Travel

The Healing Power of Food and Family: Hong Kong

By Lauran Bell Jump to Recipe
Dim sum in Hong Kong at Tim Ho Wan
I couldn’t believe it, my husband, six-year-old daughter and I, with our extended family, were flying from San Jose, California, 6,937 miles across the Pacific Ocean. It was December 2018, a time when we were unrestrained by the Covid-19 virus. We were on our way to Hong Kong – an absolute utopia for food lovers and dim sum aficionados. Once we made the trek to Hong Kong, right from the start, my daughter who had never tried dim sum before, who had hardly experienced even Americanized Chinese food, sampled Hong Kong’s Shanghai soup dumplings and crispy Peking cucumber duck wraps like a pro.
Crispy Peking duck for delicious wraps with cucumber- sliced in front of us at a Hong Kong restaurant

Hard Beginnings

Many things have not come easily for my daughter, starting from the day she was born. She entered the world, to our surprise, with a rare medical condition, which we learned was called Apert syndrome. During our Hong Kong trip, my daughter by six had already been through seven surgeries. So to be sitting in an actual Chinese banquet hall, surrounded by our family and large tanks full of swimming sea bass, would have seemed like a fantasy to me early on in her life when she needed to be hooked up to an oxygen tank when sleeping. The first seven months of her life was the only time she struggled with food. The first three months were the most difficult. She literally “fell off the growth chart,” and her medical condition was making it so she struggled to breastfeed and ended up burning more calories than she was intaking, only when she was breastfeeding. As difficult as it was for me to mentally accept as a mother, the nurse, who was the voice of my daughter’s medical team, insisted I bottle feed a lot more than I breastfeed. It was a dire situation, a choice the team made with my baby’s survival in mind. Giving my child formula and breast milk from a bottle is not what’s normally considered the healthiest choice for a typical baby, and this weighed on me psychologically.
Dad doing the bottle feeding in the NICU

The Food Journey Begins

What I didn’t know that year was that once my child could eat solid food, from then on, food was something that we would delight in, and it would be the pleasure through the pain. And there, after seven surgeries and countless obstacles, we were vacationing together – my daughter, husband, and myself – and my dad’s side of the family. My daughter would have the rare opportunity at her young age to experience the tastes and textures of food that even I, as a 39 year-old, had never experienced.

Hong Kong Style Breakfast

We would wake up in the morning, and my father’s wife, Kathy, who was born in Hong Kong, and who had lived there until she was college-aged, would pick out our morning breakfast spot. Sometimes it was our hotel’s breakfast buffet, the Regal Kowloon Hotel in Tsim Sha Tsui, with foods from all over the world, or we went to dim sum. My daughter’s favorite breakfast, however, was anywhere that served the popular Hong Kong French toast.

Hong Kong French toast in Tsim Sha Tsui
We could walk across the courtyard from our hotel and pick from a number of different restaurants, one right next to the other, and most of them would serve Hong Kong style French toast. Watching my daughter’s joy as she dug into the buttery toast, dripping with maple syrup, right alongside her cousins- who we only get to see a few times a year- made me happy. Being in that simple moment of joy and love made me forget for awhile the trauma that my little immediate family had been through. It’s as if the old memories of kneeling on the hospital floor overcome by the fear of losing her infinitely were being re-drawn in my mind, not re-written, just re-drawn in lighter colors.

Dim Sum

Dim sum at a restaurant in Tsim Sha Tsui East
Waiting outside to get into the dim sum restaurant, Tim Ho Wan
After a day of walking through the Hong Kong pet or flower markets, or going to lush parks surrounded by skyscrapers, we would follow Kathy and her extended family, who still live in Hong Kong, through the crammed city streets, past colossal malls, and food stands, and every day, lunch was something new. My daughter was able to experience dim sum in a small, Michelin awarded restaurant called Tim Ho Wan, swarming with people. Kathy, my stepmother, would ask her what she’d like to eat, and she would know her order – steamed beef meatballs (au yuk kau), prawn dumplings (har gau), and fried egg-shaped dumpling with pork (harm shui gok). Dim Sum, which can be translated in Cantonese to mean “a little bit of heart” was bringing us together. Those moments around the table were helping to restore, little by little, our faith in the goodness of life and the healing power of food and family.

Chinese Hot Pot

Hong Kong hot pot at a restaurant in Tsim Sha Tsui East
Dinner was always the ultimate experience of the day. We would walk until it felt like our limbs would fall off. Kathy’s extended family would take us through alleys and buildings, up elevators. Small, dingy corridors would open up to some of the most glamorous restaurants I have ever seen. On one of our last dinners in Hong Kong, my daughter got to experience a special food memory from my childhood – Chinese hotpot- but she was experiencing it overlooking the Victoria Harbor. We sat at a large circular table with a panoramic view, sixteen of us, face to face. Together we dipped raw meat and seafood into large pots of boiling water. My daughter with her modified chopsticks, sampled thin slices of beef, tofu, fish meatballs, and even baby hotdogs and dipped them into a variety of sauces.
Chinese hot pot at my Dad’s and Kathy’s family table in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho
As a child, Kathy would make our family hot pot every winter. Those memories are connected to a time when I did not have a never-ending list of medical to-dos, when I did not have to worry about whether or not the world would be kind to a child, my child, with physical differences.

Re-connecting Through Food

I wish I could say that when we got back from Hong Kong that all of our struggles disappeared. They did not. (Little did we know that two years later we would have to “shelter in place” because of a global pandemic, and we would postpone many medical appointments because the virus was more of a threat to my daughter’s health than anything else.) The trip to Hong Kong, however, opened us not only to a new world, with new tastes and experiences, but it opened us to our extended family and let us re-experience joy and lightheartedness again. It got us in touch with what we could still do, what we could still enjoy, despite hardships. The basic act of eating, and eating with loved ones, was a powerful reminder that life goes on. Breakfast, lunch, dinner in a new way, in a new reality, with my incredible child who could eat with the best of them.
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Kathy’s Chinese Hot Pot Dipping Sauce

This dipping sauce is the best part of hot pot, besides the fun of cooking alongside family and friends. It’s salty, oily, oniony and addicting. Transform any protein or vegetable by dipping it in this flavorful sauce.
Servings 10 people (app 1/2 cup of sauce)
Author Lauran Bell

Ingredients

  • 3 tbsp canola oil Coat the pan
  • 1/4 cup green onions Chopped
  • 6 tbsp Bull Head BBQ sauce
  • 10 tbsp soy sauce app 1 tbsp for each person
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil

Instructions

  • Heat the canola oil in a small saucepan over high heat for a couple of minutes.
  • Add the chopped scallions. Let cook on high heat for a minute, and then turn the heat to low.
  • Add the BBQ sauce and stir. Turn off the heat.
  • Add the soy sauce and sesame oil. Stir to combine.
  • Serve the sauce in small bowls for dipping. Enjoy!

Notes

TO MAKE IT SPICY:
*Add 1 tsp of chili oil 
*Add 1/4 tsp of white pepper
VARIATION ON THE SOUP BROTH: You can use a premade hot pot soup broth, but Kathy, my stepmother, prefers a dipping sauce because this way, she feels you can taste the actual hot pot ingredients more fully. 
Food Forward Family Activity: (Difficulty level = easy)

*When the thought of creating a hot pot dinner is just way too much, recreate some of the Hong Kong style hot pot flavors by just making the sauce to add to your weeknight dinner. This way, you’re one step closer when you have the time and energy to pull off the full hot pot “event.”

      • Buy Kathy’s favorite hot pot sauce, Bull Head BBQ sauce, at your nearest Asian grocery store or order it online. (Lucky for us, we have a Ranch 99 down the street.)
      • Make the recipe for Kathy’s Chinese Hot Pot Dipping Sauce. Jump to Recipe
      • Place the sauce in individual small sauce bowls, and use it on the side of any dinner that contains protein, seafood, or veggies, so your family can use it as a dipping sauce.
      • Make extra sauce and save it. Celebrate your food forward movement – one step at a time- by making a special hot pot dinner when you can, where everyone in the family cooks for themselves, and there aren’t many dishes (even more reasons to love hot pot!)
      • To learn everything you’ve ever wanted to know about hot pot sauces, visit The Woks of Life website:http://thewoksoflife.com/hot-pot-dipping-sauce/
    Lauran Bell

    Hi! I'm Lauran Bell. I'm food forward in my heart and soul, but just like others living the family life, it's hard to slow down. I have a daughter who is in middle school, who has special needs, and a husband who is a pilot. My background is in teaching college English, and I worked in Bay Area colleges for over 13 years, after graduating from Stanford University, with a M.A. in English. We have an ever-changing urban garden that constantly surprises us. It is our daily inspiration for this food blog and helps us slow down, do garden activities together, and make healthier meals. We'd like to share our easy family recipes, and fun garden activities, with you so that you too can make easy, healthier meals, with or without a garden.

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