Monthly Archives: January 2004

Gung Haggis Wun-Tun lives again!!!

Haggis in Wun-Tun?!?! Deep fried or in soup?!?! That's what happened Wednesday evening at the Flamingo, as their chefs prepared a special research and development taste-testing dinner. We tried out some various sauces and haggis a la cuisine chinoise. Personally, I grew up with Chinese cooking and while I have enjoyed the best french, swiss, italian and japanese restaurants in Vancouver, chinese is still my favorite cuisine.
Gung Haggis Wun-Tun is an idea that Jim Wong-Chu and I cooked up sometime after the 2003 dinner. Being involved with Multiculturalism, and especially as purveyors of the Asian Canadian Arts scene as executive board members for Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, we try to stay tuned into the trends, and push the envelope as we see fit. Mixing Scottish haggis with Chinese culinary technique is a given that was bound to happen at a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

Gung Haggis Dragon Boat Team

The Gung Haggis Dragon Boat team is based on multicultural principles of inclusivity and the emphasis of cultural values.  It attracts people who are interested in recreational paddling and want it with a taste of cultural experiences.

Dragon Boat racing is one of the fastest growing water sports in the world.  Its origins date back to 1000 BC in China.  Dragon boats were introduced to Canada during Expo 86 in Vancouver.  Four wooden boats were donated by the Hong Kong Tourism Bureau.  I watched the first races but it wasn't until 1993 when I first joined a team. The Headliners team won the inaugural Novice Division cup that year, and I have been hooked ever since. 

Dragon boat paddling really is for everybody.  There are teams composed of breast cancer survivor women, seniors, transplant recipients, social clubs, work groups, etc.  I have been lucky to paddle beside high calibre atheletes who have competed at the World Dragon Boat Championships – very inspiring.  But mostly I paddle with friends who want to exercise recreationally and go for beers and appies afterwards!

I organized my own team in 1997, created for the Celebration of Life Centre, a spiritual New Thought centre in Vancouver.  I would apply the Ministers' lesson for daily living into a working application of sport psychology.  It was a wonderful way to apply my knowledge of kinesiology, sport psychology and athletic coaching from Simon Fraser University.  I have since coached many teams, some corporate teams for Electronic Arts, Unipharm and Motorola as well as many community based teams.

Since 2001, I have been involved with the race committee for the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.  This has led to organizing coaching sessions for NCCP training (National Coaching Certification Programming), as well as helping to found and organize the Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race of Vancouver (brand new for 2003).  I have raced and won medals in Vancouver, Portland, Seattle, Victoria, Seattle, and Kelowna – but the most satisfying thing is creating new friendships and having wonderful experiences from people falling in love with dragon boats and paddling.

I can promise a culturally enlightening summer for you, if you  join the Gung Haggis Dragon Boat team,  Each May or June – I take the team to the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens for both a tour and Tai Chi lesson.  This way, the paddlers learn the importance of Chinese concepts of harmony and balance and can integrate it into their paddling and racing techniqe.  As well, Tai Chi teaches body movent,centering techniques and force application.  I really should call these classes of the Tao of Dragon Boat Paddling.  It is a perfect blend of Eastern Taoist & Buddhist philosophies with Western sport psychology.

In 2002, the Gung Haggis d-boat team raced in the Alcan and Kelowna Dragon Boat Festivals.  In 2003, we raced at Alcan, Kent Washington, Portland Oregon, Victoria BC, and the inaugural Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race of Vancouver, bringing home medals from both Portland and Victoria.

If you would like to join the Gung Haggis Dragon Boat Team, contact me at 604-987-7124 or email: gunghaggis@yahoo.com

What's on the 2004 Gung Haggis Fat Choy menu?

Every year we balance lots of exciting and savoury combinations of
dishes with our favorites, traditional Chinese New Year dishes and
enough to keep the vegetarians happy.  For 2003 we are creating a
very special dish blending Scottish and Chinese culinary skills into
something uniquely Canadian.

Here is the menu for 2004, subject to change at my whimsy and the kitchen's demands:

1 – Cold Plate Appetizer with Vegetarian Spring Rolls, Pork Hock, Shredded Jelly Fish (Shredded
Jelly Fish really is sea weed gluten – it's one of my favorites and was
featured last year on City Cooks with host Simi Sara, prepared by
Joseph Lee, owner of Flamingo Chinese Restaurant.)

2 – Hot & Sour Soup (Always
a favorite for everybody – and vegetarian to boot!  Warms up the
innards on a cold January night.  I am sure Burns would approve.)

3 – Special Appetizer Surprise!  (This
is something I have dreamed of for a long time… Take something
Scottish, wrap it in something Chinese, create a special Canadian
sauce, and serve it to a willing and playful audience that understands
the value of multiculturalism and good food innovations!)

4 – Beef Lettuce Wrap (This is
always fun.  Imagine a hamburger without the bun.  Oops…
nothing is holding the patty together either.  Add the Hoi-Sin bbq
plum sauce in the middle of your lettuce and remember that when it
comes to filling the lettuce – less is more.  Otherwise your
lettuce will crack and break and the sauce will run down your
fingers. Delightfully messy!)

5 – Lobster and Crab (Another
dish you can use your hands for… The lobster symbolizes the
prosperity from the East Coast of Canada, and the Dungeness crab from
the West.  I don't know!  It just tastes great and it was
such a hit last year that people forgot we served Peking Duck in
previous dinners.)

6 – Vegetables and Tofu (After
the rich seafood, vegetables and tofu to clean the palate.  It
could be green beans, snow peas, Chinese broccoli… but it's got to be
fresh!  Tofu is great… I grew up eating it since I was a little
kid.  I know a lot of caucasians who detest tofu… maybe this
venerable bean curd staple is the Chinese equivalent of
haggis?)

7 – Haggis (You can't have a
Robbie Burns Supper without Haggis… The first time I tried haggis – I
gagged.  It reminded me of poi – the Hawaiian taro paste.  I
put some haggis in with my rice… it wasn't bad.  I added sweet
& sour sauce.  Plum sauce was great with it.  Then I
learned that I didn't like the lard recipe haggis and there were many
other haggis recipes.  My favorite is from Peter Black and Sons,
found at Park Royal Shopping Centre in West Vancouver.  It is
savoury with Peter's unique and special recipe.  Featured on
CityTV's City Cooks last year two days in a row!)

8 – Crispy Skin Chicken (need we say more – better than Fried Chicken and healthier too! A regular for Chinese banquets.)

9 – Buddha's Feast with Mixed Vegetables (Thin
Rice Vermicelli with mushrooms and vegetable – so called because it is
a favorite vegetarian dish for Buddist Monks.  It is also a
traditional New Year's fare to bring enlightenment for the coming
months).

10 – Fish Dish (The Chinese
Pronouciation of Fish “Yee” sounds like the word for “coin.”  It
is important for New Year's dishes to evoke prosperity and
wealth.  Often the fish is served whole – our fish may or may not
be – it just depends on the inspiration of the cook, and what is fresh
that day!)

11 – Special Gung Haggis Fat Choy Fried Rice (no haggis!)

12 – Dessert

– Hope you enjoyed these delicious descriptions… Todd 

Dinner starts at 6:00pm.  Be there or be hungry!

 

Gung Haggis Fat Choy featured on www.where.ca

Gung Haggis Fat Choy will soon be known to thousands of travellers to Vancouver.  It is featured in the latest copy of Where Vancouver – available from your local hotel concierge.

Check out the following web site and look under features for “Moonstruck.”  http://www.where.ca/vancouver/article_feature.cfm?listing_id=18

Moonstruck
Vancouver's Chinese-Canadian community celebrates the Lunar New Year by going out for dinner
by Tim Pawsey

Another cross-cultural incursion on familiar customs, Gung Haggis Fat Choy is a hybrid event that welcomes the Year of the Monkey and pays homage to Scottish poet Robbie Burns all in the same evening (Jan. 25). The East-meets-West Burns Night/New Year is the brainchild of “Toddish McWong,” who led in his first haggis while a tour guide at Simon Fraser University. Todd Wong (his real name) is a seventh-generation Canadian who set out to create “a fun event that celebrates the similarities in our common cultures.” Looks like he succeeded. Some 400 people will show up for the sold-out banquet at Flamingo Chinese Restaurant (3489 Fraser St.; 604-877-1231). On the menu, plenty of poetry and song saluting Scottish, Chinese and Canadian cultural connections; plenty of fat cho sea moss; and haggis—marched in with bagpipes, properly “addressed,” and served sweet and sour, of course.

Publication Date: 12/2003

Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner featured in the Vancouver Courier



This year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner is featured in the Vancouver
Courier
in an article by Tim Pawsey.  It's not online yet but here's a
quote:


QUOTE:

Our favourite party is the inimitable Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a
hybrid salute to Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day Jan. 24 and 25
at Flamingo Chinese Restaurant



But don't wait.  The word is out about this New Year's celebration
like no other.  Robbie Burns and the Year of the Monkey all in one
night? Who can resist?