We're Nate Tate and Mary Kate Tate, a brother and sister cookbook author team obsessed with all things China. We create authentic and accessible Chinese recipes for home cooks. See more...

Entries in holiday (10)

Tuesday
Jun122012

How to Make Chinese Chicken Lettuce Wraps Video and Recipe

Here's our recipe for Chinese Chicken Lettuce wraps. They're healthy and easy to make and are super tasty. If you've been to the restaurant PF Chang's you've probably eaten them before and love them as much a we do. In China people eat lettuce wraps during the New Year holiday because the word for "lettuce" in chinese sounds like the word for "rising wealth". So if you eat these you're supposed to have a profitable year. After my dissapointing trip to the ATM this morning I doubt the effectiveness of these lettuce wraps at getting you rich but they sure were a huge hit at the picnic I brought them to last weekend. I like to roughly chop all the ingredients by hand so that everything is not the same size but if you don't have the patience you can throw everything (except the lettuce!) in a food processor to speed things up.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Mar102010

more chinese new year firework photos

This is a picture of when the apartment building near us caught fire. It burned for 45 minutes or so before the police showed up to put out the fire. This didn’t stop anyone from setting off more fireworks.



Here’s the police arriving to the scene... stopping for a chat before entering the burning building.


 
A cute little girl near us who was far less scared of the fireworks than me.

 



 
Nate drawing 天 (tian, the word for day). I left the shutter open for nearly 40 seconds.


My friends, beyond ready to go inside around 1 AM. The fireworks continued all night, all week, and are still going on sometimes randomly throughout the city here in March.


-mk

Thursday
Mar042010

another new year’s, another chance to make and keep resolutions


I had high hopes for 2010, but those days are over. I didn’t keep my January 1st New Year’s Resolutions. Not even for a day. When February 14th, Chinese New Year, came around I took the opportunity to edit and reinstate my resolutions. Here was New Year’s again! Another chance at success! Wake up at 6, run at least 3 miles everyday, and get out of debt entirely in 2010 turned into wake up no later than 9, don’t expand my debt any more than I have to, and if you’re not going to exercise, at least feel bad about it and take a multivitamin.

 

None of my Chinese friends make New Year’s Resolutions. In fact, they thought I was hilarious for making them and were shocked when I told them that January in the U.S. was the biggest time for new gym memberships because of people deciding to get in shape or lose weight. While I think this very Western mentality of constantly wanting to improve ourselves and our personal lot in life is admirable, I don’t think I have any chance of keeping a resolution I make simply because it’s a new year unless it’s something like eat a piece of chocolate everyday. That I can do.


A huge Chinese New Year tradition however is that of making jiaozi (饺子,traditional Chinese dumplings) at midnight on Chinese New Year (February 14th). One dumpling in the bunch is made with a gold coin inside. Bite into that one and you’re going to have luck for the entire year. Nate and I were fortunate enough to have dinner with my friend Yuki and her family. Her father was an excellent cook and made way too much food for us to ever finish. Later we all folded jiaozi together in the kitchen and I learned a new very simple cool way of folding them from Yuki’s mom. I’m still practicing, but I’ll try to make a video of that.



The only dish I didn't like was the boiled pig's feet (pictured below, top and center). That's just not my scene. Interestingly enough, my Chinese friend Susan who was also a guest at the Huang family house, told Yuki's dad that every dish he made was too salty and that her grandmother was a better cook than him. It was an uncomfortable moment but Chinese people (especially Susan) are blunt like that and sometimes downright rude. He nodded and accepted it as if fact. If you're a guest in America and you think the meal is atrocious even to the point that you'd rather eat your napkin than smell the food, you still keep it to yourself. I learned this lesson at my friend's 14th Birthday party when her mom brought out a huge, colorful cake to the table and I asked, kindly I thought, if it was homemade or store bought. She said to me in front of all my friends, "You are a very immature, rude girl and your mother didn't teach you any manners." Her face had turned the color of the crimson icing on the stale cake she'd made (or possibly bought) and she stomped out of the room and left her daughter to blow out the candles without her. Now there's a beacon of light in the dark world of bad manners...


 

-mk

Tuesday
Jan262010

santa, why are you still here?

When I was here in Beijing over Christmas, the city did not lack for Christmas decorations-- trees, cardboard Santa cutouts, lights-- but there didn't seem to be a celebration because no one understood what to celebrate for Christmas. People here don't know the Christmas story of Jesus and the manger and I don't think people have any idea who "Santa" is supposed to be. Santa Claus loses his meaning in translation with his Chinese name meaning basically Christmas Old Guy (圣诞老人, sheng dan lao ren).  But I'm not kidding when I say most stores here have a picture of Santa taped on their front doors even today. My office building lobby still has a giant Christmas tree and Santa pictures on every floor. When will Santa leave China?



I don't think people know that Santa already came bringing gifts and left. He's back in the North Pole by now. These are a few pictures I took this morning of Santas on doors right outside my apartment (grocery store, dry cleaners, internet bar, another store) Notice how all the Santas look the same-- like everyone in the city ordered from the same catalog. 

Monday
Jan042010

local beijing restaurant gives me a new year's present

I went out to eat with my coworker last night and at the end of the meal we asked for a receipt. They weren't able to give us one (I never understood why) and the manager came over personally to apologize. As an apology gift, he gave me a giant calendar for the new year. It's pretty awesome. I think I acted a little too excited... like I'd won an award or something. It reads roughly, "year of the tiger brings fortune/prosperity." I hope this is a sign. I will definitely be asking for receipts at restaurants more often. The picture above is of me in my boss's awesome kitchen trying to figure out where the heck to hang it. I'm living in his apartment while he is in the States and I am looking for an apartment. Right now the calendar is just sitting on a chair. It will be the first decoration I hang when I move into my own place! So far though I've had little luck in finding a place. The last place I saw didn't have a refrigerator. Where will my calendar end up?

-mk