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2014 Gung Haggis dinner taste-testing

Spicy Jelly fish (centre), pan-fried turnip cake (left), steamed haggis & shrimp har-gow (top), vegetarian spring rolls (right).

Wednesday March 12 – we always have a taste-testing dinner to make sure the food meets our expectations. This is especially important when the kitchen doesn’t normally cook with haggis, and we are aiming for something special for our guests. This year, the kitchen was more adventurous, and made us 3 different haggis dim sum dishes. Haggis & pork shu-mei, steamed haggis & prawns har-gow dumplings, and the shanghai styled haggis & prawns won ton dumplings.

Inside the delicious Gung Haggis dim sum are: prawn meat, green onions, water chestnut, diced carrots, haggis + secret ingredients!

Traditional haggis, is served with a vegetarian lettuce wrap.

Buddhist Feast with fun-see noodles (rice vermicelli)

Mongolian Beef with Broccoli

 

missing from pictures: Hot & Sour soup, vegetariam lettuce wrap, mango pudding and sesame cookie things

Purchase dinner event tickets online here:

Gung Haggis Fat Choy – March 16, 2014 Tickets, Vancouver

https://www.eventbrite.ca/…/gunghaggis-fat-choy-march-16-2014ticket

50 pounds of haggis – ready to be transformed into Chinese cuisine!

50 pounds of Haggis, that I picked from custom haggis maker Bruce Roane this morning.  It is now delivered to Floata Restaurant in Vancouver Chinatown where it will be readied and served with for sweet ‘n’sour sauce and/or BBQ plum sauce, for Sunday’s Gung Haggis Fat Choy St. Patrick’s Weekend Dinner.  And it is going to be served both traditional style, and also transformed into Chinese dim sum appetizers!

For 2014, we are featuring Bruce Roane’s custom haggis.  You won’t find it easily anywhere.  You have to track Bruce down… and custom order – if you want some of the best haggis around.

Back in 2009, I was attending a reception at the Scottish Parliament Buildings, for the final event of 2009 Year of Homecoming.  My friend Harry McGrath who had organized the exhibit “This is Who We Are” which featured a life size picture of me, was just about to introduce me to the First Minister Alex Salmond, who earlier that day had just helped to re-open the renovated and reimagined Robert Burns Cottage, down in Alloway, Ayrshire County.  But a pretty blonde woman, burst into the line up, saying “Excuse me, but I have to meet you.  My uncle makes the best haggis in Vancouver, and you have to meet him for your Gung Haggis Fat Choy event.”

Well… I admit that I didn’t use Bruce Roane’s haggis for the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.

But at the 2010 BC Highland Games, I had a booth for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  And a pretty blonde woman came up my booth and said “Hi, remember me, we met in Scotland.”

In the past years, I have eaten Bruce Roane’s haggis at Burns Suppers for the Robert Burns Society of Vancouver, and the JP Fell Pipe Band.  With my friends, and many people, there are lively discussions on the quality of the haggis.  Some people love a Peter Black haggis, which we have used for the past 10 years.  Some people “dinna like it”.  Some people love a Bruce Roane haggis – others “dinna like it, either”.

My opinion: It’s a good haggis, and I like it.  And it’s going to be served at the 2014 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year St. Patrick’s Day Dinner on March 16th.

And it is going to be magically transformed into tasty deep-fried haggis won ton, and delicately prepared haggis dim sum…  and people will rave to their friends, “Wow – you have to taste this!”

Also on the menu will be: Chinese pan-fried turnip cake (low-bak-goh) and steamed haggis & pork dumplings (siu-mei), served alongside spicy jelly fish. 

 

Vancouver Opera’s Don Giovanni brings out the Italian in everybody

Just call me Todderico Wongiovanni.   I felt very Italian attending the Vancouver Opera’s Don Giovanni opera on March 1st.  Mozart is always very accessible, and I have always remembered the Commendatore Scene from both the play and movie Amadeus.  “Don Giovanni” – the ghost of the commendatore sings… in baritone.

This story is based on the womanizing character of Don Juan/Don Giovanni, performed on different nights by Daniel Okulitch and Brett Polegato.  On Opening night Okulitch was a perfect rake, playing women against each other, lying with deceit, and masterminding his selfish games for his own purpose.

The other principal roles of Donna Anna and Donna Elvira, as well as the Commendatore (Donna Anna’s father) are also all played by double performers.  On opening night Erin Wall and Krisztina Szabo were brilliant in their seductions and seductee roles.

The highlight of this opera is the set design with multiple projections that easily and quickly tranform a castle ballroom into an outside street scene and back again.  The creative figures of statues and use of angles give an imaginative depth of field.

Inventive was also the use of a walkway surrounding the orchestra pit, that allowed the performers to come closer to the audience and give more room for staging.  It really felt more intimate with the four lead singers standing so close to the audience and singing, However, the orchestra seemed more muffled, and less brilliant in sound quality.

For the last decade, we have expected and received nothing less than perfection from Vancouver Opera.  This production is the first exception. The singers and orchestra were grand, of course, but the staging left a lot to be desired.  Having the stage extend out into the audience and around the orchestra pit created the difficulty of having the singers have to project even farther over the pit and stage. This created some balance problems where the singers were hard to hear, and the orchestra sounded small and muted. The Opera has been experimenting recently with “audience engagement.” They have brought in performers before the shows to mingle with the audience, and have a photographer at the entrance for guests to create a souvenir of the evening, and for the Opera to use in future promotions and on social media. Look at us, were having a great night out!

The images were spectacular, but could also be distracting. A night out at the opera is always an evening to be celebrated.  The roles were well cast, and the story, while long, did not drag. VO is to becongratulated for the exceptional quality of the shows, and their attempts to stay modern and relevant in the 21st century.  I truly appreciate the way they are reaching out to new audiences and taking chances on commissions and unusual programming.

 

What happens when Gung Haggis Fat Choy celebrates St. Patrick’s Day?

What Happens when you celebrate the Pioneer cultures and history of BC all together in one night?

 

What Happens when you celebrate Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner on St. Patrick’s Day Weekend with First Nations’ iconic poet Pauline Johnson?

 

March 16th, Sunday

5pm doors open

6pm event starts

Floata Restaurant

450 Keefer St.

Vancouver Chinatown (free parking)




Adults $65

students $55

children $35

Reserved Tables of 10 $650 - includes bottle of wine at your table!

Tickets available online 

https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/gung-haggis-fat-choy-march-16-2014-tickets-9215956173













For 2014, the date was moved to March 16th, and we are going to also celebrate St. Patrick's Day, and First Nations culture and history, in this Year of Reconciliation in the City of Vancouver.










Did you know that the first Premier of BC, was born in Ireland?  John Foster McCreight was born in Caledon, County Tyrone.  Caledon also means "from Scotland".











The most iconic First Nations poet of Canadian history has to be Pauline Johnson, (also known in Mohawk as Tekahionwake. She was a late 19th Century Canadian writer and performer that traveled across Canada.










We will continue to celebrate the fusion of the Scottish Robbie Burns Day and Chinese New Year cultures and traditions, to recognize the fist non-native cultural pioneers of this province.  The Scots came from the Far East, across the Atlantic, as the first White explorers, such as Alexander Mackenzie and Simon Fraser.  And the Chinese traveled from the Far West across the Pacific, first as Buddhist Monks, identifying a land to the East of China as "Fusang".










Every year we celebrate with a mix of culinary cuisine featuring deep-fried haggis wonton and haggis dim sum, as well as traditional haggis served with Chinese vegetarian lettuce wrap.







Our music and poetry features both traditional, contemporary and fusion.  This year we feature:


  • Victoria Poet Laureate Janet Marie Roger, who is also of Mohawk ancestry - just like Pauline Johnson, and will perform her own spoken word poetry as well as work by Pauline Johnson. 
  • Chinese-Canadian author Janie Chang will bring us a special story.  Her new novel Three Souls is #2 on the Asian-American best sellers list in the USA, right behind Amy Tan.
  • Celtic storyteller Mary Gavan will regale us with amazing stories of Celtic songs and Robert Burns.
  • Silk Road Music Ensemble, led by Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault will bring their mix of the traditional Chinese, Celtic and world music.  They were featured in the 2004 tv performance special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy"
  • Amy Stephen, celtic accordionist with Mad Pudding and Vancouver Intercultural Orchestra, will also bring her magic fingers and songs.
  • Kwantlen First Nations artist Brandon Gabriel, also brings his Chinese and Scottish ancestry into his contemporary artistic life.  He will read a poem from his great great grandfather, one of the first First Nations poets.
  • Co-hosts are "Chirish" siblings of Chinese and Irish ancestry, broadcaster Margaret Gallagher and actor Patrick Gallagher.
  • Gung Haggis Fat Choy Pipes & Drums will bring their unique fusion and musical surprises!

Gung Hay Fat Choy – Happy Chinese Lunar New Year – Year of the Horse

Chine brush stroke picture of Horse, painted by my father – photo Todd Wong

I am descended from horses. My mother’s maiden name is Mar. My maternal grandfather was Sunny Mar, who paid the Chinese Head Tax, prior to the 1923 Chinese Exclusion Act. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma_%28surname%29

en.wikipedia.org

Ma (simplified Chinese: 马; traditional Chinese: 馬; pinyin: Mǎ) is one of the mosSee more
Here is a bronze replica of the famous “Horse Galloping on Flying Swallow” – that I brought back from my 1993 trip to China. http://arts.cultural-china.com/en/30Arts385.html

This is one of my favorite pieces of art.  I first saw it in 1976 on a poster in my High School English 11 teacher’s classroom.  When I found bronze replicas at the Shaanxi Province Museum in Xi’an, China – I had to bring one home.

“Among China’s various craft masterpieces, Bronze Galloping Horse Treading on a Flying Swallow 马踏飞燕 is unique with its splendid designs and is a classical work of Chinese ancient aesthetics.

“Bronze Galloping Horse Treading on a Flying Swallow was unearthed in 1969 in the Leitai Tomb of the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220) in Wuwei County, Gansu Province. The bronze statue is a famous representative sculpture of the Han Dynasty. Wuwei County leapt to fame with the discovery of this national treasure.”

 

 

 

The Robbie Burns Poetry Marathon Reading at SFU Downtown

Here is Alma Lee, founder of the Vancouver International Writers Festival at the 2013 Burns Poetry Marathon Reading – photo Todd Wong

Happy Robbie Burns Day Eve… Join me tomorrow for the Burns Poetry Marathon Reading… 11am at the Burns Statue in Stanley Park with bagpiper Thomas Budd

Then at 12pm at SFU Downtown – where we will Rap the Address to the Haggis!

You can register to read a Burns Poem and join the fun:

http://www.scottish.sfu.ca/sfus_robert_burns_marathon

We did the inaugural Burns Marathon reading two years ago in 2012 – Here is my blog story https://www.gunghaggis.com/2012/01/26/marathon-poetry-reading-of-robbie-burns-poetry-sfu-harbour-centre/

Here is Leith Davies, director of the Centre for Scottish Studies SFU, Teresa King (descendant of Robert Burns), and me!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner postponed to March 16th

ANNOUNCEMENT – Dinner Post-poned to March 16th
Floata Restaurant, #400 – 180 Keefer St.
details to be confirmed.

Sorry to inconvenience everybody – but logistics and health have forced this difficult decision.

It is St. Patrick’s Day Weekend – so we will be inclusive of Irish, Chinese, Scottish and First Nations cultures for a reinvigorated Gung Haggis Fat Choy that will celebrate our province’s pioneer history and the cultural fusion of today’s diversity.

I will follow up with our guests – and we will have something special for your patronage and support.

– Tickets available online at https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/gung-haggis-fat-choy-2014-tickets-9215956173

Cheers, Todd

Here is a picture of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team on St. Patrick’s Day 2013 – for the Celtic Fest St. Patrick’s Day parade.

2014 dinner menu for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

Every year we switch up some of the dishes for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner 

We pay attention to what we ate last year, what fits with the performance themes.  January 31, will welcome the Year of the Horse – and NO – we will not have horse meat.  But Horses will fit into the literary theme…  How about some Beef?

Half the dishes are vegetarian including: turnip cake appetizer, vegetarian hot and sour soup, lettuce wrap, buddha’s feast + efu long life noodles.  Meat dishes will be fish, chicken and a beef dish, + traditional haggis.  Our specialty appetizer items are deep-fried haggis & shrimp won ton, and haggis & pork su-mei dumplings… but we are considering bringing back spring rolls in place of the bbq pork.

This is the appetizer platter: Spicy jellyfish (center), , Lo-Bak-Goh turnip cake (front), BBQ pork (right) and haggis & pork shu-mei dumplings (left).  Delicious!  My great-grandmother always used to make the turnip cakes for me – to this day, they are one of my favorite dim sum dishes!

Our famous Haggis & shrimp Wonton dumplings! Utterly tasty…. It is one of our mentor Jim Wong-Chu’s favorite items on the menu that he looks forward to tasting each year.  Last year, we had accordionist Lewis Kane, fresh from Scotland attend out taste-test dinner. We asked Lewis to try one… to see if a real Scottish person would eat it.  And… he LIKED it…. he said it was real good… and that they should do this in Scotland!  HA!  Score one for Canada!

Last year we had Winter Melon soup… would be a staple if winter melons grew in Scotland.  Sublime in flavour, delicately balanced with mushrooms, cucumbers, carrots and lots of other good things. But… for 2014, we will return to a traditional Hot & Sour Soup – because the word “Sour” is very similarly spelled to the word “soul” – and good soul food always feels filling… and we are featuring author Janie Chang, whose new book is titled “Three Souls” – so we will have a Hot and Sour Soul Soup.  Nice alliteration, eh?

Here is the best way to eat haggis…  take a spoonful of haggis and add it to the Chinese vegetarian lettuce wrap.  Very tasty – just like a hamburger without the bun.  Remember to put lots of Chinese Hoi-sin bbq sauce inside.

Last year we had Steamed salmon – flavoured with hot oil and ginger, and topped with chives and cilantro.  This was one of the original dishes that I had personally prepared at the original Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner backin 1998.  So mouth-watering good… it melts in your mouth.

Buddhist’s feast is a traditional New Year’s dish, with lots of vegetables and bamboo shoots and mushrooms and Chinese funghi.  We figured if we are making Chinese people eat haggis, the Scottish people can eat Chinese funghi.  Afterall… it is considered a delicacy in Chinese cuisine.

This is traditional crispy skin chicken, served with shrimp chips.  They are always very tasty – and not greasy like American style deep-fried chicken from KFC and elsewhere.

Mogolian Beef – tasty sauce over slabs of beef.  The mongols had an empire that covered all of Asia and extended into Eastern Europe.  They were fierce warriors because of their horsemanship skills.  See… I told you I would work in the Year of the Horse theme somewhere…

E-fu noodles… these are lovely textured egg-based noodles, and also traditional at Chinese banquets.  Not the regular chow mein noodles many people associate with Chinese take-out.  This is one of my favorite dishes, and the long noodles symbolize good wishes for long life.

And then there is dessert…. need we say more than two words?  Mango pudding.

But please note – menu is subject to change… as availability and freshness is important to us.

The dinner event WAS originally set for Sunday January 26th – but NOW POSTPONED to Sunday March 16th, 2014

– Tickets available online at https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/gung-haggis-fat-choy-2014-tickets-9215956173

2014 GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY DINNER – TICKETS NOW ON SALE

17th Annual GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY
Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
– Celebrating Year of the Horse & featuring poetry of Robert Burns and Pauline Johnson

Sunday January 26th, 2014 – postponed
to Sunday March 16th 2014
5:00 pm Reception
6:00 pm Dinner Start

Floata Restuarant – #400 – 180 Keefer St.
Vancouver Chinatown (Free Parking)
$65 per Seat
$55 for Students with ID
$35 for Children 13 and under
$650 for table of 10 includes complimentary wine for your table

Chinese Banquet dinner featuring our haggis won-ton specialty

– Lots of poetry, music, food and fun
– Special theme of Chinese and Scottish Ghost stories
– Featuring: Silk Road Music Ensemble, Gung Haggis Pipe Band, Storyteller Mary Gavan, author Janie Chang and more special guests, raffle prizes and silent auction


Please note:
– Ticket Sales End March 15th
– No “Walk up – day of sales”

Tips To Improve Your Work Performance

 

High-performing employees often realize both personal and professional development. They receive raises, bonuses, and promotions. They don’t think of ways to improve work performance only when their annual performance evaluation is around the corner. Instead, they continuously assess their performance, identify strengths and weaknesses, and make adjustments accordingly. You can also become a better version of yourself by constantly improving your work performance. Here are 7 tips to help you do that.

 
 
 

1.     Set Clear, Realistic Milestones

It’s just human nature to aim for the stars and that happens even when we are setting goals. While it’s perfectly okay to be a bit daring as far as goals are involved, it’s extremely important to think clearly and be reasonable. Come up with 2-3 big goals you want to achieveOpens in a new tab., and then create weekly and monthly milestones to guide the way. For instance, if you want to capture 2,000 leads within a year, you should set weekly and monthly milestones to help you accomplish that. You should aim to capture 40 leads every week and come up with strategies for driving more traffic to the company website. Learn more about the benefits of collaboration & productivity.

2.     Plan Carefully and Prioritize

You must organize, plan, and prioritize to come up with an effective routine. Start by going through activities and tasks on your to-do list for the day. Then, plan the tasks based on their priority status and deadline. There are plenty of project planning tools out there that can help you with that. Complete tasks that require immediate attention first then move on to the important ones

3.     Minimize Distractions

With apps, tech devices, people, and pleasures competing for your attention, it’s now easier than ever to get distracted and less productive. This decline in productivity can result in an endless loop of chasing deadlines, where you never give yourself sufficient time to refocus, and thus, can’t perform at your peak. But there are certain things you can do to minimize distractions, so you can complete more tasks efficiently and have adequate time to recharge.  To get started, log out of your social media platforms and mute your email and any other communication platform on your computer or smartphone. Get rid of clutter and keep your office desk clean and neat. If you’re working remotely, consider installing soundproofing materialsOpens in a new tab. to eliminate or reduce noises coming from your kids, pets seeking attention, or your partner who’s also working from home.

4.     Identify Your Strong Points and Weak Points

Carry out a self-evaluation to identify the skills you already have that can help improve your work performance and determine areas that you need to improve. For instance, you may find out that you’re great at coming up with new ideas and putting them into action. Or perhaps you’re great at promoting company programs, but not so great at negotiating contracts with potential customers. Regularly assess your work performance and document your strengths and accomplishments.

5.     Maintain a Good Work-Life Balance

Maintaining a perfect work-life balance is a huge stride towards improving your productivity and job performance. Avoid burnouts by spending quality time with your loved ones, engaging in non-work-related leisure activities, and getting sufficient, restful sleep. Participate in self-improvement activities like yoga, meditation, social events, and sports to help you wind down and relax in a unique style. Having hobbies and engaging in self-improvement activities can help you enhance your job performance.

6.     Communicate Clearly and Effectively

If you want to achieve peak performance at work, then you must practice clear and effective communication. Always seek clarification when you aren’t certain what’s expected from you.  If you’re leading a team, regularly ask for feedback from team members and come up with innovative strategies for solving problems.

7.     Keep on Learning

By investing in your professional development, you can easily enhance your job performance. Strive to learn something new daily. It could be about your role, your company, or topics that inspire interest in you. Continuous learning enables you to gain new skills or sharpen existing ones. It also allows you to accumulate a wealth of knowledge that you can leverage to improve your performance both today and in the future.

    8. Focus on one task at a time

Multitasking is surely a skill that employees want from their workers. In fact, many people claim that they are really good at it and can handle a lot of tasks at the same time. However, in a dynamic workplace, multitasking can affect the quality of your work and overall performance.

 People argue that while they are good at it, they always handle 2 or more tasks at the same time. Most of the time they stop whatever they are doing to simply help a colleague of their finish something, without thinking that such a distraction may compromise the quality of their work. Of course, we all like to help our colleagues as want to be helped whenever there is a need, but at least we should prioritize our own tasks first and then help each other.