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

好心人

Ho Sim Lang

yang cheng lake

Steamed Hairy Crabs

November 23, 2019 by Ho Lang

Steamed Hairy Crabs

I wished i could say that these beauties were from Yang Cheng Lake, in Shanghai, but guess what? They were from NTUC Supermarket. Surprise surprise.

Hairy Crabs are such a delicacy that most people would go the extra distance and trouble just to take the dish. So I am now presented with the next problem. How to recreate that wonderful dish? Thankfully I have had plenty of experience cooking crabs and I bet this shouldn’t be too different from our local variety.

I say steamed it. Plain and simple. That’s always the best way to cooking anything especially seafood. Add a little cooking wine like Shao Xing Hua Tiao Jiu and you are definitely on your way to a delicious steamed hairy crab – albeit cooked in your very own home kitchen. My place is no Michelin Star, but I have cooked my way into the hearts and stomachs of many.

And for the dipping sauce, I like mine with premium Lee Kum Kee Light Soya Sauce and lots of fresh young ginger slices.

Recipe

Ingredients

Hairy Crabs – you are the one to decide how many you want to eat at a go. (NTUC Supermarket sells them “live” at SGD 5.90 each <<bargain!>> and I got 6 immediately without hesitation – $35.40! wow.)

Shao Xing Hua Tiao Jiu – pour into the tray until the crabs all get their feet drenched (the more they are soaked in the wine, the deeper the flavours when you steamed them.)

Young Ginger – 3 inches would be sufficient (julienne the ginger into paper thin slices so that they would soak in the light soya sauce)

Lee Kum Kee Premium Light Soya Sauce – just enough for dipping (I love this sauce. It goes into everything that I cook.)

Method

1. Wash the crabs, give them a shave if you really want.

2. They are alive, so leave the handcuffs on. Let’s just say they are ready to run if you cut them loose.

3. Place them in a tray or plate, drizzle enough Shao Xing Hua Tiao Jiu (aka Chinese cooking wine) until they all get their feet wet. Be generous, these guys won’t disappoint when they are fully steamed.

4. Steam them for 12 minutes. Not less; not more.

5. Slice the young ginger very thinly, and drop them into the soya sauce. Shiok.

6. Once they are steamed, just eat and dip in the sauce if you like.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: lee kum kee premium light soya sauce, shanghai, shao xing hua tiao jiu, steamed hairy crabs, yang cheng lake, young ginger

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