this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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Chinese language 中文 漢語
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That's rice wine, a type of cooking spirit, one moment.
Here's how to include it in a sweet dumpling recipe:
https://icook.tw/recipes/438042
Here's a few recipes on "Drunk Chicken", can personally attest to this dish.
https://cookpad.com/tw/%E6%90%9C%E5%B0%8B/%E7%B1%B3%E9%85%92%E9%86%89%E9%9B%9E
Thank you, that´s a good starting point.
I found out that the sweet rice wine is called Jiuniang and is often used in a dish called Guìhuā jiǔniàng. I might try that one. In that recipe the sweet rice wine is used as a sauce/soup that has sugared osmanthus flower and sticky rice balls swimming in it.
I am probably wrong but isnt sake “rice wine”?
Why does alcohol have a picture of a child on it?
It says, "granny, we're gonna eat glutinous rice wine dumplings yay!" you can see the picture of the dish on the bottle. Presumably the alcohol cooks off. And here's a recipe for them in English: https://www.sbs.com.au/food/recipe/fermented-glutinous-rice-dumpling/ugypizgsj
It's probably a cooking wine, so the alcohol probably evaporates, leaving the dish in a child consumable state.
The alcohol content of most 米酒 (and pretty much all of it sold in supermarkets) is 0.5% or less. You'll get more alcohol from an orange that's sat out on the counter for a while on a sunny day.
This stuff is commonly used in sweet soups, often with glutinous rice dumplings, osmanthus flowers, etc. added. There's also a form called 蛋酒 (lit. "egg alcohol") that is like a sweet egg drop soup. And it's absolutely incredibly popular with children here.