Ingredients
- 27 mins
- 8 sausages
- 1 more
- 1,100 gr turnips
- 850 ml water
- 700 ml water (cold)
- 475 ml chicken broth
- 300 gr corn starch
- 160 gr cantonese sausage
- 120 ml water
- 65 gr chinese shrimps (dried)
- 30 ml cooking oil
- 20 ml oil
- 12 gr sugar
- 10 ml oil in (pan)
- 5 ml soy sauce
- 5 ml cooking wine
- 5 gr pepper (ground)
- 4 gr salt
- some shortening
Let the cakes cool completely before cutting. Cooled cakes can be easily taken out of pans upside down. Turnip cakes taste better when served warm and topped with soy sauce and a little bit of chili sauce. Or they can be cut up into thin slices and pan fried slightly with oil before serving. NOTES: An easy recipe for Cantonese salty turnip cakes -We usually make this cake in winter time. I got this recipe originally from a magazine in Hong Kong. It is a new and easy way to make this Cantonese specialty. I have tried this recipe on about ten Americans. They all like it. If you don't have a steamer, a 15 litre stock pot can be a very good steamer. Any casseroles that can fit in your steamer can be used instead of cake pans. * Cantonese sausages are usually made with pork cubes. They are made by dehydrating the sausages with cold air and are usually available in the winter time. The diameter is about the same as American breakfast sausages but is about 5 to 15 cm long. The sausages have to be cut into very fine cubes so that they mix well with the turnips. The cake tastes good partly because of the flavor of the sausages. I have never tried anything else. But I think bacon bits might be able to mix well with the turnip mixture. Of course, the cake will taste different with bacon bits. : Difficulty: moderate. : Time: 1 hour preparation, 2 hours cooking and cooling. : Precision: measure the ingredients. : Infan Cheong : Computer Science Dept., U. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, USA : cheong@uiucdcs.cs.uiuc.edu : Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust