Shrimp in Lobster Sauce

"A friend from work was born in Hong Kong. He went to live with his Master at the age of four. He accepts that learning, and now teaching, kung fu is his lot in life. However, his Godfather operated an open air "kitchen" in downtown Hong Kong. Cooking became my friend's passion. This is the recipe he gave me when I asked him how to make Shrimp in Lobster Sauce. **Doubling the recipe will triple the cook time, but not affect the quality of the dish."
 
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photo by Demandy photo by Demandy
photo by Demandy
photo by Demandy photo by Demandy
Ready In:
10mins
Ingredients:
16
Serves:
2
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ingredients

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directions

  • While the rice is cooking, make your marinade and marinate the shrimp.
  • Just before beginning the cooking process, whisk corn starch into ½ cup of water.
  • In a wok on high heat, combine oil, garlic, carrots, frozen peas and rice wine.
  • When garlic becomes fragrant, add marinated shrimp, salt, pepper, sugar and water.
  • Bring to a boil.
  • Push shrimp towards the rim of the wok and add cornstarch mixture.
  • Turn off heat.
  • Pour egg into wok with a circular motion.
  • Mix all ingredients in the wok.
  • Serve on a bed of rice, which will take 45 minutes longer to cook than this dish.

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Reviews

  1. I made this dish and doubled the sauce. It ended up being very similar to the recipe in the Chinese restaurants. I marinaded the shrimps a little longer about 90 minutes which brought out the flavors of the shrimp and white pepper. Thanks for the recipe!
     
  2. Thanks for this. I miss this since I no longer live in the states. All of the other recipes contain ground meat or beans (which i don't remember having in my take-out).
     
  3. I am so happy that I found this recipe! My husband loves the Shrimp with Lobster Sauce that we order from our local Chinese restaurant. All other recipes I have found include ground pork. This has exactly the flavor I have been trying to replicate. I'll make it over and over. Thank you!!!
     
  4. I don't know if I did something terribly wrong, but it was a disaster for me. I as mesmerized by the delicious looking picture, but mine looked more like a sloppy, gunky gulash! Oh well, I guess I'll leave the Chinese (Asian) food to the experts!
     
  5. Good but very bland, I felt it was missing something from the recipe I've had in Chinese restaurants. Perhaps more rice wine would help. It's low in calories. In fact this gave us 4 servings instead of two and we served each serving over 3/4 c brown rice.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>At 19 years of age, I was the only child of any of my father's friends who was regularly invited to their gatherings. I was a fish out of water, but it felt good to be included. One New Year's Day everyone gathered for a day of football and food. I noticed two things that day. The women went on and on about how good the different dishes of food were that were brought into the party that day, and I noticed that all the food was cooked by men. It was at that party that I realized it was ok for men to cook. Within a month I was regularly taping cooking programs. (There was no food network way back then. In fact MTV played noting but music videos back then.) Too many years of being single left me with no one to cook for, that is until relatively recently. I am so glad to have had someone to cook for again. I now use RecipeZaar recipes to teach my teen-aged son how to cook.</p>
 
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