Slice ginger and cut one stalk of green onion into 1 ½ “ pieces and place in a bowl
Bring ½ cup broth to a boil in a small pot, add 20g sliced ginger, add 60g green onion pieces and turn off heat. Cover with a lid and let sit for ½ hour. To make sure you still have around a ½ cup of broth after it boils, turn off the heat as soon as it starts to boil.
Chop the remaining stalk of green onion and set aside
Place the ground pork on a chopping board and chop for 5 minutes to increase its viscosity
Transfer the ground pork to a larger mixing bowl
Add 1 tsp of salt into the ground pork and stir with your fingers in one direction for 2 minutes
Add ¾ of the chopped green onions, 1 egg, 2 tsp cooking wine, ½ tsp sugar, ¼ tsp white pepper powder and 2 tsp corn starch to the meat mixture and mix well
Remove the ginger and green onions from the broth and use the it to infuse into the ground pork. We will call this the ginger green onion broth
Pour approx 20 ml (a little more than a tablespoon) of the ginger green onion broth into the ground pork mixture and stir with your fingers in one direction until the liquid is absorbed into the meat. Continue to do this until you use up all the ginger green onion brothYour meat mixture should now be fairly sticky Gather all the meat into one hand and drop into the mixing bowl. Do this about 20 times You don’t need to drop it too far away. 5-6 inches away from the bottom of the bowl should be good. This creates elasticity so that the meatballs will not fall apart during braising
Divide the meat into 4 equal portions
Heat a pan and add 3 tbsp oil
Form each of the meat portions into balls and throw them from your left hand to your right hand (hands being 2-3 inches apart) 10 times to ensure that they will stick together If your meatballs are falling apart, you probably didn’t create enough viscosity so you may want to use another bowl and throw your meatball into it a few more times
Place each meatball into the pan You don’t want to cook it through, you just want to sear it on 2 sides. And yes, they will not exactly be sphere-shaped…but it’s rustic! If you want it sphere-shaped, you’ll have to deep fry the meatballs
Turn off the heat when both sides are seared
Wash then dry the napa cabbage and leave them in large leaf pieces
Place 2-3 layers of cabbage on the bottom of the pot
Place the meatballs on top of the cabbage Don’t worry if the cabbage layer looks thick. The cabbage will shrink in size substantially when cooked. Some people believe the cabbage is the most delicious part of this dish because it absorbs flavors of the meat and seasonings
Sprinkle ½ tsp salt, 1 tsp sugar, and 2 tsp soy sauce onto the meatballs
Cover the meatballs with another 2-4 layers of napa cabbage If your napa cabbage doesn’t fit in the pot, you can add the remaining after it starts boiling (step #17) since the cabbage in the pot would have shrunk a bit by then
Sprinkle another ½ tsp salt on the top layer of the napa cabbage
Add 1 cup of broth and mix well and pour into the pot
Cover the pot with the lid and cook at high heat until it boils and then turn the heat down to low and cook for 1½ hours. Since pots and burners are all different, be sure to check every 30 minutes to make sure that the liquids aren't evaporating too quickly causing the vegetables on the bottom to burn. Add more water if necessary or reduce cooking time No need to stir or flip during the cooking time. After 1 ½ hours, in a small bowl, add 4 tsp cornstarch to 2 tbsp of water to make the slurry and mix well
Place the napa cabbage and lion’s heads onto a serving dish, leaving the broth in the pot
Pour the slurry into the broth and stir until thickened. Pour the thickened broth onto the lion’s head
Sprinkle the remaining chopped green onions on top of the lion’s heads and serve