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Abalone Seafood Congee

This is a luxurious, silky-smooth Cantonese-style congee often served at upscale dim sum restaurants or during special occasions. 



The abalone  brings a rich, oceanic sweetness and tender-chewy texture, while a mix of fresh seafood adds depth and elegance. 

The congee is light yet deeply flavorful, with a velvety mouthfeel that makes it one of the most refined seafood porridges in Chinese cuisine.

Ingredients (serves 3–4)Congee base
  • White rice (jasmine or short-grain) — ¾ cup (≈140–150 g)
  • Water — 2.0–2.5 liters (start with 2 L; add boiling water if needed)
  • Optional: 2–3 tbsp glutinous rice for extra creaminess
Seafood & abalone
  • Canned or fresh abalone — 1 × 425 g can (or 200–300 g fresh/pre-soaked dried abalone, sliced thinly)
  • Fresh large shrimp — 150–200 g (peeled, deveined, butterflied)
  • Fresh scallops — 100–150 g (sliced horizontally if large)
  • Optional extra seafood: fresh squid rings — 100 g, or crab meat — 80 g
Marinade for seafood
  • Shaoxing wine — 1 tbsp
  • Salt — ¼ tsp
  • White pepper — small pinch
  • Cornstarch — ½ tsp
  • Minced ginger — 1 tsp
Aromatics & seasoning
  • Ginger — 4–5 thin slices (for base) + 1 tsp minced
  • Green onion — 2 stalks (white part for base, green part finely chopped for garnish)
  • Salt — to taste (usually ¾–1 tsp total)
  • Ground white pepper — to taste
  • Light soy sauce — ½–1 tsp (optional)
  • Sesame oil — ½–1 tsp (final drizzle)
  • Optional: chicken powder or a few dried scallops — 2–3 pieces (soaked, for richer umami)
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Prepare the rice
    • Rinse rice 2–3 times until water runs mostly clear.
    • Optional: mix in ½ tsp neutral oil + ¼ tsp salt. Let sit 15–30 minutes (makes silkier congee).
  2. Marinate the seafood
    • Pat shrimp, scallops, and any other fresh seafood dry.
    • Mix with Shaoxing wine, salt, white pepper, cornstarch, and minced ginger.
    • Marinate 10–15 minutes.
  3. Cook the congee base
    • In a large pot, combine rinsed rice + 2.0–2.5 L cold water + ginger slices + white parts of green onion (and soaked dried scallops if using).
    • Bring to a full rolling boil over high heat, stirring frequently in the first 5–10 minutes to release starch and prevent sticking.
    • Reduce to lowest simmer, partially cover, and cook 60–90 minutes. Stir every 10–15 minutes.
    • When rice grains have mostly broken down and congee is creamy (around 40–60 min), proceed.
    Pressure cooker alternative: Porridge mode ≈38–45 min high pressure + natural release 15 min.
  4. Add abalone & seafood
    • Slice canned/fresh abalone thinly (reserve any abalone juice from the can — add to congee for extra flavor).
    • Bring congee back to a strong, bubbling boil.
    • Gently add marinated shrimp, scallops, squid (if using), and abalone slices (with any reserved juice).
    • Stir once or twice very gently.
    • Cook 1½–2½ minutes until shrimp turn pink, scallops become opaque, and everything is just cooked (do not overcook — seafood should stay tender).
  5. Season & finish
    • Turn off heat immediately.
    • Season with salt, white pepper, optional light soy sauce, and chicken powder (if using).
    • Drizzle sesame oil over the surface and give one gentle stir.
    • Let sit 1 minute (residual heat finishes cooking the seafood perfectly).
  6. Serve
    • Ladle into bowls while extremely hot.
    • Garnish generously with chopped green onion tops (and optional cilantro).
    • Serve plain — the natural sweetness of abalone and seafood shines through.
    • Traditional accompaniments: youtiao (fried dough sticks), century egg slices, or pickled vegetables.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Abalone quality → Canned abalone (pre-cooked) is easiest and most common for home cooking. Fresh abalone needs pre-soaking and longer poaching if dried. Slice thinly for even distribution.
  • Seafood timing → Add seafood last and cook only briefly — overcooking turns it rubbery and loses sweetness.
  • Broth richness → Adding dried scallops (干贝) or abalone juice to the base takes it to banquet level.
  • Thickness → Cantonese seafood congee is usually quite soupy — keep extra hot water handy.
  • Variations
    • Add fish maw (鱼肚) or sea cucumber slices for extra luxury.
    • For milder flavor: reduce soy sauce and keep seasoning light.
  • Storage → Best eaten fresh. Leftovers keep in fridge 1–2 days; reheat gently with splash of water (seafood may toughen slightly).
This congee is refined, nourishing, and full of natural ocean sweetness — a true highlight of Cantonese seafood cuisine.

Crystal Shrimp

The shrimp are marinated to stay extremely bouncy and crisp , then very briefly blanched or steamed in a way that preserves their natural sweetness and makes them look almost glassy under light.



The key to success is ultra-fresh shrimp, precise timing, and a light coating technique that enhances clarity without clouding the dish.Ingredients (serves 3–4 as a main or 5–6 as a banquet dish)
  • Fresh large prawns / shrimp (or base river shrimp) — 500–600 g (about 12–16 large shrimp; head-on preferred for presentation)
  • Pork fat / lard — 40–60 g, very finely minced (essential for bouncy texture)
  • Egg white — 1 large
  • Cornstarch — 2–3 tbsp (divided)
  • Shaoxing wine — 1 tbsp
  • Salt — ¾–1 tsp
  • Sugar — ½ tsp
  • White pepper — ¼ tsp
  • Sesame oil — ½ tsp
  • Ice water — about 1 cup (for shocking)
  • Neutral oil — 1 tsp (for blanching)
Garnish & dipping sauce (optional but traditional)
  • Chopped green onion or cilantro
  • Light soy sauce + a few drops of sesame oil
  • Or simple salt + white pepper mix for dipping
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Shell and devein the shrimp
    • Peel the shrimp, leaving the tail segment intact (for elegant presentation).
    • Make a shallow cut along the back and remove the black vein.
    • Pat the shrimp completely dry with paper towels (critical — any moisture ruins the crystal effect).
  2. Velvet the shrimp ( the secret to bouncy, translucent texture)
    • Place shrimp in a bowl. Add:
      • ½ tsp salt
      • ½ tsp sugar
      • ¼ tsp white pepper
      • 1 tbsp Shaoxing wine
      • ½ egg white (reserve the other half for later)
      • 1–1½ tbsp cornstarch
    • Mix gently in one direction for 1–2 minutes until the shrimp feel sticky and coated.
    • Add the minced pork fat and mix again — it melts during cooking and keeps the shrimp juicy.
    • Cover and refrigerate 20–40 minutes (this step is essential — it firms up the coating and makes the shrimp “crystal” after cooking).
  3. Blanch the shrimp (most common method for crystal effect)
    • Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil.
    • Add 1 tsp neutral oil + ½ tsp salt (oil prevents sticking; salt seasons lightly).
    • Prepare a large bowl of ice water nearby.
    • Working in batches (do not overcrowd), gently drop the marinated shrimp into the boiling water.
    • Stir gently once. As soon as the shrimp turn pink/opaque and curl into a “C” shape (usually 15–25 seconds), immediately remove with a slotted spoon.
    • Plunge straight into ice water for 10–15 seconds to stop cooking and tighten the texture.
    • Drain well and pat dry gently with paper towels.
    Alternative method — steaming (lighter, less oily):
    • Arrange marinated shrimp on a heatproof plate.
    • Steam over high heat for 3–4 minutes until just cooked.
    • Immediately shock in ice water.
  4. Final seasoning & presentation
    • Gently toss the chilled, drained shrimp with:
      • remaining ½ egg white (beaten lightly)
      • ½–1 tsp cornstarch
      • ½ tsp sesame oil
      • tiny pinch of salt
    • This second light coating creates the glossy, crystal-clear sheen.
    • Arrange the shrimp neatly on a plate (tail up or in a circle for beauty).
    • Garnish with a few fresh osmanthus flowers, chopped green onion, or cilantro if desired.
  5. Serve
    • Serve chilled or at cool room temperature — the dish is meant to highlight the natural sweetness and bounce of the shrimp.
    • Accompany with a simple dipping sauce: light soy sauce + a few drops of sesame oil, or just salt + white pepper.
    • Traditionally paired with steamed rice or eaten as part of a multi-course banquet.
Quick Tips for Success
  • Freshness is everything — Use extremely fresh, live shrimp. The clearer the shrimp were when raw, the more crystal-like they will look after cooking.
  • Timing is critical — Overcooking even by 10 seconds turns shrimp opaque and tough. Err on the side of undercooking.
  • Pork fat → Traditional Cantonese chefs insist on it — it keeps the shrimp juicy and enhances bounce. Omit for a lighter version, but texture will be less perfect.
  • Ice shock → Shocking in ice water is non-negotiable — it tightens the protein and gives the glassy appearance.
  • No heavy sauce → This dish is about the pure flavor and visual beauty of the shrimp — keep seasoning very light.
  • Storage → Best eaten fresh the same day. If refrigerating, cover tightly and serve within 12 hours (texture will soften slightly).
This dish is a showcase of Cantonese refinement — simple ingredients transformed into something visually stunning and incredibly delicious.

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Abalone Seafood Congee

This is a luxurious, silky-smooth Cantonese-style congee often served at upscale dim sum restaurants or during special occasions.  The aba...

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