Recipe Twenty · Hainanese

Heh Cho

虾枣
Hainanese Prawn Fritters — The Forgotten Cousin of Ngoh Hiang
Golden-brown deep-fried heh cho on a small platter, sliced sides up showing prawn-flecked filling. Sweet chilli-plum dip in a tiny bowl beside. Coriander garnish, cucumber slices. Painted heritage style.
Heritage Note from Hock Ko

The Hainanese have their own version of the five-spice meat roll, but they call it heh cho — and it is mostly prawn, not pork.

While the Hokkien and Teochew make ngoh hiang (Recipe 4) with mostly pork and a little prawn, the Hainanese tradition leans heavily on prawn — sometimes 60% prawn to 40% pork, sometimes 70/30. The rolls are smaller, more delicate, with a more pronounced prawn sweetness and lighter texture.

Heh cho (虾炸 or 虾枣 in different dialect spellings) means "fried prawn" or "prawn date" — referring to the date-like elongated shape. In Hainan island, this dish is part of the traditional banquet repertoire. The Hainanese diaspora brought it to Singapore where it became a staple at:

  • Hainanese-owned Chinese New Year feasts
  • Wedding banquet hot starter platters
  • Heritage Hainanese restaurants (Yet Con — reportedly closed, Chin Chin Eating House, British Hainan)
  • Some economy rice stalls as a premium side

Today the dish is fading — most younger eaters don't distinguish heh cho from ngoh hiang. That is exactly why it belongs in this book.

Makes
14–16 rolls
Active Time
50 min
Total Time
2 hrs
Difficulty
★★★

🛒Ingredients

Prawn-forward filling, beancurd-skin wrap, sweet chilli-plum dip. The prawn does the talking.

For the Filling

Fresh prawns, peeled, deveined350 gThe hero ingredient. Sea prawns from wet market. Roughly chopped — not pasted.
Pork belly, finely minced200 g70/30 fat-to-lean. Hainanese tradition keeps pork as a supporting role.
Fresh water chestnuts100 gPeeled, finely diced. Heritage crunch.
Spring onions2 stalksFinely chopped.
Garlic4 clovesMinced.
Coriander stems1 tbspFinely chopped. Heritage Hainanese herb signature.
Egg1Beaten.

Hainanese Seasoning

Light soy sauce1.5 tbsp
Oyster sauce1 tsp
Shaoxing wine1 tbsp
Sesame oil1 tbsp
Sugar2 tsp
Salt1 tsp
Ground white pepper1 tsp
Five-spice powder½ tspLess than ngoh hiang — Hainanese style is lighter on five-spice.
Sole fish powder (ti po)1 tsp
Ginger juice1 tsp
Tapioca flour2 tbsp
Rice flour1 tbsp

🌶️Shifu's Lift

choose one path — see "Shifu's Secret" chapter for the philosophy
  • Old-school path: ¼ tsp MSG in seasoning
  • Modern hawker path: ½ tsp chicken stock powder
  • Heritage purist path: Already covered with sole fish powder

For Wrapping & Frying

Dried beancurd skin sheets14–16 rectanglesCut into 14 cm × 12 cm.
Beaten egg whitefor sealing
Cornflourfor dusting
Neutral oilfor deep-frying

Sweet Chilli-Plum Dip traditional Hainanese pairing

Lingham chilli sauce4 tbsp
Plum sauce1 tbspThe Hainanese touch.
White vinegar1 tsp
Toasted sesame seeds1 tsp

👨‍🍳Method

Six stages. Build, prep, roll, steam, fry, serve. Hainanese precision: smaller, neater, more uniform than ngoh hiang.

1Stage

Build the Filling

Roughly chop prawns — do not paste them in a food processor. Hainanese tradition wants to see prawn pieces, not prawn paste. Aim for 5 mm-ish chunks.

In a large bowl, combine minced pork belly + chopped prawns + all seasoning ingredients (except water chestnuts and herbs). Mix in one direction with chopsticks for 5 minutes until the mixture turns slightly pale and tacky. This is the same protein-development technique as ngoh hiang.

Test the throw: pinch a small ball, throw it back into the bowl. It should slap and hold, not splatter.

Now fold in water chestnuts + spring onions + coriander stems + beaten egg. Gentle folds only — water chestnuts release water if over-mixed.

Cover and rest in fridge 30 minutes.

Step illustration: ceramic mixing bowl on marble counter, heh cho filling at tacky-binding state. Hand holding chopsticks vertical mid-stir in heritage one-direction action. Filling shows 60-70% prawn proportion: rough-chopped pink-orange prawn chunks dominant, smaller flecks of pork belly, water chestnut, spring onion.
Stage 1 — chunks of prawn, not paste. Mix one direction until it slaps.
2Stage

Prep Beancurd Skin

Dampen a clean cloth. Wipe each beancurd sheet on both sides to remove excess salt and soften. Cut to 14 cm × 12 cm rectangles.

3Stage

Roll

Per roll:

  1. Lay a beancurd rectangle on a board, long side facing you
  2. Place ~2 heaping tablespoons of filling along the bottom edge in a 12 cm sausage shape
  3. Fold both short sides inward over the filling
  4. Roll up tightly from bottom to top
  5. Seal final edge with a dab of beaten egg white
  6. Place seam-side down on a lightly oiled plate

Hainanese rolls are smaller and more uniform than Hokkien/Teochew ngoh hiang — 12 cm is the standard length.

Step illustration: hands mid-roll of a heh cho — beancurd-skin rectangle folded over filling about halfway, fingers tucking filling tight. Two completed heh cho already on the board, uniform 12cm length and slim profile.
Stage 3 — twelve centimetres, uniform. The Hainanese precision-craft signature.
4Stage

Steam

Set up a steamer with rapid boiling water. Place rolls seam-side down with 2 cm gaps. Steam medium heat 10 minutes. Hainanese rolls steam shorter than Hokkien/Teochew because they're smaller and have more delicate prawn that overcooks.

Cool completely on wire rack. Cooling is non-negotiable — frying immediately = oil splatter and skin tears.

Pause point: refrigerate up to 3 days, freeze up to 3 months at this stage.

5Stage

Fry

Heat oil to 170°C.

Lightly dust each roll with cornflour. Fry 2–3 rolls at a time, 2 minutes, turning once.

For extra-crispy heritage finish: double-fry. Pull rolls at 1.5 minutes (par-fry, hold). Re-fry to order at 180°C for 45 seconds. The skin shatters when bitten.

Drain on a wire rack. Cool 2 minutes. Cut on a sharp diagonal into 2 cm pieces with kitchen scissors.

Critical moment: heavy wok with hot oil, three heh cho rolls mid-second-fry — surfaces turning from pale-golden to deep-amber-mahogany, skin blistering glassy-crisp. Hand holding wire spider strainer. Two finished double-fried heh cho on a wire rack.
The critical moment — double-fry. Pale-golden first pass, deep-amber second.
6Stage

Serve

Plate the heh cho on a small platter, sliced sides up to show the prawn-flecked filling. Garnish with coriander leaves and cucumber slices on the side. Sweet chilli-plum dip in a small bowl.

Eat hot — the prawn flavour fades within 5 minutes of serving.

Hero plate: small heritage round ceramic platter, six heh cho cut on a sharp diagonal, sliced sides up showing prawn-flecked filling cross-section. Coriander leaves, cucumber slices. Heritage ceramic dipping bowl of sweet chilli-plum sauce with sesame seeds. Marble kopitiam table.
The plate — sliced sides up, the prawn cross-sections facing the eater. A quieter cousin.

🎯The Three Tips

Heritage. Master's. Mistake.

🏛 Heritage Note

The Plum Sauce in the Dip

The plum sauce in the dipping is what distinguishes Hainanese heh cho from Hokkien/Teochew ngoh hiang dipping (which is sweet chilli + dark soy). The plum sauce adds a fruity, slightly sour note that complements the prawn sweetness.

If you cannot find ready-made plum sauce, substitute: 2 tbsp hoisin + 1 tsp lemon juice + 1 tsp vinegar + 1 tsp sugar.

👨‍🍳 Master's Tip

Don't Paste the Prawns

The single biggest difference between ngoh hiang and heh cho is texture. Heh cho should have discernible chunks of prawn when you bite into it — that pop of fresh sea-sweetness.

If you paste the prawns in a food processor (the way some commercial fishball makers do), you lose the prawn pop. The filling becomes a uniform paste that tastes more like fishball than prawn. Always chop prawns by hand, leaving 5 mm chunks.

The other technique: add the egg last. The egg is for binding only — adding too early and over-mixing causes the filling to turn into a wet glue.

⚠ Common Mistake

Soggy or Burst Rolls

Three failures:

  1. Soggy rolls = beancurd skin too wet (over-soaked) or cooled with steam trapped. Fix: damp wipe only, never soak. Cool on wire rack with airflow.
  2. Burst rolls during frying = oil too hot or rolls not sealed properly. Fix: 170°C strictly, use egg white seal, dust with cornflour before frying.
  3. Watery filling = water chestnuts over-mixed. Fix: dice water chestnuts not too fine, fold in last, do not over-mix.
📈 Scaling for Hawker Service

For an economy rice or zi char stall offering heh cho

  • Premium positioning: Heh cho is a higher-priced side than fishball or fried egg — sells SGD 1.50–2.50 per piece, vs SGD 0.80 for plain meat dishes.
  • Batch prep: 100–150 rolls steamed Sunday/Monday, frozen, fried to order daily.
  • Double-fry advantage: Holds crispness for 30 minutes after frying — useful for buffet-style economy rice display.
  • Cost (Singapore 2026): Per roll ~SGD 0.55 (prawn 0.30 + pork 0.10 + skin/seasoning 0.15). Sells SGD 1.80–2.50 per piece. Margin: 65–70%.
Heh cho is the Hainanese cousin of ngoh hiang — quieter, more delicate, less famous. The prawn does the talking. The pork is just there to keep it grounded. Heritage food is full of these quieter cousins. Let us not let them disappear.
— Hock Ko