One of my childhood favorites is "oh jian" or Malaysian style oyster omelette. It is one of the hawker delights and usually we would order this in addition to our dinner (usually fried or soupy noodle). It has a gelatinous texture and kind of gooey with crispy edges. Normally serve with sambal. In Taiwan, they have their own version too which is called "oh ah jian" but theirs was ladle with a lot of sauce. This starch mixture recipe of mine came from a Taiwanese cooking show. I adapted their flour ratios and played with the water amount. I failed the first attempt which created a hard starch and not gelatinous.
Okay, now you should have noticed mine is "hei jian" (shrimp) and not "oh jian" (oyster). Well frankly I loved the eggs and the gelatinous texture but not necessarily the oyster, also I wanted the convenience of eating it whenever I feel like it and not rushing out to buy the oyster. But of course you can substitute the shrimp with oyster or simply use both. But this shrimps omelette pancake (虾煎) can definitely satisfied my cravings.
One think I need to note though. It is not easy to fry an excellent omelette, it takes skill. I still need to play with it some more as I don't have the feel yet. Since I love the gelatinous texture, I might want to add more, but more doesn't means good as the outcome with eggs won't come out great. It needs to have a balance and I haven't gotten it yet. I got the starch mixture right but I haven't gotten the technique right yet, I still need lots of practices. If you know how to fry a killer Malaysian style oyster omelet, please share your technique with me. Thank you in advance!