Soba with fish balls and quekiam
For all you noodle lovers out there, here’s something we enjoyed recently per the request of my daughter Sam who said she missed terribly stir fried oriental noodles with store-bought fishballs and quekiam. This is commercial quekiam, mind you, the kind you buy frozen from the supermarket, not the kind wrapped in tawpe (bean curd skin) that is served as an appetizer in Chinese restaurants.

Commercial quekiam is so called only because it is shaped and colored like the real quekiam. In truth, it’s mostly flour. So are the fish balls, actually.

There are so many brands of commercial quekiam and fish balls, choose the best quality that you can afford because the cheaper ones turn tough as rubber after frying and often taste like cardboard.
This recipe is good for 4 to 6 persons.
Ingredients:
250 g. of soba noodles, dry weight
200 g. of frozen quekiam (sometimes spelled as kikiam)
200 g. of fish balls
1/2 head of garlic
1 onion
1 carrot
a bunch of pechay (pei-tsai in Chinese, a variety of cabbage)
a bunch of onion leaves
1/4 c. of oyster sauce
1/4 c. of hoisin sauce
3 to 4 tbsps. of light soy sauce
pepper
about 6 tbsps. of cooking oil
sesame seed oil
Cooking procedure:
Boil the soba noodles according to package directions. Drain, plunge in iced water, drain and set aside.
Peel and finely mince the garlic. Peel and finely slice the onion.
Peel the carrot and slice thinly. Discard the root ends of the onion leaves and cut into one-inch lengths. Cut off the dark green leaves of the pechay and reserve for future use. You only need the crisp white and light green stalks for this noodle dish. Cut the stalks into one-inch lengths.

Cut the fish balls into halves. Slice the quekiam diagonally into two to three pieces.
Heat the cooking oil. Lightly fry the fish balls and quekiam. Add the carrots and cook, stirring, for about a minute. Add the garlic, onion and pechay tips; cook for another minute. Add the onion leaves. Stir. Pour in the soy sauce, oyster sauce and hoisin sauce. Add pepper. Stir to blend.

Add the noodles, toss and stir to coat the noodles with the sauce. Turn off the heat, drizzle with sesame oil and serve. Not everyone like tea but this noodle dish really goes well with green tea. ![]()
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9 Responses to “Soba with fish balls and quekiam”
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Hi there! I’m so glad I’ve got this website it’s amazed me all the recipes I’ve received. Every time I’ve seen it, my stomach-made me very hungry! Since, I was gone for a long time in our country, I can’t even get those ingredients which is more interesting rather than to take some substitute for it.
I was wondering if you can send me recipe of fish balls and a kikiam too! It’ll be a good help for all of us who been far from our home land-Philippines.
Thank you very much!
looks yummy with sesame oil….. i like the food.
Betty, the link to the quekiam recipe is already in the entry. You can sign up for the newsletter service to receive updates on the latest entries.
sign up na agad for the updates!
wag pahuhuli !!
Thanks for this recipe =) I will try this myself. It looks really yummy. Actually too yummy that just by the pic alone, I’m getting really hungry!
LOL Joey, salamat sa thumbs up.
Mics, it’s so simple but my kids really love it. Hope you do too.
Wow looks yummy ! Thanks for the recipe ^_^
soba noodles…hmm..sounds delicious!
thank u so much for the information,it can help in my thesis proposal,Gods bless you!……….and more power to you!,,,,,,,,,