Aug
7
2005
Wholemeal pikelets

These pikelets are very filling, and a little dry. Be careful not to overcook them, and they are too dry to eat with maple syrup. Instead use freshly squeezed lemon juice and raw turbinado sugar (or just plain white sugar).

Wholemeal Pikelets Small

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Jul
31
2005
IMBB 17: Tea!

Bak Kut Teh-4
I have a confession to make - I love food and I love to cook, but I’m sadly deficient when it comes to cooking Chinese food. I never really learned to cook while growing up. I only really started taking an interest in cooking in Junior year at NYU. So you see, I’ve only ever cooked real food in the US.

So while I have tons of experience cooking Italian, American, even a little basic French food for masses of people, I have very little experience cooking the good, Southeast Asian Chinese food I grew up eating. I’ve been trying to rectify that situation this year. Last month, I cooked Tau Yu Bak (Pork braised in soy sauce) and Lotus Root Soup as baby steps. I cobbled together recipes for both by combining a number of recipes I found online, and to my surprise, both dishes turned out well. Even some of my more culinarily adventurous New York friends liked these two dishes.

When I saw that Clement was hosting the 17th edition of “Is My Blog Burning?” and that the theme would be tea, I knew what I wanted to make. Bak Kut Teh (literally translated: meat bone tea). I love Bak Kut Teh, and while it’s a dish better served during the winter months, I felt I could make an exception.

Imagine my chagrin when I found out that Bak Kut Teh was called a tea, but didn’t actually have tea as an ingredient. Not to be thwarted, I decided to cook it any way - and to accompany it with some Chinese tea eggs for good measure.

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Jan
31
2005
Cookies for Home

I’ve settled on my cookies that I’m making to bring home to Singapore with me:

  1. Oatmeal Raisin Cookies (my personal favorites)
  2. White Chocolate and Macadamia Nuts
  3. Gingersnaps
  4. Madras Cookies (the recipe intrigues me - it calls for curry powder and almonds)
  5. Peanut Butter Balls (they look like truffles, but with peanut butter inside, and a chocolate coating and crushed peanuts outside)
  6. Giant Glazed Lemon Cookies
  7. Cheese Cracklies
  8. Deep Dark Frosted Brownies
  9. Rich Chocolate Truffles (not technically a cookie, but I love chocolate truffles. I also got some quality Guittard bittersweet to make truffles with)

Yum…


Jan
14
2005
Pink and Green Cupcakes!

What’s this?* A box of cupcakes? Yes!

Cupcake Box

I’ve been wanting to make cupcakes for a while now. Last week I nearly made cupcakes for Maggie’s birthday celebration, but ran out of time and brought unfrosted cupcakes (aka muffins) to her party instead. However, this week, I made real cupcakes! Food color in the frosting and all!

Pink Cupcake-1

Look at my little pink cupcake. Ain’t she cute?

I will post the recipe tomorrow.

*Strange thing - I had to struggle for a few seconds after typing “What’s this?” because my fingers desperately wanted to follow it up with “A ranger, caught off his guard?”


Nov
21
2004
Thanksgiving: an excuse for food

One of the weird things about being a non-American in America is the Thanksgiving dilemma - to celebrate or not to celebrate? It’s a very American holiday, the most obvious Singaporean analog being our Chinese New Year’s Eve, when families do their utmost to get together and have dinner. It’s the big “reunion dinner” holiday for Americans, especially since it’s not tied to a particular religion, like Christmas or Hanukkah, but instead is a completely valid holiday for everyone who considers themselves “American” to celebrate. I definitely do not consider myself American, and thus, logically, there’s not really a point to celebrating Thanksgiving for me.

However, Adan is most definitely American, and as such, would really enjoy a large meal with friends or family. Plus, I really enjoy cooking for people. I like cooking in general, and I like feeding people. Latent maternal instincts, or some such. So two years ago, ET and I came up with the idea of having a post-Thanksgiving dinner for our friends. This would allow me to feed a large number of people, have a happy get-together dinner while allowing our friends to have dinner with their actual families on Thanksgiving day, and for ET, she’d get to have not one, but two turkeys a year. The girl really likes her turkeys. Don’t get between ET and her turkey. She’d quite happily run you over for some leftover turkey. It’s a bit like Nina and fried chicken. Do you really want to take your life into your hands like that?

Our post-Thanksgiving food fest (PTFF) this year turned into a bit of a fiasco.

First, have I ever told you about my living/dining room chairs? When we first moved into this apartment, we had about 6 living/dining room chairs, and that was almost enough for everyone when we had people over. We still had to drag our computer chairs out into the living room from time to time, but our 6 chairs were almost enough. But then more people started coming over. It’s basically been a game of catch-up since then. Every time we think we have enough seating in this apartment, something else happens to expand our group (someone gets a girlfriend/boyfriend, someone brings over another friend who becomes part of the circle, someone comes back from Japan, etc, etc). I don’t think we’re meant to ever have enough chairs. It’s just one of those things.

We’re up to 8 chairs and a 3-seater sofa in the living/dining room, with our two computer chairs as backup, and that’s been working out pretty well. I guess I should have seen it coming, then, when I invited 20 people over for the PTFF. I invited a similar number last year, and about half of the invitees couldn’t make it, which is what I figured would happen this year. Boy, was I wrong.

On Thursday, I realized that since most of our bunch replied affirmatively (I guess the food was good last year :)) and because Adan invited a few people from work, our confirmed guest list was up to 22 people. I began to have a meltdown. I only had enough seating for half of these people, and I really didn’t think a 30 lb turkey would fit in my oven, not to mention, it would take about 8 hours to cook. Aieee!!

Two days of stressing and some invitation juggling later, we came to a reasonable solution. We’d have two PTFFs. One on Saturday for people in our immediate circle (14 people), and one on Sunday for people from Adan’s work (10 people - he owes me big for making this happen).

That said, the menu for both nights will be very similar, just scaled appropriately for the number of attendees, and is this:

- Roast turkey (duh.)
- Cranberry-orange sauce (fresh cranberries with orange juice, zest, and a dash of Cointreau)
- Stuffing with apple, chestnuts, and bacon
- Garlic mashed potato gratin
- Roasted sweet potatoes
- Cornbread
- Sauteed spinach with garlic
- Caramelized shallots
- Stuffed mushrooms (breading, herbs, cheese)
- Fresh tomato salad with red onion
- Cheese course consisting of Prima Donna, a sharp cheddar (for the less adventurous), and a smooth triple-creme Pierre Robert. Served with crackers and good bread.
- Cheesecake
- Triple chocolate cake (blackout cake)

As you can see, I really like to feed people. And when I feed people, I FEED PEOPLE. Of course, everything will be made from scratch, because I’m crazy like that.

This should be fun :) Stressful, but fun.

Listening to: This Years Love by David Gray


Jan 6, 2009

» Jennifer 8. Lee hunts for General Tso | Video on TED.com
This video was kind of all sorts of awesome.

Jan 1, 2009

» Eggnog Ice Cream Recipe | Simply Recipes

Dec 26, 2008

» Closet Cooking: Kabocha no Nimono
Simmered Kabocha