Foodie
Showing posts with label Veggie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veggie. Show all posts
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Homemade Mushroom Powder
I am always learning new things and if i discover an ingredient or technique which is inexpensive, i would try is out. If it is a good thing, i will certainly share it with all my readers. It has been a rage in the food world a while ago and still is, an important item in the pantry.......
To read further and to know how, click HERE Read More......
Monday, October 27, 2014
Homemade Pickled Mustard Greens aka Kiam Chye/Hum Choy
i have been pickling my own kiam chai/hum choy and it has been very satifying as the taste can be adjusted to your own liking. I am sharing my experience and hope that all who are far away from home and good freshly pickled kiam chai/hum choy is not available.............
To continue to read and find out how to make these click HERE Read More......
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Japanese Style Spinach
This Japanese specialty is know as O-hitashi and is a simple to prepare side dish for chicken or fish, such as salmon or tuna. What i made might not be called O-histashi as i have changed the dressing to my taste. Well, whatever, not only is this recipe simple to prepare, it only needed everyday ingredients, plus water and two very simple, quick cooking techniques - blanching and dry-toasting. Some easy plating tricks, will at the end, result to something that is visually quite stunning, delicious and healthy too.
For recipe and how to click HERE Read More......
Labels:
Asian,
Festivals Dishes,
Japanese,
Side Dish,
Veggie
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
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Armenian Eggplant Spread
Here's an easy roasted eggplant spread which can be a dip, or side dish, or sandwich stuffer or pasta topper, that takes less than ten minutes of work time and can be made in advance. Although the presented dish is a brown mass of suspicious looking stuff, never mind the suspicions, it is awfully delicious no wonder some calls this - Russian Caviar. To me this is more appetizing than the real Mccoy.
For recipe 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
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Yan Yat Yee Sang
Yan Yat Yee Sang - this must sound like a tongue twister, that's how chinese sounds when you do not speak or know how to, Alexander will ask - What did you say? and mumble whatever came out of his mouth. The Chinese Lunar New year is celebrated for 15 days, read about how these 15 days are celebrated. The chinese has their humour in a funny way - 12th day is The Diarrhea Day - ha ha. Today is the seventh day and It is known as "人日" Rénrì in mandarin or Yan Yat in cantonese or Everyone's Birthday, the day when everyone grows one year older. In West Malaysia and Singapore, Yu Sheng/Yee Sang, raw slivers of fish are tossed together with various pickles and vegeatble into a Salad. As they toss the salad, they raise the salad high with their chopsticks and say auspicious words...........
Continue to read HERE Read More......
Labels:
Asian,
Chinese,
Festivals Dishes,
Malaysian,
Party,
Salad,
Singaporean,
Veggie
Monday, July 18, 2011
East Meets West- Zucchini with Pork and Rice Stuffing
This is a guest post from Reese Darragh of The New Art Of Baking. A Malaysian living in the United States, Thank you Reese for coming to my rescue for not posting as often as i used to, you know, it's the summer and so much to do.
The recipe and how to are HERE Read More......
The recipe and how to are HERE Read More......
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Hakka Pestle Tea Rice/Ham Cha Farn/Looi Cha Farn
This dish is from the Chinese migratory Hakka dialect group and is several hundred years old. The Hakkas, especially this sub-group called Ho Poh , have a unique tradition regarding this dish as medicinal, a detox meal which is also reputed to boost metabolism and servet his supersalad, with 7 types of vegetables, on the seventh day of Chinese New Year just like the cantonese tradition of serving Yee Sang which most chinese are accustomed to.
Ham Cha Farn(salty tea), Looi Cha Farn(ground tea) or Thunder Rice, has a lot of variations. The tea used ,be it green or black signifies and determine the flavour and taste of the dish. It is sometimes kept simple by grinding the tea, add salt to taste and hot boiling water, to make a broth. However others may add roasted peanuts, sesame seeds or both together with the tea leaves and herbs like mint, basil, perilla and saw coriander, in the grinding process to make into an almost medicinal tea broth. This alters the flavour of the dish significantly. The taste however, is not for everyone. Some find it enervating and refreshing, others do not like the bitter or strong herbal notes.
The essential ingredients are Farn(Cooked Rice), which can be puffed rice (mee chang) or rice grains fried with garlic and a little oil, prior to cooking and three of the seven ingredients which will determine a good Ham Cha Farn/Looi Cha Farn are dried shrimps, choy poh(preserved radish) and firm tofu. These three are to be sauted and seasoned with sugar and white pepper..
To complement the tea and rice, a wide variety of carefully selected vegetables (including blanched long beans, cabbage, carrots, four-angled beans, chye sim, celery, are used. It should be noted that meat and fish is seldom added to this diah as the the main idea is to eat lots of vegetables, making this dish cheap, hearty , nutritious and a fibre-rich.
Continue for recipe HERE
Read More......
Ham Cha Farn(salty tea), Looi Cha Farn(ground tea) or Thunder Rice, has a lot of variations. The tea used ,be it green or black signifies and determine the flavour and taste of the dish. It is sometimes kept simple by grinding the tea, add salt to taste and hot boiling water, to make a broth. However others may add roasted peanuts, sesame seeds or both together with the tea leaves and herbs like mint, basil, perilla and saw coriander, in the grinding process to make into an almost medicinal tea broth. This alters the flavour of the dish significantly. The taste however, is not for everyone. Some find it enervating and refreshing, others do not like the bitter or strong herbal notes.
The essential ingredients are Farn(Cooked Rice), which can be puffed rice (mee chang) or rice grains fried with garlic and a little oil, prior to cooking and three of the seven ingredients which will determine a good Ham Cha Farn/Looi Cha Farn are dried shrimps, choy poh(preserved radish) and firm tofu. These three are to be sauted and seasoned with sugar and white pepper..
To complement the tea and rice, a wide variety of carefully selected vegetables (including blanched long beans, cabbage, carrots, four-angled beans, chye sim, celery, are used. It should be noted that meat and fish is seldom added to this diah as the the main idea is to eat lots of vegetables, making this dish cheap, hearty , nutritious and a fibre-rich.
Continue for recipe HERE
Read More......
Saturday, August 14, 2010
A Maize-ing Soup
Maize was or is the term used for Corn in the United Kingdom and Ireland and since Malaysia was colonised by the British, maize it was to me for the longest ever, until there came Sweet Corn in the Malaysian markets. I did not realised that Maize and Corn are the same becauce the difference in taste and texture were totally different, the maize was woody, starchy and it took a lot of mouth grinding to finish a cob, while the sweet corn needed no introduction espeicially when we are here in sweet corn Heaven. In Chinese Medicine, corn and celery are used as a stomach tonic, carrot and tomato promote digestion, lastly the humble potato heals inflammations and is used as an energy tonic. With these goodness in a soup, what can go wrong?
Ingredients:
2 ears of fresh corn - cut into 1 1/2 inch slices
3 large tomatoes - quartered
2 stalk celery - cut into 1 inch lengths
2 carrots - peeled and cut into 1 inch lengths
2 potatoes - peeled and cut into halfs
2 lbs pork spareribs/neck bones
Salt to taste
Method:
Serves
Read More......
Ingredients:
2 ears of fresh corn - cut into 1 1/2 inch slices
3 large tomatoes - quartered
2 stalk celery - cut into 1 inch lengths
2 carrots - peeled and cut into 1 inch lengths
2 potatoes - peeled and cut into halfs
2 lbs pork spareribs/neck bones
Salt to taste
Method:
In the pressure cooker, put the pork bones in and enough water to cover the bones. Bring to high boil and let boil until most of the scum is floating on top of the water. Turn off heat and pour the contents through a colander. Wash the bones thoroughly with cold tap water until all scums are removed. Wash the pressure cooker well, removing scum and fat that are stuck to the pot.
Put bones back into the clean pressure cooker and add in the corn, tomatoes and wai san with enough water the cover ingredients. Make sure that the water level is not more than 2/3 full - pressure needs to be built with space. Pressurized for 30 minutes and turn off heat, allowing the soup to continue to cook in the pressure. Remove lid only when the pressure is totally off and add salt to taste. If you are in a hurry for dinner, put pressure cooker under the tap and run the cold water over the lid of the pressure cooker, this should bring the pressure down fast and you can soup on the table as soon as salt is added to taste.
Serves
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Tuesday, June 01, 2010
Garlic Chive Omelette
Garlic Chives aka Chinese Chives is the first green that will be on the ground after the long winter and it is a very welcome sight. It is a very forgiving plant which does not need much attention and a tiny patch of it, is suffice for many meals through the summer. This omelette is one of recipes using this garlic chives.
Here are some nutritional information: they are rich in vitamin C. Chives leaves are a good source of fiber, potassium, and vitamin A. Garlic chives is high in carotene, thiamine, and riboflavin. Garlic chives is also rich in minerals, especially calcium and iron.was used in traditional folk medicine to treat intestinal parasites, enhance the immune system, stimulate digestion, and treat anemia. It has long been used to treat fatigue, help control excessive bleeding, and as an antidote for ingested poisons. The leaves and bulbs are applied to insect bites, cuts, and wounds, while the seeds are used to treat kidney, liver, and digestive system problems.
This vegetable saved my life - when i was 2 or 3 years old, i was having a metal whisle in my mouth while i was having my bath, the whisle was tiny, like the pepermint candy which has a hole in the middle. As soon as my mom lay me down on to the towel, oops - i swallowed the whisle. I had to go to the doctor right away and was told that the only thing to do was to wait - yes, wait for it to come out the other end. The most important thing was not to allow the whisle to get rusty and to do so, i have to drown in alot of cod liver oil and eat as much of this garlic chives as possible. The whisle did come out, vegetable and all.
Ingredients:
2 cups of garlic chives - chopped
4 large eggs
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp white pepper
oil for frying
Method:
Beat eggs with salt and pepper.
Add in the chopped chives.
Heat 2 tbsp oil in a frying pan and pour in all the egg mixture to make a large omelette or fry it by spoonful into tiny patties.
Serve warm with white rice..
Read More......
Here are some nutritional information: they are rich in vitamin C. Chives leaves are a good source of fiber, potassium, and vitamin A. Garlic chives is high in carotene, thiamine, and riboflavin. Garlic chives is also rich in minerals, especially calcium and iron.was used in traditional folk medicine to treat intestinal parasites, enhance the immune system, stimulate digestion, and treat anemia. It has long been used to treat fatigue, help control excessive bleeding, and as an antidote for ingested poisons. The leaves and bulbs are applied to insect bites, cuts, and wounds, while the seeds are used to treat kidney, liver, and digestive system problems.
This vegetable saved my life - when i was 2 or 3 years old, i was having a metal whisle in my mouth while i was having my bath, the whisle was tiny, like the pepermint candy which has a hole in the middle. As soon as my mom lay me down on to the towel, oops - i swallowed the whisle. I had to go to the doctor right away and was told that the only thing to do was to wait - yes, wait for it to come out the other end. The most important thing was not to allow the whisle to get rusty and to do so, i have to drown in alot of cod liver oil and eat as much of this garlic chives as possible. The whisle did come out, vegetable and all.
Ingredients:
2 cups of garlic chives - chopped
4 large eggs
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp white pepper
oil for frying
Method:
Beat eggs with salt and pepper.
Add in the chopped chives.
Heat 2 tbsp oil in a frying pan and pour in all the egg mixture to make a large omelette or fry it by spoonful into tiny patties.
Serve warm with white rice..
Read More......
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Cilantro Oil
Like i have said in my previous post on Cilantro Pesto, i came to like cilantro and use lots of it, adding it to lots of dishes especially soups. When you have more than you need of fresh cilantro and before they die on you, besides making Cilantro Pesto, the next best option is to turn it into a infused oil,. It is not quite the real thing, it is less pungent but it is there in your refrigerator, to put on almost anything - noodles, rice etc.
Ingredients:
250 ml (1 cup) vegetable oil or olive oil
2 bunches of fresh Cilantro
Method:
.Drop the cilantro into boiling water for a few seconds and refresh in ice water.
.Squeeze the blanched cilantro dry.
.In a high speed blender/food processor, blend the oil and cilantro together for 30 seconds, strain it through a cheesecloth.
Serves
Read More......
Ingredients:
250 ml (1 cup) vegetable oil or olive oil
2 bunches of fresh Cilantro
Method:
.Drop the cilantro into boiling water for a few seconds and refresh in ice water.
.Squeeze the blanched cilantro dry.
.In a high speed blender/food processor, blend the oil and cilantro together for 30 seconds, strain it through a cheesecloth.
Serves
Read More......
Monday, March 08, 2010
Cilantro Pesto
I have a hate-love relationship with this herb - Cilantro. I used to hate this raw green leaf that sat side by side, closely clustered together with shredded green onions, like a couple who are in love and they were or still are, sitting on top of all dishes served in the restaurants. At home, it was a different story, garnishes like these two never appear with our meals, cos we had to be frugal and garnishes were luxury, perhaps that was why i hated garnishes, not because it did not taste good, it was because i have not eaten enough to like them. Now, it is a different story, i don't know when i started to like these garnishes but i really love them. Cilantro can be very expensive especially during the Chinese New Year Celebration in Malaysia but strangely and luckily, it is pretty cheap here. The problem arises when it is cheap, i will buy a few bunches and cilantro don't keep so well and knowing this fact, have to find ways to use/cook them before they wilt. Making pesto is one of the ways and pesto keeps well in the freezer until you need to use it.
Ingredients:
2 cups, packed, of cilantro, large stems removed
1/2 cup blanched almonds
1/4 cup chopped red onion
1/2 teaspoon chopped and seeded serrano chile(optional)
1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/4 cup olive oil
Method
In a food processor, pulse the cilantro, almonds, onion, chile(if using), and salt until well blended. With the food processor running, slowly add the olive oil in a steady stream.
Add more oil as needed for your use.
Makes about 1 cup.
Serves
Read More......
Ingredients:
2 cups, packed, of cilantro, large stems removed
1/2 cup blanched almonds
1/4 cup chopped red onion
1/2 teaspoon chopped and seeded serrano chile(optional)
1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/4 cup olive oil
Method
In a food processor, pulse the cilantro, almonds, onion, chile(if using), and salt until well blended. With the food processor running, slowly add the olive oil in a steady stream.
Add more oil as needed for your use.
Makes about 1 cup.
Serves
Read More......
Friday, February 19, 2010
Taro Crunch
When i was shredding taro for Yee Sang, i remembered this snack. I shredded more taro and made this forgotten snack which was so crunchy. The taro is sometimes called the "potato" of the humid tropics and indeed it is - a good taro will be fluffy in texture just like the potato. Taro is quite costly and choosing a good one which will be fluffy is crucial to your pocket and the dish you will be preparing. For a good fluffy taro, choose one that is shaped like a vase - narrow on the top and bottom, wide in the middle and it has to be as smooth as possible - no bumps or knotches. Bumps mean that the taro has been constricted from growing well and that it has been grown in muddy soil. Taro grown in sandy soil, grows well and will be fluffy. I have given up buying taro with skin on and have been buying peeled ones, although peeled ones are very much more expensive, at least i can see that the taro will be fluffy and not rotten.
Taro is so versatile and there are endless recipes which are classics, below are some of the tested recipes -
Woo Tau Koh
Taro fatt koh
Woo Tau Kow Yoke
Woo kok
Taro Shredds
Taro and black-eyed pea cake
Taro fragrant rice
Sueen poon cheeBubur Cha Cha
Fried Nin Ko
There are many more recipes that i would like to try - like Or Nee, Taro Cake, Taro Filling for mooncake and many more.
Ingredients:
1 lb shredded taro
1 cup roasted peanuts - chopped
½ cup sesame seeds
3 - 5 tbsp rice flour
1/2 tsp 5 spice powder
1 tsp salt.
Water to bind
Method:
Mix all the ingredients, followed by a little water to bind ingredients.
Heat oil for deep frying and when oil is 350f, using the chopstick, pick up a little taro shreds and deep fry till golden brown and crispy.
Drain well and let cool before storing.
Serves
Read More......
Taro is so versatile and there are endless recipes which are classics, below are some of the tested recipes -
Woo Tau Koh
Taro fatt koh
Woo Tau Kow Yoke
Woo kok
Taro Shredds
Taro and black-eyed pea cake
Taro fragrant rice
Sueen poon cheeBubur Cha Cha
Fried Nin Ko
There are many more recipes that i would like to try - like Or Nee, Taro Cake, Taro Filling for mooncake and many more.
Ingredients:
1 lb shredded taro
1 cup roasted peanuts - chopped
½ cup sesame seeds
3 - 5 tbsp rice flour
1/2 tsp 5 spice powder
1 tsp salt.
Water to bind
Method:
Mix all the ingredients, followed by a little water to bind ingredients.
Heat oil for deep frying and when oil is 350f, using the chopstick, pick up a little taro shreds and deep fry till golden brown and crispy.
Drain well and let cool before storing.
Serves
Read More......
Labels:
Asian,
Chinese,
Festivals Dishes,
Kuih Muih,
Malaysian,
Snacks,
vegetarian,
Veggie
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Mock Shark Fin's Omelette
It has been such a long time that i have attended a chinese wedding dinner - an eight course one. The most memorable will be this first dish which was supposed to be an appetizer - The Four Seasons. It was the most welcome platter cos, malaysian guests were noted for never being on-time, so can you imagine how hungry everyone must be. There were four types severed on a lovely garnished huge plate and i did not really cared which represented which season but this omelette was more often than not, will be one of them but it was cooked with Shark Fins. Here, i have fried my omelette with bean sprouts instead - not because i am turning 'green' cos i don't have Shark Fins - who has???
1 cup crab meat - mix with 1 tbsp shaoxing wine and steam for 3 minutes.
1 cup bean sprouts - heads and tails removed
3 large eggs
salt and pepper to taste
oil for frying
chopped spring onions/cilantro for garnishing
Iceberg lettuce (optional)
Method:
Beat eggs with salt and pepper.
Add in the crab meat and bean sprouts.
Heat up oil and when oil is shimmering, add in the egg mixture and stir. Continue to stir until egg is cooked and set.
Dish out and serve hot.
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