Saturday, March 28, 2009

Jellyfish

I was wrong about jellyfish.

A distant vague memory: As a food, I thought jellyfish was exotic.

In 1994, I went to a Chinese buffet in the Rice Village. Good Chinese buffets are rare, but this one had high quality and some not-so-Americanized dishes. (I believe the name may have been China Station, and I know the restaurant is long departed).

A jellyfish appetizer had many flavors -- pungency, sweetness, nuttiness. Yet I wasn't completely sure which part of the dish was the jellyfish.

Last week: In Hong Kong Market, a stand displayed three brands of salted jellyfish. One cost around $1.50. Another, $2.50. The third, $3.50.

In an Asian grocery, when I don't know the product, and the packaging is not English, I follow a simple rule: Buy the most expensive one. I did.

Salted jellyfish requires a little preparation and a lot of waiting. First, you boil the thin strips in water with a little vinegar until they just begin to shrink. Then, you let them rest in cold water - to get out the salt. I waited a full day.

The reality. As I pulled the prepared jellyfish from the refrigerator, I discovered that jellyfish, as food, are not strange. After the salt has leached out, they have little flavor. Instead they become pasta-like conduits of other flavors.

As I contemplated what to do with these bland, slimy strands, I remembered Vietnamese salads with glass noodles. Like glass noodles, jellyfish have a slightly slimy, slightly chewy/crunchy texture.

So the dish began to appear in my head: a Vietnamese salad with jellyfish instead of glass noodles:

The base consists of shredded carrots, shredded cucumber, and jellyfish mixed with a combination of fish sauce, lime juice, sugar, crushed peanuts, chili pepper, and sesame seeds. To make it a meal, I topped it with strips of egg omelet, grilled chicken, and mint.

(In the photo, the bits of jellyfish are the translucent strips mixed in with carrots.)

A new understanding of jellyfish. As food, jellyfish is immensely utilitarian. It acts as a texture base and a platform for other flavors. But unlike pasta, it is high in protein, low in calories, low in carbs, low in fat.

It is only as exotic -- and only as good -- as the ingredients, flavors, and imagination that you add.

6 comments:

Ruthie Johnson Miller said...

Fantastic. I think I'll need to try it to dispel that difficulty myth for myself -- can't wait!

Dr. Ricky said...

I commend you for experimenting with jellyfish - you have inspired me. So, I just wrote about it on my blog.

HoustonWok said...

wow FIH!!!!!
This is a great looking dish and I bet it taste as good as it looks! I like the kind of chewy jelly like texture of jelly fish.
Cheers

Unknown said...

I haven't tasted jellyfish before and would like to try it. I'd like to know how to blog so I could post my experience.

Nhệch said...

Hi. This is a plate of "nom sua", a Vietnamese food made from jellyfish. It is very crispy and taste good. Worth to try!
http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/262441_219602254757636_214818111902717_602166_7285881_n.jpg

Gwendolen said...

Thanks so much for your article, quite helpful material.