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Spinach and Egg Rolls

This is a very popular, simple and healthy home-style Chinese dish — thin omelette sheets rolled around blanched spinach with a light savory filling. 



It’s often served as a cold appetizer, breakfast item, lunchbox food or side dish. The rolls are tender, colorful, mildly seasoned and look elegant when sliced.

Ingredients (makes 6–8 rolls)Egg sheets
  • Eggs — 4 large
  • Salt — ¼ tsp
  • Cooking oil — 1–2 tsp (for frying)
Spinach filling
  • Fresh spinach — 300–400 g (about 10–12 cups packed)
  • Garlic — 2–3 cloves, minced
  • Light soy sauce — 1–1½ tsp
  • Sesame oil — 1 tsp
  • Salt — ¼–½ tsp (to taste)
  • Sugar — ½ tsp (optional, balances flavor)
  • White pepper — small pinch
  • Toasted sesame seeds — 1–2 tsp (optional, for garnish)
Optional add-ins for extra flavor/texture
  • Carrot — ½ small, julienned or finely shredded (blanched)
  • Wood ear fungus — 20 g dried (soaked, blanched, shredded)
  • Cooked ham or crab stick — 50 g, julienned (for richer versions)
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Blanch the spinach
    • Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add a pinch of salt.
    • Add spinach in batches. Blanch 20–30 seconds until bright green and wilted.
    • Immediately transfer to a bowl of ice water (or very cold water) to stop cooking and keep the color vivid.
    • Drain well. Squeeze out as much water as possible with your hands (very important — wet spinach makes rolls soggy).
    • Chop roughly or leave in longer strands (depending on preference).
  2. Season the spinach
    • In a bowl, mix blanched spinach with minced garlic, light soy sauce, sesame oil, salt, sugar, white pepper, and optional toasted sesame seeds.
    • Toss well. Taste and adjust seasoning (it should be savory, garlicky, and lightly aromatic).
    • Let sit 5–10 minutes so flavors absorb.
  3. Make the egg sheets
    • Crack eggs into a bowl. Add ¼ tsp salt. Beat well until fully combined (no streaks).
    • Heat a non-stick pan (20–24 cm diameter) over medium-low heat.
    • Lightly brush with oil (use a paper towel — very thin layer).
    • Pour in a thin layer of egg mixture (about ¼ of total for each sheet). Swirl pan quickly to spread into a thin, even circle.
    • Cook 30–60 seconds until set and edges lift slightly (do not brown — it should stay pale yellow).
    • Flip carefully (or slide onto a plate and invert back into pan) and cook 10–15 seconds more.
    • Slide onto a cutting board or plate. Repeat to make 4 thin egg sheets.
    • Let cool slightly.
  4. Assemble the rolls
    • Place one egg sheet on a clean surface or bamboo mat (optional).
    • Spread a thin, even layer of seasoned spinach across the sheet (leave 1–2 cm border at the top edge).
    • If using carrot, ham, or wood ear: arrange thin strips in a line near the bottom edge.
    • Starting from the bottom, roll tightly into a cylinder (like rolling sushi).
    • Seal the end by pressing gently (egg is slightly sticky when cool).
    • Repeat with remaining sheets and filling.
  5. Slice & serve
    • Trim the ends for neatness (optional).
    • Cut each roll into 1.5–2 cm thick slices with a sharp knife (wipe knife between cuts for clean edges).
    • Arrange slices cut-side up on a plate.
    • Serve chilled or at room temperature as an appetizer, side dish, or snack.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Egg sheet thinness → Thin sheets roll easier and look prettier. Use low heat and swirl quickly.
  • Squeeze spinach well → Excess water makes rolls soggy and fall apart.
  • Flavor balance → Garlic and sesame oil are the stars — don’t skip them. Sugar is subtle but rounds out the taste.
  • Make ahead → Rolls can be made 4–6 hours in advance and refrigerated (cover tightly). Slice just before serving.
  • Variations
    • Add shredded chicken, imitation crab, or dried shrimp for richer filling.
    • For spicy version: mix chili oil or chili crisp into the spinach.
    • For vegan: replace egg sheets with thin tofu skin or rice paper.
  • Storage → Refrigerate up to 1 day (texture best on day of making). Do not freeze.
This dish is light, fresh, colorful and full of gentle savory flavor — a perfect Chinese home-style cold dish.

Almond Milk Tea with Egg White

This is a classic, silky, and comforting Hong Kong-style / Cantonese dessert drink , often served chilled in summer or warm in winter. 



The signature feature is the fluffy, cloud-like egg white foam  that floats on top, giving a light, meringue-like texture and a luxurious mouthfeel. 

The base is a smooth, nutty almond milk made from real almonds (not artificial essence), mildly sweet and fragrant.

Ingredients (serves 3–4 small bowls or glasses)Almond milk base
  • Raw almonds ( mix preferred; is sweeter, more aromatic) — 100–120 g (about ¾–1 cup)
  • Water — 1.2–1.5 liters (start with 1.2 L for thicker milk)
  • Rock sugar — 60–100 g (adjust to taste; rock sugar gives the cleanest sweetness)
  • Optional: a pinch of salt (enhances nutty flavor)
Egg white foam
  • Egg whites — 2 large (room temperature)
  • Sugar — 20–30 g (or to taste)
  • Optional: a few drops of vanilla extract or almond extract (for extra fragrance)
Optional garnishes
  • Toasted almond slices or crushed almonds — 1–2 tbsp
  • Goji berries — a few, soaked
  • Osmanthus flowers ( a small pinch (dried or fresh)
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Soak and blend the almonds
    • Rinse almonds under cold water.
    • Soak in plenty of cold water for 4–8 hours (or overnight) — this softens them and makes blending easier.
    • Drain almonds. (You can peel the skins for a whiter, smoother milk, but many traditional recipes keep the skins for more nutty flavor and nutrition.)
    • Place soaked almonds in a high-speed blender with 1.2 liters water.
    • Blend on high for 1–2 minutes until completely smooth and milky (no visible almond bits).
  2. Strain the almond milk
    • Pour the blended mixture through a very fine mesh strainer, nut milk bag, or double-layered cheesecloth into a large pot.
    • Press or squeeze gently to extract as much milk as possible (you should get about 1–1.2 liters of smooth almond milk).
    • Discard the almond pulp (or save it for baking, smoothies, or almond cookies).
  3. Sweeten and heat the almond milk
    • Pour the strained almond milk into a clean pot.
    • Add rock sugar (start with 60 g — you can add more later).
    • Heat over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until the sugar fully dissolves and the milk is hot but not boiling (about 70–80°C / 160–175°F). Boiling can make the milk separate or lose fragrance.
    • Taste and adjust sweetness (it should be mildly sweet — the egg white foam will add more sweetness later).
    • Turn off heat. Let cool slightly (warm or room temperature is fine for hot version; chill completely for iced version).
  4. Make the egg white foam
    • In a clean, dry bowl, add the 2 egg whites.
    • Beat with an electric hand mixer on medium-high speed until foamy.
    • Gradually add sugar (20–30 g) while beating.
    • Continue beating until stiff peaks form (glossy, firm, and holds shape when lifted — about 3–5 minutes). Do not overbeat to dry peaks.
    • Optional: add a few drops of vanilla or almond extract at the end for extra fragrance.
  5. Assemble & serve
    • Hot version (traditional winter style):
      • Reheat almond milk gently until warm (do not boil).
      • Ladle into serving bowls or glasses.
      • Spoon a generous dollop of fluffy egg white foam on top of each serving (it floats beautifully).
      • Garnish with toasted almond slices, a few goji berries, or a sprinkle of osmanthus flowers.
    • Iced version (summer favorite):
      • Chill the almond milk completely in the fridge (or over ice).
      • Pour into glasses filled with ice cubes.
      • Top with egg white foam (whip fresh if it deflates).
      • Garnish as above.
  6. Serve
    • Serve immediately — the egg white foam is best when fresh and airy.
    • Drink by spooning the foam first, then sipping the almond milk below — the contrast is divine.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Almond quality → Use good-quality raw almonds (mix is traditional for balanced flavor). Avoid pre-blanched or roasted almonds — they change the taste.
  • Smoothness → High-speed blender is essential. Blend long enough to break down almonds completely.
  • Egg white foam → Bowl and beaters must be grease-free and dry. Fresh egg whites whip better. Don’t overbeat.
  • Sweetness → Rock sugar gives the cleanest, most authentic taste. Adjust gradually — it should be mildly sweet.
  • Variations
    • Add a splash of evaporated milk or coconut milk for creamier texture.
    • For extra fragrance: steep a jasmine tea bag or osmanthus in the milk.
    • For vegan: omit egg white foam (still delicious as plain almond milk tea).
  • Storage → Almond milk keeps in fridge 2–3 days (shake before use). Egg white foam is best fresh — whip new batch when serving.
This dessert drink is silky, fragrant, lightly sweet, and incredibly comforting — a true Cantonese classic.

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Spinach and Egg Rolls

This is a very popular, simple and healthy home-style Chinese dish — thin omelette sheets rolled around blanched spinach with a light savor...

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