Side Pannel
Mongolian Hot Pot, Beijing Style
Mongolian Hot Pot, Beijing Style
- Recipe Submitted by ADMIN on 09/26/2007
Category: Meat, Chinese
Ingredients List
- 1 lb Lean boneless leg of lamb
- Lamb tail fat; sliced
- Ginger slices
- Scallion slices
- Soy sauce
Directions
FOR THE DIPS
Sesame paste
Fermented bean curd
Shrimp oil
Soy sauce
Vineger
Rice wine
Preserved chinese chive
-flowers
Preserved sweet garlic
Chinese coriander (or
-cilantro), chopped
Chili (chilli) oil
Cooking utensil: a charcoal-burning fire pot for cooking at the table. 1.
Cut the mutton into paper-thin slices about 2 1/2 inches by 1 inch . It
will be easier to slice if partially frozen first. Spread them on
individual serving dishes. Arrange the dips and side dishes in bowls.
2. Half-fill the fire pot with boiling water. Add the sliced scallion and
ginger, mutton tail fat, and a little soy sauce. Cover the pot lid tightly.
Fill the chimney with burning charcoal and bring the stock to a boil.
3. To eat, the diners mix their own sauces from the condiments and
seasonings.
Then they pick up the mutton slices and cook them in the boiling stock for
a few seconds, until the meat turns pinkish-white. The meat is then dipped
into the sauce. The best pastry to go with the meat is shaobing - the
Chinese baked sesame cakes.
Sesame paste
Fermented bean curd
Shrimp oil
Soy sauce
Vineger
Rice wine
Preserved chinese chive
-flowers
Preserved sweet garlic
Chinese coriander (or
-cilantro), chopped
Chili (chilli) oil
Cooking utensil: a charcoal-burning fire pot for cooking at the table. 1.
Cut the mutton into paper-thin slices about 2 1/2 inches by 1 inch . It
will be easier to slice if partially frozen first. Spread them on
individual serving dishes. Arrange the dips and side dishes in bowls.
2. Half-fill the fire pot with boiling water. Add the sliced scallion and
ginger, mutton tail fat, and a little soy sauce. Cover the pot lid tightly.
Fill the chimney with burning charcoal and bring the stock to a boil.
3. To eat, the diners mix their own sauces from the condiments and
seasonings.
Then they pick up the mutton slices and cook them in the boiling stock for
a few seconds, until the meat turns pinkish-white. The meat is then dipped
into the sauce. The best pastry to go with the meat is shaobing - the
Chinese baked sesame cakes.
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