US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
China / Life

The Hunting Month

By Pauline D Loh (China Daily) Updated: 2020-01-17 00:00

The last month of the lunar calendar used to be called the Hunting Month, or La Yue, in more rustic times. That was when traps were set in the wild to catch pheasants, rabbits, deer and wild boar in preparation for the rounds of feasting during Spring Festival, just a week away from now.

In spite of the urban spread of China's population, the year-end tradition of preserving meat is still very popular, where a variety of birds, cuts of beef, mutton, pork and fish can be seen strung up in backyards and balconies alike to catch the winter north wind and sun.

Sausages are made from hand-cut pork belly and marinated in salt, sugar and yellow rice wine, which has a characteristic red tinge.

This is also the time when fresh duck or goose livers are marinated in spices, sugar and wine and stuffed into intestines. Unlike the meat sausages, these seasonal delicacies are only available for a limited time.

One regional specialty is whole pig liver, hollowed out and stuffed with a piece of pork fat. Surprisingly, they are not hard to eat. The liver turns firm during the curing process, while the fat turns crisp and transparent. The Cantonese cook steams, then cuts these liver sausages into very thin slivers, serving them on slices of steamed arrowhead or yam.

More familiar are whole ducks which are spatchcocked, spiced and salted. The intensely savory birds will be a highlight on reunion tables on Lunar New Year's Eve. Surprisingly, chickens are cooked fresh and seldom cured in the southern regions.

Further north, in Yunnan and Sichuan, various cuts of meat are heavily seasoned and hung up to dry, ending up in stir-fries, or simply steamed. Here, the meats are pickled with lots of chilli and Sichuan peppercorns.

In Ningbo, Zhejiang province, a favorite new year delicacy is a type of ham, featuring chopped pork stuffed into a pig's stomach and then cured in brine.

In Hubei, where there are plenty of lakes and ponds, preparations for spring start with fishing for carp. Whole carp are salted and then hung up to dehydrate but a good cured carp stays soft and supple for the Lunar New Year meals.

The Hunting Month may have slowly evolved into the curing month, yet it is still part of a culinary tradition that is a prelude to the most important celebration of the entire lunar year-Spring Festival.

Another major indicator is on the eighth day of the last lunar month, which fell on Jan 2 this year. This is the day when every household will serve a porridge of mixed grains-laba porridge. It is the last bookmark of the previous year's harvest of cereals, pulses and brans.

The colorful mixed grains are cooked together with brown sugar and served to family and visitors. With the eating of laba porridge, the countdown to Spring Festival begins.

 

The Hunting Month
A woman in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, hangs up cured meat to dry in the last month of the lunar calendar. CAI KUANYUAN/FOR CHINA DAILY

 

 

 

 

Highlights
Hot Topics

...