Cookbook:Century Egg with Ham and Ginger
Appearance
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Century Egg with Ham and Ginger | |
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Category | Chinese recipes |
Difficulty |
Cookbook | Recipes | Ingredients | Equipment | Techniques | Cookbook Disambiguation Pages | Recipes | Cuisines | Cuisine of China
The century egg (a.k.a. preserved egg, thousand-year egg, hundred-year egg, hundred-year-old egg, thousand-year-old egg; Chinese: 皮蛋; pinyin: pídàn or Chinese: 松花蛋; pinyin: sōnghūadàn) is a Chinese delicacy made by preserving duck (or less commonly chicken) eggs in a mixture of charcoal and lime for (despite the name) around 100 days. It is greenish in color, has a creamy cheese-like flavor, and a strong aroma.
Ingredients
[edit | edit source]- 4 century eggs
- 80 g Jinhua ham
- 80 g pickled stem ginger
- 1 small bowl of dark vinegar (use for dipping)
Procedure
[edit | edit source]- Wash century eggs clean.
- Shell the eggs, and cut each into 4 slices. Cut the pickled stem ginger into thin slices.
- Cut the Jinhua ham into thin slices. Soak in water for a while.
- Sandwich a slice of ginger with one of ham and a sliced century egg.
- Serve with vinegar.