Chủ Nhật, 30 tháng 8, 2009

Tiramisu dessert

Always wanted to learn how to make Tiramisu, it looks like very difficult but actual fact is so simple - 15 minutes preparation and juz need to chill, no baking no cooking further required :)

Ingredients
a packet of finger biscuits
250 g mascarpone cheese
2 eggs
2 tbsp sugar
black coffee
some coffee powder and cocoa powder

Method
1. Dip sugar coated finger biscuits (face down side) in a bowl of black coffee. And laid them as shown (using 1L alluminum tray).
2. Separate egg yolks and white. Keep the white for other cooking purpose. Put the yolks in a mixing bowl. Stir in the sugar.
3. Pour in the mascarpone cheese and blend well.
4. Pour about 1/4 of the mixture over to the finger biscuits. Sprinkle with some coffee powder and cocoa powder.

5. Repeat the step 1 till finger biscuits finished.

6. Pour over the remaining mixture on the finger biscuits, covering the sides and edges or gives a gentle shake. Sprinkle coffee powder and cocoa powder again.

7. Chilled in the fridge for about 4 hours.

8. Voila the Tiramisu dessert is ready for serving.

Thứ Sáu, 28 tháng 8, 2009

Fried Kway Tiao

Ingredients

1 packet of kway tiao sticks - soaked
1 carrot shred
2 pcs vegetarian ham - shred
a few leaves of chinese cabbage - sliced
a few pcs of tao pok - sliced
oil, light soya sauce
sesame oil


Method

1. In a pot of hot boiling water, cook the soften kway tiao sticks and simmer for 2-3 minutes. Off fire, drain and set aside.

2. Heat another frying pan with oil, toss in the rest of the ingredients and cooked for 1-2 minutes.

3. Blend in the kway tiao sticks, add some water if necessary if gets too dry.

4. Seasoning with light soya sauce and adjust to your taste.

5. Off fire and dash in sesame oil serve immediatelywith your favourite sambal chilli.

Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 8, 2009

Easy Cabbage dish

Ingredients

a few leaves of chinese cabbage
1 small carrot
1 can of sliced button mushrooms
light soya sauce
pepper
sesame oil

Method

1. Rinse cabbage and sliced it to about 2-3 cm in width. Skinned carrot and sliced it corsely.

2. Heat pan with oil, saute some ginger strips till golden brown.

3. Add in the carrot slices and cook for 1-2 minutes. Toss in the cabbage and mushrooms. Cover to simmer for 2-3 minutes.

4. Season to taste, add abit water if gets too dry. Dash in sesame oil, off fire and serve hot.

Thứ Ba, 18 tháng 8, 2009

Memory, Landscape and Community: Steroids for the Baker

About a year ago...actually more then a year ago while I was still in school, I was required to write a response paper to the documentary Craft in America. The topic was to discuss how does Memory, Landscape and Community (themes discussed in the documentary) affect the baker and/or the craft and art of baking?

A few of my thoughts for your reading pleasure....:D

The present is a result of past memories. Our memories play lead on the stage of life and in the world of crafting and baking. Memory is a broad term that has both philosophical and practical importance to anyone who aspires to go above and beyond in what they do. Philosophically speaking, you can’t know where you’re going unless you know where you came from. Knowing where you came from involves knowledge of your culture, heritage, and traditions and using them for ideas and inspiration for your work. Only when you understand who you are in terms of what came before you and consciously incorporate these ideas, stories, and struggles into your art does your art become yours. I define art as something that only happens once and captivating art as something that reflects it’s creator in a unique way. As a baker, you can follow a recipe exactly and come up with a decent product, but unless you put your flare into it, your product certainly won’t standout in anyway.

On the practical side, memory is an aspect of knowledge. Knowledge builds confidence, and confidence builds decisiveness. Confidence and decisiveness is your rock so you can be more creative. About 3 summers ago I was learning traditional tailoring from a local dressmaker that had been practicing her craft for 50+ years; since the age 14. She made me memorize all of the formulas for pattern drafting from traditional one piece shirts to 3 piece raglan sleeves with shoulder and elbow darts. Her reason was once you know the rules; you can break them and thus be more creative. Since the technical aspects are already embedded within you, you can concentrate more on making your work unique by giving it a “soul”. The best part is no matter how crazy your design turns out to be it will work out technically because by memorizing the formulas, you’ll naturally incorporate them into your designs as you come up with them. Baking is similar to tailoring because it’s a science as much as it is an art. As a baker, memory is what sets you apart. Having knowledge of recipes and techniques empowers you to add artistic value to an otherwise science project.

Landscape influences our work the same way memory does as it is an endless source of inspiration consisting of vivid colors, unique shapes, intriguing patterns and compelling textures that captivates our senses, giving our work a touch of individuality. Everyone is affected by their surrounds in one way or another. The landscape that surrounds us defines a part of who we are as a nation, a state, a city, a community and as an individual. As a baker, whether you surrender your inspiration to the landscape or capture and tame it into your creations via color, shape, patterns or texture it will speak volumes to your audience about where you came from, and where you’re going.

Landscape and community go hand in hand in defining who you are as an individual. Landscape reflects where you came from and where you’re going while community reflects who you are and what you’ll become. Community embraces the past and fosters the future. Craft forms are passed from generation to generation in the spirit of community and commonality. All craft artists work within a tradition. However, every generation seeks to push the boundaries and change the art form in his or her own way. It takes a village to raise a child; it takes a community to nurture a craft. Community is the foundation of knowledge and inspiration. Like all crafts, baking is nothing new. It’s a craft that’s been and will be passed down from one generation to another with the aid of community. Community acts as a time machine granting us access to the pass, present, and future; endowing us the opportunity to intensely understand, appreciate and develop our craft as a baker.

Memory, landscape and community are vital in any craft. It’s what sets apart baking as an art. They’re not literal topics that can be taught and must be acquired through passion. Memory awakens your senses and works with your surrounding landscape to develop your flare. Community brings it all together, boils it down and distributes the luscious drug known as baking that we’re all so passionately addicted too.

Couscous Lunchbox

Couscous is a semolina grain which is very quick and easy to cook, and it makes a pleasant change from rice or pasta.

Ingredients

2 cups of couscous - cooked
a tray of cherry tomatoes - halved
1 cucumber, peeled cut into small dices
1 canned cooked chickpeas
1 lemon - squeeze as much juices (alternatively can use ready-squeeze juices)
1/4 cup olive oil or any vegetable oil
salt and pepper
1/3 cup basilic or corriander
1/3 cup feta cheese - crumbled

Method (Serve 3-4)

1. Cooked the couscous as instructed on the packaging (2 cups via 2 cups of hot boiling water, cover and simmer for 6 minutes).

2. Combine cherry tomatoes, cucumber and chickpeas and mixed well.

3. Add in the lemon juice vegetable oil and seasoning. This part need your adjustment to taste.

4. Toss in gently basil or corriander leaves and feta cheese until evenly dispersed.

5. Serve warm or cold.


This recipe works very well with basilic leaves and feta cheese. It tasted marvellous.

Veggie Omelette

Simplified version from the 'Japanese pizza'.

Ingredients

1/4 head cabbage -finely shredded
1/2 zucchini or courgettes - finely shredded
plain flour
pinches of salt
2 eggs beaten
1 tbsp oil
basil or corriander leaves

Method

1. Combine cabbage, zucchini and basilic leaves, flour and salt in a bowl. Toss until everything is coated with a dusting of flour.

2. Stir in the eggs and mix until all is evenly coated.

3. Heat in pan over medium heat and add a generous splash of oil. scoop the veggie mixture into the pan, and using a metal spoon press it to form a round pancake shape, as flat as u can.

4. Cook for 4-5 minutes or until the bottom is golden. Flip over and add oil if necessary. Press it down again and cook until golden on this side about another 3-5 minutes.

5. Dish up, cut into wedges and enjoy immediately.

Chủ Nhật, 16 tháng 8, 2009

Tomato Soup Pasta

I was flipping through some recipes book for ideas, and this minestrone soup pasta caught me and since i have some similar ingredients..so i given it a try.

Ingredients

1 small canned of tomato puree
2 ripes tomatoes - chopped
1 carrot - diced
a handful of frozen green peas
a few leaves of chinese cabbage - strips
1 canned of sliced button mushrooms
macaroni serving
water, salt and pepper

Method

1. In a pot bring chopped tomatoes, carrots to boil.

2. Add in peas, mushrooms and cabbage strips. Stir in 2 scoops of tomato puree (empty the canned by adding some hot water and pour into the soup pot).

3. Mix well and season to taste.

4. Before serving, put some macaroni in a bowl and ladle tomato soup over it. Serve hot.

Thứ Sáu, 14 tháng 8, 2009

Stir Fry Chayotte shreds

Ingredients

1 chayotte (fou shou gua), skinned and shred
1 carrot - shred
a small handful of black fungus strips -soaked and set aside
2 slices of vegetarian ham - strips
oil salt and pepper
sesame oil

Method

1. Heat pan with saute with some ginger strips till golden.

2. Add in carrot, black fungus and vegetarian ham strips and fry for 2-3 minutes.

3. Toss in the chayotte strips mixed well for 1-2 minutes. Season to taste.

4. Dash in sesame oil and off fire. Serve.

Thứ Năm, 13 tháng 8, 2009

Stir fry 'Hai Long' Strips

'Hai long' is a sea vegetable and from what i know it has high nutrients and vitamins. The product is packed dried and have to soak it before cooking into your favourite dishes. It also have very strong of 'fishy' smell, i normally soaked it with hot water with some salt. Note that a small amount of 'hai long' is enough as it will expand when wet. Rinse about 2-3 times to 'get rid' of the smell..

Ingredients

a small handful of hai long - soaked
1 carrot - shredded
1 tbsp dark soya sauce
fair amount of sesame oil
water
vegetable bouillon
ginger slices

Method

1. Drain and set aside the hai long strips.

2. Heat the pan saute with some ginger slices till golden. Toss in the carrot shreds and fry for 1-2 minutes. Stir in the hai long strips and mixed well.

3. Add in the dark soya sauce, vegetable bouillon and some water. Cover and simmer for 3-5 minutes. Add in water if the sauce gets dry up.

4. Dash in the sesame oil and off fire. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Serve immediately.

Kang Kong Tomyam Soup

My neighbour had a little garden planted with vietnamese kang kong and she gave us a few batches of the vegetables. And i really have some hard time to think what to do with it...because i almost out of ideas with kang kong recipes..So i decided to cook it with tomyam paste, either fry or into soup...up to your choices :)

Ingredients

a bundle of kang kong - pluck the leaves and 'hollow' stalks, discard the hard stalks at the base
a few pieces of dried bean curd or a piece of tofu - diced it
tomyam paste
water


Method

1. Rinse drain and set aside the kang kong vegetable.

2. Bring a pot of water to boil, add in the bean curd pieces.

3. When the water starts to boil again, put in the kang kong vegetables and stir in the tomyam paste (to your taste).

4. Mix well cover and allow to boil. When it bubbles, off fire simmer about 1-2 minutes. Serve hot.

Chủ Nhật, 9 tháng 8, 2009

Vegetarian Quiche

Ingredients
Ready-made pate
spinach
1 canned chopped mushrooms
a handful of black olive -halved
200 ml light cream
1 egg
some pepper
1 packet of shredded cheese

Method
1. Greased a mould, lay ready made pate over it. Spread spinach evenly.



2. Cover with chopped button mushrooms and olive as shown.


3. Mixed egg and cream together with some pepper and pour over.

4. Fold up the pate edges, and sprinkle shredded cheese.

5. Put into a preheated oven and bake for 25 minutes at 210 degrees.


6. Remove and cut into 8 parts. Serve hot.

Set dinner

Out of recipe? Here you go...a simple and sumptous dinner 'a la carte' served with pumpkin-chestnut creamy soup..ingredients at your choice :)

Easy to cook Cabbage

Ingredients
halved cabbage
salt
sesame oil
pepper
sesame seeds

Method
1. Cut and rinse cabbage, drain and marinate it with salt.
2. Stand it for 4 hours. Pour away excess water, rinse drain and set aside.
3. Heat a wok with oil, toss in the cabbage. Stir fried for a few minutes, add sesame oil and pepper.
4. Off fire and allow simmer till ready to serve. Sprinkle with sesame seeds.


Note : Cabbage dish can be served with porridge or rice.

Grass Jelly with barley dessert

Here you go with another creation, using grass jelly with cooked barley..be ready to serve hot or cold as you like..

'Century Egg' Congee

Saw this recipe while glancing my friend's blog recently..and thot it is an idea to create vegetarian style 'century egg' congee...since getting century egg here in oversea is not easy..

Very simple, cooked the congee and add some vegetarian stock bouillon...when ready topped with the cubes grass jelly and avocado...serve immediately..
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