Sunday, December 25, 2011
Coleslaw
It might sound surprising but I actually don't eat a lot of cabbage. Its not that I dislike or hate the taste but its just one vegetable that I would not actively select or cook.
So believe it or it, this is my first coleslaw. While DH loves coleslaw, I normally avoid it especially when we go out to eat, he will gladly have my portion too. Its probably more a weight conscious thing, lots of mayonnaise means high calories. haha....now you know why I prefer my salad without dressing :)
The men organized a BBQ Xmas gathering. Interestingly, all I hear on the menu is meat and more meat or seafood. While I know that this sort of carnivore food planning is probably very typical in Asian country, thought a coleslaw would be a great pairing for a BBQ! Doesn't mean if I don't like it other people cannot enjoy it right?
Used Greek yogurt to make the dressing so its much healthier without sacrificing the creamy salad dressing texture that normally goes into coleslaw.
If own a vegetable shredder or mandoline slicer, this would be a breeze to prepare.
Ingredients:
Thinly shredded red cabbage
Thinly shredded carrot
Coleslaw dressing:
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup Greek yogurt
2 tbsp good quality mustard
1 tbsp apple vinegar
lemon juice to taste
sugar, pepper and salt to taste
Whisk all the ingredients and taste it. Adjust seasoning as you prefer before pouring onto shredded vegetable. Mix well. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours before serving.
Thursday, December 1, 2011
All in a bag Roast Chicken
Rub some salt inside the chicken. Decided to stuff some spring onions and hot lemon (Jamie Oliver's tip) inside the cavity of the chicken. Put everything into the bag including the vegetables (potatoes and carrot), sprinkle the seasoning which comes with the bag and give it a few good hard shakes.
Tie it up and put in pre-heat oven and bake for 1 hour. Make sure you make sufficient space in the oven as the bag will balloon out a little while baking.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
sil's Chicken Lasagna
Ingredients
250g lasagna sheets
2 tbsp butter
1 medium onion, chopped
1 medium carrot, chopped
1 medium zucchini, chopped
1 can mushrooms, sliced
4-5 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp basil herbs
1 tsp oregano herbs
1 tsp mint herbs
2-3 pieces bay leaves
400g can purèed tomatoes
450g minced chicken
Parmesan cheese for topping
For white cheesy sauce:
3 tbsp butter
3 tbsp plain flour
375ml chicken stock
1/4 cup milk
pinch nutmeg
125g grated cheddar/mozzarella cheese
Method:
1. Pre-heat oven to 200°C. Grease rectangular baking dish.
2. Melt the butter in a saucepan and gently fry onion until transparent. Add chicken and fry. Then add garlic and carrots, followed by mushrooms and herbs. Cook until mushrooms are brown. Simmer for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add zuchinni and simmer for a further 20 minutes.
3. In a saucepan, melt extra butter over low heat and gently stir in flour. Increase heat, stir in stock and mix until smooth. Stir in nutmeg and cheese until cheese is melted and mixture thick. Season with salt and pepper.
4. Pour ½ cup of chicken sauce into baking dish. Cover with a layer of lasagna sheets. Pour 1/3 of remaining sauce over the lasagna sheets, followed by 1/3 of the cheese sauce.
5. Repeat with lasagna, chicken and cheese sauce until lasagna is used up, finishing with the cheese sauce (make sure all lasagna is covered). Sprinkle the top with parmesan cheese. Bake 30 - 35 minutes until the cheese is all golden brown.
6. Let stand for 5 - 10 minutes and serve.
They freeze well too so normally I make more so Master Prince can have his lasagna fix with his sadist Garfield chum!
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Inari sushi (Yubuchobap)
Made this using a pre-mix kit found at the Korean mini mart. The kit contains of seasoned fried tofu pouches, vinegar based sauce packet and some dried rice condiment mix (carrot, black sesame, egg and seaweed). With the kit, it was pretty easy to make this, all you need is to cook some rice, mix in the vinegar and dried ingredients and stuff them into the tofu pouches.
Mix it all up - doesn't it look good? Other alternative fillings could include tuna, cucumber and carrot.
TIP - keep your hands slightly dam while making this to 'tame the rice' from sticking everywhere.
If you want more ideas, mosey over @ Maangchi.
Instead of commercial pre-mix packet, you might want to make your own. You will need to season them first before using. Below is Bentopet's recipe :
10 pcs aburaage
2 cups dashi
4 tbsp shoyu
5 tbsp sugar
8 tbsp mirin
Method:
1. Remove oil from aburaage by rinsing in hot water.
2. Add all ingredients into a pot, cover with a drop-lid or cover with aluminium foil and simmer until liquid is almost dry.
3. Squeeze dry the aburaage so that all the remainder liquids are removed.
3. Cut the aburaage into half and gently open it up so that you can stuff the sushi rice into it. Keep seasoned aburaage in refrigerator up to 10 days.
Kimchi Fried Rice with leftovers
This dish is super easy and super quick to make, ready to eat in less than 10 min. Needless to say, its the kimchi that plays the backbone to this yummy rice.
All you need are some simple ingredients (feel free to add any other leftovers you may have in the refrigerator, such as carrots, zuchinni, egg, tuna etc.). As you can tell, I didn't have very much in my fridge!
old kimchi
cooked rice (leftovers are the best)
bacon or any leftover meat
sesame oil (to drizzle)
Method:
1. Fry kimchi with a little oil for about 3-5 min.
2. Add rice, some kimchi juice and meat, cook for another 3-5 min until all the food is heated through and well mixed.
3. Turn off heat, drizzle some sesame oil.
4. Serve warm with a sprinkling of chopped spring onion as garnish.
Friday, November 25, 2011
Kimbap (Korean sushi)
There is no hard or fast rules with making sushi, you can use any filling you like. The classic popular ones are crabstick, cucumber, yellow pickle radish, carrot and avocado. Others include fried omelet, tuna, cooked beef and spinach. For this kimbap I used Korean pre-cooked ham, spring onion and a few sprigs of coriander - the combination was very refreshing.
Have you wondered what is the difference between the Japanese and Korean sushi? For the latter, they add roasted sesame into the rice and also rub sesame oil on the seaweed skin of the completed sushi roll. Being more accustom to Japanese sushi I have often wondered why they do that. Am told that it gives a nicer gloss to the sushi with added flavour of sesame oil. As you can probably guess by now, Koreans love their sesame oil!
Unfortunately, Master Prince is not keen on sesame oil nor is he a fan of sesame seed. So I had to make separate ones for him. Made his first then added the sesame seed into the rice and rolled up the rest.
Ingredients
Dried seaweed sheets
Crabsticks, sliced
Korean pre-cooked ham, sliced
Cucumber (sliced lengthwise, soaked in some sea salt for about 5 min and then rinsed)
Fried omelet, sliced
Yellow pickled radish, sliced
Spring onion and a few sprigs of coriander
Some sesame oil for rubbing
Sushi rice
3 cups calrose rice
3 tbsp mirin
1 tbsp caster sugar
1 tsp scant salt
1 tbsp sesame oil (optional)
In a bowl mix mirin, sugar and salt. Microwave for about 20 seconds or until sugar and salt has melted into the mixture. When rice is cooked, stir in mirin mixture quickly and set aside warm sushi rice for about 10 min. Used my thermal pot cooker for this and it worked well especially keeping the rice nice and warm. When ready to assemble sushi, mix in some sesame seeds and 1 tbsp sesame oil (optional).
To assemble:
1. Place bamboo mat flat on table with a piece of seaweed (shiny side facing down).
2. Scoop 3-5 tbsp of rice and spread out evenly in the middle of seaweed, about 4 inches, leaving the top and bottom of the seaweed at least 1-2 inches free of rice.
3. Place desired fillings in the centre (but not too many - remember that less is more), gently roll up sushi, from the bottom up. Once you have a completed roll, give the roll (still in bamboo mat) a few firm but gentle squeeze to make sure the kimbap filling is secure.
4. Repeat until all the seaweed or fillings are used up. When all the seaweed rolls are completed into logs, put a little bit of sesame oil on your palm and rub the surface of the seaweed logs. [TIP: use disposable gloves or a clean plastic bag - you'll thank me for it! :) ]
5. Slice them into bite size, about 0.5 inch in thickness. [TIP: always keep your knife slightly dam for a cleaner cut. Alternatively oil your knife with a little sesame oil. This is to keep the rice from sticking to your knife while slicing up.] Keep covered until ready to serve. Best eaten the same day, otherwise keep in fridge and warm up in microwave the next day.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Spicy Kimchi Stew (Kimchijigae)
One of the first dish that comes to mind when someone says let's have Korean (other than grilled meat) - it'll be this yummy dish, erm soup.
Unfortunately in my family, I seem to be the only one who likes this dish. Unlike Korean men, the ones I know do not like the taste of fermented sour spicy cabbage aka. Kimchi.
So this dish is more for me - not complaining as that means more for me since I don't have to share - totally satisfying especially on a cool rainy or cold day.
Adapted recipe from beyondkimchee's blog
Ingredients
1/4 head of fermented cabbage kimchi (about 1 lb), stuffing removed and sliced
2 1/2 cup anchovy stock* or water
1/3lb pork belly or pork butt diced
8oz firm tofu, sliced
1/2 large onion, sliced
1 garlic, chopped
2 tsp Korean soy sauce
2 tbsp rice wine, divided
1/2 cup Kimchi juice
1 tbsp Korean chili flakes
6-8 rice cake slices (optional)
*Anchovy stock:
5-6 large dried anchovies
3 dried sea kelp squares
3 cups water
Method:
1. In a bowl toss pork slices with soya sauce, 1 tbsp rice wine and garlic. Set aside.
2. In another small bowl, combine Korean chili flakes with 2 tbsp of kimchi juice and 1 tbsp rice wine and set aside.
3. In a shallow pot, spread onion on the bottom, layer kimchi slices, the pork, and the tofu slices on top. You can add rice cakes if you want to. Drizzle the Korean chili flakes mixture over. Pour the rest of kimchi juice and the stock (or water) over everything.
4. Cover and bring to boil over high heat. Reduce the heat to low and let it simmer for 25-30 minutes, covered, until the cabbage gets soft and tender. Garnish with green onion if you wish. Serve hot with rice.
For the anchovy stock:
5. Soak kelp in water for at least 30 min.
6. Fry anchovies in a little oil for 5min until slightly crispy.
7. Bring anchovies, kelp, and water to boil. Before water starts boiling, remove kelp, reduce the heat to low and simmer for 10 minutes. If you let it rest for a few minutes the stock will have better flavor. Strain the stock and discard anchovies.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Sloppy Joes
As with the name, 'sloppy' this dish is just all that. It is almost like a burger just that they are not shaped into a burger patty. With the 'free flowing' sauce, you really need both hands to eat this. Forget the cutleries. Tuck a bib under your chin and grab the bun with both your hands - chomp, slurp away. This is one food that once you start you need to press ahead full steam and finish it otherwise everything may just end up on the plate itself! *be warned but its all good fun*
1/2 cup minced carrots (can sub chopped bell pepper)
1 cup chopped onion (about 1 medium onion)
1/2 cup chopped celery
2 cloves garlic, minced
salt
1 1/4 lb ground beef
1/2 cup ketchup
2 cups tomato sauce (or 1 15-ounce can whole tomatoes, puréed)
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
1 tbsp red wine vinegar
2 tbsp brown sugar
pinch ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
pinch cayenne pepper
freshly ground black pepper
4 hamburger buns
1. Heat olive oil and saute carrots for 5 min. Add the chopped onion and celery. Cook until onions are translucent, about 5 more minutes.
With the leftover joes, here are some variations using wholemeal pita bread:
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Hassleback Potatoes
As you know, Christmas and New Year are just around the corner, don't you think this dish would just be perfect next to your roast? Best of all, its fairly easy to make. I used the word 'fairly easy' as it could be a little tricky slicing the potato thinly without through the potato. But discovered that if you wedge the potato in between a pair of chopsticks, you'll have a smoother experience!!
There are many various you can make this - original with some salt and pepper, garlic, sour cream, cheese, herbs - really, the list of possibilities seems endless!
Ingredients
6 potatoes, washed and pat dry
2 tbsp olive oil
30 g butter
sea salt
freshly cracked black pepper
Method:
1. Preheat the oven to 220C degrees.
2. Place on a chopping board, flat side down. Start from one end of the potato, cut almost all the way through, at about 3 to 4 mm intervals. Cut the potato thinner so that it will fan out nicer. If you cut it too fat, it will not look as delicate.
3. Arrange potatoes on a baking tray and scatter some butter in between the potato slits. Drizzle some olive oil and sprinkle some sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
4. Bake potatoes for about 40 minutes.
Crispy on the outside and soft and fluffy inside, yum!
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Tasty Asparagus Tart
In pre-heated oven, bake pastry for 15-20 min until slightly golden brown.
Be generous and spread some marscapone cheese on top, then arrange your asparagus on top.
Sprinkle some cheese of your choice. You can top with some herbs or spices like paprika or just some freshly cracked black pepper. For a spicy 'kick', I like it with a hearty dash of Ichimi Togarashi (japanese red pepper flakes).
Bake until the cheese melts and is golden brown.
Slice and serve warm.
Do give this a try.
Its one of those simple dishes that is almost effortless to prepare and yet comes out totally elegant and everyone will enjoy, what's hard not to like - layers of crispy puff pastry and cheese...YUM (oh, and of course healthy veggies too)!! By the way, an alternative to asparagus is to use zucchini - think arranging a row of green and then yellow to contrast would definitely come out very pretty too.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Roasted Pork Bones Porridge
This is one of my favourite comfort food, especially on rainy or cooler days. Unlike some people who treat this as 'sick people' food, I can have this anytime, any day of the week. I especially like plain watery porridge with some side condiments.
Anyway, been making this as a staple for Sunday lunch and my family (including my parents) love it and its much tastier than plain porridge. Its SUPER easy too.
Wash your rice and fill the pot half with water and some roasted pork bones (got them from the market) - best if there is some meat on them. Part of the treat is to nibble bits of tasty meat off bone!
Boil for over an hour. Stir occassionally, checking that you always have sufficient water in the pot otherwise you might end up with rice instead of porridge or bits of lumps at the bottom!! Serve warm.
Just a stray cat in the alley, who btw decided to self invite himself for a tour around my house one day.
Needless to say, we both got a shock. Guess I should be grateful its not a rat or some other four legged animal!
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Cannelloni *revisted*
Just checking how many tubes can fit nicely into the casserole dish.
Stuffing consist of spinach, black olives, ricotta cheese, some basil herbs and caramelized sweet onions. Mix them all up and stuff into the tube pasta. Spread out some tomato pasta sauce (used bottled) at the bottom of the dish before arranging the cannelloni on top.
Add a little more pasta sauce on the top before adding the cheese of your choice - used two types of cheese, cheddar and Gouda.
Bake in pre-heated oven at 180C degrees for about 35 min or until the cheese is nice and golden!
Ta-da, a quick fix. Great with a side serve of fresh salad. Longest activity was probably waiting for the frozen spinach to thaw or was that caramelising the onions?? haha, maybe the former.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Quick Spinach Cannanoli
Over the weekend managed to make this and it was simple and quick. Surprisingly DH liked it so much that he requested for it to be on the weekly weekend menu!! Also as much as Master Prince protested that he hated spinach blah-blah and giving me i'm-being-poisoned-faced...he polished it up. All you need is some spinach (fresh or frozen). If using fresh, you will need to wash and blanch the spinach in hot water for about 4 min, drain and immediately plug into cold water, gently squeeze out excess water from spinach. In a bowl, mix spinach with your preference of feta or ricotta and olives or anchovies. Stuff them into the cannanoli (tube) pasta. Using Leggo's bottled classic bolognaise sauce, spread some sauce thinly at the bottom of an oven/heat-proof dish, place the stuffed pasta on top and layer another thin layer of the bolognaise sauce or if you wish, can use white/cream sauce. Spread some shredded cheese of your choice on top and bake in preheated oven at 220C degrees for about 30min until the cheese is melty and golden in colour.
There you go, a very quick healthy chessy affair!
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Brussels sprouts
Yes, Brussels sprouts taste good!!
Contrary to what you are thinking right not - No, it is NOT bitter at all.
The tip for tasty Brussels sprouts is to remember these simple golden rules - you must firstly be generous and secondly do not over cook them!
Be generous. What do I mean?? You need to peel back a feel layers - get rid of the initial not so nice looking outer leaves and then be generous by peeling back a two or three more layers. This will ensure that you've taken out all/most of the bitter leaves, leaving behind the young sweet part of the vegetable.
Avoid overcooking. Blanched the sprouts in hot boiling water no more than 1 minute. Do not boil away until they get all soft, mushy and yucky. Everyone who declare that they 'hate Brussels sprouts' complaining that it just doesn't taste nice (I'm sure there are a few heads nodding in agreement here) - well one of the main reason is that it is usually overcooked.
This is how I cooked mine. In a saucepan or wok, cook some bits of bacon and fry it for a few minutes (depending how 'char' or brown you like your bacon), then toss in some garlic and continue frying until the garlic just start to colour. Throw in your blanched Brussels sprouts, fry for less than 1 minute with a little salt (to taste). Turn off the fire and plate it. Can be served warm or at room temperature.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Classic Lamb Stew - Another Julia
It was every bit as heavenly as the boeuf bourguignon made earlier. Had good feedback from everyone who tasted this.
What's special about it this time was the way it was cooked *grins*. The meat took much quicker getting to 'melt in the mouth' tender stage. All thanks with the help of the trusty pressure cooker. So easy :) Not to say cooking with the oven was any much harder but the latter just took a lot longer that's all. The other method of cooking if you do not own a pressure cooker or an oven is to cook this using a slow cooker overnight.
As you guessed, the leftovers tasted even better. Only regret was I should have cooked more as there were no left overs, sob - note to self for next time!! Looks like stews will be making a regular feature for 2011.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Marcella's Hazan Lasagne
Marcella shares some wisdom in her book (which I am still trying to get my hands on) Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking that the "ragu must be cooked for no less than 3 hours!”
She describes:
Obtained a copy of the recipe here.
Bolognese Sauce:
1 tablespoon oil
3 tablespoon butter
½ cup chopped onion
2/3 cup chopped celery
2/3 cup chopped carrot
3/4 pound ground beef chuck
salt & pepper
1 cup milk/stock
pinch of nutmeg
1 cup dry white wine
1 canned imported Italian plum tomatoes, cut up, with their juice
1. Put the oil, butter and onion in the pot, and turn the heat on to medium. Cook and stir the onion until is has become translucent, then add the chopped celery and carrot. Cook for about 2 minutes, stirring the vegetables to coat them well.
2. Add the ground beef, a large pinch of salt, & a few grindings of pepper. Crumble the meat with a fork and cook until beef has lost its raw, red color.
3. Add the milk/stock and let simmer gently, stirring frequently, until it has bubbled away completely. Add a tiny grating – about 1/8 teaspoon – of nutmeg and stir.
4. Add the wine, let simmer until it has evaporated, then add the tomatoes and stir thoroughly to coat all ingredients well. When the tomatoes begin to bubble, turn the heat down so that the sauce cooks at the laziest of simmers, with just an intermittent bubble breaking through the surface. Cook, uncovered, for 3 hours or more, stirring from time to time. While the sauce is stirring, you are likely to find that it begins to dry out and the fat separates from the meat. To keep it from sticking, continue the cooking, adding ½ cup of water whenever necessary. At the end, however, no water at all must be left and the fat must separate from the sauce. Taste and correct for salt.
Béchamel Sauce:
3 cups milk
6 tablespoons butter
4½ tablespoons flour
¼ teaspoon salt
1. Put the milk in a saucepan, turn the heat to medium-low, and bring the milk just to the verge of boiling, to the point when it begins to form a ring of small, pearly bubbles.
2. While heating the milk, put the butter in a heavy-bottomed, 4- to 6-cup saucepan, and turn the heat to low. When the butter has melted completely, add the flour and stirring it with a wooden spoon. Cook, while stirring constantly, for about 2 minutes. Do not allow flour to become colored. Remove from heat.
3. Add the hot milk to the flour-and-butter mixture, no more than 2 tablespoons of it at a time. Stir steadily and thoroughly. As soon as the first 2 tablespoons have been incorporated into the mixture, add 2 more, and continue to stir. Repeat this procedure until you have added ½ cup milk; you can now put in the rest of the milk ½ cup at a time, stirring steadfastly, until all the milk has been smoothly amalgamated with the flour and butter.
4. Place the pot over low heat, add the salt, and cook, stirring without interruption, until the sauce is as dense as thick cream. If you find any lumps forming, dissolve them by beating the sauce rapidly with a whisk. If all else fails, strain the mixture!!
Bench notes - adding warmed milk to the roux bit by bit really helps with getting a smooth mixture!
When you have prepared the ragu and the white sauce, all you need is to assemble it.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Bill Granger's Corn Fritters
If you read my previous post, was very disappointed as I had high expectations especially after so many other bloggers rave about it.
Unfortunately it was a bit too thick and dough-y for my liking.
Thinking I should try making amends with my earlier experience with corn fritters (before crossing it out of my list forever), decided to give it another try. Chance upon Bill Granger's recipe here.
What can I say........changed my mind! These sweet & savoury bites are definitely high on my list for breakfast now. :) Maybe its because I made them fresh unlike the ones from Mart which tasted more like they were made a lot earlier and then reheated.Here's to you Bill! *thumbs up*
Adapted Bill Granger's recipe
Ingredients:
1 cup plain flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon sweet paprika
2 large eggs
1/2 cup milk
2 cups (from 2 to 3 ears) sweet corn kernels
1/4 cup red capsicum, cut into small dice
1/4 cup yellow capsicum, cut into small dice
1/2 cup sliced spring onions, sliced
2 tablespoons chopped fresh coriander
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
Method:
1. Sift the flour, baking powder, salt, sugar and paprika into a medium bowl.
2. In a separate bowl, whisk the eggs and milk until combined.
3. Gradually add the egg mixture to the dry ingredients and whisk until a smooth, stiff, lump-free batter forms.
4. Add corn, capsicum and coriander to the batter. Mix well.
5. In a large nonstick frying pan, heat the vegetable oil over medium heat. When the oil is hot, add the batter in scant quarter-cup amounts, cooking four at a time. Fry for 2 minutes or until the underside of each fritter is golden. Turn the fritters over and cook until the other side is golden. Transfer to another plate and keep warm while cooking the remaining fritters.
6. Serve warm with a few rashes of bacon, roasted tomatoes, slices of avacado and some baby spinach or rockette leaves.