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Yi mein
Lobster with soup yi fu noodles.jpg
Lobster with E-Fu Noodle in Hong Kong
Alternative names E-fu noodles, yee-fu noodles, yi noodles, yifu noodles
Type Chinese noodles
Place of origin China
Main ingredients Wheat flour, eggs
Yi mein
Yi mein
Chinese 伊麵
Alternative Chinese name
Chinese 伊府麵

Yi mein (Chinese: 伊麵; pinyin: yī miàn; Cantonese Yale: yī mihn) is a variety of flat Cantonese egg noodles made from wheat flour. They are known for their golden brown color and chewy characteristics. The slightly chewy and slightly spongy texture of the noodles is due to the soda water used in making the dough, which is then fried and dried into flat patty-like dried bricks.

Preparation

The Yi mein noodles available at grocery stores were pre-cooked by machines the same way as the modern instant noodles are made.

The noodles may be cooked a number of ways. They are boiled first, then can be stir fried, or used in soups or salads. Good noodles maintain their elasticity, allowing the noodles to stretch and remain chewy.

Dishes

Yi mein noodles can be consumed directly or used in various dishes:

  • Plain yi mein
  • Plain yi mein with Chinese chives (韮黃)
  • Dried fried yi mein (乾燒伊麵), often comes with Chinese chives and shiitake mushroom
  • Crab meat yi mein (蟹肉伊麵)
  • Lobster yi mein (龍蝦伊麵), it is sometimes served with cheese in Hong Kong.
  • Yi mein with black mushrooms and eggplant
  • Yi mein in soup
  • I fu mie, dried fried yi mein noodle served in sauce with vegetables chicken or prawn.

Traditions

When yi mein is consumed on birthdays, it is generally referred to as longevity noodles or sau mein (壽麵/寿面). The Chinese character for "long" (長壽麵/长寿面) is also added as a prefix to represent "long life". Usually it is consumed with longevity buns on such occasions.

Gallery

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Yi mein para niños

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