Chinese braised abalone with mushrooms - for a celebration
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Chinese braised abalone with mushrooms - for a celebration

2
hours
24 hours
To make, cool and chill the superior stock
2 hours
To soak the dried mushrooms
24 hours
To cook, cool and chill the abalone and ham
6-10
people

Susan says

This dish is good to serve during the Lunar New Year holiday because it’s full of expensive, auspicious ingredients that are supposed to bring wealth and happiness. It’s not difficult to make, but it does take a long time, so spread the work out over at least two days. In restaurants, it would be made with dried abalone - which is extremely expensive, and not easy to prepare, but I’ve substituted fresh abalone.

Don't bother cooking this if you're not going to make the superior stock: it's a waste of expensive ingredeints if you use canned broth or chicken powder. You need a soup chicken - a larger, older hen that's very tough, but which, when simmered for many hours, yields a flavourful broth.

 

You can buy fresh abalone from wet markets but I prefer the larger, frozen variety that come from Australia or South Africa. If using small, fresh abalone, buy one per person and have the vendor clean them; for the larger ones, buy three or four weighing about 150 grams each, then slice them when they're thawed.

Chinese ham is heavily salted then air-dried, so it's dense and flavourful. For the stock, buy the cheaper scraps and bones, but for cooking with the abalone, pick a nice, tidy piece.

Ingredients
For the superior stock
1, about 1.5kg (3lb 5oz)
soup chicken
800g (28oz)
pork trotters, cut lengthwise through the bone, then into 5cm (2in) lengths
125g (4½oz)
Chinese ham scraps
50g (1¾oz)
peeled ginger
6-10, depending on size
spring onions
To make the dish
8-10 small, or 3-4 large (about 150g/5⅓oz each)
abalone
fine sea salt, as necessary
100g (3½oz)
Chinese ham, in one piece
12 large
dried Chinese mushrooms
a few
lettuce leaves
8-10
conpoy (dried scallops), about 2.5cm (1in) in diameter
12
goose or duck webs (feet)
1.5 litres (6⅓ cups), or as needed
superior stock
Cornstarch, for thickening, if needed
Iceberg lettuce and broccoli florets, for serving
Directions

Make the superior stock. Bring a very large pot of water to the boil and add the chicken, pork trotters and Chinese ham scraps. Bring the water to the boil then lower the heat and simmer for five minutes. Drain the ingredients, remove them, and wash the pot. Rinse the chicken and ham under cold, running water and put them back into the pot. Scrub the pork trotters, washing away all the scum and sediment from the bones and meat, then put the pieces back into the pot. Add four litres (four quarts) of water to the pot then place it over a high flame. Bring to the boil then add the ginger and spring onions. Cover the pan partially with the lid then lower the flame so the water is at a very low simmer. Cook for six to eight hours, skimming away any scum that floats to the surface. After six to eight hours, the broth should be clear and taste very chicken-y. Strain the ingredients through a colander set over a large bowl. Discard the ginger and spring onions; the chicken, trotters and ham can be used in other dishes.

1/10

Cool the broth then put it in the fridge; after it chills, scrape off and discard the coagulated fat. You won't need all the stock for this recipe; the remainder can be frozen for later use.

2/10

If using frozen abalone, defrost them. With both fresh and frozen, rinse them under cold, running water. Pull the intestines and guts from the body. Sprinkle a lot of salt over the abalone then use a small, clean brush such as a toothbrush to scrub them thoroughly until the bodies are clean and smooth. Rinse off the salt.

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Bring a medium-sized pot of water to a simmer then add the 100g (3½oz) piece of Chinese ham. Bring to the boil, then drain. Rinse the ham with cold water, then drain again.

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Soak the dried mushrooms in just enough warm water to cover them. When they are completely hydrated (about two hours), trim off and discard the stems. Squeeze out the water from the mushroom caps. Strain the mushroom soaking liquid through a fine sieve into a measuring cup. Add enough superior stock so you have 1.5 litres of liquid.

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Line a large clay pot (or steel pot) with a few lettuce leaves to cover the bottom (this prevents the other ingredients from scorching). Put the mushrooms on the lettuce then add the abalone and the ham. Pour in the superior stock/mushroom soaking liquid, adding enough to cover the ingredients. Set the clay pot over a medium flame and bring to the boil. Turn the heat to very low, cover the pot with the lid and cook at a low simmer until the abalone is tender (about six to eight hours, depending on size). Check the pot frequently to make sure the ingredients aren't cooking too quickly and that there's a sufficient amount of liquid. Remove from the heat and cool to room temperature, then refrigerate for at least four hours, or overnight.

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About two hours before serving dinner, take the pot from the fridge and let it come to room temperature before placing it over a low flame (if you put the pot on the heat straight from the fridge, it might crack). Bring the contents to a simmer. Fish out and discard the lettuce leaves. Take the ham from the pot and cut it into fine julienne before stirring the pieces into the ingredients.

7/10

Scrub the goose or duck webs throughly and clip off the nails. Add them to the clay pot/steel pot, tucking them among the ingredients so they're submerged in the liquid. Simmer for about 45 minutes, or until tender. Rinse the conpoy with water, then put them in a bowl and add just enough warm water to cover them. Leave to soak for about 15 minutes. Add the conpoy and the soaking liquid to the pot and bring to a simmer. Cook for about 15 minutes, or until the scallops are tender. Taste the braising sauce - it should be deeply flavoured and just a little salty. If it's too salty, stir in more superior stock to dilute it. If the sauce is watery, put a heaped teaspoon of cornstarch into a small bowl, mix in some sauce, then pour this mixture into the pot, stirring constantly. Add enough cornstarch to lightly thicken the sauce.

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In a pot of boiling water, blanch the lettuce leaves until just wilted, and cook the broccoli until tender, then drain. Squeeze the excess water from the lettuce.

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To serve, put the lettuce leaves in a serving dish and arrange the webs, conpoy and mushrooms on top. If you used larger abalone, thinly slice them, then lay them over the other ingredients; with small abalone, leave them whole. Arrange the broccoli over the ingredients, then serve with white rice.

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