Taro cake

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Taro cake

Traditional Chinese: 芋頭
Simplified Chinese: 芋头
Literal meaning: taro cake

Taro cake is a Chinese dish made from the vegetable taro. When served in dim sum cuisine, it is cut into square-shaped slices and pan-fried before serving. It is found in Hong Kong, China, and overseas Chinatowns restaurants. Other ingredients often include pork and Chinese black mushroom, or even Chinese sausages. It is usually topped with chopped scallions.

Contents

[edit] Variety

[edit] Dim sum

The pan fried square taro cake is semi-crunchy on the outside and medium-soft on the inside. It is also the most consistent version with more or less the same formula in East and Southeast Asia, or among overseas Chinese communities.

[edit] Regional home-style

The other version is the more home-style baked version. Usually it uses the same ingredients and steamed for long periods of time in a deep pan until it is ultra soft and pasty. The formula varies greatly depending on the family recipe or regional tastes.

[edit] Frozen taro cake

Some restaurants offer taro cakes cut into small cubes as part of a main course appetizer to a major Chinese cuisine. These are sometimes frozen to a more solid state. Though it is not nearly as common as the other forms.

[edit] In other cultures

A similar dish is prepared in the cuisine of Vietnam, where it is called bánh khoai môn.

[edit] See also

Languages