December 31, 2020
We are heading towards the end of such an unpredictable 2020. Every year, Kevin and I try to spend time visiting family and reconnecting over good food. This was the first year we skipped our holiday traditions and stayed home instead. Kevin spent all of his time working and squeezing in a few rounds of gaming here and there. I spent almost all of my free time outside of work in the kitchen testing out new treats. I resolved to take the holidays to test, retest, and refine recipes with the goal of creating the best possible versions of some of my favorite foods. During the holidays, the one food Kevin looks forward to the most is xiao long bao, or soup dumplings. It was a dish he grew up eating when he lived in Hong Kong. He would request soup dumplings whenever possible whether or not there was a momentous occasion to celebrate. In the days leading up to the holidays, his anticipation for soup dumplings would build day by day since he knows the destination we eventually head to (either New York City or Hong Kong) would have some form of authentic, truly delicious soup dumplings waiting for him. Since we couldn’t actually travel to New York City or Hong Kong for the holidays this year, I set out to recreate his favorite dish of all time at home. Soup dumplings are a bit tricky to get just right. The dumpling wrapper has to be thin, delicate, and sturdy. The filling has to be savory, juicy, and plump. Most importantly, there has to be soup filled in each and every dumpling. To get the soup into the dumplings, I had to take one of two steps – either cook up some soup filled with tons of pork bones, chicken bones, or a combination of the two or find a way to gel up homemade or store-bought stock. For a truly savory broth, I knew I had to take the extra step of cooking up some savory stock. I had already intended on roasting a whole chicken for dinner over the weekend, so I saved the bones of the chicken to use in creating a wonderful stock. I let the chicken stock cook low and slow for almost 24 hours in the slow cooker. When the stock was ready, I transferred it to a couple containers to use as a base for soup, pho, and noodle soup later in the week. I reserved a few cups to use as the base for my soup dumplings. While the stock was still hot, I dissolved ½ a packet of unflavored gelatin for every 1 cup of chicken stock. Then, I set out to test, retest, and refine my soup dumplings. Seven trials later, I was able to get my desired soupy, plump soup dumplings. The most important taste test was making sure it met or exceeded Kevin’s expectations of a legit soup dumpling. With each trial, I had Kevin provide feedback on the soup dumplings. I had to navigate through too thick dumpling wrappers to not soupy enough dumplings until I got to my sixth trial of soup dumplings. The sixth trial met Kevin’s expectations of a soup dumpling – thin, delicate wrapper, juicy, plump dumpling, and sufficient soup in the dumplings. He described the sixth trial as the most successful trial of the bunch. To make sure I could replicate the same results, I made a couple more batches of soup dumplings following the lessons I learned in the sixth trial. The seventh trial resulted in success once more. By the seventh trial, I was ready to share my findings. These soup dumplings were so good, I added them to my permanent rotation of celebratory meals to make no matter where our holiday adventures take us in the future. Once our bellies were full from all of the food I’ve been recreating over the holidays, we finally made our way to opening the presents we received from family and friends. I kept the gifts in the original packages until I was ready to use them. The sheet pans, baking molds, and cookware were just what I needed to replenish the kitchen tools I’ve been putting into overdrive during the holiday season. This holiday season, while different from all of the prior holiday seasons, still turned out pretty good. Kevin got to enjoy all of his favorite foods (especially soup dumplings). I got to experiment with even more foods in the kitchen. Our 2020 holiday was finally complete.
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