Cantonese Steamed Fish (清蒸鱼)
X. Kevin Zhao
“It presents beautifully and tastes heavenly.”

I think I first ate Cantonese steamed fish when I was in Hong Kong for depositions almost ten years ago. The fish was tender and so flavorful. But what I remember most was the aromatics: the sizzling mix of fresh ginger, scallions, soy sauce, and rice vinegar came together perfectly. It is simple to make, yet it presents beautifully and tastes heavenly.
Ingredients
- 8-10 ounce filet of fish (The fish I had in Hong Kong was steamed whole, but I find it easier to use filets. Also, although you can use any white fish, I recommend sea bass)
- 3 green scallions (cut lengthwise into 2-3 inch pieces and thinly julienned)
- fresh ginger, roughly 2-3 inches (peeled, thinly sliced, and then julienned)
- 2 tablespoons of soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon of rice vinegar
- 1 teaspoon (or so) of sugar
- 2 tablespoons of a high-smoke point oil (e.g., canola)
- handful of cilantro (optional)
Directions :
- Rinse the fish and pat dry.
- Prepare your steamer, adding 2-3 inches of water and bring it to boil (I have a bamboo steamer, but any steamer will do).
- Put the fish on a heatproof plate (or shallow bowl) and put it inside the steamer.
- Cover and steam the fish for 6-8 minutes on medium-high heat. The cooking time will vary depending on the thickness of the fish (I like to use the thinner, tail section of sea bass, so 6 minutes is perfect). Do not let the water completely evaporate!
- Meanwhile, prepare the aromatics. Cut the scallions lengthwise into 2-3 inch pieces and then thinly julienne. Peel a 2-3 inch piece of ginger and slice thinly, and then julienne. (Optional: roughly chop the cilantro).
- Next, prepare the sauce. Mix the soy sauce, rice vinegar and sugar in a small bowl.
- When the fish is done, take it out of the steamer and drain any extra liquid.
- Put the aromatics (ginger, scallions, cilantro mixture) on top of the fish and pour the sauce over it all.
- Heat the oil in a saucepan until it starts to smoke. Then pour it over the raw aromatics/sauce on the fish.
- Serve with steam rice and enjoy! (Many say, and I agree, that the extra sauce with rice may be the best part of the )


