The
countdown to Chinese New Year is on again and I am looking forward to this
season of feasting and family togetherness. But due to the global pandemic and
resulting lockdown situation, celebrations will be different this year.
Even
though there are limitations to our movement, I am glad that restaurants and
cafés are still serving for takeaways and deliveries, so there is still an
option to order in instead of spending long hours in the kitchen, preparing a
menu of festive food.Takeaway Prosperity Yee Sang prepared
by Wan Li Chinese Restaurant, Renaissance JB
We
read online that most Chinese restaurants were already serving their seasonal
specialties, so my family and I decided to have a takeaway experience for a
pre-Chinese New Year banquet – and enjoy a lower Early Bird price.
Having
agreed on the estimated time of arrival for the pick-up, I reached the porch of
the Renaissance Johor Baru ahead of time to collect my order prepared by Wan Li
Chinese Restaurant.
I
told the security staff who approached me with a polite enquiry that I was
there to collect my food order from Wan Li. A few moments later, I saw the
staff coming out with bags containing my packed order.Here they are with my takeaway order from
Wan Li Chinese Restaurant
I
am familiar with the Cantonese cuisine prepared by Chef Linus Mak and his
culinary team and was eagerly anticipating the taste of their popular Abundance
Treasure Pot along with the eight-course Chinese New Year takeaway set which
includes two desserts.
Our
festive banquet at home will not be complete without a platter of Prosperity Yee
Sang so I guessed that the round box within a Red carrier bag must be our
order of this raw fish salad topped with Salmon fillets.
It
is now a tradition to kick off a Chinese New Year banquet with a prosperity
toss of Yee Sang,
a phrase which literally means raw fish, so it will be fun to savour this festive favourite
at home too.Ready to load up takeaway order into my car!
There were three large paper bags neatly packed
with takeaway containers with one carrying the claypot for the Abundance Treasure
Pot or Poon Choy or Choi (Cantonese), a dish best described as a
Banquet in a Basin.
Like
the Yee Sang, the Poon Choi are available in two sizes, Small and Large. For
our takeaway, I chose the Small size that serves a portion for five diners.
There
was an air of excitement as I unloaded the carrier bags from my car and
unpacked the food containers on our dining table, probably because this was our
first time for a takeaway Chinese New Year banquet experience.
It
does not matter that there was no fancy crockery in an elaborate table setting
because what mattered most was the good food shared with loved ones in the
comfort of our own home.Adding salmon fillets to the
Prosperity Yee Sang platter
To
share this experience with family members who cannot be home for our
traditional reunion dinner this year, we made every effort to capture good
shots of our meal to share this dining experience with them.
As was the tradition, we started our meal with the Prosperity Salmon Yee
Sang prepared with Crispy Shredded Treasures and topped by salmon fillets which
the chef had creatively folded into a shape that resembled rose blossoms.
I was privileged to do the honours of adding the side ingredients onto
the salad with a praise-worthy attempt at pronouncing the appropriate
auspicious wishes as each ingredient was added.
When I poured in the tub of oil, I moved my hand in a circular motion to
ensure that the liquid gold flowed in all directions to cover all areas
with good fortune…Tossing Yee Sang salad together!
Above all, we are grateful for such bountiful provisions, for our
protection and preservation, for the measure of good health we enjoy and the
family, no matter how few of us, who can share this meal together during these
unprecedented times.
Then it was time to raise our chopsticks to toss the salad together and
give the ingredients a good mix.
It was good to taste the familiar flavour of a refreshing mix of piquant
flavours from the colourful shredded ingredients that range from slivers of
jackfruit, pomelo beads to pickled radish, tinged with the sweetness of plum
sauce along with the crunch from slices of crispy beetroot.
Abundance Treasure Port that serves five diners
With our appetite suitably whet by the appetizing taste of the Yee Sang
salad, we move on to admire the ingredients in the Abundance Treasure Pot with
its top layer attractively arranged with heads of abalone, whole prawns from
the sea and broccoli florets topped with black moss and a sprinkle of golden
garlic.
As
we eat through the layers below, we discovered slices of sea cucumber, Chinese
mushrooms, fish maw, dried scallops, dried oysters, village chicken, roast
duck, white radish, Chinese Tianjin cabbage, stewed in the rich flavours of
golden garlic and abalone sauce.
In
the tradition of treasure pots, the rich ingredients from this Banquet in a Basin
were distinctly selected for their symbolism and prepared in portions
sufficient to satisfy each diner.
As
we savoured the tasty ingredients, it was also an opportunity to introduce my
niece to some of the ingredients that she was unfamiliar with. Look at all these rich ingredients in the
Abundance Treasure Pot!
For
instance, faat choy, a black moss that resembles strings of black hair, its
symbolism and why these ingredients are featured in Chinese New Year dishes.
By
this time, the soup – still sitting in the takeaway containers – was cooling
down so we emptied the portions of soup into a saucepan to warm it up before we
savoured the comforting taste of the Double-Boiled Village Chicken Soup brewed
with American Ginseng.
This
festive menu included auspicious dishes of poultry, fish, vegetables, prawns
and fried rice wrapped in a lotus leaf – and finally, two desserts.
Even
though the dishes were laid out on the table, we chose to eat each dish one
after another, taking our time to savour the flavours as if they were served
course by course. Our takeaway pre-Chinese New Year banquet
The
portion of Wan Li Roast Chicken came with a box of crispy prawn crackers,
packed air-tight for us to enjoy the crisp crackle of the crackers with the
chicken.
For
a change from the usual Steamed Sea Garoupa fish in Soya Sauce, this takeaway
menu served a Deep-Fried Sea Garoupa and a side of Teriyaki Sauce with Garlic
and Scallion.
Before starting on the fish, we drizzled the sauce over the deep-fried fish. In the privacy of our home, we had no qualms about rolling up our sleeves to dig in with our fingers and chewed every morsel of flesh from its bones.
My
niece – a great fan of prawns – marveled at the size of the gigantic prawns and
did her duty in de-shelling a prawn to serve her grandmother.
Meanwhile
my eldest sister – not a fan of prawns – graciously offered her share to my
niece who accepted it without hesitation and thoroughly enjoyed the wok-fried
Sea Prawns soaked in the rich and fragrant garlic ginger sauce.
The vegetable dish was Broccoli with (big!) braised Mushrooms and Pacific Clams. These vegetables comfortably complimented the vegetables we enjoyed in the Yee Sang salad and happily finished it to the last bit.
The
meal came to a fitting close with fragrant Fried Rice with cubes of Smoked
Duck, Chinese Sausage and Yam, served wrapped in Lotus Leaf.
Then
we cleared the table and took a break before serving the double desserts of
Chilled Sea Coconut with Red Dates, Ginseng Herbs and Longan Soup, and crispy Nian
Gao, a traditional rice cake made from glutinous rice.
It was like a taste of nostalgia when I sank my teeth into a slice of the rice cake, sandwiched between a slice of sweet potato and a slice of yam, then deep-fried coated in a crispy batter.
Chewing
on it not only evoked thoughts of dad, who was such a fan of this rice cake (that
he could enjoy eating it on-its-own!) but it also reminded me to (again!) share
the belief about Nian Gao and the kitchen god...
Legend
has it that the gooey consistency of this steamed sweet rice cake was to seal
the lips of the kitchen god and stop him from giving a bad report about the
family when he goes to meet the Jade Emperor a week before the dawn of the new
year…
So
each year as families gathered for reunion dinners and festive feasting, this
and other folklore will be shared among the family from generation to
generation, in a tradition that builds strong bonds and family togetherness.Double desserts of Sea Coconut with
Red Dates, Ginseng Herbal Longan soup
and crispy Nian Gao
As
we put down our chopsticks, we agreed that while a takeaway Chinese New Year
banquet was a different experience, it was pure pleasure to savour festive
favourites with dear ones in the comfort of home.
To
place takeaway orders, Tel: +607 – 381 3388 or +6017 – 771 3327. Email: henry.lee@renaissancehotels.com
Wan Li Chinese Restaurant is on the lobby level of Renaissance Johor Baru, at No. 2 Jalan Permas 11, Bandar Baru Permas Jaya, 81750 Johor Baru, Johor.
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