“There are 15 days of Chinese New Year, so does this mean
15 days of feasting too?” I wondered while I was planning meals with our guests
this festive season.
Mum with her children, grandchildren and great-grand kids. Even baby Audrey got into the craziness in this silly shot! |
In any community, food is an essential part of
celebrations and for Chinese New Year, traditional Chinese will indulge in
feasting on auspicious food to usher in good fortune for the year ahead.
Feasting traditionally begins with the reunion dinner
when family members come together for a festive feast on the eve of Chinese New
Year.
Many enjoy the tradition of preparing a wide array of
ingredients to cook and eat in a steamboat meal while many modern families may
opt to enjoy their reunion meal in a restaurant.
Following this popular trend, restaurants have prepared
festive menus that start with a prosperity toss of Yee Sang or Raw Fish
salad followed by dishes created with high-value, quality ingredients in superior
soup, whole fish, poultry, meat and vegetables.
Generous chunks of fresh salmon to top our own-made Yee Sang tossed at Mampir Lagi |
To accommodate this demand, restaurants offer two
dining sessions for reunion dinners, with the first starting as early as 5.30pm
and the second session at 8pm.
As “non-traditional” Chinese, our family always opted
for something extraordinary to enjoy for our reunion dinners.
For a start, my mum did not have parents-in-law, so
she never had the obligation to go to her father-in-law’s house to be a dutiful
daughter-in-law.
This is because traditionally, the reunion celebration
would be held in the home of the family patriarch.
I remember joining my cousins, uncles and aunts for a huge
gathering at grandfather or Ah Kong’s house at No. 154 Jalan Ngee Heng.
Ready for our Yee Sang toss at Mampir Lagi |
This was my earliest experience of such a family
reunion with large-scale cooking for a family who would feast on grandmother’s
specialty dishes, especially her tender Teochew braised duck!
In the kitchen, grandma’s dutiful daughters-in-law
would be helping her, the chief cook, to chop or peel ingredients that would go
into the delicious soup and dishes.
I must emphasize that Chinese New Year is a serious
time of feasting for families especially for folks whose forefathers arrived
here with very little and had carved out a living from very humble beginnings.
In olden days, working-class Chinese lived humbly
throughout the year and Chinese New Year was the only time of year to have a
taste of real meat.
Teochew braised duck prepared in grandmother's recipe by Aunty Polly |
I remember stories told about how boys were favoured
over girls and that mothers would set aside the fleshy chicken thigh for her
son/s while the daughters had to settle for bony bits of the chicken.
Thankfully, this mindset had changed and there is now
a sense of equality and balance in treatment towards sons and their
high-achieving daughters.
Meanwhile I’m pleased that mum and her sisters not
only inherited grandma’s recipes but have also mastered the art of preparing
her famous Teochew braised duck and warm Cantonese egg pudding!
[I knew that these two specialties would somehow
surface during Chinese New Year when family members from near and far would
enjoy a taste – and I was right!]
Chinese New Year 2020 coincided with the birthday of
eldest uncle who is advancing with age – he said he’s 91 – so many journeyed from
UK, Sydney, Perth and Kuala Lumpur, to enjoy a double-celebration with him at
his home in Kota Tinggi on the first day of Chinese New Year.
Family reunion dinner at Sisters Barbecue Korean Family Restaurant |
But before the dawn of the New Year, family members
arrived in Johor Baru – family by family – and the feasting started from our
humble home with a home-cooked meal that my nephew, his wife and young family (from
Perth) had the privilege to enjoy.
Weeks ago, my nephew Brendon, who’s also based in
Perth for studies, had a FaceTime chat with my mum (his grandmother) and told
her that he would be back for Chinese New Year.
Among other things, he told his grandmother that he
longed for a taste of her special bitter-gourd soup!
It was so funny because traditional Chinese would never
consider bitter-gourd as part of their festive menu. But as we are
“non-traditional,” my nephew had his fill of grandmother’s bitter-gourd soup
with his home-cooked dinner!
On the day before Chinese New Year eve, dinner was
arranged for more than 20 people in our extended family that included the
parents-in-law of my two nephews plus a brother-in-law who had returned from
Belfast.
All smiles for a delightful dessert of fresh durian! |
This feast was hosted in Mampir Lagi, a café
that serves Indonesian cuisine, prepared by master chef and proprietor, Henny
Lumintang, a native of Lombok Island.
Henny was so kind to accommodate our request to
Bring-Our-Own ingredients (platter and chopsticks too!) for a toss of
refreshing Yee Sang or Raw Fish salad before enjoying the flavours of
her tasty Indonesian dishes.
It was an unusual combination of food especially when
my sister-in-law arranged for a generous portion of fresh salmon topping on the
Raw Fish salad!
The next day was Chinese New Year eve and for the
reunion, dinner was arranged at Sisters Barbecue Korean Family Restaurant in
Bukit Indah for Korean cuisine.
Chinese New Year 2020 coincided with Uncle Roland's birthday for a double celebration |
This was indeed a special reunion for us because our
group increased by another three – Aunty Polly, her husband and daughter
(Wimbledon) – who had arrived from KL by road.
After a leisurely meal with countless refills of tasty
kimchi, I overheard the buzz whispered way down the long table and learnt about
the impromptu decision to meet back home for dessert.
Then I was given the pleasant task to drive the
seniors home to await the delivery of our dessert of fresh durian!
Then our reunion dinner continued with a deeply
desired feast for the fans of bitter or sweet tasting durian, getting their
fill of this unique King of Fruits.
Our Chinese New Year Day kicked off with well-wishing
each other as the elders and married women presented Red Packets or lai-see
filled with fortune money while the children and single adults, happily
received.
Then we had another Yee Sang toss at home accompanied
by a meal of – wait for it – thawed-out-frozen Kway Chap.
Chinese New Year dinner at Village Briyani Cafe |
My brother and his wife had thoughtfully bought this
in advance and stored it in deep-freeze so that relatives who lived abroad and who
longed for a taste of this Teochew specialty in JB, could savour it as a
special treat!
With a hobby in photography, my nephew’s wife came
armed with her clever camera and organized us for a photography session –
family by family – to capture photo mementoes, both formal and silly shots!
Later for lunch, everyone converged at the home of Uncle
Roland, including his daughter (Sweden), Aunty Nellie (Melbourne) and Aunty
Sylvia, her husband and son along with Aunty Polly’s younger daughter (Sydney),
four who drove directly to Kota Tinggi from KL that day.
Lunch at Fika Farmhouse in Horizon Hills |
Uncle was clearly overwhelmed with emotion when he was
presented with two birthday cakes, one from me and the other from his grandson,
and we sang “Happy Birthday” to him in three languages – English, Mandarin and
Malay – while his daughter and husband sang their Swedish version of Happy
Birthday!
For dinner on the first day of Chinese New Year, our family
feasting continued in JB with North Indian cuisine at Village Briyani Café.
By this time, our group had increased by another four
people and our table was extended a little longer to accommodate this large
group.
And just as we did in previous group meals, those who
had eaten their fill, moved up and down the long table to chit-chat and snap
photos with each other.
Warm Cantonese egg pudding made by Aunty Sylvia |
As I licked my fingers, I thought it was simply bizarre
to enjoy a delightful dinner of Briyani rice, Roti and Naan with a selection of
tasty gravies for Chinese New Year!
In the next two days, there was more family feasting
held in homes and in favourite restaurants like Fika Farmhouse at Horizon Hills
for Iberico pork ribs and for meaty crabs at Tian Lai Restaurant in Gelang
Patah.
Even as I write, most of the family members who joined
our reunion, have left JB for the next leg of festive visits in KL.
From the photos shared, I saw that they also feasted
on homemade braised duck in grandma’s recipe and freshly made egg pudding with
a dash of brandy.
Meanwhile some have returned to Australia or will be
boarding their flight in a few hours’ time to head back to the UK.
It was so good to welcome all of you back to JB and to
make more memories together.
I think we can aptly describe it as an epic reunion,
don’t you?
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