A typical Chinese banquet has 12 courses, usually starting with a cold plate. The top cold plate is the roast suckling pig below. Here the plate filler is the jelly fish in the middle - it's marinated and really tastes quite good. Jelly fish is not as squishy as it sounds - it's a combination of crunchy and chewy, quite indescribable, the only way is to try it.
These are baked stuffed conches with chopped up conch meat, celery, bamboo shoots, etc. in a "Portuguese" sauce (heavy on coconut, like curry except not hot) - not your traditional Chinese dish (anything that's baked can't be!).
Ah! the forbidden shark's fin soup - one last time before it's completely extinct. You can see this soup is served in a shallow soup bowl to show off the considerable amount of shark's fin in the middle - a reason why the original price of this banquet is so high - it is determined by the weight of shark's fin in it. Shark's fin doesn't really have any taste; it's reliant on its texture and the soup that it's cooked in. It's costliness guarantees demand as a "prestige" food at banquets.
Another delicacy - dried whole abalone with broccoli. Dried abalone is very expensive because it takes a really large fresh abalone to dry it to this good size due to shrinkage. They could cost upwards of $100 a piece. Texture is chewy.
Chicken fried in hand-poured oil - the chicken is not immersed in oil but is placed just above the hot oil in the wok. Hot oil is poured over the chicken to make it crispy. This is superbly done - even the breast meat is very tender and not dry.
The veggie dish is baby pea shoots with whole garlic.
Double lobster baked in Maggi sauce - love this!
Double carbs! Olive and chicken fried rice and noodles al dente - exceptional performance in both categories.
Sweet tapioca soup with taro
Green tea pastry and filled mochi
and Maalox to go...
Restaurant: Casa Victoria, Markham