• Home
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Reviews
  • Ideas
  • Random
  • Sketch

好心人

Ho Sim Lang

Scallops and Asparagus

March 18, 2015 by Ho Lang

image

Scallops and Asparagus

I love this dish, especially at the Chinese restaurant whenever we have birthdays with grandma and grandpa. We would go to Tai San restaurant at this undisclosed location. We often go there at night and I would mostly be sleeping in the car due to motion sickness. And when I open my eyes, we would always just be driving into Tai San.

Come to think of it, people must have been richer then. We have cars and big houses. These days I can’t even afford a car or landed property. Have we improved or really become the new poor? We are more educated than our parents, but it seems we have lesser opportunities to break out of the poverty trap.

Anyway, the food at Tai San was always good. And we would always have our fill and family dinners were always about feasting and celebration. So this dish was always something that I would refer to as the menu filler. Scallops and Asparagus never really look like a main dish but more like a dish to make up the space in between great dishes. It was like a transitional dish to help make up the number.

It didn’t matter to me because I loved the dish as if it was a main. It was technically just as difficult as any of the other famous dishes to cook. If the scallops are not prepared properly, they would either be too raw or overcooked, and handling seafood is an art just like estimating the doneness in premium fillet mignon.

Here is my recipe for a very simple but delicious Scallops and Asparagus, hope you like it too.

Recipe

Ingredients

8-9 large stalks of Asparagus
6 large Japanese Scallops
2-3 Garlic (minced)
Drizzle of Light Soya Sauce
2-3 tbsp Olive Oil

Method

1. Shave the skin off the asparagus and sliced diagonally. Heat oil in wok, and fry the garlic until fragrant. Then throw in the asparagus pieces and fry at high heat. You want to create some gloss and be able to sear the vegetable.

2. Reserve the semi cooked asparagus and add oil again to fry the scallops. For this part, there is not much advice I can offer except that scallops cook rather quickly. Depending on the size you would want to moderate the heat in the pan. The end result you want to achieve is for the scallops to sear a little and to cook through.

3. Once the scallops are cooked through (most difficult part), add the asparagus back into the pan and continue to fry at high heat, add soya sauce and it should be just nice.

Bon Appetit!

Comments

comments

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Recipes, Seafood, Vegetables Tagged: asparagus, scallops
← Toast Box Mee Rebus (Review)
Seafood Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce →

Recent Posts

  • How to Make Crispy Salmon with Ginger
  • The Unexpected Sounds of Commuting: A Train Journey Experience
  • Singapore Budget 2025: What’s In It for You?

Tags

barilla bitter gourd black chicken butter carrots cherry tomatoes chilli Chinese Scallops dried Chinese scallops dried octopus dried red dates dried scallops dried Shitake Mushrooms dried shrimps eggs food garlic ginger glass prawns Hakka Rice Wine Ho Jiaks light soya sauce minced pork mushrooms musing olive oil perspectives pork ribs recipes red dates reviews salmon scallops seafood sea salt sesame seed oil Singapore singaporean cuisine spaghetti spicy stir fry tomatoes watercress white button mushrooms wolfberries

Copyright © 2026 好心人.

Omega WordPress Theme by ThemeHall