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Thursday, November 10, 2011

Ensaymada madness

I couldn't stop myself, just had to take a pic before everything disappears in 2 minutes... flat!

Almost everyone I know has a bucket list, things they want to do  before they go.  I, too, have a growing foodie bucket list, made up of mostly, what else, food to cook or bake. ;)

Ever since I finally baked a successful pandesal, I couldn't stop thinking of making another go at baking an edible ensaymada.  I've tried it twice, both times it turned hard as rocks and this isn't an exaggeration. Even my dogs wouldn't touch it!

Anyway, I was on a look out for a recipe.  I probably have 5 different  ensaymada recipes from different sources languishing in the recipe box but I wanted to try a new one so I searched yummy.ph and found this: Patty Loanzon's Cheesy Ensaymada http://www.yummy.ph/recipe/Cheesy-Ensaymada . Looks easy enough but yikes! 4 hours wait to proof! This is gonna be a looonnnggg day. 

Since this was a spur-of-the-moment baking, I have to make do with the ingredients on hand.  Everything checked except queso de bola.  Raiding the ref, I found some leftover blue cheese, Pecorino romano, and a pack of cheezy spread.  Though blue cheese might be an interesting choice, it had to be the Pecorino since I needed my family or the dogs to finish this lot in case it doesn't turn out well. Haha.

After resting the dough for 1 1/2 hours and rolling it into a swirl, it's ready for 4 hours of proofing.  Time for some early Christmas shopping!

With everything set, I turned on my trusty Kitchen aide and kneaded it using the dough hook attachment.  I'm sure manually kneading it is possible but after my failed attempts using hand-kneaded ensaymada, I'm not gonna risk this one, so I let the dough hook do its job.

After four hours and a failed shopping trip, all puffed up and almost ready for the oven.

I made some minor revisions to the recipe.  To get a more buttery and a stronger cheese flavor, I used pecorino romano instead of processed cheese in the dough and added an extra 1/2 c of butter to the dough.  Also, I kneaded it an extra 5 minutes since the dough wasn't elastic enough after 5. Lastly, I made a sponge composed of the yeast, a bit of flour, honey and water and allowed this to rise a bit before adding it to the rest of the dough ingredients.

And here they are!   

 Finished Pecorino romano ensaymada.  Buttery and soft just the way I like!  

The pecorino and butter sent heavenly aromas from the oven, beckoning the hungry to try the large buns even while scorchingly hot.  I couldn't stop myself, I had to know if at last I made an edible ensaymada.   Even without the topping, I bit into it.  It yielded.  I was excited.  It was soft, buttery and melt-in-the-mouth. FINALLY, an ensaymada recipe worth keeping.


Sunday, November 6, 2011

First time Ibos!

Sorry haven’t been posting.  It has been a busy month for me and just had a breather before another long weekend.  


I’ve finally got a short vacay outside the Metro. Actually, I had a quick visit to the family’s roots in Mindanao.  If you’ve been there, its actually a bucolic seaside town with amazing views of endless rice fields. But any vacay wouldn’t be complete without some foodie pursuits, right?
Ricefields abound around Misamis Occ.

Aren’t you sometimes awed at how a humble seed from no less than a weed can be transformed into so many delectable possibilities?  I’m particularly talking about rice, which could be the staple we know, a kind of porridge, a sauce thickener, a main dish (I’m thinking risotto and paella), a snack item, even a dessert!  I sometimes feel guilty of being able to easily bake a passable chiffon or a chocolate cake and yet clueless on how to make native snacks such as biko or suman.  It has been on my to-do list for so long, so on this vacay, I asked my cousins if they could find me someone who’ll be willing to show me how wrap our native rice-based delicacy called Ibos.  Thankfully, the retired family cook was only too willing to teach me how.

Manong Ipit thinning some of the coconut leaf ribs to make it easier to use as a wrap.

Why Ibos? Because I really love how this one tastes. Unlike similarly wrapped rice delicacy found here in Manila, this one is slightly sweet, with a hint of anise and a heavenly smoky taste that you get from cooking the filling in an open wood fire.  And don’t forget the leafy undertones which it gets from wrapping and boiling this in young coconut leaves.  It’s the perfect breakfast, midday or afternoon snack with sikwate (native chocolate drink) or naturally ripened mangoes. 

Cooking the ibos filling in open fire just like in the olden days.  Frankly, I think this infuses the filling with some complex smoky flavors which makes it extra special.


Just thinking about it makes me wish I still had my BH (what they call the “pasalubong” there) stash in the freezer but alas, it was gone in a flash.  Blame it on the shrinking baggage allowance which will never be enough if you want a month’s supply of ibos in the freezer. Haha! :)

Only the young coconut leaves are used since its more pliable

It didn't take long before I realized this thing needs quite a BIT of patience to wrap! But as I hit my 5th one, it became a LOT easier.  Practice does makes perfect, so BRING IT ON! ;)  Between the four of us, we were able to make around 75 pieces of oddly shaped ibos.  Good thing, quality control doesn't apply to first timers.

It's kinda hard to describe how to wrap it.  You can look at this  blog for some direction http://unofficialcook.com/recipes/suman-sa-ibos/.    I'm attaching, though, the recipe for the filling which you have to cook in a heavy pot on an open wood fire or stove top with continuous stirring until it is almost half-done then wrapped while hot.  Since the filling is still undercooked, the ibos should be arranged standing in a covered heavy bottomed pot half-submerged in water and boiled until done.

The newly wrapped ibos before it was boiled in water.  Looks good, right?

Ibos, just the way I like

2 1/2 kilos glutinous rice
milk from 6 mature coconuts
sugar to taste (according to the cook, its 1 salmon can full, ok so where do I get an empty can of salmon if I don't eat it? Haha )
2 Tbsp salt (I'm not too sure if this pertains to iodized or rock salt so, don't add everything all at once.)
1 Tbsp anise or less if preferred, pounded with a bit of water
Water with the same volume as the 2 1/2 kilos of rice   

 The finished product, our breakfast the following day :) Together with some hot cocoa, there couldn't be a more perfect combo to start the day than this!

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Couldn't get more sinful than this, Sinfully






When was the last time you entered a store and wouldn't want to leave it, ever?  This is probably the reason why Sinfully, the offsite branch of the Makati Shangrila patisserie didn't provide dine-in facilities in their store.  No one would wanna leave.  




Whoever thought of putting the chocolatier and all the chocolates in front of the store, in full view of the malling public is a genius!  The chocolates, I swear, called out to me to come into the store and buy them all.  Haha.  




We looked at everything and couldn't decided which ones to try.  If only I could take all of them home. *Sigh*.  So finally we decided to skip the chocolates and tried two mini cakes instead, Desire and Endless Summer (I think that's what its called) and tried to find a bench where we can vent out all out ooohhhhs and aaaaahhhhhs.


                                               Desire at its finest

                   Endless Summer

Between the two, we both agreed we loved Desire more.   Its layers perfectly blend and compliment to make each forkful a perfect bite.  The chocolate sponge bottom supports a layer which reminds you of a Ferrero rocher chocolate piece, topped by a thick rich caramel layer and finished with a dark chocolate mousse, all enrobed in a thin and shiny dark chocolate icing and topped with exotic fruits such as a physalis (my current obsession), a bunch of cranberries and a strawberry holding a blueberry. Miraculously, even with all these, the cake wasn't cloyingly sweet.  Definitely a piece of heaven on earth!

No doubt about it, I'm coming back for the chocolates but for now, I'll just dream and drool.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Pork Ribs with Tomato Sauce

I have shelves full of cookbooks, some given, some bought while others inherited.  I still add a few more titles each year whenever one piques my interest but it seems I always bring down the same titles whenever I want to try a new dish.  

And every time I feel like cooking Chinese, my hands just automatically reaches for this book "The Technique of Chinese Cooking", a 36 year old book I inherited from my Nanay (Mom).  I may have several books, all teaching how to cook a variety of Chinese dishes but this one seems to be the most authentic (I think I saw a peking duck recipe there which starts with teaching you how to kill the duck.. haha).  But since it was made in Taiwan, the translation could sometimes be off, fortunately the gist can be understood anyway. 

Today, I wanted to eat pork.. period.  Its been awhile since I cooked anything with pork but I didn't want to go out anymore to buy ingredients so I had to make do with what was inside the freezer and cabinets.  Fortunately, there was a pack of pork ribs.  Yey!  This is definitely my day.  



I searched the book for a simple pork rib recipe and found this.  Easy peasy.  I didn't have celery in the crisper so I omitted it,  added more sugar to the sauce and replaced hot soy sauce (didn't have this ingredient) with soy sauce and chili powder. So worth to try, definitely finger-licking good. (Sorry Col.Sanders, this one really is) :)



Pork Ribs with Tomato Sauce (Cantonese dish)

Ingredients:

1/2 k pork ribs, sliced about 2 in long and 3/4 in wide)

Marinate
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 tsp salt
1/8 tsp MSG (omit if you want)
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp sesame oil
1/8 tsp black pepper
1/2 Tbsp soy sauce (I used Kikkoman All Purpose soysauce)
2 tsp Shaoxing cooking wine
1/4 tsp meat tenderizer
1 pc celery (I omitted this since I didn't have it at home)


Glaze
2 Tbsp soy sauce 
1/8 tsp chili powder
1 1/2 Tbsp tomato catchup
2 tsp sugar

Other ingredients
oil for deep frying
parsley for garnishing

1. Mix all the ingredients of the marinade.  Massage onto pork and let it stand for an hour or two.

2. Combine all the ingredients for the glaze.  Set aside.

3. After marinating, deep-fry pork ribs in very hot oil until crispy.

4. Boil the glaze mix, drop in pork ribs and mix evenly.  Garnish with parsley.
  

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Cravings part 2: Mocha Chiffon Crunch with Caramel Buttercream frosting

Another rainy day crazy craving: sweets!

Don't you just have them, too?  But since there was an extended blackout, I just had to console myself with fruits but it wasn't working.  I still want a fluffy, really sweet cake to satiate my cravings.  Though it could be done, the thought of hand beating eggwhites until stiff was out of the question. I just had to wait  until I could use my trusty mixer.


After a few boring hours, at last its back! Hurray! I was still mentally debating what to bake until finally deciding to make a mocha chiffon.  I tried to use brewed Barako (a coffee variety native here) but the taste was too subtle, I had to add in powdered instant coffee.   Wasn't able to decorate this last night so I iced this the following day. I thought of doing some fancy shamanzy icing but its a work day so had to contend with caramel buttercream.  I still had leftover orange flavored whipped cream and caramelized sugar with cashews from last weekend's project so I just incorporated it into this cake project.  How can anyone go wrong with chiffon, coffee and caramel? :)



Mocha Chiffon Crunch with Caramel Buttercream frosting
 
Cake (from a Heny Sison cake class I attended with some changes)
1 1/4 cups cake flour, sifted
1 tablespoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup sugar
1/2 c vegetable oil (I used coconut oil for this)
1 tablespoon instant coffee dissolved in 3/4 c water
7 egg yolks
1 c egg whites
1/2 c sugar
1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar


1. Preheat to 325F
2. Grease or line with wax paper two 9 1/2 inch round pans
3. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and 1 cup water.  Add the oil, egg yolks and water with coffee.  Blend until incorporated.
4. In a separate bowl, beat egg whites, cream of tartar and the 1/2 c sugar.  Beat until stiff.
5. Fold in the egg yold mixture into the eggwhites.  Pour into prepared pans and bake.
6. Bake for 30-45 mins or until done.



Caramel Buttercream frosting
25 g Water
185 g White sugar

50 g Water
35 g Whipping Cream
5 g Coffee Extract


1 egg yolk
300 g butter, softened


1.  Cook the 25 g water and white sugar to caramel stage (when the mixture turns golden brown, you can take it off the heat).
2.  Let it cool to 120 deg C and add the 50 g water and cream.  Be careful, it will produce steam.
3.  Add in the coffee extract.
4. Whip the egg yolk until light yellow in color then add in the caramel mixture.  Cool this to 30 deg C.
5. Whip in a third of the butter.  When this has been mixed, whip in the rest of the butter.

Cashew Crunch
1. Melt about 3/4 c of sugar to light golden brown and pour it into a silicon-lined baking pan. (You have to be careful when handling hot sugar, sugar burns are nasty ).
2. Tilt the pan from side to side to spread it more thinly then sprinkle about 1/4 c of cashew.  When cool, chop it into small pieces. 

To assemble:
1. Cut each cake rounds into two.  Spread a thin layer of the icing on each of the layers.
2.  Cover the whole cake with more of the icing.  If you want, you can also whip some whipping cream with a bit of sugar and pipe mounds on top of cake.  
3. As a finishing touch, sprinkle some of the cashew crunch.
 

Cravings on a Dreary, Rainy Day

There was a typhoon and didn't even know it was signal no.2 already.  So, I drove to the office but came home after a few hours when I realized that 1) no one came to the office except one and 2) I might get stranded if I stay until 6pm.  

So, I came home unexpectedly to a dark house (no electricity) and no lunch set on the table.  Ok, no biggie.  I just have to whip up something that's using ingredients already in the house in 15 mins or less.  

Then I remembered my little piece of heaven in a bottle, my forgotten white truffle oil. Everything seems to taste better with a drop, really. What can I say, its culinary magic.




So, I started cooking the pasta and while this was boiling in the pot, I began making my version of Alfredo sauce. In less than 15 minutes, both pasta and sauce were ready.  I added a few pieces of Spanish sardines and a sprinkle of parmesan cheese on top and once again, I was in truffle heaven :)




While still waiting for the electricity to come back and nothing to do but wait for the weather to improve, I styled and shot this using two plates.  Which do you think looked better?  :)


Spanish Sardine Spaghetti in White Truffle Sauce

Approximately 5 pieces Spanish sardines in oil (you can keep it whole or break it into chunks)

200 g spaghetti, cooked as directed

8 cloves of garlic, pounded 
3 slices of bacon, cut 1 inch thick

1 Tbsp of butter

4 pieces of fresh shitake mushrooms(leftovers from last weekend), sliced into slivers

1 Nestle All Purpose cream

1 Nestle heavy cream can

1/4 c water

1/4 tsp of white or black pepper

1 pc of laurel leaf

1/8 tsp of nutmeg

iodized salt to taste

Parmesan cheese, grated 

1/4 tsp white truffle oil (I used Sabatino Tartufi)

1. Cook bacon until crisp. Lower the heat then add the butter and garlic.  Fry till fragrant.

2. Add in the shitake and saute for about 2 minutes.

3. Add both creams, 1/4 c water and the rest of the ingredients except parmesan and truffle oil.  Cook until thickened, about 5 minutes.  Remove from fire.  Add drops of truffle oil.

4. To assemble, top some of the cooked spaghetti with the pasta sauce and spanish sardines.  To finish, generously sprinkle with parmesan.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The long awaited Pizza post

Its been a few months since I tried making pizza but let me write this lest I forget how I did it.

After my pizza failures, i tried making it 3 more times, talk about persistence, right? After my no-knead pizza failure, I began looking for another pizza crust recipe and found this by Heny Sison: http://www.yummy.ph/recipe/Pizza-Dough.  Seems easy enough.  

I used the bottom of a large clay pot to serve as my pizza stone since I didn't have one and I read somewhere that you can use clay tiles instead.  What I forgot to do, though, is preheat the pizza stone before topping the pizza with the sauce and dried meats.  Huge mistake!  Even after baking the pizza for 20 minutes, the middle part was really soggy that it fell apart when served.  Yikes!  I knew I had to repeat this the following week, I just can't let it defeat me, right? 


So, on with pizza 3 and 4. From previous pizza attempts I made the following adjustments:


1. Preheated the oven at 425- 450F.  (The recipe didn't set a time)
2. Preheated the pizza stone in the oven for 10 minutes before baking the crust on it.
3. Sprinkled some flour on the pizza stone if the crust is kinda moist.  This prevents the crust from sticking.
4. Parbaked the crust for 5 minutes in a preheated oven before smothering it with sauce and toppings.
5. Baked the pizza with the toppings for another 10 to 12 minutes.  Do not overbake.  
6. Spread some butter or oil to the crust before spreading the pizza sauce.  It makes the crust less prone to sogginess.
7. Used a different flour. For some reason, this pizza flour seems to work. Found it in a supermarket but I'm sure our usual all purpose flour will work too.




And here it is, after 4 tries, my thin crust pizza! 
I used the same tomato paste-based pizza sauce as in my earlier post, topped it with sliced bell peppers, mozzarella, basil leaves, canned mushrooms and sliced salame picante.  I made another pizza with the same toppings except I replaced the salame with slivers of bottled spanish sardine, a more healthy version but nonetheless flavorful.  Can't wait to try that one again.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Pino Resto Bar


When you drove for 2 hours a 25 km stretch, ok I might be exaggerating, it might be 30 km, you just wanna lie in and sleep off the stress the following day.  But the family hasn't been going out lately, so we decided to have a Sunday lunch out.  It was choice between Romulo Cafe somewhere near Timog or Pino Resto Bar in UP Village, both we haven't tried and both within the vicinity.  We chose Pino since it was nearer and it was already 12 by the time we got out. 


Pino is one of the new restos that has opened within the UP Village that I've read a lot of good things about.  But since everyone has his own preferences and food tastes, I'd rather try it then form my own impressions about the resto and food.  

Pino is kinda unique as it has a vegetarian sister resto, Pipino just above it plus the place turns into a cooking school in other days.  Dining at the ground floor, you can enjoy the best of both restos since you can order from both the Pipino and Pino menus but this doesn't apply to Pipino. Since I'm not so ready to go vegetarian (how can I let go of lechon??), it has to be Pino.

The menu was a mix of fusion and traditional.  To get a taste of their starters, we ordered their Pino-ka Platter 1 made up of their Pork and Shrimp Lemongrass, Skewers, Nori Cheese Sticks, Pino Fries, Crispy Calamares, Chicken Lollipop.  Good presentation, loved the pork and shrimp lemongrass.  




I would have preferred to have it as a Vietnamese wrap though, and was looking at the lettuce leaves from our Fried Kesong Puti Salad with Mango Vinaigrette but the leaves were  vinaigrette coated.  Too messy and too sweet to use.  Maybe next time.

Fried Kesong Puti Salad with Mango Vinaigrette

Tatay (my Dad) wanted the Pininyahang baby-back ribs but they were out that day so we decided to just try the Kalderetang Lengua and the Bagnet and Tofu Stack-O with Mushroom Rice.  From Pipino, we tried the Soba noodles with soy mirin sauce and the Vegetable curry with couscous.
Cold Soba Buckwheat Noodles with Mango Salsa, Crispy Tofu and Soy-Mirin
the Bagnet and Tofu Stack-O with Mushroom Rice, my fave

The Lengua was perfectly tenderized but I'm not too sure if I like their Kaldereta sauce but the Bagnet was spot-on.  It was perfectly seasoned and cooked till crisp.  I was honestly thinking why it was paired with tofu (could it be to lessen the guilt??) but presentation-wise, it was perfect.  The Cold Soba Buckwheat Noodles with Mango Salsa, Crispy Tofu and Soy-Mirin was your usual Japanese buckwheat noodle dish with a mango salsa twist. I wasn't too keen on the Vegetable curry with couscous, though.  The curry tasted of Japanese kare which I'm not too fond of. Price wise, it was reasonable.  Just for the Bagnet, I'm definitely coming back:)




Vegetable Curry with couscous


Pino Resto Bar
39 Malingap St., Teachers Village
Quezon City, Metro Manila
Philippines
(02) 441-1773

Burfi, so easy!

I'm a dessert fiend.  Apparently, I'm also a recipe hoarder.  Found so much written or printed ones lying everywhere in my room and the funny thing is, most haven't been tried yet.  So, I made a decision to try a recipe I thought was interesting as soon as I can before its either lost, forgotten or thrown into a drawer.  

Last weekend while watching someone cook Indian cuisine, the girl demonstrated this really easy dessert.  I've bought most of my Indian sweets from my favorite shop, Assad along U.N. Ave. but I've always wanted to make my own so today while in the kitchen trying to do some clean up, I saw my dessicated coconut and cardamon then remembered I also recently bought pistachios, all ready for my burfi.  Since the recipe called for cardamon powder and I only had the whole seeds, I dry roasted some then powderized it using a blender. I was in cardamon heaven.  I also pan roasted the pistacios a bit to give it some crunch and more nutty flavor.

I followed the recipe except for the cardamon which I sparingly used, just a bit less than a half of a teaspoon since it might be too overpowering. Good decision. I mixed everything and cooked it in 8 minutes with continuous stirring, letting it cool a bit before rolling into balls and dredging it in more dessicated coconut.  Easy and so addicting!  Made this in about 20 minutes or less.




Burfi

200 g dessicated coconut + more for dredging
a bit less than 1/2  tsp ground cardamon
380 g of condensed milk
1/3 c roughly chopped, shelled and lightly toasted pistachios



Note: Cardamon comes in both green and black varieties.  I like the green ones since they seem to have a better flavor.  They can be bought in Indian stores.  You can also opt to just leave it out if you can't find them but if you can, please do.  It makes it much more authentic. As for the pistachios, you can replace it with any nut but cashew might give a better flavor.  Lastly, cook it in a thick sauce pan and stir continuously.  The sugar and milk might burn if you heat it without stirring.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Bread-making phobic

I have a confession.  Give me a recipe of any cake to bake and I'll do it without hesitation but a recipe with yeast and flour, is a totally different story.  For some reason, it really brings out a lot of my baking insecurities.  98% of my attempts are total failures and I'm still haunted by them. Haha. The 2% success rate are for my breads which I made using a bread maker and (take note) bread mix and for a pizza crust which was at least edible.  


So with this success rate, I stayed away from baking anything that resembles breads for the longest time and just resigned to the fact that I'm a total bread-making failure and needs to enroll in a bread-making course.  Well, that was until this year. A friend commented that she made this http://www.yummy.ph/recipe/stuffed-brioche and it really looked good.  So armed with a bit of courage, I made half the recipe and took a picture.  What this picture didn't show though, was that it was heavy.  Was a brioche supposed to be this way?? Anyway, some did look good on pics but I think only Pirate, my dog appreciated it. Haha.


After that, it was pizza 2.  Failed. Pizza 3, somewhat better. I'm convinced, I need help.  Looked at several schools but the days didn't fit my sched.  So anyway, finally found a friend who was willing to give some pandesal-making lessons using a recipe she got from a bread baking class which she never tried making by herself after.  So on a Saturday, armed with the recipe and what she remembered from that class, we tried following the recipe and it turned out close to perfect!  Actually, she did most of the work but at least I did some weighing and I did put it inside the oven.  I'm happy.  The jinx has been lifted.  Look at all these beauties!



After a few days, with a bit more confidence but still with some apprehension, I tried making half a recipe again all by myself (well, I did pM my friend over FB while I was doing this).  I added 3 times the sugar since I wanted it sweet. This was actually how it looked like before it went into the oven:








After 2 1/2 hours, with the whole house wafting with fresh bread aromas, finally this was how it looked.  So glad it turned out soft and sweet but I think I need more salt next time to balance the flavors but the texture, oooohhhh so perfect.  Next time though, I'm going to scale it to 30 g of dough.  These ones grew twice its size in the oven and they were huge!  




Pan de sal
Heny Sison with some adjustments

500 g bread flour
20 g active dry yeast
312 g water
100 g brown sugar
6 g salt
50 g margarine
1/4 c cooking oil
bread crumbs for coating

1. Warm some of the water, it should be around 45-50 degrees C.  Add the yeast and some of the sugar (about a teaspoon), stir and let it sit until frothy.
2. Pour the yeast mixture into the mixing bowl then add all the other ingredients except for the cooking oil and bread crumbs.

3. Using the dough hook attachment of your Kitchen Aide, mix the dough at speed 2 until the dough is smooth and elastic.
4. Coat a separate bowl and transfer the kneaded dough.  Cover with plastic wrap and let rise until double in size (about 30 mins)
5. Punch the air out.  Cover it again and let it rise until double in size (another 30 mins). Do not punch out the air.

6. Preheat oven at 350 deg F. Spread some breadcrumbs on the workbench.  Carefully transfer the dough and form a long baton.

7. Using a wooden dough scraper, cut into about 30 g pieces.

8. Transfer to a jelly roll pan or cookie sheet with  a silicone mat and let it rise again until double in size.  Leave about an inch between the dough pieces to give it space to rise.

9. Bake for about 20 mins.  Enjoy!




Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Operation: Gourmet Streetfood

Haven't been posting but I can assure you the kitchen has been busy.  Aside from cooking for a friend's party,  what's really been keeping me on my toes during off work hours (meaning early mornings and late evenings) is working on a number of new recipes which needed to be taste tested.  Bad idea for someone who's trying to keep her weight off.  Oh well, I'll be back to normal hopefully by next week.  I'm gunning to finish this by Friday to  have the weekends off to visit a food fair, another foodie hobby.

A sneak peek into what I'm working on. Guess which converted Filipino streetfood this is.  Hint: these fried eggs, when sold, are normally bright orange.  For the recipes, you have to wait for it to go on the web :)


First time, Beef Sukiyaki

Someone had a Sukiyaki hangover and it wasn't me.  

After eating Beef Sukiyaki from a neighbor's party the night before, Nanay wanted a recreation of the dish but presented better.  Armed with a googled recipe, I was off searching for the ingredients especially a bunch of enoki mushrooms which I really wanted to be there for an added special touch.

Luckily, the first vegetable vendor I saw had a bunch of them but they really looked wilted from the heat but after doing an exhaustive search for another hour I have to resign myself to this bunch.  Found some fresh tofu too from another stall as well as leeks.  Nanay bought the thinly sliced beef, Chinese cabbage, carrots and shitake mushrooms from another market.  The rest of the ingredients, I had them already at home.






We've never had a table top hot plate at home so I used our 15 yr old Salad Master skillet (I tell you, this skillet is built to last!) to cook this on the table.  I mixed the soup ingredients, washed and prepared all the other ingredients then with a bit of oil, stir fried some of the beef  until browned before adding  broth into the skillet.  To make it look better, I arranged these inside the skillet and waited for it to boil before serving.  Since everything cooked so fast, the shitake were a little bit tough.  Lesson learned: if using reconstituted shitake, boil it first until tender before adding all the other ingredients. 

Beef Sukiyaki (Good for about 8)


2 Tbsp of vegetable oil
250 g of beef sirloin, sliced against the grain as thinly as possible
a handful of reconstituted sliced shitake mushrooms, squeeze out the water
2 stems of leeks
250 g squid balls
1 small carrot
1 large firm tofu, sliced 
3 bunches of enoki mushrooms
about 200 g of green bean thread noodles


Sukiyaki Broth


6 cups of water
2/3 c of sugar
1 c of Kikkoman light soysauce (if using usual soysauce, lessen it)
1/2 c of mirin


1. Mix all the ingredients for the Sukiyaki Broth.  Set aside.


2. Pour the vegetable oil in the skillet. Set it on high.  Add the sirloin and brown both sides.


3 . Add the broth into the skillet. Add the shitake mushrooms and let it boil.


4. Add the rest of the ingredients.  When the green bean thread noodles has turned transparent and soft, turn down the heat and enjoy!

Monday, August 29, 2011

Luk Foo Cantonese Kitchen

  
Things to try at Luk Foo Cantonese Kitchen. We've been dragging our feet to try this Chinese resto well maybe because it looks    small and ordinary from the outside.  Surprisingly though, the food was well seasoned, sometimes bordering on low salt but you know, its how I want my food to be.  In effect, you taste more than the saltiness of the food, savoring the other flavors that made each dish distinct.




The Cold cuts combination. 

       

Taro Puff and Crispy Noodle with Seafood on the background.  I’ve never been a fan of taro puff but this one was served hot, perfectly crisp on the outside with a soft, oozing center which had a hint of five spice. Perfect! (I wonder where I can learn to do this lacy coating.)

    


Broccoli with Scallop and Shrimp. Broccoli was perfectly blanched and the scallops and shrimps were fresh. 

We tried their Fish lips soup and their Crispy Noodle with Seafood.  Both were spot on.  Its funny how my Tatay would always wanna order a noodle dish in any Chinese resto we’re in.  I guess, he gauges a Chinese resto by the pancit they serve and this one is worthy of a second visit.  Can't wait.


Luk Foo Cantonese Kitchen
Puregold Mindanao Ave. a few meters from the Mindanao Ave. and Congressional Ave. intersection, Quezon City