Eating fish at Chinese New Year is a must, and this home-style sea bass recipe comes from Amy Poon of Poon’s London, a family food business producing top-quality Chinese sauces,...
Eating fish at Chinese New Year is a must, and this home-style sea bass recipe comes from Amy Poon of Poon’s London, a family food business producing top-quality Chinese sauces, oils and dressings.
Rinse the mushrooms, lily flowers, red dates, goji berries and tangerine peel, then put them in a large bowl and cover with warm water. Leave for half an hour until soft. Drain, then slice the mushrooms (removing the stalks from the shiitake), tie the lily flowers into knots, thinly slice and remove the stones from the dates and cut the tangerine peel into very fine matchsticks. Put them all in a bowl, then add the soy sauce, sesame oil, shaoxing wine, white pepper, sugar, potato starch/cornflour and 1 tbsp vegetable oil. Mix well.
Cut 3 of the spring onions in half to create 6 pieces, then put 5 of these on a heatproof plate big enough to hold the fish. Lay the fish on top (so the spring onions act as a trivet and allow the steam to circulate around the fish properly), then put the final spring onion half inside the cavity. Cut 2 slices off the piece of ginger and put them inside the cavity too. Cut the remaining ginger and the final spring onion into matchsticks.
Put a large steamer over a pan of simmering water or put a wire rack in a large wok or pan filled with simmering water. Pour the marinated dried ingredients over the fish, piling all the solids up. Put the fish plate in the steamer/wok, then cover and steam over a high heat for 8-10 minutes.
Heat the remaining 3 tbsp oil in a small pan until smoking hot. When the fish is cooked, carefully lift out the plate (wear oven gloves). Pile the spring onion matchsticks and ginger matchsticks on top, then the coriander. Pour the hot oil all over the fish – it should vigorously sizzle and give off a fragrant aroma. Serve.