I made this tasty soup for my family’s 2015 Christmas
dinner. The soup is loaded with lots of seafood and is a special occasion type
dish. The other main ingredient is winter melon. Winter melon is really a gourd
used mainly in soups, but I’ve also used it in these stir fry recipes: Chicken
and Rock Shrimp with Winter Melon (冬瓜蝦仁雞, Dung1
Gwaa1 Haa1 Jan4 Gai1), Winter
Melon with Dried Shrimp (冬瓜蝦米, Dung1 Gwaa1
Haa1 Mai5), and Stir
Fried Beef with Winter Melon (冬瓜炒牛肉, Dung1
Gwaa1 Caau2 Ngau4 Juk6). So
winter melon can be quite versatile, but cooks quickly and becomes mushy if
overcooked.
Unfortunately I wasn’t able to use fresh local crabs due to a
deadly neurotoxin contamination, so I used imported (from another state) freshly
cooked crab from my local grocery store. I used the meat from two cooked
Dungeness crabs and that produced about 1 lb. (500 g.) of meat. If you’re not
fortunate enough to have freshly cooked crabs available, canned or frozen crab
can be used. Crab is not the only seafood that can be used, and abalone or sea
cucumber can be used as substitutes.
The soup stock was made using the Bone Soup
(湯, Tong1) recipe. You can
used a prepared soup stock, but the taste of the soup is heavily dependent upon
the quality of the ingredients. So if you’re going to all the trouble and
expense to make this soup, you should make your own soup stock. The last
Chinese character in the recipe’s name, 羹 (gang1), signifies that this is a thick soup. A
thick soup means that a corn starch solution is added to thicken the soup. The
amount of thickener added to the soup depends upon personal preference, but the
soup should be thicker than a normal soup and not thicker than a very thick
gravy.
Enjoy!