Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Year Cake is made with sweet and succulent flower crab stir fried (Hua Xie Chao), herbs, spices and sticky glutinous rice Chinese New Year Cakes (Nian Gao).
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Lunar New Year Recipe
Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Year Cake (花蟹炒年糕, Hua Xie Chao Nian Gao) is a very special dish to share with family and friends during the upcoming Lunar Year along with our 10 Fun and Easy Chinese New Year Recipes.
The flower crab (Hua Xie Chao) is sweet and turns a bright red/orange hue when it is stir fried in the wok. You have to do a little work to get to the succulent crab meat. However, I promise that you are just going to love this Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Year Cake dish. Offer a starter appetizer of pan fried Vegan Chinese Radish Cake for a real treat.
This might not be the best first date type of meal as there is not anything dainty about digging out crab meat with your chopsticks and sucking the end of the crab legs while the juice drips down your chin. However, you are going to just love the delicate flavors of the ginger, garlic and sweet flower crab. This is the perfect meal to bring in the Chinese New Year (CNY).
Family Recipe
Stir fried crab with Chinese New Year cake (Hua Xie Chao Nian Gao) is a special dish from the Zhe Jiang Province. Our dear friend, Safie, is from this province. I asked her what dish do you want to make together to celebrate the New Year.
She immediately responded with Hua Xie Chao Nian Gao. This is something that reminds her of the warm memories of being home for the holidays. With a good plan in place, we went to the wet market to gather our supplies.
Nian Gao
The first thing on our grocery list was the The New Years cake (Nian Gao in Mandarin or Nian Gou in Cantonese). Nian Gao are chewy little rice cakes made of glutinous rice flour that is pounded to different shapes and sizes and add a nice texture to this dish.
Nian Gao is a very popular recipe item during the Chinese New Year as “Nian” means year and “gao” means high. This loosely translates to “every year, may you reach higher and higher.” Nian Gao is a very common dish served during the Chinese New Year for good luck and to be prosperous in the upcoming New Year. A sweet version is our Sweet Sticky Rice Chinese New Year Cake.
The Chinese New Year (Lunar Year or Spring Festival) will be celebrated starting on Feb 19th, 2015 of this year. New Year cakes come in many shapes and sizes and colors and additions depending on which China province you live in.
Hometown Favorites
My dear sweet friend, Safie, is from the province of Zhe Jiang and city of Wen Zhou. In her hometown, they have a very special Nian Gao that has wild Chinese herbs in it and is slightly red/beige colour. Nian gao has a very chewy and sticky texture that just makes your mouth want to go back for more. They are like a really fun textured rice noodle.
They can be used in both savory and sweet Chinese dishes. I would have loved to make this dish using her hometown's Nian Gao but it would be very difficult for you to find this in your country or even in Hong Kong. Here is the little Chef, Safie! Please extend a warm hello and a thank you to Safie for bringing us this recipe and the history behind this special dish.
Different Types of Rice Cakes
Instead, we have made this Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Year Cake dish with your basic run of the mill Chinese dried rice cake that can be found in the noodle section of a grocery store or sometimes can also be found fresh in the refrigerator section. We used the brand Ng Fun Bran, 500 grams rice cakes in the noodles section of a local Park n Shop here in Hong Kong.
Chinese rice cakes are a bit different in taste and texture from the Korean dduk (Tteok) that we use in our Baked Dduk Lavered in Bacon or Japanese rice cakes we used in our Isobeyaki Mochi recipe. However, if that is all you can find you can slice the cylinder shaped Korean dduk or find them in disks in the refrigerated section. If you can obtain your special Nian Gao from your hometown, then just slice and add to the recipe and it would be even better.
Asian Flower Crabs
Next on our list was to head to the Aberdeen wet market to pick out our live happily swimming Asian Flower crabs (Hua Xie). This type of crab meat is very sweet and tender. We told the sweet little Cantonese fish vendor that we were making Hua Xie Chao Nian Gao).
She smiled and picked out 2 live and very active female crabs with lots of roe. I guess the roe is really what makes the dish stand out. I understand that in some countries you cannot harvest adult female crabs but I am in living in Hong Kong and I need to be respectful of their traditions and culture. So when you're in Rome....or Hong Kong be sure to also try our recipe for Steamed Shanghai Hairy Crab.
How to Prepare the Crab?
In order for the delicious crab meat and roe to permeate the dish you need to cut up and prepare the live crab. Now, this is the part that I get a bit squeamish about and so glad that the sweet little fish monger offered to clean up, remove the lungs and chop up the crab into sections. Bless her, as I never have the heart to kill anything still moving.
How to Keep Crabs Happy?
When we first moved to Hong Kong, my husband brought home 2 live fish and gave them to me. He wanted me to prepare Cantonese steamed fish. I filled the kitchen sink with water and let the fish swim and asked him if we should buy an aquarium. Since then, I have over come many of my fears.
One trick that I have learned is to ask the fish monger to prepare the fish or seafood as you wish before you leave the wet market and if all else falls ask for extra ice. Ice works to freeze and paralyze the fish/seafood so that they are kind of sleeping before you prepare them.
Ingredients
The other items on our grocery list such as cornstarch, ginger, green onions light and dark soya sauce, sugar and Shaoxing wine are standard items in any Chinese Kitchen. Light soy sauce gives it a slightly salty favor.
The dark sauce gives it a pretty color. If you want to keep this dish gluten-free, then just use tamari sauce instead of soy sauce. The Shaoxing wine, ginger, garlic and green onions are the aromatics in this very special dish. The crab and sugar give it sweetness. The nian gao gives it its fun texture and slight sweetness.
Shaoxing Wine
As the Chinese New Year is a very special celebration, Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Years Cake would traditionally be served with a very special aged Shaoxing wine (niu er hong). Shaoxing wine is fermented rice wine. It is usually made in the region of Shaoxing and in the province of Zhejiang so that is why it is called Shaoxing wine.
Special Niu er Hong
Niu er hong (translates as daughter red) and is usually made by the father and he buries this aged Shaoxing wine under the ground until his daughter is married. When his daughter marries, he digs up the special aged Shaoxing wine and they enjoy with the wedding celebration.
This special "aged Shaoxing wine" is not to used in making the Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Years Cake but instead to be enjoyed with the meal. The younger Shaoxing wines can be used for the purpose of cooking. You can purchase Shaoxing wine in any Asian grocery store and you can exchange for cooking sherry if you cannot find this product.
Wishing everyone a very safe and happy Chinese New Year and I hope you enjoy this delicious Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Years Cake as a part of your CNY tradition.
More Delicious Chinese New Year Recipes
Sweet Sticky Rice Chinese New Year Cake
Glutinous Rice Balls in Osmanthus Sweet Soup
Garlic Chili Stir Fried Lotus Root
10 Fun and Easy Chinese New Year Recipes
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Stir Fried Crab with Chinese New Year Cake
Ingredients
- 2 crabs
live Asian flower crabs (Hua Xie) female hard shell crabs with lots of roe are best. - 500 grams Chinese New Year Cakes Nian Gao (Sticky rice oval sliced cakes) - can use dried or fresh and even exchange with Korean dduk if cannot find Chinese sticky rice cakes
- 1-2 tablespoon cornstarch
to coat the the ends of the crab and to prevent crab from coming out of shell and to help thicken the sauce. - 1 tablespoon oil
- 1.5 inch ginger
knob of ginger cut into thin julienned slivers. (Do not mince or it will be too strong a flavor in the dish) - 2 cloves garlic
peeled and minced - 3 green onions
cut into 2 inch strips (and extra for garnish) Use the white sections for aromatics and save the green sections at the end of the cooking process - ½ cup rice wine (shao xing)
or cooking sherry - 1.5 tablespoon tamari (soy) sauce
- 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
- 1 cup water
- 3 teaspoon sugar
Instructions
- Ask your fish monger to quarter the crab and remove the lungs. Alternatively if you bring home a live crab, then place crab in lots of ice to help sedate the crab before stunning, quartering the crab and removing the lungs and main shell (called the carapace) Keep the main shell (carapace) whole but quarter the leg sections.
- Rinse your Sticky Chinese New Year rice cakes. Do not soak or otherwise they get too sticky. Set aside.
- Dip the ends of the cut crab in cornstarch. this helps prevent the meat from falling out during the cooking process and also helps thicken the sauce.
- Place oil in wok and add ginger, garlic and the white end of the green onion (bash the white parts of the green onion with the back of clever) and fry until aromatic. Add all of your crab quarters, main top shell and legs and stir fry for 3-4 minutes or until crab shells turn red.
- Add the Shaoxing wine, Tamari (light soy sauce) and dark soy sauce to taste, sugar, rice cakes and water. Stir fry for 1 minute and then cover for about 2 additional minutes or until rice cakes are tender and most of the liquid is absorbed.
- Add the green part of the scallions and stir into mixture, adjust seasonings as needed and serve. Enjoy!
thatskinnychickcanbake says
So wonderful to have the gorgeous recipe from your friend, Safie! I'm not sure I could do justice to making it in Indiana, but I'd love to taste it!!!
kitchenriffs says
Cutting up live crabs (or lobsters) isn't one of my favorite things to do. Always good to have a fish monger to do it for you! This looks great -- so much flavor and color. Good dish -- thanks.
Eva Taylor says
What an interesting dish, how do you eat the crab? Is the body edible too? Happy New Year!
Healthy World Cuisine says
Hello Eva, I hope you are doing well. This particular kind of crab in HK is called a flower crab. This particular crab is hard shelled crab so a crab cracker, chopsticks and even the claw end I found useful to get out that delicious sweet crab meat out of the shell. Wishing you a very safe and happy New Year.
shashi @ http://runninsrilankan.com says
Oh my - I cannot believe how fresh that crab is! There's no way I could harm something moving either - thank goodness for the sweet little fish monger! This looks fantastic Bobbie - I am salivating just looking at these pictures!
Raymund says
Wow those crabs are huge and fatty, I would love to devour on some of those 🙂
Tina @ Tina's Chic Corner says
I love learning about foreign cuisines! This looks amazing and a lovely treat for the holiday. 🙂
nancyc says
I'm not a big crab eater, but this is a beautiful dish!
The Foodie Affair says
Your photos are outstanding and this crab dish would be wonderful to kick off Chinese New Year!
wok with ray says
Oh this is such a delicious crab feast! I miss wet market where you buy seafood fresh unlike here in he U.S. where everything is frozen. 🙂
Tandy | Lavender and Lime says
When ever I see a recipe using crab I feel a little bit jealous that we don't get that delicacy here. Enjoy the Chinese New Year 🙂
chef mimimi says
Oh my gosh this is one incredible dish! I am so jealous of your markets. Funny story - we took our kids to San Francisco almost 20 years ago (I rremember because it was for my 40th) and of course we walked through Chinatown. Because of what my daughter saw hanging, swimming, and in cages at the markets, she became a vegetarian. She was 10. She's still a vegetarian.
Healthy World Cuisine says
Hi there Mimi! Thanks so much. I am glad you liked this dish. You will have to come to visit Hong Kong and we can go on a tour of the markets, together. Wet markets are not for the faint of heart and can relate to why your daughter is still a vegetarian. Hong Kongers love their food fresh, really fresh and maybe only walking or swimming just moments before it hits the wok. When I first moved to Asia, it was more difficult but now I am quite used to the hustle and bustle of the markets.
Robyn says
Oh my gosh, Bobbi, I burst out laughing when I read the story about your husband and the fish! I would have done the same thing. Thank goodness for butchers because I can't kill anything moving either, lol.
This dish is simply beautiful and I would give anything to be sitting down to that fabulous meal right now. I love that you and your friend, Safie, cooked this together and created a masterpiece - so impressive! Sharing all over 🙂 Have a wonderful day!
Healthy World Cuisine says
Welcome home Birthday Girl! We will need to have a belated celebration. Seriously if it wasn't for my husband taking things in his own hands, those 2 fish would still be swimming in my sink. I will pass on your kind comments on to Safie. Take care
thecompletebook says
I LOVE crab. I salivated from beginning to to end of this post.
Have a super day.
🙂 Mandy xo
Healthy World Cuisine says
Thank you Mandy. This dish has very delicate flavors that really allow the gentle sweet flavors of the crab shine through.
Norma Chang says
What a delicious looking dish, wish I could dig in and enjoy.
Healthy World Cuisine says
Hi there Norma! So good to see you here today. Have you ever tried something similar to this dish?
Norma Chang says
Yes, I make something similar but not with crab.
In the U.S. shao xing wine sold in the food market contains salt, for drinking one needs to buy it from the liquor store.
Jasline @ Foodie Baker says
There are so many traditional Chinese dishes out there! This is the first time I heard of frying crabs with nian gao, sounds and look delicious!
Healthy World Cuisine says
Thanks Jasline. I know that chili crab is quite popular but these flavors are really delicate and the sticky chewy rice cakes are a nice texture along with the crab and pick up the savory roe flavors. A must try dish!