Foodie
Showing posts with label Home Cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Cooking. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Love Fried Rice For Valentine's Day
According to Wiki, Qixi Festival (Chinese: 七夕), also known as the Qiqiao Festival (Chinese: 乞巧節), is a Chinese festival that celebrates the annual meeting of the cowherd and weaver girl in Chinese mythology and this festival is the chinese Valentine's Day. Although the chinese does not celebrate Valentine's Day like the West does by giving flowers and gifts, they demonstrate their love by cooking their favorite foods...............
Continue to read and for recipes click HERE Read More......
Monday, January 21, 2013
Napa Delight
Chinese New Year is around the corner and i have been trying to put up the menu for the Reunion Dinner and found this delicious and easy dish.Napa cabbage, also known as Chinese cabbage, has crunchy leaves that are more elegant and delicate than regular firm-headed green cabbage. The Napa Cabbage is a sign of prosperity in China and this dish will certainly adorn your reunion dinner table with richness.
I am submitting this post to Chinese New Year Delights 2013 hosted by Sonia aka Nasi Lemak Lover
Continue to read and for recipe click HERE Read More......
Labels:
Asian,
Chinese,
Dinner,
Festivals Dishes,
Home Cooking,
Lunch,
Veggie
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Rose Wantan
Has it been that long? 5 weeks????? no posting!! OMG, time really goes by fast when you are occupied. Was really occupied, entertaining visitors, entertaining myself by going for a
Cruise - Disney Fantasy Cruise. ...............
Continue to read and learn how to from HERE Read More......
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Loh See Fun From Scratch
This has been my quest, to make loh see fun from scratch. Many hours have been spent trying to get the right texture - one that is chewy, slippery and firm to the tooth without using any chemicals...............
Continue to read and how to make this ..............
Click HERE Read More......
Saturday, February 04, 2012
Dongpo Pagoda With Mui Choy
This weekend would be the last weekend to celebrate the Chinese New Year. as the 15th day falls on Feb. 6th 2012 What celebration?????? .................
Continue to read and for how to, click HERE
Read More......
Labels:
Chinese,
Festivals Dishes,
Home Cooking,
Pork,
Veggie
Tuesday, November 01, 2011
Braised Beef Shank
I love this beef stew with daikon/radish. It is a Cantonese favorite and it's usually eaten with egg noodle soup and tasted just as delicious with white rice. I like mine with lots of beef tendon, so i cooked this dish with beef shank instead of the usual beef brisket. Adding Daikon /radish to this stew is a must as beef and daikon/radish together is a marriage made in heaven........
To continue reading and for recipe click HERE Read More......
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Slow Cooker Barbecue Pork Ribs
There are many right ways to make BBQ Ribs and it's all up to you and don't let anyone tell you that it isn't right. After all the best pork BBQ rib is the one you like best. So if you want them fall off the bone tender then make them that way. You can put sauce on them or not, you can make your BBQ Ribs spicy hot, or sticky and sweet, however, whatever.
I, for one does not like to buy store bought sauces and being part of the Foodbuzz Tastemaker Program, I received KC Masterpiece Barbecue Sauce Southern Style for sampling................
Click HERE to read further and for recipe Read More......
Friday, September 09, 2011
Gravlax
When Don from Simplybest From Food and Life posted Gravlax, i told her that i have not tasted Gravlax before and she gave me a lengthy tutorial on how to cure the salmon. Don and I chat on skype ever so often and it does not necessary the both of us, when we see Peng online, she will be added to the conference and the three of us will chat until the cows come home, that is 'the cows in Germany'. I knew Don from way back when food forums were very popular, we were very active members and we met many other members who were just as passionate in cooking and baking. Although most food forums died naturally, our friendship continued to another level, we chat on skype.........
Click HERE to continue reading and for recipe
Read More......
Monday, August 15, 2011
Yau Yee Cheng Chee Yoke/Steamed Ground Pork With Dried Squid
This dish is without a doubt in any MOM's repertoire, asian moms that is. Steaming ground pork and adding whatever to enhance the ground pork has been cooked and served since time immemorial.
To read further and for recipe, it is HERE Read More......
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Soft Tofu and Fish Paste/老少平安
This dish is simple to prepare and it is considered as Mom's cooking. I don't know about other Moms but i do know that my Mom love to cook this and the whole family loved the dish. After the family laid my Mom to rest last year, my brother took us out for lunch and he ordered this dish. It was then that he told me the name of this dish - Lo Sui Ping On.
To read further and for recipe, click HERE Read More......
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Fried Shallots from Scratch
Shallots are called bawang merah kecil (small red onions) in Malay. Do not confuse shallots with green onions or scallions. Shallots tend to be more expensive than onions but their sweeter, milder, more complex flavor are worth it, no wonder they are much favored by chefs. I am quite lucky that shallots are not that expensive and affordable unlike Down Under, i was told that they are cost double digits $$.
The step by step is HERE Read More......
The step by step is HERE Read More......
Labels:
Asian,
Chinese,
Home Cooking,
Malaysian,
Singaporean
Monday, April 11, 2011
Garlicky Belly Pork
Have you ever eaten or cooked with pork belly? Pork belly is usually referred to the belly region of a pig which is from the underside. Pork Bellies are more commonly known as Bacon and now, when you think of all the delicious bacon recipes, you know where it comes from Eating Belly pork gives you an amazing textural experience, a feeling of flavor oozing in mouth You have a nice layer of meat, a nice layer of fat, another nice layer of meat, another nice layer of fat, and when you cook it properly, this combination of textures together with its rich, juicy loveliness will satiate your palate.
This cut of meat is enormously popular in chinese and korean cuisine.
The recipe for Garlicky Belly Pork is HERE Read More......
Friday, November 05, 2010
Beef Stew
A stew is a combination of solid food ingredients that have been cooked in liquid and served in the resultant gravy. Ingredients in a stew can include any combination of vegetables (such as carrots, potatoes, beans, peppers and tomatoes etc.), meat, especially tougher meats suitable for slow-cooking, such as beef. Poultry, sausages, and seafood are also used. While water can be used as the stew-cooking liquid, wine, stock, and beer are also common. Seasoning and flavourings may also be added. Stews are typically cooked at a relatively low temperature (simmered, not boiled), allowing flavors to mingle.Stewing is suitable for the least tender cuts of meat that become tender and juicy with the slow moist heat method. This makes it popular in low-cost cooking. Cuts having a certain amount of marbling and gelatinous connective tissue give moist, juicy stews, while lean meat may easily become dry.
Stews may be thickened by reduction or with flour, either by coating pieces of meat with flour before searing, or by using a roux or beurre manié, a dough consisting of equal parts of butter and flour. Thickeners like cornstarch or arrowroot may also be used.
Stews are similar to soups, and in some cases there may not be a clear distinction between the two. Generally, stews have less liquid than soups, are much thicker and require longer cooking over low heat. While soups are almost always served in a bowl, stews may be thick enough to be served on a plate with the gravy as a sauce over the solid ingredients." This definition of STEW is from Wikipedia
Stews may be thickened by reduction or with flour, either by coating pieces of meat with flour before searing, or by using a roux or beurre manié, a dough consisting of equal parts of butter and flour. Thickeners like cornstarch or arrowroot may also be used.
Stews are similar to soups, and in some cases there may not be a clear distinction between the two. Generally, stews have less liquid than soups, are much thicker and require longer cooking over low heat. While soups are almost always served in a bowl, stews may be thick enough to be served on a plate with the gravy as a sauce over the solid ingredients." This definition of STEW is from Wikipedia
Read about the History of STEW fromWikipedia
and i find this list of STEWS from all over the world very interesting, perhaps planning to cook from this list if the ingredients are available and the method of cooking is possible.
List of STEWS
Baeckeoffe, a potato stew from Alsace
Barbacoa, a meat stew from Mexico
Bigos, a traditional stew in Polish cuisine
Birria, a goat stew from Mexico
Bo Kho, (Vietnamese: bò kho), a beef stew in rich seasonings, served with bread, noodle or plain rice from Vietnam
Bouillabaisse, a fish stew from Provence
Bourguignon, a French dish of beef stewed in red burgundy wine
Booyah, an American meat stew
Brunswick stew, from Virginia and the Carolinas
Burgoo, a Kentuckian stew
Caldeirada, a fish stew from Portugal
Carnitas, a pork meat stew from Michoacán, Mexico
Cassoulet, a French bean stew
Cawl, a Welsh stew, usually with lamb and leeks
Charquican, a Chilean dish
Chankonabe, a Japanese dish flavoured with soy sauce or miso. Chankonabe is traditionally eaten by sumo wrestlers.
Chicken stew, whole chicken and seasonings
Chicken paprikash, chicken stew with paprika
Chili con carne, Mexican meat and bean stew
Chili sin carne, a meatless American adaptation of the Mexican dish
Chilorio, a pork stew from Sinaloa, Mexico
Cincinnati chili, chili developed by Greek immigrants in the Cincinnati area
Cholent, a slow-cooked Jewish dish eaten on the Shabbat
Cochinita pibil, an orange color pork stew from Yucatán, Mexico
Cotriade, a fish stew from Brittany
Cocido, a traditional Spanish stew. In Portugal, it is called cozido
Cream stew, a yoshoku Japanese white stew
Daube, a French stew made with cubed beef braised in wine, vegetables, garlic, and herbs.
Dinuguan, pork blood stew from the Philippines.
Fabada Asturiana, a Spanish bean and meat stew
Feijoada, Brazilian or Portuguese bean stew.
Főzelék, a thick Hungarian vegetable dish.
Gaisburger Marsch, a German dish of stewed beef served with Spätzle and potatoes
Gheimeh, an Iranian stew with cubed lamb and yellow split peas
Ghormeh Sabzi, an Iranian stew with green herbs, dried limes, beans and meat.
Goulash, a Hungarian meat stew with paprika
Gumbo, a Louisiana creole dish
Hasenpfeffer, a sour, marinated rabbit stew from Germany
Haleem, an Pakistani lentil/mutton stew.
Hayashi rice, a Japanese dish of beef, onions and mushrooms in red wine and demi-glace sauce, served with rice
Irish stew, made with lamb or mutton, potato, onion and parsley
Ishtu, a curry in Kerala, India made from chicken or mutton, potato, and coconut milk.[2]
Istrian Stew or yota, or jota, a dish popular in Croatian and Slovenian Istra and NE Italy
Jjigae, a diverse range of Korean stews.
Kare-kare, stewed beef or oxtail and vegetables in peanut sauce from the Philippines.
Karelian hot pot, from the region of Karelia in eastern Finland.
Khash, a stew from Armenia and Georgia.
Khoresht, a variety of Persian stews, often prepared with saffron.
Kokkinisto, a Greek stew with red meat, in a tomato passata with shallots, cinnamon and other spices.
Lancashire Hotpot, an English stew
Locro, a South American stew (mainly in the Andes region)
Mechado, a Philippine-style beef stew
Nihari, a Pakistani beef stew made overnight and served for breakfast.
Nikujaga, a Japanese beef and potato stew
Olla podrida, a Spanish red bean stew
Pasticada, a Croatian stew from the region of Dalmatia
Peperonata, an Italian stew made with peppers
Pescado Blanco, a white fish stew from Patzcuaro Michoacán Mexico
Pörkölt, a Hungarian meat stew resembling goulash, flavoured with paprika
Potjiekos, a South African stew
Puchero, a South American and Spanish stew
Ragout, a highly seasoned French stew
Ratatouille, a French vegetable stew
Sancocho, a stew from the Caribbean
The Stew, a stew from the La Tour du Pin
Semur, a typical Javanese stew with beef or chicken, potatoes, carrots, various spices and kecap manis (sweet soy sauce).from Indonesia.
Stoofvlees, a Belgian beef stew with beer, mustard and laurel
Tagine, a Moroccan stew, named after the conical pot in which it is traditionally cooked and/or served in.
Tharid, a traditional Arab stew of bread in broth
Waterzooi, a Belgian stew
Continue for recipe HERERead More......
Monday, September 27, 2010
Crawfish Etouffee
Crawfish étouffée accordingly consists of aromatic vegetables and crawfish meat smothered in a savory roux-based sauce and served over rice. There is an endless debate as to what is the best recipe for crawfish étouffée? Roux or no roux? Tomato no tomato? This can go on forever ... it's one of those dishes where there is no one definitive recipe, but chances are that whichever one you try will be good and fantastically great.
1 medium - large onion - chopped
2 cloves garlic - chopped
1/ 2 cups water
Freshly ground black pepper
Salt
Green onion tops
Fresh parsley
Method:
Melt butter in pot, add flour and stir well.
Add onions, bell pepper, celery and garlic. Cook until tender, and keep stirring.
Add tomato paste and cayenne pepper, then add water. Cook down for 20 minutes or so, then add the crawfish tails. Bring to a boil.
Add salt and pepper to taste, then add chopped green onion tops and parsley.
1 lb crawfish tails
4 ozs butter
2 tbsp all-purpose flour4 ozs butter
1 medium - large onion - chopped
2 cloves garlic - chopped
2 tbsp bell pepper, minced
1/2 stalk celery, minced
2 tsp tomato paste
Cayenne pepper1/ 2 cups water
Freshly ground black pepper
Salt
Green onion tops
Fresh parsley
Method:
Melt butter in pot, add flour and stir well.
Add onions, bell pepper, celery and garlic. Cook until tender, and keep stirring.
Add tomato paste and cayenne pepper, then add water. Cook down for 20 minutes or so, then add the crawfish tails. Bring to a boil.
Add salt and pepper to taste, then add chopped green onion tops and parsley.
Serve hot with white rice.
Read More......
Monday, August 30, 2010
Home Brewing - Glutinous Rice Wine
I have to confess that i have shyed away from brewing glutinous rice wine at home for the longest ever, all because of all the superstitions pertaining to brewing wine at home. I finally buck up courage together with inspiration from my friend, Claire and tried making 2 batches, one plain and one with red rice yeast. Claire came to help and all we had to do was to blend the yeast and start assembling the rice for brewing. I had prepped the rice earlier by cooking it in the rice cooker, so that it will be cooled enough for assembling when Claire arrived. I was so excited that i forgot to take pictures of the assembling. I did not take pictures perhaps i was skeptical that the wine will be a success as i know that i will break all rules and superstitions - I did not have a mouthful of sugar when i started making, i talked alot and made it in broad daylight, i did not leave the pot under the bed with a rusty knife on top, i let the 2 pots(crockpots) sitting on the dinning table, perhaps if you make the wine in a glass bottle, it will be better to put it away from the light. According to one of the myths - one should leave the pot alone without peeking, i, of course, have been opening the lids of both the pots and checking for green stuff growing and have been tasting the wine as days go by. Despite of being so rebelious, the wine turned out so sweet and not too alcohlic. The one with the red rice yeast tasted better than the plain one and had more wine, perhaps the extra yeast present in the red rice gave the extra kick and for the extra wine, i think i had sprinkled in an extra cup of water. The whole process was worth it and now my younger friends can have Rice Wine Chicken during their confinement, just inform me and i will brew some.
Ingredients:
8 cups/2.2 lbs/1 kg long grain white glutinous rice
1 pc wine yeast (bigger kind brought from Malaysia)
1 pc wine yeast (small kind available in any asian stores here in the States)
1 cup red rice yeast (also available in the asian stores here)
2 cups filtered water for sprinkling.
Method:
Wash the glutinous rice, drain, and place in rice cooker with enough water to cover the surface(it is just like cooking regular jasmine rice). Put to cook, and when rice is cooked, remove from the rice cooker, then spread it onto foil covered baking sheets and leave to cool completely.(make sure new foil is used to cover the baking sheets) Rice must be completely cold before use.
Using a clean coffee grinder, grind the wine yeast and red rice yeast into powder.
To assemble:
Sprinkle a little wine yeast mixture on to a crockpot and then layer with rice(wet hands with the filtered water and flatten a handful and use it for layering).
Sprinkle with more rice yeast all over the rice and then sprinkle with the filtered water.
Repeat the layering - rice, rice yeast and water until all the rice is done.
Lastly pour the remainder of the filtered water.
Cover crockpot with a clean cloth and then the lid.
Leave it to ferment for 7 days, then open lid and give mixture a good stir with a clean wooden spoon.
Cover crockpot with the clean cloth and lid and leave to brew for another 14 days(the total brewing time is 21 days - if you prefer a stronger alcoholic wine leave for another 7 days).
Wine can be harvested on the 21st or 30th day.
Prepare a sieve or a colander and line it with a clean cloth. Put it over a pot to catch the wine.
Put the brewed wine mixture onto the cloth and let the wine dripped.(patience in letting the wine drip slowly will result in very clear wine).
When all the wine has dripped and the residue is quite dry, remove the residue and store it in a jar or air tight container for many more other recipes.
Bring the wine to a quick boil (my wine started to boil at 180f and of course it is cos i am one mile above sea-level)
Let the wine cool before bottling.
Wine is now to be enjoyed in any way you wish.
Ingredients:
8 cups/2.2 lbs/1 kg long grain white glutinous rice
1 pc wine yeast (bigger kind brought from Malaysia)
1 pc wine yeast (small kind available in any asian stores here in the States)
1 cup red rice yeast (also available in the asian stores here)
2 cups filtered water for sprinkling.
Method:
Wash the glutinous rice, drain, and place in rice cooker with enough water to cover the surface(it is just like cooking regular jasmine rice). Put to cook, and when rice is cooked, remove from the rice cooker, then spread it onto foil covered baking sheets and leave to cool completely.(make sure new foil is used to cover the baking sheets) Rice must be completely cold before use.
Using a clean coffee grinder, grind the wine yeast and red rice yeast into powder.
To assemble:
Sprinkle a little wine yeast mixture on to a crockpot and then layer with rice(wet hands with the filtered water and flatten a handful and use it for layering).
Sprinkle with more rice yeast all over the rice and then sprinkle with the filtered water.
Repeat the layering - rice, rice yeast and water until all the rice is done.
Lastly pour the remainder of the filtered water.
Cover crockpot with a clean cloth and then the lid.
Leave it to ferment for 7 days, then open lid and give mixture a good stir with a clean wooden spoon.
Cover crockpot with the clean cloth and lid and leave to brew for another 14 days(the total brewing time is 21 days - if you prefer a stronger alcoholic wine leave for another 7 days).
Wine can be harvested on the 21st or 30th day.
Prepare a sieve or a colander and line it with a clean cloth. Put it over a pot to catch the wine.
Put the brewed wine mixture onto the cloth and let the wine dripped.(patience in letting the wine drip slowly will result in very clear wine).
When all the wine has dripped and the residue is quite dry, remove the residue and store it in a jar or air tight container for many more other recipes.
Bring the wine to a quick boil (my wine started to boil at 180f and of course it is cos i am one mile above sea-level)
Let the wine cool before bottling.
Wine is now to be enjoyed in any way you wish.
Serves
Read More......
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