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Chinese New Year treats

Posted on 21 January 2020 No comments
Beijing Roast Duck: Plating suggestion.
It’s that time of the year again when many homes and businesses are being spruced up in time for the most important and longest event in the Chinese calendar, the Lunar New Year.

This year, the Lunar or Chinese New Year holidays are set from Jan 25-28. Traditionally, the holidays last only for three days, but since the second day of CNY falls on a Sunday this year, the statutory holiday is stretched to include the fourth day, which is Jan 28.

Nevertheless, many foreign domestic workers are not able to use up all four days as many Chinese households do a lot of entertaining on these days, and the helper is expected to help cook, and attend to the guests. Hopefully, they are either compensated for the day/s they are made to work during the holidays, or given a substitute day-off.

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But days before the holidays, many FDWs are already kept busy either doing spring cleaning or cooking endless pots of delicacies like the radish cake or the Chinese sticky rice cake which their employers traditionally give away to friends or relatives.

While cooking one tub of radish cake for the employer’s family may not be anymore difficult than preparing four dishes on a daily basis, many an FDW will swear that doing the yearly ritual over and over again is enough to leave them bone-tired. Not to mention nauseous from the pungent smell of the root crop which they have to grate endlessly into thin strips.

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But the upside is that this is also the time when many people are feeling generous, and the helper often ends up being the beneficiary of money in red packets or “lai see”, not just from their employers and family members, but also from grateful house guests.

For this issue we’re focusing on these two CNY must-have dishes, but also a special one that most people only get to partake in expensive Chinese restaurants. But trust Ednalyn Salvador, our veteran helper who works in the Peak, to make something as daunting to cook as the Peking Duck, look easy and fun to prepare and dish up. Why, she even makes her own Mandarin pancakes to wrap those succulent duck slices in!

Kung Hei Fat Choy and have fun trying out these festive treats.



Beijing Roast Duck 

(also known as “Peking Duck”)
By Ednalyn Salvador 
This is a delicious way to prepare roast duck. It is traditionally served wrapped in Mandarin pancakes along with cucumber and plum or hoisin sauce.
Our recipe is easier than many traditional methods, but still yields a delicious duck, full 

Ingredients: 
1 Peking Duck ( whole, 4-5 lbs.)
1/4 cup honey
2 tsp. soy sauce
2 tsp. hot water
1 tsp. Chinese Five Spice
2 tsp. salt
2 tsp.paprika
1 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp.black pepper
4 garlic cloves
1 green apple , quartered
1 lemon, quartered
1 onion, quartered
a couple sprigs of rosemary
2 spring onion
To Serve:
• 8-10 Mandarin pancakes
• Cucumber, cut into matchstick size 
• Scallions, sliced long
• Plum sauce
• Hoisin sauce

Instructions:
1. Check the inside of the duck for a bag containing the neck and giblets. Remove these and save to make stock or soup later, if desired.
2. Place the duck, breast side up, on a wire rack in a roasting pan that has been lined with aluminum foil.
3. Starting at the body cavity, insert your hand between the skin and breast meat to separate them.
4. In a small bowl, combine the honey, soy sauce, and hot water. Mix to combine. Brush the mixture over the whole duck.
5. Transfer the duck from the wire rack in the roasting pan to the refrigerator and chill, uncovered, for 6-12 hours, to air dry.
6. Remove the duck from the refrigerator 2 hours before roasting, to let it come to room temperature. 
7. Stuff the cavity of the duck with garlic cloves, a quartered onion, and a couple sprigs of rosemary. You could also use lemon slices or a quartered apple. The stuffing should be discarded after cooking but the aromatics add flavor to the meat.
8. Fold in the loose skin on both ends of the duck to hold everything inside and tie the duck legs with butcher’s twine or string to truss it. Then rub the duck all over with a mix of salt, pepper, garlic powder and paprika.
9. With your oven rack at its lowest position, preheat your oven to 350F.
10. Put in the duck and roast for 30 minutes.
11. Remove the duck from the oven and carefully flip it, breast- side down. Roast for an additional 30 minutes.
12. Remove the duck from the oven and carefully flip it again, breast-side up. Reduce the heat the heat of your oven to 250F and roast until the duck is deeply golden and the leg bones move slightly in the sockets, about 30-40 minutes. (If necessary, you can broil the duck for the last few minutes of cooking time to make the skin really crisp).
13. Remove the duck from the oven and let it rest 15 minutes before carving.
14. To carve the duck, slice vertically between the breasts, on one side of the breast bone. Continue slicing around the breast to separate it from the wing. Then slice the whole breast off the bone. Once the breast is removed from the carcass, you can slice it thinly to serve.
14. Serve the Peking Duck with Mandarin pancakes, cucumbers, green onions and plum sauce or hoisin sauce.


Mandarin Pancake:

Ingredients: 
• 2 cups all-purpose flour
• 1 cup hot boiling water + 20 ml for adjusting
• 3 tablespoon sesame oil or other vegetable oil.
Method: 
1. In a large bowl, stir in hot water. Set aside until cool down When the dough is still hot, it can be quite sticky and hard to knead.
2. Knead until dough is smooth. Cover and let rest for 15- 20 minutes.
3. Divide the dough into 18 similar portions.

To pan-fry:
1. Take one portion out and flatten. Brush oil on the surface.
2. Then overlay with another small portion. Roll the two pieces together
3. Brush a small layer of oil on a pan (only a small amount needed) and fry over medium fire until one side is dotted with brown and then turn over and fry the other side.
4. Tear the two pieces apart when the pancake is still warm.


Radish or Turnip Cake

(from Christine’s Recipes as posted on DWC It’s All About Food)

Ingredients:
1 kg Chinese white turnip (radish/daikon)
170 gm rice flour
4 Tbsp wheat starch 
40 gm Chinese sausage 
45 gm Chinese bacon 
55 gm Chinese dried shrimps
60 gm salted radish
2 shallots, minced
3/4 cup unsalted chicken broth
pinch of white pepper

The ingredients.

Method:
1. Blanch Chinese sausage and Chinese bacon in boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes for cleaning and easy chopping. Drain well and finely diced. 
2. Peel the turnip and grate into thick strips. 
3. Soak and rinse dried shrimps. Coarsely chop them (if you buy smaller ones, you don’t need to chop them then.) 
4. Soak salted radish, rinse well and finely chop.
5. In a big bow, mix the rice flour with wheat flour well.
6. Add 2 tablespoons of oil in a non-stick wok, sauté Chinese sausage and Chinese bacon dices over medium heat. Toss in dried shrimps and salted radish, continue to sauté until aromatic (see picture 1). Set aside.
7. Add another 2 tablespoons of oil, sauté minced shallots. Add grated turnips. Sprinkle white pepper to taste. Pour in chicken broth, bring to a boil, cover and cook until tender and translucent (see picture 2). Remove from heat. 
8. Add rice flour and wheat starch, quickly combine all ingredients into a thick batter (see picture 3). Toss in sausages, bacons and shrimps and mix well (see picture 4).
9. Pour the mixture into a greased pan, 8-inch round. Steam over high heat with cover, about 45 to 60 minutes. Check the water level and replenish, if necessary, with boiling water. 
10. Insert a chopstick into the middle part. If it comes out clean, the cake is cooked through. Let cool and refrigerate with cover for 4 hours.
11. Cut into pieces, fry both sides until golden brown. Serve hot.


Chinese Sticky Rice Cake (Tikoy)

(from Christine’s Recipes)

Ingredients:
200 gm glutinous rice flour
70 gm wheat starch 
250 gm brown sugar in bar 
1 cup water
80 ml coconut cream
30 gm oil + a dash to grease cake mould
1 egg, whisked

Method:
1. Use a saucepan to bring 1 cup of water to boil. Add brown sugar and cook until completely dissolved. Stir in coconut cream and oil. Drain syrup through a fine sieve to make the mixture smoother. Let cool.
2. Sift glutinous rice flour and wheat flour twice beforehand. Add flour bit by bit into syrup, stirring constantly along the way, and combine well. If you’d like your batter really smooth, drain through a fine sieve once more.
3. Transfer batter to a greased cake mould. Place in a wok and steam over high heat, covered, for about 60 to 75 minutes. As the cake is very sticky, even if it’s cooked through, it still sticks to your needle/chopstick if you test it. But if you can’t taste any raw flour, it’s done. Make sure to steam the cake for enough time.
4. Let cool. Refrigerate for at least 3 hours. When the cake is cold, it’s much easier to slice into thick pieces. Coat the sliced cake with whisked egg, fry on medium-low heat until both sides are brown. Serve hot.
(If you want to add a date in the middle as in the picture, do so after 15 minutes of steaming while the mixture is still soft)
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Justice Dept seeks deeper audit of PEYA Travel, execs’ accounts

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

Irate passengers besieged Peya's office in Dec 2017 after learning  their tickets were unpaid

Two years after the Peya Travel fiasco stranded more than 1,000 Filipino holidaymakers in Hong Kong, it is still unclear if charges will be filed in court against the agency executives.

According to Consul Paul Saret, the lead police investigator told the Consulate last week that the Justice Department is still awaiting a report from the Audit Commission that was asked to do a thorough scrutiny of the accounts of Peya and its executives.

“The officer said that, unfortunately, the Audit Commission is not yet done with its work,” said Saret.

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But the newly assigned head of the investigating team reportedly gave assurance that the audit report should be ready soon.

Police said around middle of last year that it had already forwarded the case to the Justice Department. But Saret said the department apparently wanted the government auditors to dig deeper into the accounts of Peya as an entity, and of those of the two accused, co-owner Rhea Donna Boyce and sales and marketing manager Arnold Grospe.
Boyce, more popularly known as Yan-yan in the Filipino community, and her Australian husband Peter Brian Boyce were arrested one after the other at Christmastime in 2017.

Both were released in mid-January 2018. Yan-yan was told to post bail and report to the police regularly, while her husband was cleared.

Grospe was arrested on June 6, 2018, and released on police bail. He was also told to report back to the police regularly.

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Saret said he was told both accused are free to travel but are still required to report to the police.

Peya folded up in December 2017 after more than 1,000 of its customers were bumped off their scheduled flights home for Christmas due to unpaid tickets.

Yan-yan Boyce and Grospe were arrested on suspicion of fraud.
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Police say protests have delayed investigation of Emry's jobs scam

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Ylagan has told investigators she sent the applicant's money to a man she met only online

Hong Kong’s seven-month-old protests have reportedly slowed down police investigation of Ester P. Ylagan, former owner of two employment agencies which have been shut down, for suspected fraud and money-laundering.

This was gathered on Jan 20 from an official of the Consulate, who said he had spoken last week to the leader of an investigating team from the Regional Crime Bureau.
Consul Paulo Saret, head of the PCG’s assistance to nationals section, said police are looking at the possibility that part of the proceeds from the jobs scam allegedly carried out by Ylagan/Mike’s were siphoned off to other countries, in particular the Philippines.

Ylagan, 67, was estimated to have collected about $5 million in placement fees in early 2016 from some 500 applicants for promised jobs in Britain and Canada that turned out to be inexistent. More than 200 have tried to recover their money, to no avail.

Emry’s Employment and Staff Services and Mike’s Secretarial Services, both owned and controlled by Ylagan, were padlocked by police in April 2016 when alleged victims of the jobs scam filed complaints against her.

Ylagan went into hiding in the Philippines but was arrested on June 7, 2018, six months after she returned to Hong Kong in December 2017, on suspicion of fraud conspiracy and money laundering.


Multiple charges of overcharging job applicants were filed by the Employment Agency Administration against Ylagan, but these were dropped in July 2018. The prosecutor said the Justice Department had decided the labour case might interfere with the ongoing police investigation of the criminal cases against Ylagan.

Saret said the head of the team investigating the money-laundering case had told him his team was coordinating with the Interpol in tracking down the funds, which had reportedly been remitted to several countries including Malaysia and Burkina Faso in Africa.

Saret said he had asked the officer why the Emry’s case, which began four years ago, was still not filed with the Justice Department, just like the two-year-old PEYA Travel case.

“They (investigating team) said much as they would like to finish everything, their focus has been affected by the political situation,” said Saret.

Since June last year, police have been trying to put down pro-democracy protests that frittered before Christmas but rekindled in recent weeks. 
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Depression, workers’ rights and protection tackled in symposium

Posted on 20 January 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Alegre says sadness is not depression, but prolonged sadness could be

A clinical psychologist has warned against using the word “depression” to describe sadness because it might hinder the determination of whether a person is really depressed and needs to see a medical specialist.

Brenda R. Alegre, lecturer in gender studies at the University of Hong Kong and who has a PhD in Psychology from the University of Santo Tomas, told migrant workers they should watch out for how they view themselves, the future and the world around them.

She spoke in a symposium on depression and gender discrimination held on Jan 19 by the Social Justice for Migrant Workers and DOMOHK at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office conference hall in Wanchai.

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Other guest speakers were Welfare Officer Virsie Tamayao from the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration and Devi Novianti, corporate communications officer of the Equal Opportunities Commission.

Alegre said depression is a medical condition that is diagnosed by a psychiatrist based on a symptom and is different from sadness, a natural emotion that a person can experience. Even so, prolonged sadness may be symptomatic of depression, she said.

“We have to give ourselves the right to be sad, pero we should understand hanggang kailan tayo talaga malulungkot? Can we really be sad the whole day? How about tomorrow?” Alegre asked.
She said when a person worries about so many concerns over a period and is in a negative mood, he has depression and one thing that can help him fight depression is by restraining his mind.

Alegre urged migrant workers to be resilient in the face of adversities, and so should their extended families back home. She said the life of OFWs is about toiling and enduring depression while their dependents are having a good life. The workers should learn to change such a situation, she said.
 
Tamayao says bilateral agreements with host countries help ensure protection of OFWs
WelOf  Virsie Tamayao said in her speech, said the Philippines has 64 bilateral agreements with countries hosting OFWs to ensure promotion of employment and protection of the rights and welfare of migrant workers and their families.

She said protection of the rights of migrant workers is enshrined in the United Nations “International Convention on the Protection of Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families” to which the Philippines is a signatory.

The signatory states are mandated to implement policies that comply with the convention, in particular, laws protecting OFWs from illegal recruitment and human trafficking.
She said under Hong Kong labor laws, migrant workers are protected although many workers are not aware of their rights so they do not stand up against abusive employers.

“Dito sa Hong Kong napakasuwerte kasi very clear ang kanilang employment ordinance,” Tamayao said.

She said the Philippine government has adopted policies to harmonize labor relationships through such activities such as the pre-deployment orientation seminars that seek to bridge cultural differences between the country and the host countries.

These measures are intended to strengthen protection of the rights of migrant workers, she said.
 
Participants show happy faces after the semina
The EOC’s Novianti provided the symposium participants with a quick review of workplace risks for female migrant workers such as sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination, disability discrimination, race discrimination and other abuses such as slave-like treatment.
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