Regal Palace was full when I entered, always a good sign. I did not get to try the red-dyed egg that decorated the tables for this particular tradition. The 10 courses were:
- A cold meat platter with jelly fish and tofu/curd wrap
- Shrimp and snap peas
- Stir-fried greens with enoki
- Roast chicken
- Abalone, portobello mushrooms, and baby bok-choy
- Winter melon soup
- Fried cod
- Lobster
- Fried rice and noodles
- Red bean dessert, jello, black sesame balls, and cookies
Overall, the meal was good. There was a light, deft touch on all the dishes. The ubiquitous flour-based sauce that gives a lot of Chinese dishes that slippery sheen was dialed back. The goopy gunk that usually drenches Chinese-style lobster was barely there, I could actually taste the ginger. The roast chicken was crispy and slightly salty. Even the delicious fried rice was light on the oil.
I also enjoyed some the presentation. The winter melon served as a bowl for the soup broth, but you can still scoop out the melon. All the cod flesh was scraped out into bite-sized chunks, but instead of throwing away the skin, the left-over fish was deep-fried into a curved serving platter. It was edible too: skin and fish-bones all (except for the spine, as I discovered).
Dishes 6 through 7 were my favourite. But there was so much food that I didn't eat very much of the fried rice and dessert. Maybe I should have asked for a doggie bag.
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