Poon’s wind-dried pork & duck liver sausage, “yun cheong”, has a deep savoury taste and is best enjoyed simply steamed with jasmine rice. The duck liver lends a rich, nutty, buttery flavour to the sausage which is enhanced by the addition of fragrant Chinese rose liqueur.
Ingredients
Ingredients: Pork Sugar Pork Fat (7%) Pork Liver (4%) Duck Liver Light Soy Sauce (Water Salt Soybean White Sugar Wheat Flour Preservative (E211) Flavour Enhancers (E631 E627)) Rose Liqueur (Millet Rose Flower Extract Water Barley Peas Millet Sugar) Spices Dark Soy Sauce (Water Salt Soybeans Wheat Flour Colours (E150a E150c) Flavour Enhancer (E621) Sugar Stabilizer (E415)) Preservative (E250) Collagen Casing.
Made in: Germany
Currently available
The world of Chinese cured meats is incredibly diverse. As with many Chinese dishes, cured meats vary by region in flavour and production methods. Our signature wind dried pork sausage, wind-dried pork & duck liver sausage and wind-dried Chinese bacon are made to old family recipes, developed by my grandfather. My parents started producing these in London in 1970 and have been making them ever since.
Poon’s wind-dried pork & duck liver sausage, “yun cheong”, has a deep savoury taste and is best enjoyed simply steamed with jasmine rice. The duck liver lends a rich, nutty, buttery flavour to the sausage which is enhanced by the addition of fragrant Chinese rose liqueur.
£6.20
120g
About Poon's London
Slough, United Kingdom
My father started in the kitchen young. In Hong Kong, he trained with a Swiss pâtissier and in the mid-Sixties he came to England in pursuit of my mother. Three years later they opened the iconic Poon’s of Covent Garden at 41 King Street (now a Burberry store.) The great and the good dined there – from Mick Jagger to Barbara Streisand. In 1980 my father was awarded a Michelin Star. Restaurants in Geneva and The City followed.
My parents retired in 2006. I have worked in all my parents’ restaurants and swore I would never go into the business, but what chance does one stand against kismet? So, I bring you my Chinese kitchen from the depths of my heart & my family’s hearth.