So, what are you cooking for this Chinese New Year? Due to guest restrictions, menus must be paired with either variety or quantity. On top of that, the Crossed Caseausway Family reunion is also impossible, which could change your plans.
Eating out is not a practical option for large families. Remembering these may be useful when preparing your dishes. Reunion dinners are always about family favorites. Each family has their own “festival dishes” that everyone grew up in. These match your heritage. I hope it will be hakka. Nona or Hockin. In fact, when I ask my family what is usually submitted for their reunion dinner, I can guess the cultural background of the family patriarch.
Fry the shrimp along the river in black bean sauce

Without this dish, there is little to think about Wong’s reunion dinner. This is one of the early recipes I’ve posted on my blog. In the early days, river shrimp were heavily caught and were sweeter than agricultural ones. Recently, the latter has to be redoed. Buy as fresh as possible and put it in the freezer as soon as you get home. NTUC sells them during this period within several wet markets. If you can get river shrimp, sea-haired items like crystal shrimp and wild Angka will also work well. Or a large import frozen.
Lo Han Chai or Chap Chy
This is a family favorite. There are different versions of this depending on whether you are nonya, hokkien, or Cantonese. My mom likes to use white fermented tofu (fu yi) and Wonbok instead of cabbage for this. The Wongbok has a solid texture, holds well, and doesn’t absorb stock like Cabbage does.
Steamed chicken
Rub the whole chicken with salt and steam for about 40-45 minutes. It was then served with fresh red chili sauce and a beautiful ginger garlic sauce (recipe here). Get the best chicken you can put your hands on. Anxious or another type of “kampun chicken” works. The large, fattier, meaty chicken broiler also works. If you have leftovers, stir-fry in garlic, soy sauce and thick black sauce. If you still have leftovers after this, add them to Chai Buay. 🙂 You can see why my mother always makes this for reunion.
Treasures and paper treasures
Prepare each ingredient in advance. Then, just before dinner, assemble and pour in the warm sauce.
jiu hur eng chye (dried quatl fish and stewed turnips)

This is another favorite reunion dish. It is paired very well with fresh iceberg lettuce and sambalberachan. It will also be very well maintained for the next few days. I’ll blog the recipes right away.
Fried hakka pork (“char yoke”)

This is another perennial favorite and perhaps the only dish that reveals our secondary mint roots. For some reason, Hakka culture is usually covered in conflict with Hokkien or Cantonese, which was certainly an experience of living in Western Malaysia. Please check this recipe.
Assorted meat with wax

Cantonese waxed meat, whether steamed or fried, is easy to prepare. It’s suitable for nibbles for the next few days.
Chii Booy (Led photo)
Our family is not without Chai Booy or Che Kiek. Cooked with mustard green vegetables, it is an essential “remaining dish” cooked in rare and expensive CNY. And book your mustard greens early. Given the challenges this season, finding something fresh can be difficult. Another way is to use salted mustard greens (“hamchai”). You will need to soak it several times to remove the salt.
Nonya Curry Chicken

Curry is also a family favorite on CNY’s day 1 and 2. The curry is well maintained and CNA is served all day long.

(TagstoTranslate) Future Chinese New Year Cooking (2021)