Slow-fired soups are a classic in Cantonese cuisine. Using carefully selected ingredients, these are left to simmer over hours for the flavours and essence of each ingredient to be fully extracted and infused into the clear tasty broth. And to Chef Tam, winter melon soup, a popular health tonic during summer, is the most classic. He was inspired by the winter melon soup to create the double-boiled dendrobium, yellow squash soup with Brittany lobster and pork shank for this year's MICHELIN guide Singapore 2017 Star Event.
To add a twist to this traditional Cantonese soup, chef Tam uses blue lobster from Brittany, France. "For the Brittany blue lobster, they will be made into shrimp balls and added to the soup, elevating the essence of seafood," says chef Tam. The traditional winter melon soup is paired with meat instead of seafood, so the blue lobster is a little different from the traditional combination.
Chef Tam first removes the shell of the blue lobster. The head and shell are kept to make the lobster stock. The lobster flesh is cut into 1x1 cm cubes, and then mixed with shrimp mousse to form lobster balls. Seasonings such as salt, sugar and white pepper are added to enhance the flavours before simmering the lobster balls in lobster stock.
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