BLACK VINEGAR PIG TROTTER AND GINGER RECIPE 豬腳薑醋 | CHINESE PIG FEET POSTPARTUM RECIPE

A must-have postpartum dish for new mom. It’s a tradition of our family to have this postpartum. It’s also a wonderful winter dish to boost the immune, improve Qi, replenish and warm the blood, expel cold and dampness, and restore vitality to the body! Chinese Pig Trotter with Black Vinegar and Ginger 豬腳薑醋 is recommended for women’s health and well being and is a beautiful dish to replenish calcium and boost collagen!

There is a lot of collagen from the pig trotter, its bones, and the hard-boiled egg. This sweet black vinegar and ginger stew aid vitality. This stew can be reboiled multiple times. Add extra black vinegar, hard-boiled eggs, pork trotters and even beef tendon! The flavours just gets better over time!

Benefits of Black Vinegar Pork Trotter During Pregnancy

This Chinese tradition, called the magic of a month of rest, “sitting moon,” “sitting the month or Zuo Yuezi goes back for centuries. This month directly after childbirth is crucial for new mothers and their children. Rooted in Traditional Chinese Medicinal theories, a woman can rebuild their health during this critical recovery time! All old ailments could be made new provided proper care. 30years ago! OMG, time flies. My hands and feet would be super cold, especially during the winter months. My family cooked this dish and with proper postpartum confinement, I no longer experience those symptoms. I feel healthier and stronger and try to eat this dish during winter months. As women, we have a higher risk of developing osteoporosis and broken bones than men of the same age group because women have smaller and thinner bones than men. Between age 20 to 80, women lose one-third of the bone mineral density. So it is crucial to replenish lost vitamins and minerals early on.

Chinese Ginger Vinegar Benefits

The citric acid from the black vinegar aids metabolism and cholesterol reduction. Ginger helps digestion, improves the absorption and assimilation of essential nutrients in the body. Ginger also helps warm the body up, improve the spleen and digestive system, restores Qi and Yang energy, treats anemia, weakness, tiredness, and etc.

I’ve always loved this dish because of the ginger aroma and the sweet and sour taste. Black vinegar contains many essential amino acids. Amino acids help repair muscle tissue and nail growth. Black vinegar helps to balance our body’s PH levels by neutralizing lactic acid and alkalizing the blood. Every winter, I will eat a pot of Chinese Pig Knuckles with Black Vinegar and Ginger to help fight ageing.

How to Cook the Best Black Vinegar Pork Trotters

Making the best pig trotter stew with black vinegar and ginger is actually very simple. But it takes time. Usually, I will allow myself two days to prepare this. Some recipes online condense the process into one sitting, but this is one that I’ve grown with. 

My grandma also emphasizes using both young and old ginger. She says you want the hotness from old ginger and the aroma from young ginger. 

You will want to both slice and bruise the ginger. Bruise and pound the ginger with a meat mallet or the side of your blade.

Most people do not put red dates in their stew, but personally, I like to add a few for that extra sweetness. Chinese red dates have many health benefits such as Vitamin C, Vitamin A, Vitamin B1, Vitamin B2, protein, calcium, phosphorus, iron and magnesium. Red dates are antioxidants and help stimulate the production of white blood cells. The iron and phosphorus in red dates also help prevent osteoporosis and anemia, both common in women. YOu can also add black fungus to preent blood clotting and assist in cleansing the blood and prevent blood deficiency.

I hope you like this recipe and enjoy some warmth during the cold winter months!

INGREDIENTS

  • 100 grams old ginger 老薑
  • 100 grams young ginger 子姜
  • 1 tsp oil 茶匙油
  • ⅓ tsp salt 茶匙鹽
  • 4 bottles (600g each) sweetened vinegar 八珍甜醋
  • 200 ml black vinegar ( sour vinegar) 黑醋
  • one pig front leg or black leg 豬手 / 豬脚
  • 4 tbsp Dark Brown Sugar
  • 4–6 eggs 雞蛋
  • 4 tsp shaoxing wine 紹興酒
  • 5pcs Red Dates 红枣 *optional
  • Instructions
  • Day 1
  • wash and pat dry ginger. It must be fully air dried approximate 2 hours.
  • tenderize and bruise the ginger. Also slice a few pieces of ginger
  • Over medium heat, stir fry the ginger for 6 mins. Add 1 teaspoon oil, ⅓ tps salt, con’t to stir fry until ginger is fully dry. Otherwise wet ginger will promote bacteria and mold.
  • In a large pot (preferably clay pot), pour 4 bottles of 600 grams each of sweetened vinegar, 200 ml black vinegar, 4 tablespoon Dark Brown Sugar
  • Boil at high heat. When bubbling, add in previously stir fried ginger.
  • Once boiling, Reduce heat to low and cook for 2 hours.
  • Turn off the heat and leave overnight.
  • Day 2
  • Clean, wash and pat dry pig trotters. Cube
  • Boil a hot pot of water, add a few slices of ginger, 4 teaspoon of shaoxing wine and pig trotters.
  • Cover the lid and bring to boil.
  • When it is boiling, turn to medium heat and cook for 30 mins.
  • Once cooked, remove from water, and pat dry.
  • Add to Day 1 cooked ginger and black vinegar pot.
  • Boil at high heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 2 hours.
  • Turn off the heat and leave overnight.
  • Day 3
  • Boil hard boil eggs for 13 mins.
  • Add salt to the boiling pot. Salt helps to keep egg whites inside the shell even if the shell is cracked.
  • Shock in cold water and remove the shell.
  • Add the hard boil eggs to the Day 2 pig trotter with black vinegar and ginger pot.
  • Boil at high heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 1 hour.

Instructions

Day 1

  1. wash and pat dry ginger. It must be fully air dried approximate 2 hours.
  2. tenderize and bruise the ginger. Also slice a few pieces of ginger
  3. Over medium heat, stir fry the ginger for 6 mins. Add 1 teaspoon oil, ⅓ tps salt, con’t to stir fry until ginger is fully dry. Otherwise wet ginger will promote bacteria and mold.
  4. In a large pot (preferably clay pot), pour 4 bottles of 600 grams each of sweetened vinegar, 200 ml black vinegar, 4 tablespoon Dark Brown Sugar
  5. Boil at high heat. When bubbling, add in previously stir fried ginger.
  6. Once boiling, Reduce heat to low and cook for 2 hours.
  7. Turn off the heat and leave overnight.

Day 2

  1. Clean, wash and pat dry pig trotters. Cube
  2. Boil a hot pot of water, add a few slices of ginger, 4 teaspoon of shaoxing wine and pig trotters.
  3. Cover the lid and bring to boil.
  4. When it is boiling, turn to medium heat and cook for 30 mins.
  5. Once cooked, remove from water, and pat dry.
  6. Add to Day 1 cooked ginger and black vinegar pot.
  7. Boil at high heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 2 hours.
  8. Turn off the heat and leave overnight.

Day 3

  1. Boil hard boil eggs for 13 mins.
  2. Add salt to the boiling pot. Salt helps to keep egg whites inside the shell even if the shell is cracked.
  3. Shock in cold water and remove the shell.
  4. Add the hard boil eggs to the Day 2 pig trotter with black vinegar and ginger pot.
  5. Boil at high heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 1 hour.

ENJOY!!

Acupuncture Timeline

1600 – 1100 BCEHieroglyphs and pictographs suggest the use of acupuncture.
200 BCEHuang Di Nei Jing first written record of acupuncture.
1680 CEFirst medical description of acupuncture by a European physician.
1822 CEIn China, education in acupuncture abolished from medical colleges but still practised rurally.
1929Acupuncture outlawed along with other forms of traditional medicine.
1949Chinese medical practices reactivated under The People’s Republic of China.
1950sAcupuncture research institutes established.
1972Nixon establishes relations with the People’s Republic of China and US physicians made fact-finding tours of China to assess acupuncture.
1995(FDA) classified acupuncture needles as medical instruments with legislation to ensure their safety and effectiveness

Cultivation in pregnancy

“A quote from the Classic of Childbirth:
In all cases, during pregnancy, align the heart properly and sit up straight, and become pure and empty, resembling Oneness.
When sitting, your mat must be properly aligned; when standing, do not lean to the side; when walking, stay in the center of the path; when sleeping, do not lie crosswise; when raising the eyes, do not look at perverse sights; when lifting the ears, do not listen to perverse sounds!
Do not speak recklessly; avoid joy and anger and grief and rage; make your thoughts harmonious!

Another quote: When King Wén was first conceived, his mother sat up straight, did not listen to perverse words or repugnant speech, did not speak recklessly, and walked straight and sat properly aligned. This is the reason why she gave birth to a sagely child.
All the various mothers of paragons of virtue paid appropriate attention to this.

Another quote: In the [first] three months of pregnancy, before the fetus has assumed a fixed form, it changes when it is exposed to things. For this reason, the mother should look at kings and lords, queens and imperial concubines, princesses and princes, and beauties. She should avoid looking at hunchbacks, weaklings and dwarfs, repugnant and decrepit people, and at monkeys.
If she wants to give birth to a male child, have her handle bow and arrow and shoot male pheasants, ride stallions and roam in the wild, and observe tigers and leopards and galloping horses.
If she wants to give birth to a female child, have her adorn herself with hair ornaments and earrings and wear jade bracelets.
If she wants to make her child beautiful, have her often look at white jade and beautiful gems, observe peacocks, and eat carp. If she wants her child to be full of wisdom and strength, she should eat beef hearts and barley.
If she wants her child to have great virtue, she must not sit in improper alignment and she must not lean to one side while standing.
This is what we refer to as “Outer Manifestation and Inner Transformation”!”

— Ishimpō 《醫心方》 vol. 22, chapter 2

Jing, Qi, Shen – The Three Treasures

The concept of the key energies yin yang and jing, qi and shen (translated as essence, vitality, spirit or heart-mind) has formed the basis of the rich Chinese culture and its many traditions, mythology, medicine, arts, crafts and various aspects of daily life for centuries. All these areas are related to the path of heaven and earth (yin and yang). The ancient Daoists believed that man exists inseparably between heaven and earth and that there is a mutual relationship between these three (heaven, earth, man). To live in the Dao therefore means to live in harmony with the energies of heaven (yang) and earth (yin). 

The ancient sages were aware of the energetic side of existence and their lives were focused on the cultivation and conservation of energy. For them, health was based on three basic substances, the energies, known as the Three Treasures – San Bao: Jing (精), Qi (氣) and Shen (神). These terms are translated as essence, life energy and spirit, mind-heart, although it is impossible to convey their full meaning through the equivalents of Western language. 

A very old analogy that has been used since time immemorial explains these concepts through the image of a candle. Jing is the wax and wick of the candle, the extremely condensed energy that becomes material. Qi is the flame, compared to the energy activity of the candle, which through burning (life) makes the candle burn. Shen is the light / radiation that emanates from a burning candle.

jing qi shen chinese symbols

The first treasure, Jing

Jing is commonly translated as the essence of the body and is considered the original energy substance that gradually depletes throughout life until we age and eventually die. In early Chinese medical texts, Jing is compared to the roots of a tree. Jing gives shape and substance to our body and connects us to our ancestors through the genetic code. 

It is considered the root of our vitality, the foundation of human life, the substance that forms our blood and all bodily fluids and influences our innate health. Daoists always strive to preserve the Jing in order to reach the heights of longevity. When a practitioner learns to consolidate Jing, they can build a solid foundation for health and powerful inner development. Consolidation of Jing is favored by its calming and solidification. If, on the other hand, a person wastes his Jing by living an uncontrolled life without any notion of restraint and moderation, the proverbial oil in the lamp will burn out quickly and poor health, exhaustion and rapid aging are to be expected. 

All this is standard knowledge for those who have been studying Chinese medicine or the internal arts for some time. With each of the three treasures, jing, qi, shen, we can distinguish two parts – one is the tangible, concrete aspect of the respective treasure and the other is the consciousness aspect. So, according to Chinese medicine, one aspect of the jing is the yin jing – the part that creates physical matter, the potential for all physical production in the body: bone marrow, blood, fluids and cellular reproduction. How well we take care of our physical health slows down the burning out of the yin jing aspect. The second aspect is the yang jing – the life force contained in the essence. The spark of potential energy contained in the yin jing. The yin jing aspect can be supported by the food and drink we consume, but the yang aspect of the jing is much more intangible, it comes from within us and is considered irreplaceable.

The second treasure, Qi

Qi translates as energy, and Taoists have always focused on the cultivation and development of this enigmatic substance. Qi is the invisible life force, the vital force behind all transformative processes of life.

All movements and transformations in the universe and in the human body occur through qi. Our life is dependent on Qi. Our health depends on the state of Qi. A deficiency or stagnation of Qi leads to an imbalance in the body and thus to dysfunction and disease in the internal organ systems. A harmonious, even, healthy and strong flow of Qi in our body can be achieved through breath work, mind cultivation and Qigong exercises – both static and dynamic. As we eat food, breathe air and draw from our essence reserves, the body undergoes continuous transformation processes to provide functional energy for the body’s daily needs. 

Chinese medicine has a well-developed model that describes this process of energy production in the body. The healthier our internal organs are, the better we metabolize Qi from various sources and the better our body functions and the healthier we are.We can say that the yang aspect of qi is the emotions and the yin aspect of qi is the sensations.

The third treasure, Shen

Shen translates as spirit, spirit-heart, spirit-heart. Shen is actually the basis of our existence. The Chinese claimed that it appears soon after conception and leaves the body after death. They believed that each person has their own Shen, which is one with the global Shen. Shen can be compared to a divine order that descends to earth and inhabits the physical body. If, as the Daoists say, the meeting point of heaven and earth is the human being, then the earth energy is the source of Jing and Qi and the heaven energy is the source of of Shen. 

Interestingly, the term Shintō (Way of the Gods, Deities – Kami), a traditional, polytheistic, indigenous religion of Japan characterized by a variety of manifestations and cults including animism and shamanism, is derived from a combination of two Chinese characters: shen (神), meaning “spirit”, and dao (道), meaning “way” or “path”. The most important thing in the Shintō is to maintain balance and harmony between the world of gods, nature and human beings. The term kami (god, deity in Japanese) is often used to refer to the power of phenomena that evoke a sense of wonder and awe in the observer. The nature of kami is present everywhere – among the living and the dead, in organic and inorganic matter, but also in natural disasters such as earthquakes, droughts and plagues, and in natural forces such as wind, rain, fire and sun. Real phenomena are considered divine in the Shintō, and the path of shen, the path of kami, is the path of immersion in harmony with the sacredness of all things. It is said that the seat of our shen is the heart, and the eyes are an expression of the state of our shen. There is a saying, “The eyes are the mirror of the soul”. Therefore, the presence of shen can be recognised by the radiance of a person’s eyes and face. This radiance, called shen ming (the word ming means radiance), is present in the eyes and on the skin when the body, mind and spirit are in harmony and the person feels well. 

Shen is the energy of our mental, creative and spiritual existence. It is responsible for all mental activities, thinking, cognition, all thought processes that have to do with logic, intelligence, memory and ingenuity. Like the Jing and the Qi, the Shen has two aspects. 

The eternal, primordial aspect – “Spirit of the Dao” – is the original source of all consciousness. It is eternal, indestructible and immortal. However, soon after we come into the world, our social conditioning and the constant desires and distractions that life brings make it inactive, and so it disappears from our consciousness and its place is taken by the temporal, worldly mind. The original spirit loses its rightful influence over the energy of our body.

Modern life, which is characterized by chronic hectic activity and stress, as well as chronic illness, is not conducive to the cultivation of Shen.Shen likes peace and tranquility. It likes a calm heart/mind (Xin). It likes a good quality of blood and Jing, the vital essences that anchor it in the body and prevent it from floating back up into the sky. The ancient Daoists pointed out a way to merge with the Shen – and this can be done by “sitting quietly and doing nothing”, following the Dao or the natural order of things without interfere in the course of things (wu wei). To do this, jing, qi and shen should be purified, harmonized and strong. In the process, the human mind, which is likened to a dirty mirror, is gradually cleansed of accumulated emotional, mental and physical distortions and impurities so that the original spirit of the Dao can shine again and reflect the world as it really is.

Introduce Yourself (Example Post)

This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.

You’re going to publish a post today. Don’t worry about how your blog looks. Don’t worry if you haven’t given it a name yet, or you’re feeling overwhelmed. Just click the “New Post” button, and tell us why you’re here.

Why do this?

  • Because it gives new readers context. What are you about? Why should they read your blog?
  • Because it will help you focus your own ideas about your blog and what you’d like to do with it.

The post can be short or long, a personal intro to your life or a bloggy mission statement, a manifesto for the future or a simple outline of your the types of things you hope to publish.

To help you get started, here are a few questions:

  • Why are you blogging publicly, rather than keeping a personal journal?
  • What topics do you think you’ll write about?
  • Who would you love to connect with via your blog?
  • If you blog successfully throughout the next year, what would you hope to have accomplished?

You’re not locked into any of this; one of the wonderful things about blogs is how they constantly evolve as we learn, grow, and interact with one another — but it’s good to know where and why you started, and articulating your goals may just give you a few other post ideas.

Can’t think how to get started? Just write the first thing that pops into your head. Anne Lamott, author of a book on writing we love, says that you need to give yourself permission to write a “crappy first draft”. Anne makes a great point — just start writing, and worry about editing it later.

When you’re ready to publish, give your post three to five tags that describe your blog’s focus — writing, photography, fiction, parenting, food, cars, movies, sports, whatever. These tags will help others who care about your topics find you in the Reader. Make sure one of the tags is “zerotohero,” so other new bloggers can find you, too.