This is a light, nourishing Cantonese-style sheng gun fish congee—fresh, delicate slices of premium Norwegian Arctic cod (a mild, flaky white fish with low fat and high protein) are gently "rolled" or cooked directly in the hot porridge at the very end, preserving its tender, silky texture without overcooking.
It's quick, comforting, and ideal for breakfast, recovery meals, or when you want something soothing yet elegant.
The cod's subtle sweetness pairs beautifully with the creamy rice porridge.
Norwegian Arctic Cod Congee Serves: 2–3
Prep time: 15–20 minutes (plus soaking/marinating)
Cooking time: 25–40 minutes
Difficulty: EasyIngredients
Prep time: 15–20 minutes (plus soaking/marinating)
Cooking time: 25–40 minutes
Difficulty: EasyIngredients
- Congee base:
- Short-grain or medium-grain white rice (or a mix with a little glutinous rice for creaminess) — ½–¾ cup (100–150 g)
- Water or chicken stock — 6–8 cups (1.5–2 liters; adjust for desired thickness)
- Ginger slices — 3–4 thin slices (plus extra julienned for garnish)
- Salt — ½ tsp (or to taste)
- Neutral oil or sesame oil — ½–1 tsp (added to rice for silkiness)
- Fish:
- Norwegian Arctic cod fillet (fresh or fully thawed) — 250–350 g (8–12 oz), boneless and skinless
- Shaoxing wine (or dry sherry) — 1–2 tsp
- Light soy sauce — 1 tsp
- Grated ginger — 1 tsp
- Cornstarch — 1 tsp
- White pepper — ¼–½ tsp
- Salt — pinch
- Optional: 1 egg white (for a smoother, velvety coating on the fish)
- Garnishes & finishing:
- Green onion/scallion — 2 stalks, thinly sliced
- Cilantro — small handful, chopped (optional)
- Julienned ginger — for extra aroma
- White pepper and sesame oil — to taste
- Optional add-ins: A few slices of century egg , chopped romaine lettuce or spinach, or blanched peas for color and nutrition
- Prepare the rice (for faster, silkier congee)
Rinse the rice 1–2 times until water runs mostly clear. Soak in clean water for 30 minutes (or overnight for best results).
Quick shortcut (recommended): After soaking, drain and freeze the rice in a bag for at least 8 hours (or overnight). This breaks down the grains faster, cutting cooking time in half while achieving a creamy texture. - Marinate the cod
Pat the cod fillet very dry. Slice thinly on a slight diagonal (about ¼ inch / 0.5 cm thick; larger pieces help prevent breaking apart).
In a bowl, gently mix the slices with Shaoxing wine, light soy sauce, grated ginger, cornstarch, white pepper, and a pinch of salt. If using egg white, add it last and toss lightly until the fish feels slightly slippery.
Marinate in the fridge for 10–15 minutes (do not over-marinate or the fish may toughen).
- Cook the congee base
In a large pot, combine the rice (fresh or frozen), water/stock, ginger slices, and a few drops of oil.
Bring to a boil over high heat, then reduce to medium-low. Simmer uncovered or with lid slightly ajar, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking.- Stovetop: Cook 25–40 minutes until the rice breaks down into a silky, creamy porridge (add more hot water if it thickens too much).
- Faster method (with frozen rice): Boil, then simmer 10–15 minutes, stirring vigorously toward the end to thicken.
Season lightly with salt once the porridge reaches your desired consistency (thick but still pourable).
- Add the cod (the "sheng gun" or raw-rolling step)
Bring the congee back to a gentle boil over medium-high heat.
Add the marinated cod slices one by one or in small batches, stirring very gently to separate the pieces.
Cook for 1–2 minutes only—just until the fish turns opaque and white (it continues cooking in the residual heat). Do not overboil or the cod will become tough and break apart.
Optional: Stir in chopped century egg, lettuce, or spinach in the last 30 seconds for extra flavor and color. - Finish and serve
Turn off the heat. Stir in a few drops of sesame oil and white pepper. Taste and adjust salt if needed.
Ladle into bowls immediately. Garnish generously with sliced green onion, cilantro, and julienned ginger.
Serve piping hot—the fresh ginger and herbs add a bright, aromatic lift.
- Fish quality — Norwegian Arctic cod is excellent for this dish: mild, firm enough to slice yet delicate. Use the freshest possible; pat very dry before slicing to avoid a fishy taste.
- Texture secret — The "sheng gun" technique (adding fish at the very end) keeps the cod silky and tender. Marinating with cornstarch and egg white creates a protective coating.
- Congee consistency — Short-grain rice gives the creamiest result. For ultra-smooth porridge, blend a portion of the cooked rice before adding the fish.
- Variations — Add century egg for a classic twist, or vegetables like spinach/peas for nutrition. For a baby/toddler version, flake the cooked cod finely and omit strong seasonings.
- Make-ahead — Prepare the congee base ahead and reheat gently before adding fresh fish (do not store the finished congee with fish, as it continues cooking).
- Why Norwegian Arctic cod? — It's sustainably sourced, low in mercury, high in omega-3s and lean protein—making this porridge both delicious and nourishing.