Hong Kong Dishes
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This
is virtually Hong Kong’s national dish. The name literally means “fork
roast”. The tender fillets of pork are roasted and glazed in honey and
spices, and hung in the windows of specialist roast meat shops. Cha siu is classically served thinly sliced, with steamed rice and strips of vegetables.

Cha siu
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Hainan Chicken
Comprising
chunks of steamed chicken, served slightly warm or cold, and dipped in
an aromatic oil made with spring onions and ginger, this dish has become
everyday comfort food. It is traditionally accompanied by a rich
chicken broth, a few vegetables and rice steamed in chicken stock for
flavour. -
Brisket of Beef
Requiring
up to eight hours of slow cooking, preparation of this Hong Kong
classic is an art. Households and restaurants guard their individual
recipes, but all involve the classic five Chinese spices, rock sugar and
tangerine peel. It’s served in an earthenware pot as a main course, or
as a topping for rice or noodles. Given its richness, it is particularly
enjoyed in winter. -
Fish Balls
A
daily food for many Hong Kongers, either on skewers as snacks or served
with noodles in broth to make a meal. Traditional restaurants eschew
machine production methods, and still shape these balls of minced fish,
white pepper and other spices by hand, before poaching them in seafood
or chicken stock.

Fish drying, Cheung Chau
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You
may have encountered the disastrous and greasy travesty of fried squid
served up in Western Chinatowns. Banish that unpleasant memory from your
mind, and prepare to discover the gloriously crisp original. Fresh
squid is scored, lightly battered and flash fried with lots of salt,
white pepper, chilli and garlic. The result is an addictive combination
of tangy textures. -
Lai Wong Bau
Chinese
bread is shaped into buns, not loaves, and steamed rather than baked –
giving it a beautifully soft and fluffy quality (no gritty whole grains
here). There are many varieties of sweet bun, but lai wong bau
is the reigning favourite, the kind of treat that children will clamour
for. These buns are filled with milk, eggs, coconut and sugar. Try them
piping hot on a cold winter morning.
Top 10 Dim Sum (Dumplings)

