How a Shunde chef is bringing the flavours of his hometown to Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant

Seafood and fresh vegetables feature in traditional dishes served in the Shunde area of Foshan (shown), which originally made its name from farming and fishing. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

Shunde originally made its name from agriculture, fishing and silk farming.

The area’s cuisine therefore features lots of fresh ingredients that are still found there, such as vegetables, seafood, meat and rice.

Sautéed lobster with fresh milk is one of the traditional Shunde dishes that includes dairy products obtained from water buffalo living in that part of the city of Foshan.

Some Shunde dishes also include milk and other dairy products obtained from the native water buffalo from the area, which is rare in Chinese cuisine; some famous dishes include fried milk and brined sheet cheese, which is something like feta.

Minced fish soup – made with fish belly meat and snow fungus, angled luffa, wood ear and egg white added to the rice fish broth – is being served as part of a special Shunde menu created by Ho Wai-sing, executive chef of The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant, in Kowloon.

Shunde chefs like to retain the natural tastes of ingredients while keeping dishes light and fresh, with crispy, tender and smooth textures.

The flavours of the district share a palette of flavours with the rest of the Guangdong region, such as sweet, sour, bitter, salt and aromatic, but it shows off umami flavour like no other and is said to have the best rice.

The area has nurtured a foodie culture and some of the country’s finest chefs, and it is said that many five-star hotels in China will have a chef from Shunde, including here in Hong Kong.

Ho Wai-sing, executive chef of The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant, who is originally from Shunde, in China’s Guangdong province.

Ho Wai-sing, the executive chef of The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant, in Kowloon, who is a Shunde native, is celebrating his hometown cuisine with a specially prepared menu, which is available until the end of September.

The interior of The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant in Kowloon, which is serving Shunde dishes on a menu specially created by executive chef Ho Wai-sing throughout September.

Ho has created authentic and well-known Shunde dishes, while adding some of his own creative flair, such as in the sautéed lobster with fresh milk, where he stirs the fresh milk until it is smooth and then adds the fresh lobster meat.

The minced fish soup is made with fish belly meat and snow fungus, angled luffa, wood ear and egg white are all added to the rice fish broth.

The delicious homestyle Shunde dish of steamed fresh chicken with kohlrabi and red dates, which is being served at The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant in Hong Kong throughout September.

His steamed fresh chicken with kohlrabi and red dates is a delicious homestyle dish, while the casserole fried rice with yellow eel is another flavourful hearty dish.

Other offerings include the deep-fried young pigeon, which has deliciously tender meat and crispy skin and – another of his meaty favourites – the steamed beef brisket with flour rolls served in a basket.

Deep-fried baby pigeon features on the special Shunde menu being served until the end of September at The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant in Hong Kong.

The desserts on the menu are equally good, including steamed sago pudding with red bean paste, osmanthus and salty egg yolk and pan-fried glutinous rice cakes with chestnut paste and sesame.

Steamed sago pudding with red bean paste, osmanthus and salty egg yolk (top left) and pan-fried glutinous rice cakes with chestnut paste and sesame are just two of the desserts featured on the Shunde menu being served throughout September at The Royal Garden Chinese Restaurant in Hong Kong.

Other dishes on the menu include chilled pork stomach with assorted bell peppers, chilled bitter melon with taro, steamed grass carp with preserved vegetables, roasted fish heads, stir-fried fresh milk with pine nuts, black truffle paste and porcini mushrooms, and sautéed mandarin fish rolls with angled luffa and snow fungus.

Want more stories like this? Sign up here. Follow STYLE on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter

You Might Also Like