Serving Lion's Head to celebrate the Year of the Rabbit |
So now as an adult with my own family, I find myself wanting to pass down some of these Chinese New Year traditions, superstitions and all. The house is clean, cleaning out any bad luck. We placed a pair of clementines in each room of our house symbolizing happiness, good fortune and health. Red envelopes are stuffed and ready to hand out to the boys. All that is missing is the big feast. I'm a little behind with menu planning and shopping due to all the friggin' snow we've been getting. But thought I'd share a new recipe we tested this week that was a huge hit and will definitely be part of our family's Chinese New Year tradition.
Lion's Heads with lots of mane (or cabbage) |
Lion's Head
Adapted from Ming Tsai's Simply Ming One-Pot Meals
Note: Chinese dishes have evocative names. The lion's head refers to the meatballs and the cabbage represents the mane. A lion represents strength and the roundness of the meatball represents family, togetherness.
INGREDIENTS
3/4 lb ground pork
3/4 lb ground beef
1 medium onion, cut into 1/4-inch dice
1 tbs minced garlic
2 tbs minced ginger
2 tbs Worcestershire sauce
1 tbs sesame oil
1 cup steamed white rice
2 large eggs
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 small head napa cabbage, cut into thin strips
DIRECTIONS
1. Set up steamer (bamboo steamer or dish elevated above water-filled wok)
make-shift steamer in a wok |
3. Using your hands, lightly form the mixture into 2-inch balls. Place a 3/4 to 1-inch bed of cabbage in the top of the steamer and top with the meatballs. Season with salt and pepper and steam until the meatballs and cabbage are cooked through (10-12 minutes). Transfer the cabbage to a platter , top with the meatballs and serve.
The Good: Super easy to make. No rolling around meatballs in oil.
The Bad: The cabbage cooks down dramatically. Wish there was more cabbage to go around.
Grade: A. The boys could not get enough. Great, quick, healthy weeknight meal.
This looks as delicious as stuffed cabbage without as much work. I love hearing about how you're passing down your traditions and sharing them with your family.
ReplyDeleteThanks Megan. It really is so easy. And the boys loved pretending to roar like lions :)
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