Ingredients:
1 slice Winter melon (based on the diameter of 8″ and thickness 2″)
1 lb Pork ribs
8-10 pcs Red dates - pitted
5 or 6 dried shitake mushrroms - soak
1 piece tai tau choy - soak and wash away the salt
3-5 pcs Dried oysters/dried scallops/dried octupus/dried squid - soak
Salt to tasteMethod:
Put pork ribs in the pressure cooker and put in enough water to cover the ribs. Bring it to the boil and conitinue to boil until all the scums rise to the surface. Remove all the ribs and wash away all the scums. Discard the water in the pressure cooker and wash preassure cooker really well.
Cut winter melon into small cubes of 1″ (remove seeds and skin)
Put cleaned ribs back to the pressure cooker together with the rest of the ingredients except the salt. Put in the water that mushrooms and dried octupus were soaked. Top up with more water until it is enough to cover the ingredients. Close the lid of the pressure cooker and pressurized for 30 - 45 minutes, counting from the time the pressure cooker starts hissing.
Turn off heat when cooking time is over and let the pressure released by itself before opening the lid.
Taste the soup before adding salt as tai tau choy can be very salty.
Enjoy
Serves
i make soups like this all the time. hearty and delicious, and remind me of home.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful hearty soup. It looks delicious, Lily. I hope you are having a great day. Blessings...Mary
ReplyDeleteCan you post a picture of what tai tau choy is? I am sure if I saw it, I would know what it is.
ReplyDeleteThanks
My son who is working in HK becomes more like HK residents likes to drink soup. I am more like cantonese being looked after by the Cantonese Mah Chai.I like Tai Tou choy but my children did not fancy that. Maybe I should try this soup. Very delicious and good for hot weather.
ReplyDeleteMy grandma makes daikon cake (lo pak ko) using ta tau choy but i never knew what it actually looks like. Do you have a photo of it? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHi, MIss Lily
ReplyDeleteI love this winter melon soup, reminds me of my AhMah Nai Nai, how I miss every soup of our homeland. Simple and delicious.
olivia and anonymous
ReplyDeletei used my last piece of tai tau choy for this soup. Will get some from the asian store and then take some pictures.
Hello Miss Lily,
ReplyDeleteIs tai tau choy same as tong choy?
Thank´s
kaosuelin
ReplyDeletetai tau choy is preserved/salted kohrabi and tung choy is made from nappa cabbage
I just made wintermelon soup today too! It's great. I think yours looks much more appetizing though!
ReplyDeleteHello,
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Radu
ReplyDeleteCan you give me the link to your blog so that i can review it cos i will only link blogs which are food related only
If you don't have a pressure cooker, would you just simmer it on the stove for a few hours?
ReplyDeleteI've never used a pressure cooker nor do I own one.
Thanks! Your posts are very inspiring.
anonymous
ReplyDeletelike any soups, the longer you simmer the better the soup - the cantonese call it 'low fore tong'
From what I've seen so far, this looks very good.
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I am just using a soup paste Boullion instead of the ribs and all of that, how many cups of water is this supposed to go in and how many does it serve?
ReplyDeleteThank you!
anonymous
ReplyDeletewhen making soup, i like to make it with just enough of water/stock to cover the ingredients that go into the soup. The servings in the ready to drink soup depends on the method used - like stovetop soup pot or the pressure cooker. If the soup has evaporated jut top with water and bring it back to boil and adjust the taste. In your case, check with the instruction which comes with the boullion, do not add too much water in the beginning, adjust the taste at the end, with either salt or water