We’re all here…

The Duānwǔ or Dragon Boat Festival, otherwise known as the Chang or Dumpling Festival, fell on Monday earlier this week. My sister-in-law from Kuching was in town and my brother-in-law and his family came too from Bintulu and since the latter would be leaving on the actual day of the festival, we decided to go out for dinner on Sunday night, a day earlier. Melissa insisted on treating them and her maternal grandma and another brother-in-law and his wife here in Sibu to dinner as she had been working for over a year now and she felt this would be a good opportunity to reciprocate and show her appreciation to all of them for everything during her growing-up years to this very day.

I went to this restaurant to make the reservation – many in town were closed for the Gawai Festival as their employees had all gone back to their longhouses to celebrate but luckily, this one was an exception. However, bookings were real heavy and the lady boss asked if I wanted the 5.30 p.m. slot. I said that was too early so she said in that case, I would have to go for the 7.30 p.m. slot…and I agreed, not that I had much of a choice.

So there we were that night and even though we got there at around 7.15 p.m., the table was ready…

Reserved

…waiting for all of us. Yes, yes, I know…I’m a Wee, not a Wong but it’s the one and the same thing actually. The character,黄, in Mandarin means yellow and normally, in Hokkien, we would say ooi…and hence, Wee whereas in Foochow, it would be uwong…so Wong, it would be.

The place was packed and the tables overflowed to the pavement outside. I was glad I made an effort to drop by that morning to select the dishes we would like to have so no sooner had we taken our places and ordered our drinks than the food was served. I could see many of the people sitting there looking rather bored, waiting for their orders to come out of the kitchen.

This was new on their menu – the chicken dish…

MingMeiShi chicken

…with some Thai-style sour and spicy jellyfish salad underneath. All of us enjoyed that and needless to say, we also enjoyed my other selections that we had had time and again before. These included their sweet and sour fish fillet…

MingMeiShi sweet and sour fish fillet

…and the creamy butter prawns…

MingMeiShi creamy butter prawns

…and I also ordered their bitter gourd, fried with three types of eggs – fresh, salted and century…

MingMeiShi 3-egg bitter gourd

My mother-in-law loved this dish very much and kept saying how good it was and how well they had cooked it.

Everyone loved their fried pumpkin with salted-egg batter too…

Fried pumpkin with salted egg batter

…and to wash it all down, we had the Foochow-style tofu soup…

Foochow-style tofu soup

…which was exceptionally nice that night.

I must say that the fact that they were able to maintain the quality of the food served despite the crowd would be something praiseworthy. I have been to places where when there were a lot a people, the food did not turn out as nice…but not here. Unfortunately, we were informed halfway that hey had run out of midin (wild jungle fern) and they asked if I would like to order a substitute.  I just instructed them to cancel that so we had 7 dishes altogether only instead of the original 8 that I had asked for.

7? Yes, we had 7, not just the 6 above. The stewed pork was a little slow in coming out…

MingMeiShi stewed pork belly

…and the waitress seemed to be in a hurry, and not surprisingly so too as there were so many tables to serve, to cut it up into pieces for us to stuff in the steamed buns…

MingMeiShi steamed buns

…and eat so I was not fast enough to take a nice photograph of the meat. We were all very delighted that the chunk we got was not very fat, mostly lean…just a thin layer underneath the skin – and that was so so so heavenly, I tell you! LOL!!! The fact that it was all gone in a blink of the eye would be testament as to how nice that was.

That scrumptious dinner, 7 dishes for 10 people, inclusive of rice and drinks, came up to RM226.90…and the nice lady boss waived the 90 sen and so, Melissa only had to pay RM226 for it all.

Having had the celebration earlier, we did not have anything fancy on the day itself. I managed to order some freshly-made popiah skin so I got the ingredients and prepared the filling and everything else…

STP's popiah 1

…and that was what we had for lunch and dinner…

STP's popiah 2

…and I even managed to make some to give to my in-laws and my side of the family.

Of course, we did not neglect to feast on the changs (dumplings) to uphold the tradition and preserve our heritage on this very auspicious occasion in the year.