Jeremy Pang - Hong Kong Diner

Hong Kong Diner was written by Jeremy Pang from the cooking school, School of Wok (and now celebrity chef as he regularly appears on TV) and is a collection of recipes inspired by Jeremy (and his friends) exploration of the Hong Kong food scene.

More than any other book I own and have read, this book made me want to get on a plane and go and discover a foreign city.  I absolutely love books that make you want to immerse into a culture and Hong Kong Diner really did do that.  I found myself looking up flights, hotels and restaurants and thinking about taking a trip to Hong Kong.  It looks like a really intriguing city and is now on my bucket list.

The recipes themselves were fantastic and after a simple tweet saying I had received the book and "which recipe do I begin with", Jeremy Pang himself replied saying "the first one of course" and so that is where I began, with the pineapple buns and pork chops.  It was really fabulous, so tasty and  just what we wanted.  The pork chop should be deep fried but with the sun shining brightly we were outside and so decided to braai the pork chop.  It turned out really beautifully even if it was not as crispy as Jeremy intended.  The charring really made up for the lack of crispiness.

Since starting on that very first recipe I have since cooked a fair amount from this book.  Everything has worked well and everything tastes wonderful.  If you have one Chinese recipe book then make it this one, you too will want to jump on a plane to Hong Kong.

Since purchasing this book I have found a real love of Chinese food, rather than what you can buy at the local take away.  I have learnt how to make bao buns and there are so many to choose from that you will really have a hard time deciding what to make.  Here though our favourite is the char sui pork which we eat in the bao buns with cucumber.  The bao buns really are the stand out recipe for me and my family, they are so pillowy soft and delicious.

The bao buns might look difficult but they are explained well and once you get the hang of making dough they are not even difficult.  Some of the recipes take skill but by and large these are skills that repeating will help you master.  The recipes work well and don't need tweaking so if you can follow a recipe you can do this.

This book has allowed me to become very knowledgeable with Chinese food and really learn to master some amazing dishes that all of us adore.

Of all my books (and I have close to 200) this is in my top 5 and if you like Chinese food then this really is the one to buy, it is really highly recommended by me and I would not be without it.


Recipes 9/10
Readability 10/10
Knowledge learnt 9/10
Total 28/30