I've been putting this off because I tend to think of my food as simple adaptations of basic techniques, and not really original creations, so I feel a bit silly posting recipes for my food. But I think I've figured out a way to make 'em work. If Quinn's recipes are sometimes more like guidelines, consider mine to be more like shouted instructions to a dizzy blindfolded kid trying to hit a pinata. Even if that is the case, I'd like to think I'm a pretty good pinata directions giver, and done right, we should all end up with something tasty.
In this case, the pinata is filled with steamed ground pork with lap cheong (chinese sausage) and ginger. This was my Mom's favorite dish that her father cooked. I can't for the life of me attempt to type its name out, since I've never seen it written down, but since I couldn't pronounce it properly as a little kid, I just called it jingle bell in my head, for that is what it sounds like so that is what we shall call it today. (In all seriousness, some googling suggests the first two words are zheng rou, but nothing came close to whatever that third word is)
Serves 1-2
1 lb ground pork
2-3 slices of ginger
2-4 lap cheong (again, chinese sausage)
1 tbsp sesame oil
1 tbsp soy sauce
salt
pepper
The lap cheong is in place of the more traditional fermented fish, which is sour and pasty and disgusting. Whereas lap cheong is sweet and oily and tasty. I've also done this with black bean and garlic sauce in it, as well as green onions. Really, you can add or subtract a lot, but the ginger, sesame oil, and ground pork are the heart of the dish.
As for amounts, well, those numbers are very very loose. I usually use a pound of ground pork if I'm just serving one or two, and the rest is sort of instinctive. Don't haul out a measuring spoon or anything, just use enough of everything to get the flavor throughout. If you like the lap cheong and are using a bit more, go a little light on the oil, cause you'll be feeling the lap cheong in your pores anyway (in a good way!).
- Chop up the lap cheong into bite sized pieces. Mix all of the ingredients together.

- Mold the pork into a patty-ish shape in whatever dish you'll be steaming it in. I use a ceramic bowl with a lid, but pyrex will work as well.

- Cover and place the bowl into your steamer. If you're lacking a big ole Chinese restaurant steamer like me, you can do like I do. Fill a big pot with a couple of inches of water. Place a pyrex or similarly indestructible bowl with a flat-ish bottom upside down at the bottom of the pot. Cover the big pot and add heat until the water starts steaming. Place the dish with the pork on top of the bowl, and recover the big pot. Voila, instant steamer.

- Let it steam fifteen to twenty minutes (just enough time to make rice! Yay!) and pull your pork out. It should be a greyish, frankly not all that appetizing color. It will be delicious.

- Serve with rice.
