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Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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Tonight Cindy and I were wandering in the ID (Seattle's International
District). We stopped for dinner at Hing Loon Seafood Restaurant. One of their specialties is clams in black bean sauce, and after trying it I can understand why. Wonderful stuff. Lots of fresh clams (one of the benefits of living in Seattle), and the best damn black bean sauce I have ever tried. The sauce had a complex flavor, just the right amount of heat, and an unusual consistency. In all of the recipes for black bean sauce that I have seen, corn starch is used as the thickener. But Hing Loon's sauce was more viscous - it was stickier, stretching into tendrils, more like the effect you get with gumbo file or okra. Does anyone know how they get this texture? Maybe I should have asked, but I am always a bit shy about asking a restaurant to divulge their secrets (and most of the time they don't). -- Julian Vrieslander |
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