Hot pot #1

My in-laws have arrived from China, and they’re settling in nicely. It takes some time for four adults to ease into a routine, but we’ll get there—we always do. I’ve been able to make my word count these days, so that is a success! Yesterday’s mission was to buy shorts for my father-in-law and plant some green bean plants given to us by a neighbor. It doesn’t seem like much, but my in-laws move considerably slower than my wife and I, and buying shorts took two and a half hours. Much of this time was spent waiting for my father-in-law while he tried on his shorts. I swear it took ten minutes per leg. It’s ok. It is helping my wife and I slow the pace of our lives.

We then had hot pot for dinner, or hua guo, a great communal meal. For those unaware, hot pot consists of a central pot of boiling soup (often spicy) and raw ingredients that are added and cooked communally and then dipped in a dipping sauce- for us, a mixture of sesame paste, peanut butter, fermented tofu, and green onion (but there are many variations). It’s technically a Mongolian dish and usually focuses on thinly sliced lamb, but it has evolved to include everything under the sun. The Mongol Yuan Dynasty ruled China for 97 years (1271-1368), and the popular dish is a leftover from that time. There is now a hot pot place on every corner in China, and they have begun to pop up here, too, although it is usually costly- especially seeing you do all the cooking.   

I have many great memories of eating hot pot over the years, and it was probably a weekly occurrence when I lived in China. The last time my wife and I saw all her cousins at once was over hot pot several years ago. It’s bittersweet as they are now spread all over with their own families, some in China and some in the US, and it is unlikely we will be able to pull it off again. That night, we laughed and drank lots of beer. We then stumbled around the city and ended up at a little cart selling lamb skewers barbequed over hot coals and sprinkled with spicy pepper and cumin. We sat on little plastic stools and enjoyed the warm spring night. The memory is particularly salient for me as I finally felt accepted as part of my little Chinese family, which was no easy feat for a foreigner. 

Last night, we had a feast- little bok choy, tofu in various iterations, different types of mushrooms, eel dumplings, fishballs, taro, potato, sweet potato, noodles made from sweet potato starch, Korean glutinous rice sticks (tteokbokki), and pickled garlic. There was no thinly sliced lamb this time, but we didn’t miss it. The broth was nice and spicy, and our house was filled with fragrant steam, laughs, and memories- just how I like it.

Today’s mission? Introducing my in-laws to a traditional boiled dinner (corned beef) and doing some grocery shopping.

Cheers!


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Published by scottatirrell

Scott Austin Tirrell loves dark speculative fiction, conjuring isolated worlds where ancient mysteries, the raw power of nature, and the paranormal entwine. His work is steeped in the arcane, drawing from the forgotten corners of history and the unsettling grasp of the supernatural. With a style shaped by Clive Barker, Frank Herbert, and Joe Abercrombie, he crafts narratives that pull ordinary, flawed souls into the extraordinary, where reality frays, shadows lengthen, and the unknown whispers from the void. He has self-published eight books, with Koen set to come out in 2025 under Grendel Press. Residing in Boston with his wife, he draws inspiration from the region’s haunted past and spectral folklore. Scott invites readers to step beyond the veil and into his worlds, where every tale descends into the deeper, darker truths of the human condition.

8 thoughts on “Hot pot #1

    1. Sounds like a great idea! We brought a two-sided hot pot pan from China a few years ago, so we had two flavors last night. One was the typical spicy and numb (mala) and the other was a mushroom broth.

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  1. Sounds like a lovely get-together. Your hotpot ingredients also sound yummy (though “hold the eel” would be fine with me.

    And you managed to buy the shorts and still meet your word count. Impressive.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. You are young now, but you will appreciate the pace of your father in law in years to come when trousers become a trial. It can easily take ten minutes, as they start to fight back when you get to a certain age. I just retired and the second leg of my trousers is becoming a major feature in my morning routine. 🙂

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