Richmond, BC – A Dip into Asia

Richmond Night Market Richmond BC

The colourful, delicious Richmond Night Market is a must for visitors

Few cities in Canada can boast a true immersion experience into another culture. I don’t mean the gentle toe-dip into Little India or Greektown in Toronto, or the mild submersion of Vancouver’s Chinatown.

Richmond, BC takes one into the underwater depths of an extraordinary ethnic ocean. Several Asian traditions – China, Korea, Japan, Thailand, Viet Nam, etc – flourish in this multicultural lagoon.

Have a hankering for har gow? Salivating for sushi? Craving kimchi? The high water mark in any cultural experience is food, and in Richmond, there’s a veritable flood of possibilities. Indeed, I have always considered myself to be fairly cosmopolitan, au fait with much of what the culinary world has to offer, but in a few short days I am amazed to find a host of unexplored new flavours.

In Haroo, a tiny Korean restaurant, I sip roasted corn tea (deliciously corny and refreshing) and cook my own dinner – dolsot bibimbap, a sizzling stone pot filled with mouth-watering vegetables, meat, seafood and even a raw egg, all sitting atop rice which turns crunchy against the hot walls of the pot. The aim is to enjoy all this, reach the bottom, and get those crunchy bits!  Haroo 3

Haroo is on Alexandra Road. But it might be hard to find. Ask a local where Alexandra St. is and they will probably look blank. Tell them you want to go to Wai Sek Kai or Food Street and their faces light up, directions forthcoming. It runs for only two blocks but a rabbits warren of little strip malls make it possible in this short distance to house more than 200 Asian restaurants!

For most Asian cultures, food is an important facet of community. In China and Hong Kong, large platters of food served on ‘lazy susan’ turntables bring families and friends together, chopsticks flying as they sample each dish. At the Fisherman’s Terrace, famed for its dim sum, I do the same, delicately picking up pieces of lotus root and mushrooms from the plate, ignoring western conventions which would regard forking a bite from the serving dish as inexcusable. When it’s done with chopsticks, it seems perfectly natural.

lotus root

Asian Tea Ceremony

In the same mall, the Aberdeen Centre (and not a Scot in sight!), I visit Ten Fu, a tea merchant, where I’m treated to a ceremonial brewing of Pu’erh, a beautifully smoky, fermented tea which has aged for 15 years.

I learn to drink the fourth or even fifth brewing, the first three being discarded. And I’m rewarded with an aromatic inky brew, its characteristic ring of gold shining against the white cup. Heavenly.

tea ceremonys

Beggar’s Chicken – a secret Asian delight

It is in Richmond that I finally get my first, coveted taste of Beggar’s Chicken. This remarkable roast chicken dish dates to the Qing dynasty. Traditionally, a whole spiced chicken, stuffed with rice, is wrapped in lotus leaves, then encased in mud and roasted in an open fire.

Beggar's chicken closed

Beggar’s chicken closed

Beggar's chicken - it's secret succulent centre revealed

Beggar’s chicken – it’s secret succulent centre revealed

Suhang’s version is wrapped in a ball of bread dough which cooks the succulent chicken and rice inside as it bakes. There are two layers – bread and lotus leaves – to unwrap before the unveiling releases great wafts of scented steam. My taste buds are salivating. This dish alone makes the whole trip worthwhile. It’s glorious.

Steveston – a historic fishing village

Steveston, now a part of Richmond, is wrapped up in food – the fishing and canning of salmon. The Steveston Museum tells the story of this industry whose products once spanned the globe.

crab withVan

Barges tethered at the Steveston dock serve seafood, fresh from the Pacific. At the Crab King, owner and chef Van plucks a large, meaty crab from his tank and cooks it Vietnamese style with chillies. It’s a zesty contrast to the more traditional fish and chips being served on the next barge, and highlights how the cultures of the Far East have enriched the culinary landscape in this area.

Vietnamese crab

The Richmond Asian Night Market

Perhaps nowhere is this more evident than at the Richmond Night Market. Here, Slavic rolls and deep fried cheesecake make a valiant effort to bring western flavours to a market that is overwhelmed with stalls serving bakudanyaki, taiyaki and deep fried California rolls.

takoyaki s

Bakudanyaki is new to my palate. A fat dumpling stuffed with potatoes or chicken or even a whole quail egg, it comes topped with a wasabi or chili sauce. Taiyaki is similar, stuffed with curried chicken, leek and prawn, or my favourite, red bean paste. It’s baked on a hot griddle into a fish shape.

I sample as many goodies as my stomach will allow – spicy grilled squid ( no chi chi calamari here); a delicious fried tofu topped with  sweet chili sauce; and a challenging grilled whole fish I have to pick at delicately to remove the bones, while its glazed eyes inspect my efforts.night market squid s

Replete, the vendors warrant a tour – toys for technogeeks, jelly sandals and exotic clothing, and even colour-changing contact lenses guaranteed to add a sparkle to your eyes (seriously, there’s a built-in twinkle!). It’s all reminiscent of those endlessly fascinating, colourful street markets in Hong Kong, Beijing or Seoul.

Sadly, it’s all too easy to land at Vancouver Airport, located in Richmond, then head to the big city, missing this exotic neighbour to the south. Don’t!

Where else can you sample the food and culture of a half dozen different Asian cultures without ever leaving the North American continent? It will put a twinkle in your eyes – without resorting to contact lenses.

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