Location: My tiny kitchen

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Last weekend, a friend couple invited ET and I over to their house for dinner. Cantonese hotpot was the theme of the night and when we arrived, my friends already had everything ready. A full dining table of hotpot items were beautifully laid – sliced fatty beef (lots of it!), different kinds of meatballs, shrimp, geoduck (so expensive!), different kinds of mushrooms…it will take up a whole paragraph if I were to name everything. As I scanned across the table greedily, my eyes brightened up when I saw the big pile of beef slices and other kinds of meat. “How did you know what I like for hotpot?”, I happily asked my friend B. “Well, your blog doesn’t have many recipes on seafood, so we figure to go with more meat than seafood”. What a good friend B is – she always knows what I want :-) .

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B’s comment made me think of the few seafood recipes that I have. After giving myself a good 10 minutes of recollection, I remembered a basic, common and traditional Cantonese steamed fish recipe in which the whole fish is steamed with julienned ginger. After the fish is cooked, a big pile of julienned green onion and cilantro are placed on top of the fish on which hot oil was spooned. To finish, a generous amount of good quality soy sauce is drizzled on the fish. Together, ginger, green onion and cilantro makes the classic for white fish.

My fish recipe is a spin-off of the traditional Cantonese steamed fish recipe. Instead of using whole fishes which could be difficult to find, my recipe works on any type of white fish fillets. I like boiling the fillets instead of steaming them, since boiling removes the fishy smell. When you try this recipe, you will be amazed by how convenient it is – it takes almost no time to prepare.

To serve this dish to two people you will need:

- 2 cod/sole/halibut fillets
- 5 green onions
- 1 small bunch of cilantro
- good soy sauce
- Maggi sauce
- Red pepper flakes (optional)

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1. In a quart pan, bring water to a boil. Put the fillets into the water and let it simmer for 3 minutes.
2. Gently take the fillets out of the water and let it drain.

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3. Finely slice the green onion and remove the stalk part of the cilantro. Place the green onion and cilantro on the fillets.
4. In a quart pan, put in 4 tbsp of vegetable oil. Heat the oil until it is very hot, about 1 or 1 and 1/2 minute.
5. Pour the hot oil over the fish (be careful with this as the oil might splatter).
6. Drizzle a good amount of soy sauce over the fillets. Drizzle a few drops of Maggi sauce on the fish. Finally, finish off by sprinkling a few red pepper flakes over the fish.

The best way for me to enjoy this dish is with rice.

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