Despite their
name, the “thousand-year-old eggs” are not that old!
Thousand-year-old
eggs (also called century eggs) are preserved duck eggs (皮蛋
- pe`ih-daahn in Cantonese). You can easily
find them at wet markets. The century
eggs are covered with mud and chips and left to ferment – not for a century –
but up to 100 days. After that period the white has turned to opaque black and
its texture is gelatin-like. The yolk has become black-greenish, is creamy and
has a pungent alkaline taste.
The outside is gelatin-like /
inside is creamy and has a strong alkaline taste
|
The 2 eggs covered with yellow-orange chips are “pe`ih-daahn”.
The black egg is a
salted duck egg (咸蛋)
or haa`hm-daahn in Cantonese
|
How to eat thousand-year-old eggs?
Simply remove the mud and rinse the egg well. Then crack
the shell, peel and slice the egg (like you would do for hard-boiled eggs).
Thousand-year-old eggs are often added in congee to make the notable “thousand-year-old
egg and pork rice congee” (pe`ih-daahn sau-yuhk juk1).
Pe`ih-daahn are also served as cold hors
d’oeuvres.
Pe`ih-daahn with pickled stem ginger |
Thousand-year-old eggs served cold with thinly sliced bean
curd |
Slices of pickled stem ginger (sold in small plastic bags
at wet markets)
Stem ginger / Jí-gèung
/ 子姜
I remember the first time I tried thousand-year-old
eggs. Pe`ih-daahn are definitely an acquired taste!
I really enjoy this kinf of egg. Unfortunately, not easy to find in France :(
ReplyDeleteHi Le Yin! Thanks for reading. A pity not so easy available. ;)
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