Showing posts with label My Recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Recipe. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2015

Breakfast #2: Pita Bread

I like pita pockets and it has many ways of making into delightful breakfast. I made a pizza on Saturday night.


All I did is just spread tomatoes puree on it, add baby spinach, add grated mozzarella cheese, add cheery tomatoes and some slice of Italian Salami, then bake it in a oven for about 7 minutes.

I also made a sandwich this morning with mix spring salad, ham and smoke duck breast with some mayo and add some feta cheese and cherry tomatoes as a side.


Yum yum, convenient breakfast!

Strawberry Milk Pudding

I like pudding,

But buying from those fancy restaurants or outlets are dame expansive and the amount may be just a little..... so I make them!


Ingredient:
  • 2 Cup of Milk (I use Strawberry milk)
  • 5 Tbsp of Corn Flour
Optional:
  • Sugar (amount up to your sweet tooth. I use none here as the Meji Strawberry are already sweet)
  • Vanilla Extract (I didn't use it here since I am using flavored milk)
  • Blue Berry or any Berry or Nets (I use frozen blue berry here)
Method:
  1. Pour the milk into a pot and add the corn flour into the milk and start stirring until all the corn flour melts into the milk and no lumps present. All these with medium fire and bring it to a boil.
  2. Lower the fire to medium low and continue stirring and stirring  and do not stop for about 5 minutes.
  3. Until the milk is thick enough to be dripping from your spoon in a slightly gluey manner.
  4. Off the fire and pour it into the container using a sift to remove unwanted material or lumps.
  5. Leave it on the table top and let it cool until a temperature that you can put in your fridge for at least 3 hours.
  6. Serve with and berries and nuts!


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Red Hock Chew Wine Residue (Distiller's Grain, by product of Distillation process) 红糟

I am a Chinese, with ancestors from Hock Chew of Hokkien province of China, but born in Singapore. Since young, I very much like the cuisine my mum would cooked up using something what we call 红糟, (Chinese Hanyu Pinyin Hong2 Zao1), translate to English... well... no actually word but a description.

It is actually a distillation by product made from fermenting Chinese glutinous rice, Red Yeast Rice (红麴) and white yeast (the thing you put into the grains to make wine). The result would be wine and also the residue. We, The Hock Chew, uses the residue for many cuisines, one of which is 红糟鸡, chicken cooked in red yeast rice residue.

Here comes the most exciting part, to me :P

The ingredients
  1. 5 whole chicken leg - cut into manageable pieces for eating
  2. 10 sun dried mushroom - soak over night with warm water. Squeeze dry and remove stem
  3. 4 thick sliced of ginger the size of a thumb.
  4. 4 peeled garlic clove - crush or flatten it
  5. 5 tbsp of Hock Chew red yeast rice residue
  6. 5 tbsp of Chinese wine (I use 花雕酒)
  7. 2 tsp of Sesame oil
  8. 1 tbsp of sugar
  9. 1 tbsp of chicken essence powder
  10. Salt and light soya sauce to taste
To add some notes. Red yeast rice residue can be a very tricky ingredient for cooking. It is obtained by fermenting process, where the temperature and weather condition and age affects the taste, the amount and the quality. The product maybe a bit too sweet, too sour or bitter at times. The one I had was made by mom about 1 and a half year ago (maybe I will try to post the process of making it) and it is a little sweet. Most of the time, it is a bit sour and bitter (is that what you normally expect from wine? I am not a wine connoisseur, so I couldn't tell you. My taste is from the memories of eating my mom's creation)

The sugar, salt and light soya sauce listed here is what I use to balance the taste. You should find something that is a little sweet and slightly salted and slightly sour. In the end, it is really up to you. My dad and god-father would pour in almost 2 cups of the wine (花雕酒), well.... guys like it that way I guess...

Process:
1. Heat up your wok and about 4 tbsp of oil. When the oil is hot enough, throw in the 4 piece of ginger.
sautéed the ginger until it turn golden brown and dry.

2. Throw in the garlic, sautéed until aromatic.

3. Pour in the red yeast rice residue, stir-fry the mixture for a few seconds. Do not over fried this as it burns very easily.

4. Throw in the chicken, mix it well so that all the pieces are covered by the mixture.

5. Put in the mushroom. I put it in early as I want it to suck up all the good flavours.

6. At this point, you can put in the chicken powder, sugar, light soya sauce and salt. Taste it after every condiment you put in and see if the taste is suitable for you. Do this over medium fire.

7. If you want more gravy, you can put in some of the water from soaking the mushroom. Doing so, you will have to add in more of the condiments to balance the taste.

8. Simmer over low to medium heat for about 15 minutes.

9. End result. Put in the Chinese wine just before you bowl it. If you don't like too much of the alcohol taste, simmer it further for a minute or so.

The variation I cook this time round is more of a dry-gravy type. If you want the soupy style, just add chicken stock (be careful of the saltiness in commercial ready-pack chicken stock).

Other variations of the dish is using pork belly and bamboo shoots. If so, pork belly must be stir-fry before adding the red yeast rice residue. Mom ever cook duck version before, it's just nicer! Do note that duck version will be more oily as duck contains more fats. Remove it if you must.

Bon appétit!






Wednesday, September 18, 2013

My Hokkien/Hock Chew Style "Giam Ben" (Hokkien, translated to Salty Rice, Flavour Rice)

Mom used to cook this very often when she runs out of idea on what's for Lunch/dinner/supper etc etc. I kind of like this as, to me, it is simply delicious and simple.




Ingredients:
4 Chicken Drum stick
1 Mustard Vegetable 芥菜(Taiwanese would call it 常年菜)
5 Dry mushroom sliced to strip (after soaking in water for 2 hours, squeezed dry)
1 Handful of dried Shrimp (soak in water for 1 hour)
2 cup of rice (washed, soak in mushroom water)
Some minced Garlic
Oyster sauce
Dark soya sauce
Chicken Stock 1 cup



1. Start fire, heated wok with cold oil. Add minced garlic and fried till golden.

2. Add dried shrimp and fried till aroma releases.

3. Add mushroom, stir fry till aroma releases.

4. Add chicken, stir fry till surface shrink a bit. 
Then add a spatule of oyster sauce and mix well.

5. Add mustard vegetable (don't cut it too small). Mixed well.

6. Add 1 cup of chicken stock, 1/2 cup of water. 
Pour in the mushroom water soaked rice. 
Stir well for about 5 minutes. 
Then add a spoon of dark soya sauce. 
Note that this is to add colour, not saltiness, so choose those that is not so salty one.

7. Throw in 2 spoon of deep fried onion and stir well. Then pour the mixture into a steam pan.

8. Steam the mixture for about 30-45 minutes to an hour. 
Try the rice to see if you like the softness every 15 minutes 
so you don't over cook the rice an make it too soft for your liking.

9. I use a round cover, so that steam will cool and roll down the side and not fall into the mixture. 
That would make your mixture too wet. 
I cover with a very wet cloth to condense the steam underneath the cover.

10. End result. Serve with chilly and more deep fried onions and pepper. 
(Chilli is easily make, just grind Garlic, Ginger and Chilly Padi in this proportion, 
1-1-1.5 bowl, add soya sauce to taste. Add lime or lemon to add flavour)

There are a few variations which mom ever cook before.

  1. Change chicken to pork belly
  2. Change Mustard Vegetable to Cabbage (高丽菜)