Bay Area chefs share what the cook for the holiday Today Us News


What kind of food will be popping up on tables during the 2026 Lunar New Year?

In Chinese culture – not the only Asian culture to celebrate the holiday, surely, but a big one in the Bay Area – think whole fish, which represents family and sharing. Or think dumplings, which represent wealth and good fortune with shapes recalling gold ingots. And across regions and families, there are, of course, the personal traditions that mark this most auspicious holiday.

As the big day (of a weekslong celebration) approaches on Tuesday, Feb. 17, we’ve asked three chefs to share their culinary game plans for New Year’s.

Kathy Fang

Restaurateur and cookbook author, owner San Francisco’s Fang and House of Nanking; kathyfang.com

“Egg rolls or spring rolls are something that I feel every family has to have. It symbolizes wealth because of the way that it’s shaped — they say it looks like bars of gold. I actually grew up making them with family. The big feast is at night, but as people are cooking, the rolls are like a snack that gets you through the day. By dinner, everybody’s probably had a couple ‘golden bars’ to snack on, but you know, you can never have enough gold. …

“Our family specifically, we eat nian gao, a sticky rice cake. It’s very prevalent in Shanghainese families. It’s sliced rice cakes that get stir-fried with pork or Chinese sausage, and then there’s vegetables in it. We also have it in sweet form, which is a pressed sticky-rice cake. It has dates, and it’s red, and you slice it and eat it in the morning on New Year’s Day.”

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JANUARY 28: A shrimp noodle dish is seen at Fang Restaurant on Howard Street in San Francisco, Calif., on Thursday, Jan. 28, 2021. Chef Kathy Fang and her parents Peter and Lily Fang, who also own the historic House of NanKing restaurant, normally celebrate the holiday with a big dinner party at Fang, but because of the pandemic, it will just be them this year. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
A shrimp noodle dish created by Chef Kathy Fang is served at Fang Restaurant in San Francisco on Jan. 28, 2021. Her parents, Peter and Lily Fang, also own the historic House of Nanking restaurant. Noodles, which represent longevity, are a popular Lunar New Year dinner dish. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

Kristina Cho

– James Beard Award-winning cookbook author of 2021’s “Mooncakes and Milk Bread,” Richmond; eatchofood.substack.com




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