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Egg foo young

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Egg foo young

Pork Egg Foo Young With Brown Gravy
Chinese:

Egg foo young (Chinese: 芙蓉蛋, also spelled egg fooyung, egg foo yong, egg fu yung, or egg furong) is an omelette dish found in American Chinese cuisine. The name comes from the Cantonese language, and may be related to the Fu Yong flower, Hibiscus mutabilis. The dish is associated with Tiki culture, and American Chinese restaurants today often list it as "Polynesian" in their menus.[citation needed] Egg foo young is derived from Fu Yung Egg Slices, an authentic Chinese recipe from Shanghai[1].

Contents

[edit] Preparation

This dish is prepared with beaten eggs and minced ham. From these dishes, creative Chinese chefs in the United States at least as early as the 1930s created a pancake filled with eggs, vegetables, and meat or seafood.

The dish usually appears as a well-folded omelette with the non-egg ingredients embedded in the egg mixture, covered with or served in sauce or gravy. It is readily prepared for take-out and packed in a container.

It may be made with various vegetables such as bean sprouts, celery and water chestnuts. When meat is used as an ingredient, a choice of roast pork, shrimp, chicken, beef or lobster may be offered.

[edit] Regional modifications

In a regional variation, many American-Chinese restaurants in St. Louis, Missouri, serve what is called a St. Paul sandwich, which is an egg foo young patty served with mayonnaise, dill pickle and sometimes lettuce and tomato between two slices of white bread.

[edit] Comparison

The Vietnamese dish trứng hấp is similar to egg foo young.

In Japanese Chinese cuisine, the dish Kani-tama (かに玉 or 蟹玉) is similar, using crab meat instead of ham or other meats.

In Indonesian Chinese cuisine, it is well known as Fu Yung Hai

In Malay cuisine, its similar to "Telur Bungkus", literally menas "egg package" (the package usually contains chicken or beef, onions, mushrooms and vegetables and gravy and wrapped inside the egg)

[edit] In popular culture

The American poet Carl Sandburg mentions the dish (which he called "egg foo yong") in his 1936 epic poem The People, Yes.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links


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