Category Archives: Food & Restaurants

Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub + 6th Anniversary!

Kilts Night is the first Thursday of every month at Doolin's Irish Pub

2008_Nov6 021 by you.
Kilts Night gang celebrates with Doolin's chef Jorge Franco – a Guatemalan-Canadian who can wear a kilt!  Todd Wong, Debbie Poon, Jorge, Terry “Bear” Varga, Marion Poy and Tim Renaud (bassist for the band Halifax Wharfrats).

Kilts Night on Thursday was also Doolin's 6th Anniversary.  I arrived about 6pm, to hear Mark Downey singing U2 songs on his acoustic guitar.  Mark and I met for the Celtic Fest event “Battle of the Bards.”  He played Irish poet William Butler Yeats, and I played Scottish Poet Robert Burns.  Guess who won… Toddish McWong & Battle of the Bards at Celtic Fest

It was a fun evening with lots of entertainment. I had a great chat with Kathleen from The Celtic Connection newspaper.  She took a picture of me, and wants to do an interview about my upcoming Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner for 2009 – the 250th Anniversary of Robert Burns' birthday.

Our Kilts Night gang contains a number of our team paddlers from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. We really enjoy the celtic-tinged Canadiana music performed by the Halifax Wharf Rats led by Brian and Michelle, with Rick on drums and Tim on bass.

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Doolin's manager Jay Mangan tied down the ballons so that patrons had a better view of the Irish step dancers! – photo Todd Wong

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Three high-steppin' lassies performed some Irish dancing – photo Todd Wong

See more pictures on my flickr site:

Kilts Night November 2008 @ Doolin's

Kilts Night November 2008

Heart of the City Festival: Stories of Chinese food from “Eating Stories” read at Chinese Benevolent Association historical building

The Heart of the City Festival celebrates Chinese food and Chinese buildings – with stories of pioneers and their descendants


CHINESE CANADIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY WRITERS

Sunday November 2, 1:30pm – 2:30pm
Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver, 108 E. Pender 3rd floor

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Readings from the book “Eating Stories: A Chinese Canadian & Aboriginal Potluck” were featured at the at the Chinese
Benevolent Association on Sunday.  The book was published by the Chinese Canadian Historical Society last year and quickly sold out its first printing.  I was part of the writing workshops that helped to create this anthology of stories about food, culture and history.

Scheduled to read were moderator George Jung, Dan Seto, Larry Wong and Bob Sung. Also scheduled was Shirley Chan, but she asked me to fill in for her late Saturday…. so I was a surprise reader.

The reading started off with a welcome and an historical explanation of the Chinatown heritage buildings such as the Chinese Benevolent Association, and how the many clan associations served to help the pioneer Chinese in Vancouver and Canada.

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Dan Seto was the first reader.  He read his short story “Fong Luen Tong New Year Banquet” about the society set up for people with the names “Seto” or “Sit.”

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Bob Sung read second.  He read the story “A Lesson in Communication” about trying to impress a White Girl on a date in a Chinese restaurant, and how he kept mispronouncing the Chinese words so much that the waiter was laughing at him.

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Larry Wong read third.  He read the story “Evening With Pop (1949)” about how his father would always bring food home late at night to share with him and his sister.

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I read fourth.  I explained that my contributions were a blend of pictures and their descriptions.  The first picture I showed was me with my grandmother and girlfriend at Mother's Day 2007.

The second picture was me when I was 16 years old, holding two freshly caught salmon.  I explained how my mother's favorite way to cook fish was steamed with hot oil.

The third picture was the first picture ever taken of me wearing a kilt, back in 1993.  I was a tour guide at Simon Fraser University, and volunteers were needed to help with the university's traditional Robbie Burns ceremony.  This was when I first coined the phrase “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.”

The final picture was taken at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner with me holding a large haggis on a plate, while then Mayor Larry Campbell stabbed it with a knife.  I explained the origins of the dinner, and how it grew into a famous mix of cultural fusion of Chinese and Scottish food and culture.

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George Jung was the final reader.  George read his story “Applesauce” which described how 102 year old Mrs. Der had climbed two steep flights of stairs to demand “Where is the money, the frefund for the head tax that my husband paid?”  He describes how Mrs. Der met Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and how the redress ex-gratia payment arrived too late after she dies.

 I counted 18
current and past Gung Haggis paddlers + Hillary's mom – in the audience
– enough for a dragon boat team in competition! and 1/3 of the audience
..  Former paddler Elwin Xie had earlier in the day conducted his
Chinese Laundry Boy tour of Chinatown for the Heart of the City
Festival.

I acknowledged Savanah Walling in the audience – she is the
co-founder of the Heart of the City Festival.  I met her in April when
we both received the BC Community Achievement Award.

Sunday Night, CCHS writer Shirley Chan gave a reading of some of her
writings from the Eating Stories book, following the presentation of
the documentary Mary Lee Chan Takes on City Hall.  The film is about
how Shirley's mother helped to stop the demolition of Strathcona
neighborhood for freeway development.  Shirley's daughter Emma paddled
on the Gung Haggis dragon boat team last summer.

See more pictures at:

Heart of the City Festival: Eating Stories at CBA historical building

Chinese Canadian Military Museum celebrates 10th Anniversary with dinner at Pink Pearl

Important WW2 Canadian history is celebrated by the Chinese Canadian Military Museum, celebrating 10th Anniversary.
 
DSC_0742_91364 - Colour Party entrance by FlungingPictures.
My grand-uncle Daniel Lee and his friend Ed Lee carry the flags for the colour party to help lead the procession of Chinese Canadian veterans to help begin the ceremonies for the 10th anniversary dinner for the Chinese Canadian Military Museum – photo Patrick Tam/Flunging Pictures.
When Canada was fighting WW2, the Canadian government initially didn’t want any soldiers of Chinese ethnicity – even if they had been born in Canada.  Several Chinese Canadians argued that they should fight for Canada and volunteered for service.  This action later helped them lobby to give Chinese-Canadians the franchise to vote in 1947.

 

It was a wonderful evening at the 10th Anniversary celebration dinner for the Chinese Canadian Military Museum. I attended the dinner with my friends Stuart Mackinnon and George Jung.  We sat with Chinese American WW2 veterans from Seattle.  Peggy Lee-Wong, one of the first Chinese-Canadian women to serve in WW2, also sat with us.

DSC_0725_91347 - Lt Col Howe LEE & Ellen WOODSWORTH by FlungingPictures


Col. Howe Lee is the founder of the Chinese Canadian Military Museum.  Congratulating him is Ellen Woodsworth, former Vancouver city counilor seeking re-election this fall.  Both of these people are wonderful community builders, and I admire them greatly. – photo Patrick Tam / Flunging Pictures.

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There was a special acknowledgement as Wesley Louie presented his father Victor Louie’s military jacket to Col. Lee and the CCMM.  Wesley told the story about how his father, was granted an honorable discharge before he saw service in the Korean War.  Victor later went on to run the Marco Polo Theatre Restaurant, where my father painted all the show cards. – photo Todd Wong

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My friend Judy Maxwell gave a short talk about the history of the Chinese Canadian Military Museum.  She has done a lot of research for CCMM. – photo Todd Wong.

 

DSC_0731_91353 - Head table by FlungingPictures

Here’s a picture of the head table with guests. Mrs. and Col. Howe Lee sit beside MLA Jenny Kwan and media commentator Gabriel Yiu.  Standing is MLA John Yap in the middle, with Ellen Woodswoth beside him. – photo Patrick Tam / Flunging Pictures

Last year, John Yap MLA for Richmond Steveston invited the veterans to the BC Legislature and highlighted the 60th anniversary of Chinese Canadian citizenship.  The following is from his press release re-printed on the CCMM website.

“Today, I rise to speak about a very
important cultural institution in British Columbia, the Chinese-Canadian Military Museum. A non-profit organization established in 1998, the military museum is located in the heart of Vancouver’s Chinatown.”

Yap continues: “Howe Lee, President and Founder, had a vision to
preserve, collect and bring to light the artifacts, memorabilia and, most importantly, the stories of the Chinese-Canadian veterans that risked their lives in order to serve Canada during World War II, despite the blatant racism and indignities they faced at the time.”

He concludes: “Under the guidance of Howe Lee and Museum Curator Larry Wong, the Chinese-Canadian Military Museum proudly displays the stories of courage, sacrifice and patriotism of those who chose to fight for their country, Canada. I encourage everyone to visit the museum and learn about a widely unknown part of Canada’s military history.”

Read my article about the dinner event created last year to celebrate the 60th Anniversary of Canadian Citizenship
Chinese Canadian Veterans dinner May 12 – celebrating 60th anniversary of Canadian Citizenship

Special Kilts at Doolin's: Tim's Birthday + Frommer's shows up to review the night life!

Kilts Night
is always special when the Gung Haggis dragon boat paddlers show up…. especially when the “Halifax Wharf Rats” are playing their celtic tinged folk and rock songs!

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Happy Birthday Tim!  Bass player Tim Renaud of “Halifax Wharf Rats” with Alissa and Marion of the Gung Haggis dragon boat team – photo Todd Wong/Bunny Bears.

It's “Kilts Night” – the first Thursday each month.  We meet at Doolin's Irish Pub.  If you wear a kilt, you receive a free pint of Guinness beer.

There is great music by the Halifax Wharf Rats” which specializes in Canadiana music with a celtic twist of folk and rock.

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Deb, Marion and Hillary enjoy a pint of Strongbow and Guinness. – photo Marion

When you can learn thewords to songs like “Farewell Nova Scotia,” “Alberta Bound,” “Four Strong Winds,” and “Barrett's Privateers,” – you know you're Canadian.

And when you can wear a kilt and look around you at your friends all wearing kilts, and realize that half of them are Canadians of Asian ancestry, and you don't think that's weird – then you know you are amongst your friends on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team… and that feels Canadian.

Vancouver's heritage is full of diversity, and nothing brings people together easier than music and a good drink.

Welcome to Kilts Night – Gung Haggis Fat Choy style!

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A writer and photographer Derrick Lepper, for Frommer's travel guide showed up researching Vancouver's night life.  They took a picture of Marion pulling the darts out of the dart board – photo Todd/Marion

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Yvonne and Tony showed up sans kilts, but promised to wear kilts for next month – photo Marion

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A favorite activity is to dance to the Proclaimer's song “500 Miles” Leanne, Hillary, Alissa, Jim (hidden) and Todd- photo Marion

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And we raise our hands as we dance and sing… Leanne, Raphael and Tony – photo Marion

Next Kilts Night is Oct 2.  First Thursday of the month for October!

Okanagan Wineries: Mission Hill, Quail's Gate and Gray Monk

The Okanagan Valley has some of the best wineries in the world.

For the past 4 years I always try to stop for a visit after dragon boat racing in Vernon.  I first visited Mission Hill Winery back in 2001 after my first visit to the Kelowna Dragon Boat Festival.  Mission Hill has always been a favorite wine of mine, ever since tasting their Grand Reserve Barrel Select Chardonnay that won the IWSC trophy for Best Chardonnay.  The legendary story is that the judges couldn't believe it was a BC Canadian wine that won, and re-tested.  Mission Hill won again.

This year's Okanagan road trip began last week on Friday July 25.  On our way to a dragon boat race meeting at Kalamalka Lake, I thought there was enough time to stop at Gray Monk Estate Winery.  It is just a 15 minute drive West  to Okanagan Centre, just north of Winfield, between Kelowna and Vernon on Highway 97.  We drove past Arrow Leaf Cellars, which also has some nice wines I have tried.  We crested the hill, and looked out over the expanse of green vineyards overlooking a beautiful blue Okanagan Lake.

The wine-tasting service was very friendly at Gray Monk Estate Winery, and the tastings were free!  There also a large new patio restaurant where we saw musicians setting up at for the 6pm dinner crowd.  We tried the Chardonay unwooded, the Seigerebbe, Gewertztraminer, Reisling.  For reds we tasted the Merlot . One of our friends doesn't usually drink reds, and the tannins really puckered her face.  But she did try the Odyssey Series Merlot which was remarkably smoother.  I walked out with the Gewertztaminer ($16.99) which had wonderful sweet lychee accents, as well as the Kerner Late Harvest ($16.99).  My friends bought a Seigrebbe ($16.99) and a delicious Pinot Gris ($17.99) that we drank that night with dinner.

Dragon Boat weekend was spent mostly consuming Peach Cider and lager beers.

But on Monday, we headed to Mission Hill Winery.  This is definitely a recommended stop for any Okanagan vacation.  My traveling mates Dave and Brooke were excited to visit these Northern Okanagan wineries.  It was Brooke's first time in the Okanagan.  If you can take the tour, you will see a commissioned Chagall tapestry, and see a video that identifies the top wine growing areas in North America as Napa/Sonoma Valleys in California, the Williamette Valley in near Portland Oregon, and BC's Okanagan Valley.  A rose garden greets visitor's arrival.  And an archway marks the entrance to the winery grounds.  On Monday night, Mission Hill was also hosting a music concert in it's amphitheatres.

It's now a Gung Haggis dragon boat team tradition to take a group picture in front of the Archway, with any of our winery tour travelers on the Monday.  We had 11 people for our picture, all made more exciting because of the recent engagement of two of our paddlers who met on the team in 2006. Richard offered to take some “engagement” pictures of Wendy and Jonas at the winery grounds.

Inside we tried the 3 tastes for $5, sharing with each other to try some of the other wines.  The wine sommelier asked if we were a tour group.  When we identified ourselves as a dragon boat team, she said that Mission Hill had a brand new dragon boat team. We offered a race duel for a wine prize!

I chose to sample the 2005 Reserve Merlot, 2005 Reserve Shiraz, 2006 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon.  With my friends I also sampled the Reserve Pinot Gris, as well as the 2004 Oculus ($69.99), Mission Hill's signature blended wine.  The Oculus is a very smooth full-bodied wine that is saved for special occasions.  I opened a bottle of of the 2002 Oculus in Victoria, when we celebrated my receiving the BC Community Achievement Award.  It seemed fitting to celebrate BC excellence together.  I walked out taking the Reserve Cab Sauv and the Reserve Shiraz with me.

Next we went to Quail's Gate Winery, which is a short 2 km from Mission Hill.  Both wineries also have restaurants.  But last year, Quail's Gate opened up a new tasting room and wine store, as their previous “cabin” had been outgrown. This year it had been Mission Hill's turn to expand their wine store and tasting bar, nearly doubling their space.  But it is Quail's Gate's tasting bar that has a large window that overlooks Okanagan Lake.  It is so tempting to just stay there all afternoon sipping wines and gazing at the scenery.

Quail's Gate serves up samples of their dessert wines in little chocolate tasting cups. As a special engagement treat, I bought tastings of the Riesling Icewine ($34.99) an Optima  ($32.99) for Wendy and Jonas.  The wine host slowly poured the icewine into the chocolate cups until it just rose just above the edge.  He said to be careful handling the cups, and described it as “liquid gold.”  Wendy really liked the icewine. My girlfriend usually likes the Optima because it is less sweet.

Wendy and Jonas bought the Gerwertztraminer, and we decided to have a dinner party and I would bring the Gray Monk Gerwertz for comparison tastings. 

Nice wines… always good for an excuse to go dragon boat racing in the Okanagan

Vancouver Courier reviews EATING STORIES, anthology of Chinese-Canadian and First Nations food, family and history

EATING STORIES is getting close to selling out its first run.  It's a wonderful anthology of recipes and stories about food. 

Plus it features the secret recipe for deep-fried haggis won ton, from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinners.

It was a pleasure to take part in the writing workshops organized by the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC, and contribute to this anthology.

Check out the Vancouver Courier review by Lisa Smedman.

http://www.canada.com/vancouvercourier/news/historyslens/story.html?id=54cc4ad5-e0a1-44e8-9a5b-597613aa852c

Books
breathe life into B.C.'s past

Themes
include cooking, gold mining

Lisa
Smedman

Vancouver
Courier


Friday,
March 21, 2008

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CREDIT:

Eating
Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck offers family
stories with food
themes.


History
comes in different flavours, depending upon who's doing the reminiscing. One
of the tastiest reminders of this in recent months is the book Eating
Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck, a product of the Chinese
Canadian Historical Society of British
Columbia.

Edited
by Brandy Lien Worrall, the book is one part cook book and one part history
book, with a hefty dash of personal reminiscence thrown into the mix. It
came about as the result of a six-week workshop Worrell organized, in which
the 24 participants were encouraged to share family stories, with an
emphasis on the theme of food and community.

The
foods the participants write about–in prose and poetry–include everything
from campfire-roasted dog salmon to hot and sour soup, from potstickers to
“fusion” dishes like deep fried gung haggis won ton, the creation of the
kilt-clad Todd Wong, whose dinner celebrations blend Robbie Burns Day with
Chinese New Year. There are stories on learning to use chopsticks, favourite
restaurants, cleaning salmon, and Chinese New Year celebrations (minus the
kilts).

The
book is peppered with family photos and pictures of restaurants from bygone
eras. Worrall has also included illustrations taken from the vintage
cookbooks in her personal collection. Published between the 1930s and the
1960s, they were intended for Caucasian cooks who wanted to “surprise your
friends” with a supposedly authentic Chinese
meal.

Eating
Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck is available through the
Chinese Canadian Historical Society of B.C., at www.
cchsbc.ca.


The secret is out: Fortune Cookies aren't really Chinese…

I never thought Fortune Cookies were Chinese. 

They were always written in English, never in Chinese.  Our friends had their own Fortune Cookie factory near Chinatown. I even toured in it.

Jennifer 8 Lee has now written a book called The Fortune Cookie Chronicles.  She writes how so-called North American “Chinese food” is really not Chinese at all – but Mainstream American.

Lee exposes all the myths about North American Chinese food, myths that Chinese-Canadians and Chinese-Americans have known for generations – but White Americans are just learning about.  Geez… first the Easter Bunny, then Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy, and now Fortune Cookies!

Check out this article “How the fortune cookie crumbles” by Nina Lalli.
http://www.salon.com/mwt/food/eat_drink/2008/03/11/fortune_cookie_chronicles/index.html?source=rss&aim=/mwt/food/eat_drink

Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC honours Brandy Lien-Worrall

The Chinese Canadian Historical Society has contributed a lot to helping recognize and develop stories about the Chinese pioneers in Canada.  I participated in the second set of writing workshops led by author/editor Brandy Lien Worrall.  These stories became the book Eating Stories:

The CCHS likes to hold events at Foo's Ho Ho restaurant because it cooks the old style Cantonese dishes that the pioneer Chinese brought with them to Canada in the late 1800's and early 1900's.  I remember many family dinners at the Ho Ho Restaurant during the 1960's and 1970's.

On Saturday Night, CCHS honoured Brandy Lien-Worrall for leading the CCHS writing workshops, which singlehandedly helped fund and make a reality the Edgar Wickberg scholarships for students studying Chinese-Canadian history.  Brandy really is an amazing and inspiring person.  Not only did she succeed in editing the Eating Stories anthology over the summer and seeing it through to publication in November, but she did it while fighting a serious bout with breast cancer.  On January 1st, I named Brandy to a list of Chinese Canadians that inspired me for 2007.

It was a wonderful community dinner.  CCHS president Hayne
Wai was emcee.  Malispina University professor Imogene Lim and film
maker Karin Lee took tickets at the door.  Dr. Jan Walls made a
wonderful clapper tale tribute to Brandy.  Author Wayson Choy was in
attendance.

The dinner also featured performances from sketch comedy troupe Assaulted Fish, performing their hilarious Jackie Chan skits.

After the skits, some of the members of the writers workshops gave tributes or roasts in speeches about Brandy.  I chose the former, sharing that many of the people taking the workshops never before saw themselves as writers.  They just wanted to learn how to document stories about their families with a food theme.  But along the way, they all became writers.  And I saw their confidence and their self-esteem as writers blossom.

“If there was one gift I could give to Brandy,” I said,  “it would be as my new role as co-president of the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop to continue creating workshops like these to continue to tell the stories of Chinese Canadians and share them with our communities.”

And I forgot to say that way back in the late 1980's, ACWW founding
member Jim Wong-Chu started collecting stories for an anthology
published as Many Mouthed Birds
(1991).  It included writings by Paul Yee, Denise Chong, Evelyn Lau.
SKY Lee, and a short story by Wayson Choy titled Jade Peony.  Douglas
McIntyre saw the short story, and asked for it to be expanded into a
novel.  The rest is history.  Paul Yee won the inaugural Vancouver Book
Prize for Saltwater City (1989), followed by SKY Lee's Disappearing Moon Cafe (1990) Denise Chong's The Concubine's Children (1994), Wayson Choy's The Jade Peony (1996).

So…
you just never know where an anthology can go….

Congratulations to all you now-published writers…
and another round of thank yous and applause to our dear editor, teacher, mentor and visionary task master – Brandy!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy taste-testing rehearsal a success at Floata!


Everybody said the food was really good! 

Poet George McWhirter was amazed. Media columnist Catherine Barr was in awe! Film maker Ann Marie Fleming had smiles on her face! Blackthorn flautist Michelle Carlisle loved it!

We went to Floata to test-taste the 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy menu.  We started with a deep-fried haggis/shrimp wun tun, shrimp-filled haw-gow, haggis/pork su-mei, and vegetarian spring rolls… that was our appetizer.

Sukhi Ghuman arrived with her cameraman Zak to shoot an interview and help taste-test some food for an upcoming episode of The Express on Shaw TV.  “The Express is a lifestyle magazine program that brings you an in-depth look at the fascinating
people, events, recreation and attractions from Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.”  Sukhi asked me about the origins of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and how I came to create this cultural fusion event that blends Chinese and Scottish traditions.

“It's bringing about recognizing the pioneer histories of the Scottish-Canadians and Chinese-Canadians of BC, while recognizing that despite the racism of history, these peoples have met, dated, fallen in love and produced babies.  It's also about overcoming the racism of the head tax, the discrimination, and recognizing the future of Canada when people are Eurasian or Hapa-Canadian.  This is our world now.  This is our Canada… and it involves being inclusive of our different and diverse cultural heritages.”

We sat down at the table with our 10 guests including George and Angela McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate, Charlie Cho – our stage manager, Catherine Barr – media columnist, Leanne Riding – ACWW co-president and Gung Haggis dragon boat paddler, Carl Schmidt – our sound tech, Ann Marie Fleming – film maker, Michelle Carlisle and her son – Blackthorn flute player, and Deb Martin – my girlfriend and veteran of 5 Gung Haggis dinners, the Gung Haggis CBC TV special, and 5 years of the Gung Haggis dragon boat team.

The Hot & Sour soup came next.  Sukhi is vegetarian, so I pointed out that the vegetarian spring rolls are tasty, and if she eats fish – then the shrimp-filled haw-gow dumplings are one of my favorite dim sum foods.  Buddhists feast is another of our tasty vegetarian dishes and is a traditional Chinese New Year dish.

“Haggis really is offal stuff,” to the laughter of the Scots-Canadians at our table, as I explained what haggis is made of.  “It's made from the organs of a sheep – the heart, liver and mixed with oatmeal. You have to remember that a lot of the Scottish crofters were poor after battle of Culloden and the Scottish uprisings against the English.  The oatmeal helped the sheep go farther on the dinner table.  It's not unlike a lot of Chinese food, where you use every bit of everything. I have eaten trip – sheep's stomach lining… and ox tail in Chinese cooking.  So when the Chinese people don't eat up the haggis at our dinner, it's because of the oatmeal,” I said to much laughter.

Catherine Barr, who says she is first generation Scottish-Canadian because her parents literally came off the boat many years ago, reminded us that hot dogs are much worse than haggis because they are made from pork renderings…. the ears and other parts of the animal. 

We trust Catherine to know these things, because she grew up very steeped in Scottish culture.  I first got to know about her, because her father was the president of the Burns Club of Vancouver back in 2003.  My friendship with William Barr grew, and he invited me to Burns Club meetings, and I invited him to our Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night, and he invited me to Burns Club Robbie Burns dinners based on the Tarbolton Bachelor Club.  Catherine is going to introduce us to a Burns Supper tradition we have been remiss in replicating – the Toast to the Lassies.  Throughout our taste-testing dinner, she got to know the history of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, and how it pokes fun at Scots-Canadians and Chinese-Canadians, while celebrating its traditions, achievements and peoples.  She knows we can be wacky, quirky, reverent, irrelevant, and full of fun.  Catherine is going to plan something special for us.

Soon the haggis arrived, and Zak the cameraman made the waiter bring it to the table a couple of times, so he could get some great shots.  I picked up a lettuce leaf, slathered it with hoi-sin bbq plum sauce, added some haggis, then some lettuce wrap filling of diced vegetables and crunchy noodles…. folded the lettuce over… bit into it… and mugged for the camera… I had to repeat for a different angle.

We also ate Mongolian Beef, Shrimp balls, and e-fu long life noodles.  All of the food was very very tasty.  Michelle Carlisle and I brought out her flute and my accordion, and we improvised a duet of Loch Lomand, and Auld Lang Syne for the camera.  Sukhi also did a short interview with Michelle, about her involvement with Gung Haggis Fat Choy and her band Blackthorn. 

One of the highlights of the evening was a poem George McWhirter read for us.  He especially wrote a poem embracing Scottish and Chinese cultures, and about our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  I can't tell you anything more… but he really pokes fun at Scottish, Irish, Chinese and Canadian customs… and he snuck my name into it!!!

George and his wife Angela really LOVED our Gung Haggis Fat Choy taste-testing dinner… and are amazed that there are going to be up towards 400 people attending!

Todd Wong's Favourite Christmas Dish read on CBC Radio's “Flavour of the Week” by Maragaret Gallagher

CBC radio host Margaret Gallagher hosts “Flavour of the Week” on CBC Radio.  For Christmas Eve Day, Margaret and her co-host Fred Lee talked about favourite Christmas dishes.

They also read some of the stories about favourite dishes posted on the “Flavour of the Week” facebook group.  Margaret Gallagher read a contribution by Todd Wong.   Todd didn't hear it, but Gung Haggis dragon boat team member Stephen Mirowski did.  And he told Todd after Todd picked him up for a ride up to Vernon, to spend Christmas with Todd's girlfriend Deb's family.

Here is what Todd wrote on the Flavour of the Week Facebook group:

Stuffing…. Stuffing is important. It's better than the turkey.

Growing
up in a Chinese-Canadian family… we only had stuffing at Thanksgiving
and Christmas time. Christmas was the time we always ate “Canadian
food.”


My mother always makes “No-Mei-Fawn” for our family
Christmas dinners. – Special Sticky Rice. I pass on the brussell
sprouts and pig out on the sticky rice.


The past few years, I
have been going to Vernon for a “White Christmas” with my
non-Asian-Canadian girlfriend. And sometimes it even snows. We had a
more traditional Canadian style Christmas dinner at a friend's home
with Yorkshire pudding. That was neat! But I still looked forward to
the stuffing.