---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02

     Title: SHARK'S FIN WITH BAMBOO FUNGUS
Categories: Chinese, Seafood, Ceideburg 2
     Yield: 1 servings

   635 g  Dried shark's fin *
    12    Bamboo fungi (all similar
          -size, about 4 gms each)
    12 sm Crab claws
     1 c  Stock
    12    Coriander sprigs (for
          -garnish)
    12    Asparagus (all similar
          -size, about 1.5 g each)
   150 g  Bean sprouts
          Cooking oil
          Salt
   1/4 ts Ginger juice

--------------------------------SHRIMP PASTE--------------------------------
   3/4 c  Minced shrimp meat (approx.
          -1 20 g)
   1/2 ts Cornstarch
          Salt

---------------------------SIMMERING INGREDIENTS---------------------------
     2    Ginger root slices
     2    Shallots
     1 tb Chinese yellow wine (or
          -sherry)

-------------------------------CRAB ROE SAUCE-------------------------------
   150 g  Crab roe
     2 tb Water
     1 tb Cornstarch
   1/4 ts Salt
     5 c  Stock

----------------------------------GARNISH----------------------------------
     1 tb Shredded Chinese cured ham

 * (note: there is no suitable substitute for shark's fin)

 This is some serious food++as most of these recipes are.  They are the
 creations of one of the most intense culinary environments in the
 world and the competition is fierce.  I've never seen the Bamboo
 Fungus called for in this soup in any of the Asian markets I've been
 in and preparing a Shark's Fin is not for the impatient.

 Establishment: Bui Hang Village Restaurant (Hotel Miramar) UG/F.,
 Princess Wing, Hotel Miramar, 130 Nathan Road, Tsimshatsui, Kowloon.

 Chinese Cuisine Practical Class Platinum Award - Shark's Fin "Gossamer
 curtains veiling exquisite feminine shadows" would be a justifiably
 poetical translation for the mood-setting name of this dish. The
 bamboo fungus, a deluxe vegetarian ingredient with almost mystical
 connotations, is envisaged as a curtain of delicate fibres, through
 which the beguilingly beautiful forms of the superlative shark's fin
 can be glimpsed. Red Mayflowers (denoted by the crab roe) are
 "embroidered" on the curtains, adding a third level of appetizing
 connotations.

 To prepare 1. Soak, shark's fin for 4 hours in cold water, and then
 simmer over medium heat for 10 hours. 2. Clean bamboo fungi and soak
 in cold water for 3 to 4 hours. 3. Steam-clean crab claws for
 approximately 3 minutes on plate on wok stand above boiling water. 4.
 Make shrimp paste by mixing shrimp meat with cornstarch and pinch of
 salt.

 To cook 1. Mix simmering ingredients with water (sufficient to cover
 fin) and bring to the boil.  Add cooled shark's fin and boil for 5
 minutes. Dram well and stuff inside bamboo fungi. 2. Arrange stuffed
 fungi on a deep plate.  Mix 1 cup of stock and 1/4 tsp of salt and
 pour over fungi. Cover and steam for 15 minutes. 3. Coat each claw
 with 10 g of shrimp paste, garish with a sprig of coriander, place in
 a deep plate, cover and steam for 3 minutes. 4. Add 1 cup oil to
 heated wok, then add asparagus and saute for 30 seconds. Drain and
 place asparagus in 3 cups of salted water and simmer until just
 cooked. Drain and refresh with cold water. 5. Stir-fry bean sprouts
 in a heated wok with 1 tbs oil, 1/2 tsp salt and ginger juice until
 half-cooked, but still crunchy.  Remove from wok. 6. To make crab roe
 sauce, add water, cornstarch and salt to stock. Over a high flame,
 bring to the boil.  Add crab roe and bring to the boil again (at
 which point presentation platter should be ready for this sauce).

 To present 1. Arrange stuffed bamboo fungi like spokes of a wheel,
 pointing inwards on serving dish.  Lay asparagus and crab claws
 between them. 2. Pour freshly boiled crab roe sauce over dish.  Pile
 bean sprouts in centre, top with shredded ham.

 From "Champion Recipes of the 1986 Hong Kong Food Festival".  Hong
 Kong Tourist Association, 1986.

 Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; October 26 1992.

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