Skip to main content

Pig trotters with ginger and black vinegar ~ Confinement food (坐月) ~猪脚醋(姜醋猪脚)


Pig trotters with ginger and black vinegar is a 'heaty'  dish and is a very popular dish for confinement mothers.
The black vinegar helps in blood circulation and purifies the blood, the ginger helps to get rid of wind in the body and the collagen in the trotters helps to strengthen our joints and ligaments.
It's the Cantonese tradition that this is cooked on the 12th day after childbirth when the baby is 12 days old and together with another speciality, 'Chicken in rice wine', they are distributed to relatives and close friends to announce the arrival of a newborn.
I normally like to cook this dish during the rainy season when the weather is slighly cooler!




I used this bottle of sweet, sour vinegar and some young ginger.


Blanch the trotters in hot water to get rid of scum, rinse and drain.
Trotters simmering in a soup of black vinegar and added in some hard boiled eggs.





This is a nourishing dish which is supposed to help post-natal mums lactate more.  Also it helps to steer the body back to perfect health after delivery....

Ingredients
  • 1 bottle sweet and sour black vinegar
  • 2.1/2  cups water
  • 1.5 kg pig trotters + some lean meat, chopped
  • 100 gm ginger or more, washed and smashed with skin on
  • 100 gm rock sugar or to taste
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 3 Tbsp sesame oil
  • 4 hard boiled eggs or more
Preparation
  1. Wash and blanch meat in hot water to remove scum, rinse and drain.  Set aside.
  2. Heat the sesame oil in a wok, saute ginger till fragrant, add in the meat, stir-fry.
  3. Add in the vinegar, water, salt and rock sugar.  Bring it to the boil.
  4. Reduce to a simmer and add in the shelled hardboiled eggs.  Cover and continue to let it simmer for an hour or more.
  5. Continue to simmer till the meat is cooked and tender and test for taste.  Add in more rock sugar if it's too sour and water if the vinegar is too strong.  At the same time, skim off any fat from the surface.
  6. Serve hot with rice or enjoy it on its own.
Note :
  1. Transfer any balance to a porcelain or corningware dish and keep at room temperature, no refrigeration is required.  Never cook this dish in an alluminium  pot as the vinegar is acidic.
  2. Any extra vinegared stock can be kept separately and meat added in to cook.  In fact it tastes much better if kept longer.



Do find out more from this ' site '.

Comments

  1. Cheah this is looking really delicious. With a bowl of warm rice...yumm

    ReplyDelete
  2. One of my favourites.
    But we add black beans and "tai tau choy" into it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mmmm...my favourite.....so good with rice. I can eat this everyday :D

    ReplyDelete
  4. cheah, i would really like to learn to cook this one day..are you getting ready for another round of 'grandma?'

    ReplyDelete
  5. Cheah, I am loving this one! I'm planning to make this for our reunion dinner. Bring half back to my in-laws' place & freeze the other half for myself. haha.... But I only cooked this once and forgotten the quantity of ingredients already. Luckly to have you! :o) Have a lovely evening.
    Cheers, Kristy
    p/s chat later!

    ReplyDelete
  6. dinewithleny
    I like to have this on its own and I prefer the vinegar, yummy!

    Wendy
    Sounds interesting with 'tai tou choy'. Only have eaten those with black beans.

    MaryMoh
    Hey, this is good for you right now. Warms you up!

    Lena
    My dear, none of my children are married. I think the 'grandma' title will need a long time to be bestoved!

    Kristy
    You can keep this for a long time. Vinegar won't turn rancid. But just my opinion, sweet and sour for reunion, not so good 'yee tou'. Ha, ha, being conservative. You have a great day too!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Wa...drooling and salivating now! Can't wait for another round of confinement time LOL! I want to cook this one day...love trotters ! Thanks for the recipe. It is quite some time now since I last had this :p ...you back already ?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Elin
    Yup, am back. But so much to do, spring cleaning. Each time I come back for a holiday, work like mad!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ah, at first I thought you had some special news to announce! I don't think I've ever cooked this before because trotters are not really my thing, but my mum and dad love these sorts of dishes. I just watch them ha ha :) I'm sure they'd love your dish, it really does look appealing.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I really love this dish but don't get to eat it enough, now that most of our friends are past their child birthing stage.

    ReplyDelete
  11. i love this! very (in)famously once said i would gladly be pregnant to eat this everyday (i'm only a 20 year old college student). i learnt how to make this from my mum and now i have it whenever i can especially in the cold London winter(:


    http://mummyicancook.blogspot.com/2011/01/pork-trotters-with-vinegar.html

    ReplyDelete
  12. Shu Han
    Thanks for dropping by my blog. My daughter loves this too. Will peep at your blog soon!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Hi. Wondering, when can start eating this dish during confinement. Is it the first week itself or second week after delivery? Thank you.

    Evelyn

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Evelyn, sounds like you're on family way. Normally, for me, being a Cantonese, we cook this on the 12th day after birth and distribute to friends and relatives. Also cook the 'chicken wine' alongside with this. Distributing this is sort of an announcement of a newborn, but nowadays we don't follow this custom so rigidly, maybe amongst your own siblings. So, the mum in confinement can take this on the 12th day after birth. Hope this helps!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Thanks for dropping by. Please click on 'Anonymous' if you do not have a blog but do leave your name after the comment because I would like to know who you are.

Popular posts from this blog

Steamed Pork Belly with Shrimp Paste ~ 蝦醬蒸五花腩

  This is an extremely delicious dish to go with white rice or even plain porridge.  You don't have to add in big spoonfuls of shrimp paste for it is salty but some sugar is needed to enhance the taste.  Adding in Shaoxing wine will definitely bring the taste up to the next level.  You'll definitely need more rice to go with this dish..... trust me! Steamed Pork Belly with Shrimp Paste  ~   蝦醬蒸五花腩 Ingredients 300 gm pork belly, cut thinly (with or without skin) 1.5 Tsp Shrimp paste  2 Tsp sugar 1 Tbsp Shaosing wine 3 slices of ginger, chopped  1 Tbsp cornstarch and 1.5 to 2 Tbsp water 1 tsp oil (so that the meat will not stick to each other) a bit of pepper Chillies and spring onions, chopped for garnishing Method Cut up the pork belly thinly. Mix in the chopped ginger. Mix the shrimp paste with wine to dilute it. Pour the shrimp paste mixture into the pork belly. Add in some pepper, sugar, cornstarch, oil and water.  Mix till well ...

Braised Pork Belly with Lotus Root 莲藕焖猪肉

This is a very simple pork belly dish cooked with fermented bean curd and young lotus root.  I like that the lotus root stays crunchy and blends well with  the equally crispy wood ear fungus.  A comforting dish to serve with a bowl of hot white rice! Recipe for Braised Pork Belly with Lotus Root Ingredient 300 gm pork  belly, cut into bite size 150 gm young lotus root, sliced 4 pips garlic, smashed 20 gm wood ear fungus, soaked, stemmed, cut into strips 2 pices of Nam Yue (fermented bean curd) 1 tsp dark soya sauce 2 tsp Shaoxing wine 3 cups water Salt and sugar to taste Method Saute the garlic with some oil till fragrant, add in the pork belly, stir-fry. Add in the mashed fermented bean curd, mix well and toss in the wood ear fungus. Add in water, dark soya sauce, simmer till meat is tender and cooked and sauce slightly reduced. Toss in the sliced lotus root, ...

Char Siew Pau ~ 蒸叉烧包

I have been itching to try out a Pau recipe and vaguely remember that I did make it once, long, long ago.  So I  got hold of my old file of recipes and finally managed to retrieve it.  I did it recently and must say that I'm satisfied with the result.  The texture of the Pau was soft and a bit chewy, wholesome and filling too.  Naturally, they didn't look so nice and round like the ones sold in the dim sum restaurants, but nonetheless I think homemade ones can be just as delectable as well.