Skip to main content

Jing Bu Tang with Fresh Cordyceps

It helps to be nosey and poke around the wet market. Last week at the market, I saw some fresh cordyceps and asked the vegetable lady how to cook it. It ended up one of the more amazing discoveries - culminating in some soup of course!

She told me that fresh cordyceps can be simmered with Solomon's seal/yuk chuk and Chinese sage/ tong sum for a delightfully tasty and nourishing soup.

The best part about this Lip Sin wet market is that every stall is within walking distance. In no time I was at the Chinese herbalist - this youthful, ever-cheerful guy who sits in a tiny cubicle of herbs and stuff! He's practically hemmed in by his herbs. Anyway, I show him the fresh cordyceps I just bought and asked him what goes well with this herb. He gave me a packet of pre-packed herbs labeled "Jing Bu Tang" (Clearing and Nourishing Soup).

When I got home, I got right into action. And the end result was good. The soup was flavourful and clear, and best of all, it healed my coughing! Fantastic stuff.

So what's in the Jing Bu Tang? And how to make this anti-coughing soup? Here's the recipe.

1 packet fresh cordyceps (or Dong Chong Xia Cao)
1 packet Jing Bu Tang comprising Solomon's seal, medlar seeds, wai san, pak kei, tong sum and red dates (if your herbalist doesn't have this prepacked, just list the herbs and he'll probably be able to make up a pack for you on the spot)

As usual, bring water in a pot to boil. Add in blanched pork ribs, fresh cordyceps and Jing Bu Tang herbs. Bring to a rolling boil for 10 minutes. Lower fire, cover pot and simmer for 2-3 hours on low fire. Add salt to season after 2.5 hours. (Use Himalaya rock salt if you can.)
Serve hot.

When I was young, I often heard my aunts say that cordyceps were dried caterpillars. Now I know it isn't true - actually cordyceps sinensis is a caterpillar fungus that grows on a type of caterpillar. These days, this parasite is cultivated using grain. Strange or not, this herb works on the lung and kidney meridians to help nourish the lungs and strengthen the kidneys and enhances essence/jing. It also helps combat coughing by nourishing lung yin.

In olden day China, the emperor kept this herb exclusively for himself!

Comments

TC Lai said…
You might want to consider this recipe as well.

http://www.globalgourmet.com/food/special/1999/wisdom/soup.html

It involves Chinese dried figs and apricot kernels (Chinese almonds).
Krista Goon said…
Hi TC

Thanks! It'll be helpful to the rest of the people who read this blog too.
Anonymous said…
According to Chinese physicians I have consulted, cultivated "cordyceps" containing the fungus only are ineffective. The actual cordyceps content in capsules and essences is also highly questionable. A tropical species of "cordyceps" found on the Cameron Highlands is also of no medicinal value. Only wild Himalayan cordyceps are effective. I believe the so call "fresh cordyceps" you bought from pasar are cordycep lookalike roots and definitely not cordycep.
Anonymous said…
What healed your coughin is the Jing Bu Tang, not the so-called fresh 'cordyceps'. There's no such thing as fresh cordyceps and definitely not available at the fresh market locally
Krista Goon said…
Hi Anon:
Thanks for clarifying about the fresh cordyceps. Yes, sometimes we need alternative information because I can't say my vege lady is always correct. She tells me stuff she knows and perhaps she heard it from someone. That's the thing about us Chinese people. We have lots of hearsay and folklore. I am trying in my own way to debunk some myths, find out more about herbs and their actual uses. We question, probe, think and ask because we want to know more and knowing more isn't so bad especially if it helps the knowledge get better.

Popular posts from this blog

Tong Sum and Red Date Tea

I caught an interesting cooking show on TV last night. On Astro's Asian Food Channel (Channel 703), I watched a show on TCM. It was a Taiwanese programme where the host and hostess spoke in Mandarin and sometimes a smattering of Taiwan Hokkien. The show featured 3 recipes each segment, using TCM herbs with the herbalist host explaining about the uses of the specific herbs. Then the lady hostess would cook up a dish, usually a main course, using the herbs. While I am not very interested in making dishes like prawn balls with Chinese herbs (it seemed just too much work!), I liked the 2 other recipes they showed. One was a milk beverage with herbs (I can't recall what now). But the other one was easy. A tong sum and red date tea. Tong sum or dang shen is a mild herb which resembles a dry, gnarled twig the size of a finger. It is called the poor man's ginseng in some instances because it shares similar properties with the more expensive ginseng. Dang shen is actually a root wh

24 Herb Tea - Bitter, Foul-Tasting But Oh So Good For You!

Was out running a couple of errands this entire afternoon and ended up buying groceries at the nearby supermarket. If I had a choice I wouldn't go into this decade-old supermarket because it's small, cramped and you tend to knock into other shoppers with your trolley (yes, the aisles are that narrow). Nic and I figured that we might as well buy our groceries since we were in this vicinity and he did need some coffee. Finally we ended up with a trolley full of cheese, butter, coffee and noodles. Anyway, I was getting thirsty after all the errands and shopping. We decided to stop and have a drink at this stall which sells Chinese herbal tea. This uncle who mans it is actually a Hong Kong native who has been living in Malaysia for a long time. He drives a little white van which he parks at the corner of a junction and opens up for business. You see, he sells hot and cold Chinese herbal teas of all types - the kind that is slowly boiled and brewed. It's common to see Mal

Snow Fungus, Longan, Goji Berry & Red Date Dessert For Lungs & Liver

Just last week I made this dessert because I was rummaging in my kitchen and found some snow fungus. This is a classic dessert that any Cantonese would know. I was just surprised at myself that I haven't made this dessert in a long time. Maybe because I didn't have the key ingredient - snow fungus - at hand! What is Snow Fungus?  It is technically a fungus that grows on dead bark or tree stumps just like wood ear fungus.  Snow fungus or silver ear, snow ear or white wood ear is known as Tremella fuciformis and yes, it is an edible fungus. The pleasanter term is mushroom if that makes you feel better. As most mushrooms go, they contain vitamin D, zinc, calcium, and folate.  Benefits of Snow Fungus Snow fungus is said to have anti-ageing effects due to the presence of superoxide dismutase , an enzyme that acts as a potent antioxidant throughout the body, particularly in the skin. It is best known in TCM for nourishing the lungs and we know how important this fact is right now whe