Saturday, December 19, 2015

Pearl Balls (珍珠丸子) & Braised Lion Head (紅燒獅子頭)

These are two ground pork based dishes, both genuinely authentic, easy to make, and delicious to taste.  The first recipe below, Pearl Balls (珍珠丸子), i.e., Small Chinese Meatballs rolled in Sweet Rice, originated from Hubei Province (湖北, Shanghai's upstream sister along the Yangtze River), and became popular in Shanghai region, esp. as a Chinese New Year dish. The second recipe, Braised Lion Head (紅燒獅子頭), i.e., Large Chinese Meatballs braised in Soy Sauce, is a well-liked Shanghai region dish, esp. when it is served in a cold winter night.

I. Pearl Balls (珍珠丸子, Small Chinese Meatballs rolled in Sweet Rice)  Note- remember to soak 1 cup of sweet rice overnight before doing anything (see Step 3 below).
  1. [Prepare the Pork Paste] Place ~2 lbs of ground pork (or, grind a pork butt and use 2 lbs) in a large mixing bowl.  Gradually stir in ~1 cup of water (1/2 cup for firmer meatballs) in circular motion in single direction (either clockwise or counterclockwise, but one direction only), till the pork turns into paste form (5-6 minutes).  Add 1 medium-sized onion (minced), 1 8-oz can of water chestnut (minced), 1 egg, 1/4 - 1/2 box of Tofu, 1 tsp of salt, 4 Tbsp of soy sauce, and 1/2 tsp of white pepper, into the mixing bowl.  Stir vigorously in the same single direction again, for 3-4 minutes.  Note- Cut the salt and soy sauce to half if you like mild-tasted meatballs.
  2. [Make the Meatballs] Use one large spoon to scoop up enough pork paste to make a meatball that is ~3/4" - 1" in diameter.  Pass the paste between one spoon and the other, to form a ball.  Set aside the meatball.  Repeat this process 12 -16 times (enough for a full plate).  
  3. [Make the Pearl Balls] Soak 1 cup of sweet rice in water overnight (or 6-8 hours).  Strain out the water, and spread the sweet rice in a large pate.  Roll each meatball in the sweet rice until the meatball is fully covered with the rice (now, that is a Pearl Ball).  Place the pearl ball in a glass or ceramic container that is suitable for steaming later (I used a 8" x 8" glass baking pan that could fit 16 pearl balls).  Repeat this process until all pearl balls are placed in the container. Spread the remaining sweet rice evenly into the cracks of the pearl balls.  
  4. Steam the pearl balls for 60 minutes in a steaming pot (no need to cover the container with plastic wrap), and serve.  Here is a picture of the finished product. 
II. Braised Lion Head (紅燒獅子頭, Large Chinese Meatballs braised in Soy Sauce)
  1. [Prepare the Pork Paste] Same as above, and use the remainder of the pork paste after making 12-16 pearl balls.
  2. [Make the Lion Heads] Add 1/4" deep of vegetable oil into a deep non-stick flat bottom cooking pan. Turn on high heat.  Use a small-to-medium sized soup ladle to scoop up enough pork paste to make a large meatball (~3" in diameter).  Place the paste in one palm, and pass the paste between one palm and the other plam, back and forth, to make the paste form a ball.  Place the meatball back in the soup ladle and slide the meatball into the pan (now with the oil near smoke point, ~400-degF).  Sear both sides of the meatball till brown (check the bottom of the meatball regularly).  Repeat this process until you have enough to fill the cooking pan.  A seared large meatball is known as a Lion Head (獅子頭).  After searing, set aside the lion heads.
  3. Rinse and chop half a Napa Cabbage into larger bite size (~2" x 2", or larger).  In a fresh flat bottom cooking pan, place the Napa Cabbage pieces at the bottom until fully covered.  Add into the pan: 6-8 dried mushrooms and a cup of dried black fungus (both reconstituted and cut into bite size).  Turn on high heat, add 1/4 cup of soy sauce (i.e., 4 Tbsp), 1/4 cup of water, 1/2 tsp of salt, 1 tsp of sugar.  Place 4-5 Lion Heads on top of the Napa Cabbage pieces.  Bring to pot to boil, and let simmer for 30 minutes with lid on.  Optionally, during the last 30 minutes of simmering, soak some mung bean noodle (bean vermicelli, 粉絲) in water till soft (~5 minutes), then drop it into the simmering pot at the very end (~3 minutes, add water if the mung bean noodle absorbs all the fluid).  Here is a picture of the finished product.

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