Pages

Tuesday, 19 April 2011

QUAIL EGGS AND MIXED VEGETABLES ON POTATO NEST


When I was growing up this was one of the few vegetable dishes I knew and liked.  I found it fun to pop the green peas in my mouth one at a time. 

This was one of the classic dishes in Chinese restaurants. It wasn't served in a potato nest but in a footed dish, the standard serving dish in Chinese restaurants then. People simply called it Green Peas. 



When I came to London, I was disappointed that this dish wasn't in the restaurant menu. They, in fact, haven't heard of this dish at all. Luckily, my mother used to cook it at home, so I have learned to prepare it myself.

There's only a few ingredients in this dish and the ingredients are variable. You can omit or replace some. I've used a mixture of carrots, green peas and water chestnuts but you can also use turnips or cut up baby corn.


Ingredients for the potato nests:


4 potatoes, shredded
2 tbsp. light soy sauce
1 tsp. salt
1/2 c. corn flour
oil for frying


Mix all the ingredients together, except for the cooking oil. 


Heat the cooking oil in a wok. 

Dip a medium sized metal sieve into the hot oil. Take out of the oil and add a quarter of the potatoes and pat along the sides to form a bowl shape. 

Fry on medium heat, turning the sieve around and spooning fat on the potatoes if not completely submerged in oil. Fry until crisp. 

Push the bottom of the sieve to pop out the potato nest. 


Repeat with rest of the potatoes. Set aside.


Ingredients for the vegetables:


1/4 c. whole cashew nuts
1 clove of garlic, crushed
1 1/4 c. frozen green peas
1 c. diced carrots, parboiled
1 small can of water chestnuts, each piece quartered
1 tbsp. oyster sauce
2 tsps. light soy sauce
1/2 c. cooked frozen small prawns
1/4 c. stock or water
1 tsp. corn flour
1/2 tsp. sesame oil
12 quail eggs, cooked


Method:


Heat up 2 tbsps. of cooking oil in a wok. Stir fry the cashew on low heat just until it turns golden. Take out of the wok and set aside. 


On high heat, in the same pan and using the same oil, sauté the garlic for 1 minute. Add the green peas, carrots and water chestnuts and stir fry for 2 minutes. 

Add the prawns, oyster and light soy sauce and stir. Disperse the corn flour in the stock or water and add to the vegetables while stirring. When the sauce has thickened, the dish is cooked. 


Add the cashews and sesame oil. Give it a quick stir before turning the heat off. Divide into four and serve each portion on a potato nest. Top with 3 quail eggs each.

All rights reserved ©Adora's Box Copyright 2011. 

Please support Adora's Box by making your Amazon.com and mymemories.com (use the code STMMMS55174) purchases from this site. Click on their respective banners to proceed to their websites. It will not cost you a single cent more but will help sustain this blog. Thank you.
Chicken and Lettuce Boats (San Choy Bau)
Bamboo Shoot Lumpia in Chive Wrapper

Thanks for dropping by. It would be nice if we could meet up on FACEBOOK or TWITTER

11 comments:

  1. Oh my goodness! How cute!!!!!!! It's so hard to eat such a cute little thing. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. This looks absolutely stunning! what a wonderful idea and getting kids to eat their veg in such cool surroundings ;-)
    Can just imagine the different crunches and soft quail. Just gorgeous!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I adore anything served in nests made out of food! I once made a potato nest but alas the whole thing stuck to the metal sieve and refused to pop out. Thanks for sharing your presentation and tips, I'll try doing this again your way!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love quail eggs... it goes so well with any kind of salad. Your potato nest look so cute. I have to try this soon :)
    Tes
    http://tesathome.com

    ReplyDelete
  5. That looks great. It is adorable.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love this, Adora! Brings back memories of the chinese restaurants we used to go to as kids - those days they were called "panciteria" (oops my age is showing). Fantastic potato nest!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi Adora...you have so many inspiring food & recipe ideas that's why I check your blog often. Thanks for sharing this. It's perfect for Easter.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh cute! This is definitely festive enough for Easter too! Definitely an elegant presentation!

    ReplyDelete
  9. That looks fantastic! I got really hungry just looking at it! :)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Too beautiful to eat! What a work of art. I'm sure it's tasty too. My kids would love something like this.

    ReplyDelete
  11. That is stunning--so lovely!

    ReplyDelete

Did you like this post? I'd love to hear your thoughts...

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.