Skip to main content

Let’s Do Turkeys for Chinese New Year


“Dee, can you get the Yim Kai from the fridge?” Kay’s mother hollers from the kitchen.

I look at Kay, who is equally blurred. Salted Chicken? We look into both fridges, opening and closing doors. There was a large turkey sitting in the chiller staring back. Maybe it’s a Cantonese tradition, Kay volunteers.

Kay’s mother ambles towards us, she has the look of one annoyed with the foolishness of youth – that being Kay and I.

She shoves pass us and takes the turkey out. “As plain as day itself and these two think they can cook it by staring at it!” or some Cantonese idioms to that effect.

Both Kay and I are clueless. He doesn’t speak his mother tongue and I, being part Hakka am equally hopeless.

Kay’s mother glares at us. “I thought you meant salted chicken, Mom,” Kay says.

Kay’s mother takes out the bird and places him on a large enamel plate.

“I had to book this Yim Kai from Ipoh. This one’s a big boy, about 6.5kg and cost RM50 per kilo, “she boasts.

Yim Kai is a castrated young cockerel; a capon. The sifu in Ipoh castrated him when he was about 8 weeks old. The cockerel’s testicles lie within its body cavity. Sifu makes a small cut then, inserts a string around the cockerel’s testicles, and then yanks it out.

Ouch!

After he loses his “balls” his comb and wattles ceases to grow. His head has a dwarfed appearance and his hackle, tail and saddle feathers will grow unusually long.

He’s also less frisky; stop running after hens and have no interest in fighting either. He become very docile and resigned and start eating and gain weight. He's less aggressive than a rooster and is easier to handle.

Our eyes widen totally horrified. OMG Animal abuse resounds in our heads. Just as bad as cockerel fighting!

Kay’s mother continues, unabashed, “This is nothing new. People in China have been doing this for centuries to produce good quality meat that is tender, moist, juicy and more flavourful than regular chicken. The meat of uncastrated old rooster is coarse and stringy. The Capons are specially fattened, grows slowly and accumulate more body fat.

They’re ripe for the slaughter at 10 months. The nostalgia that these dishes bring out - how grandma’s chicken used to be and how it should be - in short, it brings back, the real taste of chicken!”

“You two stop looking like that. Don’t even know where your food comes from, eh?” Kay’s mother admonishes.

“Kay, this is what we’ve been eating for special celebrations such as Chinese New Year and the Mid-Autumn Festival, wedding banquets and prayer offerings. You use to call this fat fat pak cham kai, remember?”

Kay turns a deep red. I glare at him. “You!”

Kay looks towards his dad, fast asleep on the deck chair, his pagoda brand singlet rolled up exposing his huge belly, just covering his man-boobs. Kay’s dad snores, swats an imaginary fly in his sleep. There’s a tiny glint of saliva at the corner of his mouth.

We look at each other and then at Kay’s mother.

OMG, Kay’s dad’s a capon of sorts.

http://smartdory.com/2016/05/8-best-food-shilin-night-market-taipei/
A big boy, Capon at Shilin Night Market.
Yim Kai (Cantonese) ~ The mention of castrated cockerels may draw sniggers and giggles.
Sifu (Cantonese) or shīfu (Mandarin) ~ is the identical pronunciation of two Chinese terms for a master
Pak Cham Kai ~ Chicken steeped in stock, white cut chicken



Doris Lim is a popular freelance writer who blogs as Little Fish on travel and food stories here. Be sure to check out her other inspiring stories and follow her Instagram @SmartDoryID & Facebook to check out more places to eat delicious street foods or dine in the best restaurants!

Comments

  1. Yup I have bore witness to a few spaying of both sexes in chickens as a young lass...........
    thought nothing of it then...
    but now I have come to realize about them men without balls...we are women hear us roar!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes,Padme, you've got the part about men without balls. If you're Chinese, you might have gotten the name play Kay for the son. Kay means chicken in Hokkien. Thanks for visitng.

      Delete
  2. Only knew about it in recent years. Thought it was just another species of chicken.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Metamorphosis

I wrote in my sypnosis for Malay Mail Weekend Happenings; “Artist Renny Cheng debuts out of his signature figurative pieces and hits a raw nerve with his contemporary pieces with splashes of bold vibrant colour the creases and folds, peel back as he morphs out of the ordinary.” Renny's has the cutest fringe in Penang. Us chickadees pale in comparison,  Doris Lim is distorted next to badass writer Ruzanna Muhammed, E&O gallery manager Wanida Razali and Hin Bus Depot curator Gabija Grusaite. His metamorphosis is deviation and rightly so. This is not for the collector who says, “Hmmm…. Abstract art, either you loathe it or love it. I’m neither.” Says my friend CTW, “I go for impressionist art.” CTW’s was the first to comment on my FB post! Of course, lots of arty folks heading over from the Ernest Zacharevic x E&O gallery next door. I just love the traffic from one gallery to another! And rightly so, lots of colours and scenery, I get where you’re coming fro...

If Pigs Could Fly

Last night’s brainstorming with me hung up on food names and tethering off on an architectural tangent was a dot dot dot. Bella and Paul offered up good solutions. Paul said, “Ya, gud. Gud nice ring. Not bad," and bobbed his head in unison to mine.” The sugar rush didn’t help. Bad words neither. Frustration. Somehow it was zilch. I was dry as a bone. Nothing rattles in my head. The words took a hiatus and left me stranded. Normally it’s a bus depot up there, all the hooting and honking. Pregnant with ideas. Slept fitfully. Escaped, hopefully. This time Indian food wasn’t potent enough to cure this dilemma. A good chorizos, bacon, pine nut basil pesto induced stupor and a super fuelled caffeine high was needed.   This time, iced latte with the full blast of syrup tipped in. It came. 5 mins to be exact just as my friend Helena had said. My domain name. I WhatsApp my two. Settle. Done deal. Buy. I’m moving house soon folks. Stay tuned. Read...

Penang/Paris Mural Launch at Alliance Française de Penang

Friends of Alliance Française come together to celebrate the unveiling of “Paris/Penang", a 20-meter mural in oils featuring the Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe, the Louvre, the Queen Victoria Memorial Clock Tower, Penang Hill and Penang ferry at the Alliance Française de Penang. Penang-born former architecture student turned artist Elan Hasyim, 37 created this artwork which was painted over a period of over three months as he is based in Kuala Lumpur.  Total time spent on the mural is about 30 days. The mural started with the two famous bridges – the Pont Neuf in Paris and the Penang Bridge which Elan connected to portray the relations between the two cities. “Paris is in a way similar to Penang. The old buildings are conserved and refurbished for adaptive reuse which is great and what I love about the two cities,” he said. The event was launched by Rahime Bouaziz, director of Alliance Française de Penang. – September 28, 2015. This mural can be found on the wall o...