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Scenes from Chinatown: Odd Produce and Buckets of Crabs
New York

2008_08_27-chinatown2.jpg

2008_08_27-chinatown4.jpgDo you shop in Chinatown? We're always intimidated by the markets there. The produce is often unfamiliar, and a language barrier doesn't exactly help. But we snapped some pictures while walking along Grand Street this past weekend, then came home and did some Internet searching...

 
 

We're already familiar with the infamous durian, thanks to Kathryn's post a while back about how to open one.

2008_08_27-chinatown1.jpgWe think this is a silk squash, which we found compared to okra and loofa. It is apparently good fried...

2008_08_27-chinatown6.jpgBelow is dragon fruit, which has mild white flesh flecked with tiny black seeds.

2008_08_27-chinatown8.jpgThis bumpy guy is called bitter melon. The most familiar reference we found was to zucchini.

2008_08_27-chinatown5.jpgLong beans! These we know.

2008_08_27-chinatown7.jpgAnd then there are the seafood markets, with their boxes brimming with fish, squid, clams, and crabs. Boy, do these places stink. But the goods do look fresh.

2008_08_27-chinatown3.jpgAnd above the jump: crabs and fuzzy melons, which are gourds similar to winter squash.

We got some of our information from this article:

But we want your input! Do you shop in Chinatown? Where do you go? What do you buy?

Related: Finding Cheap Food in San Francisco

(Images: Elizabeth Passarella)

Tags

Ingredients - Fruit, Local - East Coast, NYC - Downtown, Ingredients - Vegetables, Grocery & Pantry, Chinatown

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Comments (10)

i always shop there, in fact, as much as possible. the produce is always fresh, and i can usually get a week's worth for $10 - $15. you just have to learn to be pushy. at least in the NY chinatown.

FYI, bitter melon is NOTHING like zucchini. in bitter melon the texture is more dense, there is much less water and the flavor is nothing alike. i don't know that i could really compare bitter melon to any other vegetable. i personally don't care for it, but know many that do. the longer you cook it, less bitter (and more palatable in my opinion) it becomes. in the past i made a vegetarian version of this recipe http://www.maegabriel.com/riceandnoodles/index.php?showimage=72

posted by TheVillageVegetable on August 27th 2008 at 4:42am
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I don't shop in Chinatown enough. I live in Boston now and miss the Chinatowns in the Bay Area. Great prices for vegetables and fruit!

I agree with VillageVegetable about bitter melon--it's not like zucchini at all. But I do love it in one certain dish. Bitter melon sauteed with marianated slices of beef (or chicken, or tofu) with a garlic black bean sauce will knock your socks off. Have it with rice and you're all set.

As for the fuzzy melon, it's great in a soup. Peel it, dice it and put it aside. Marinate some slices of pork in soy sauce, a little sugar, and rice wine. Put this aside. Put water (or chicken broth) and a handful of sliced ginger in a pot. If you're adventurous put a little washed dried tiny shrimp (you can find it in Chinatown) in, as well. Bring it to a boil. Put the fuzzy melon and pork in the soup, bring to a boil again. When the pork is cooked and the fuzzy melon is tender. Your soup is done. Enjoy!

posted by JDS on August 27th 2008 at 5:41am
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The silk squash (chinese okra and whatever other names there are for it) tastes kind of like dirt and cucumbers to me. I might try it again, but I wasn't impressed. They sure do look neat though!

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on August 27th 2008 at 5:50am
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Durian? Noooooooooooooooooooooo! The only way one should open a durian is with a grenade.

I love cooking with gai lan. The leafy bits are somewhat bitter, so if you don't like collard greens this might not be the best choice.

posted by Plaid Ninja on August 27th 2008 at 6:09am
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Growing up Filipino, a lot of this stuff has come across the dinner table in our household. The long beans, what we lovingly call 'string beans' at our house was awesome broken up into smaller pieces, stir fried with garlic, onion, soy sauce and some pork and eaten with rice. Absolute heaven.

But there are some things that will scar me for life. That bitter melon is definitely one of those things! There was never such an appropriate name for a vegetable. My parents would cook the vegetables and also eat the leaves. I remember getting a mouthful of that stuff and having it be so bitter my eyes would water. I wonder, like putting salt on eggplant, is there any way to prepare bitter melon to make it less bitter? I'd be willing to give it a try again (with much reluctance)!

posted by Fandangogirl on August 27th 2008 at 6:24am
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Growing up Chinese, Chinatown was (and still is) the central shopping spot for groceries and other food items. Many of the produce items at the regular grocery store were a mystery to me (kohlrabi, kale, collards, etc) until the internet arrived to enlighten me.

Oh and bitter melon is horrible. It's one of those things that you either love or hate, and I'm a hater. It shows up in Indian cuisine too.

posted by Michelle of Montreal on August 27th 2008 at 6:37am
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I know a lot of people are put off by the smell of fish in a market, but as long as you see things being washed and iced on a regular basis, you should feel confident about shopping. Additionally, a busy market means that the product is being turned over on a regular basis. Chinatown fish markets are among the best places to get a variety of fish at good prices. In the S.F. Bay Area, there is an asian grocery chain called Ranch 99 and people from all nationalities come just for the fish. They will scale, gut and cut it for you free at your request, as well as fry it for an additional cost. The fish mongers are usually Latino and Chinese, and are a helpful crew. There is a slight odor here as well, but it is the norm from every fish market (Honolulu, S.F., Oakland, Seattle, New York) I've been to. Don't let a little bit of reality get in the way of a good shopping opportunity!

posted by jgphotomom on August 27th 2008 at 6:39am
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Bitter melon. Gah... vile stuff. I think it's something you have to grow up on.

posted by protogarrett on August 27th 2008 at 7:04am
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Chinatown is a good place to go for two essential pantry condiments:

1. Sriracha

2. Sambal

But is such a valuable resource for so many other things.

You can get chickens and ducks with the heads and feet still attached. Great Chinese barbecue. Party supplies (lanterns, chopsticks, deocrations). Peapod leaves. Unusual fruit when it's in season (asian pears, litchi, pomelos). Dried mushrooms and seafood. Cool candy.

posted by art on August 27th 2008 at 7:58am
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The Boston Chinatown is a great resource. I often go to Haymarket first on Saturday mornings, then stroll over to Chinatown for other groceries, and pick up a Vietnamese sandwich...and find that I likely haven't even spent $20.

posted by aleec on August 27th 2008 at 10:01am
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