Macanese Minchi

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Macanese minchi.

So a few nights ago we were watching Anthony Bourdain eat his way through Macau and everything seemed so exotic to me, from the streets to the food to the Portuguese Eurasians. HasMacauchanged so much in the five years since I visited or did I not see the real Macau? I bet if you've been to Macau (one hour from Hong Kong that was leased to Portugal about 500 years ago as a trading port for and returned to China in 1999), you'd have eaten those delicious Portuguese egg tarts and pork chop buns. But did you eat minchi? Do you even know that minchi is Macau's national dish? I didn't. I thought Minchi was a girl I knew back in university; never met her again after we graduated. Hey Mingchee of Sarawak, please FB me if you ever read this!

Yeah, so I thought I knew Macau but realized when watching the show that I have to visit the place again soon because Bourdain made it so different from the Macau I visited. The guy just looks like he has so much fun everywhere he goes, doesn't he? He's the coolest food traveller. Really, wouldn't you rather be him than Zimmerman or Chinn or Smith or Axian? It's not just the leather jacket. Bourdain makes food tasting travelling so...hippy chic.

Macanese cuisine is influenced by Chinese, European (especially Portuguese), Indian and South East Asian cuisines so other than stir-frying, Macanese food is also grilled and roasted. Seasonings include soy sauce, oyster sauce, spices, Worchestershire sauce, tomato sauce, coconut milk (see my recipe for Portuguese chicken) and eve! n a ferm ented shrimp paste similar to the Malaysian belachan, called balichao.

Bourdain ate a version of minchi with Chinese black fungus. Black fungus are commonly used in Chinese cooking, especially in vegetarian dishes. The more popular version of minchi has potatoes instead of black fungusbut of course Bourdain wouldn't choose potatoes over fungus. Since I love both black fungus and potatoes, and I had no idea what's more authentic, I decided to include both in my minchi. There aren't that many minchi recipes on the Net but from what I've googled, minchi is a home dish and every mom cooks her own version which can be a mixture of beef or pork mince or one of those, potatoes or black fungus (which is either 'cloud ears' or 'wood ears'), and may or may not have cumin or cinnamon or oyster sauce or tomato paste but the basic seasonings are light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, Worchestershire sauce, salt, pepper and sugar. Oil can be veg oil or olive oil.

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Cloud ears are softer and thiner than wood ears. Both are edible fungus said to improve blood circulation and lower cholesterol but I eat them because I've always eaten them. Black fungus has a nice light crunch, yeah, like ears.

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1. Cut about 3 potatoes into 2 cm cubes (these were cut too small) and deep fry them until golden brown and crispy (mine were underfried).

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2. Chop a large brown onion and 3 cloves garlic and fry them in veg or olive oil until soft.

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3. Add 500 gm each of pork and beef mince (I prefer to buy the beef and pork and hand-chop them) and a bay leaf to the onions and garlic and stir fry, breaking up the meat.

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4. Fry in medium-high heat until meat has turned white.

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5. Add about 2 tablespoons of dark soy sauce, stirring well to mix.

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6. Add 2 tablespoons of light soy sauce, stirring well to mix.

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7. Add about 2 tablespoons of Worchestershire sauce (less if you don't like the tart taste), mixing well with the meat. Worchestershire sauce reminds me of Mrs Epps, a Eur! asian-Ce ylonese neighbor who taught me English when I was in Primary 3. I wanted to be like her--cook well, keep a nice house and dress well all the time. And oh, always have music in the house.

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8. Some white or black pepper. Cumin and tomato paste too if like. Season with a bit of sugar.

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9. Add the chopped cloud ears and 3 tablespoons or more of water. Stir well.

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10. Lower the heat, cover for a couple of minutes, checking now and then to make sure the mixture doesn't burn.

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11. Taste and season if necessary. Add the potatoes and dish up. Eat immediately or reheat before serving.

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Serve minchi hot with rice and a fried egg.

Minchi is traditionally eaten with rice and a fried egg and it tastes yummy when just! cooked but remember that this is simple, ordinary comfort food. The next time I cook this, I'll omit the black fungus because the dish tastes better with potatoes, and I'd add more potatoes too.


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