puhn choi [1] (pronounced: pun4 coi3 in Cantonese and pun choi in Hakka), pén cài in pinyin, is a traditional Hakka festival meal composed of many layers of different ingredients. It is served in large wooden, porcelain or metal basins called poon , due to the communal style of consumption.