Thursday, November 26, 2009

Stewed Pork Ribs ( 排骨酸)

I cooked lot of dishes with chicken lately. So today i want to cook something which i really love when i was in Malaysia. This "cho yok"/pork dish is very appetizing and once you start it, you can never stop. I used to ask my mum to guide me in the kitchen and i love the way my mum cooked the dish. Simply Fabulous..
I bought the pork ribs from my favorite chinese-ingredients shopping centre, 168 supermarket at Sumerset. You can get free car park and the shopkeepers are very helpful.
My mum used the taujiao/fermented bean paste and mix with chilli boh (blended chili paste), over here, i have a shortcut way of cooking this by using lee kum kee chilli bean sauce.


Stewed Pork Ribs (排骨酸)
Ingredients (for 2 serving)
450g pork ribs
2 cups of water
3 tbsp of chili bean sauce/ toban djan/ taujiao (Lee Kum Kee brand)
1 tbsp of tamarind pulp (soaked in 1/2 cup of warm water)
2 tsp of sugar (to taste)
4 cloves of garlic (crushed)
Method
1. Heat up a stew pot and saute the chili bean sauce.
2. Add in the garlic and fried till aromatic
3. Put in the pork ribs, follow by the tamarind juice (extracted from the pulp), water and sugar.
4. Bring it to boil. Lower down the heat and cover with lid. Slowly stew the ribs for about 2 hours. The meat will become tender by then.
5. The bean sauce is salty enough thus i don't encourage to add any salt in this dish. If you want to have more kick in this dish, add more tamarind juice
6. Another spicy dish (spicy, sour and sweet) is ready to be serve with hot steaming rice.


Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Three Cups Chicken Recipe (三杯鸡)

Before i fly to Canada, i had a nice farewell dinner with my family at Xuan Xin Restaurant @ Gurney Plaza, Penang. We ordered a dish call, 3 cups chicken. Ya, indeed, it sounds weird with direct chinese translation. Anyway, the dish is delicious. So, i thought of making the dish tonight for dinner.


Three Cups Chicken Recipe (三杯鸡)
Ingredients:
1/2 lb. boneless chicken drumsticks (marinate with 1/2 tbsp baking soda for 10 mins)
6 slices peeled ginger
4 cloves garlic (skin peeled and pressed with the back of the knife for better aroma)
1 tbsp dark sesame oil
1 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp Shaoxing wine
1 tbsp dark sweet soy sauce (Kecap Manis)
Thai basil leaves (up to your taste)

Method
The baking soda really make a difference to tenderize the chicken. So after marinate the chicken with baking soda, rinse it off thoroughly and dry them with kitchen towel. Then cut the chicken into pieces and season with soy sauce, shaoxing wine and kecap manis for about half an hour.
Heat up a wok on high heat and put in the dark sesame oil, stir fry the garlic and ginger until aromatic. Add in the chicken and stir fry a little. Cover the lid and simmer the chicken for about 5 mins. Then add in the basil leaves and stir well with the chicken. Serve with hot steaming rice.

**This dish will cook better with claypot because it will keep the dish warm longer than the metal container. Cooking in clay pots requires a slow cooking method, meats become more tender and moist and retain nutrients and natural flavors because the juices released by the food cannot escape from the pot. The need to add extra fats or liquids can be leave out.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

only saint can do?!!

Tumbled over this beautiful story in my emails. The ending of the story is surprisingly unbelievable. I really don't know who will react that way if something happen.

The story goes like this...

One couple was blessed with a son after 11 years of marriage . Naturally the son is the pearl to the loving couple's eyes.

The boy was 2 years old. One day the husband was about to go to work when he saw on the table a bottle of medicine left opened.
As he was in a hurry, he told the wife to replace the bottle with the cover. After which he closed the door and left.

The wife was very busy in the kitchen and forgot all about what her husband told her to do. The toddler took the medicine bottle as he was curious and attracted by the colour, he drank all the medicine from the bottle.
The dosage was strong. The baby was rushing to the hospital but died of overdose eventually. The wife was terrified and didn't know how to face her husband.
The worried husband rushed to the hospital and was very sad to learn the bad news.
After looking at the son's body, he looked at the wife and said 4 words.

Guess what did he said?

"I Love You, Darling"

The reaction is Proactive (able to control the situation and not to be controlled by the situation). The reason: The death of the son is a reality.

Blaming and fighting would not bring back the son. Moreover, he was not the only one who is losing a son, his wife too.

The moral of the story is choices of making decision.
Facing a mishap, you can indulge in blaming, cursing the world or even self-blaming. All these will not change what has happened. In fact, it would change your subsequent daily life: carry on your life with a scar.
On the other hand, when one let go of resentment and fear, let go of the past, carrying on life with courage, the situation is not as bad as one may imagine. Proactive Behaviour will change the conditions around us and not to be affected and influenced of that.

This simple story, however how many of us could act like this? Just a simple 4 words. Nevertheless, it required very good self-development, tolerance and lot of wisdom to say such touching words under such situation.

I had the similar situation the other day, not about life and death but it really affected me.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Malaysian Curry Chicken



I loooove spicy food and i can not live without them. I am lucky to have found a partner who can take spicy food and all those erotic asian food with me :p



Malaysian Curry Chicken (咖哩鸡)

Ingredients (serving for 2)
Instant curry paste (4 oz), Maesri brand ($0.99/can)
4 oz peeled potatoes (cut into cubes)
1 lbs chicken (you can choose either drumsticks or thighs)
1 big shallots (peeled and sliced thinly)
1 lemongrass (white part only, pounded)
1 tbsp oil
2 cup water (if you want a thicker curry, put less water)
1/2 cup coconut milk (put more if you want less spicy curry)
curry leaves

Method
Cut the chicken into pieces and set aside.

Heat up the wok and add the oil. Saute the shallots until light brown. Then add the curry paste and curry leaves, stir until aromatic. Add the chicken meat and lemongrass. Add water after 1 min of stirring.
At medium heat, wait till the curry chicken boiled and then lower the heat. Add the potatoes and simmer for 20 - 25 mins. Add the coconut milk and bring it to boil.

Serve hot with Man Tao (chinese steamed buns). I put more water in my curry in order to have more sauce to dip with.

Muar Chee



I like muar chee since i was young. The sticky glutinous chewy feeling with ground peanuts and sesame, yummy. I used to buy this desert whenever there was chinese opera near my house.
Feel like having muar chee for desert today. Sly always think that tapioca is very erotic and weird food, just like seaweed salad in japanese food. After he tried the muar chee that i have made, he said, this desert is actually pretty good :)

Here's the recipe, taken from RasaMalaysia.com


Ingredients (serving for 2)
4 oz glutinous rice flour
1 tbs tapioca flour
3/4 cup water
1 tsp oil for greasing
Fried shallot crisps

Roasted peanuts mixture
2 oz ground roasted peanuts
2 oz granulated sugar (to taste)
1 oz sesame seeds (lighly toasted)

Method:
Mix the glutinous rice flour and tapioca flour with water, then transfer the batter into a grease pan. Steamed over high heat for about 20 mins until the paste is completely cook through the centre. Then let it cool.

Mix the roasted peanut, sugar and sesame seeds in a big bowl. Cut small piece of the paste with plastic knife (clean cut with plastic knife) and then drop it into the mixture. The mixture is very sticky thus drop them one by one and coat well.

I personally don't like the fried shallots crisp, thus i didn't serve them on top of the dish.

Parcel from home

Today 3rd Oct, i went to the post office to collect a parcel from home. Hee.. i was thrilled like a little kid opening present on the X-mas. Thank you, Mili for spending her time hunting for Prawn Noodle (Hokkien Mee) and Assam Laksa paste for me. The paste is quite cheap but the killing part is the courier charges. These 2 bottles cost RM80 to fly...
I will force the white guy at home to try the Laksa :), muahahahaha..

My First Holloween

31st Oct is the Halloween night, just like the Chinese Hungry Ghost month. I went walking around the neighbourhood, houses putting big orange pumpkins outside the house, big blow-up balloons (shaped of evil smiling pumpkin, white ghost, evil witch etc) or a fake figuring sitting/lying at the doorstep. Kids will go to these houses for Trick-or-Treat.
Coded from wikipedia, the festival of Samhain celebrates the end of lighter half of the year and the beginning of the darker half. The celebration has some elements of a festival of the dead. The ancient Celts believed that the border between this world and the other world become thin on Samhain, allowing spirits to pass through. The family's ancestors were honoured and invited home whilst harmful spirits were warded off. They believed that wearing costumes and masks can disguise themselves thus ward off the fierce and savage spirits.
We were invited to go watch horror movies at a friend's house. It's a norm for kids to go around neighbourhood for trick-or-treat, for adults/teenagers wearing costumes at work (normally a costume cost about $25 and nobody will repeat the costume the following year), attending costume parties or scare yourselves watching horror movies at home :p
We watched "SAW" that night and we heard a knock on the door. "Trick or treat!!", the kids shouted. Then i saw a kid with the mask exactly the same as in the movie. Creepy eh...
I guess kids enjoy halloween the most because they can get a huge bag of candies which can last them for a month. Just like Chinese New Year, i enjoyed the most when i was young. Busy counting the money of all the Red Packet "AngPao", collected from family and relatives by the end of Chinese New Year (on the 15th day).
Candies for Trick-or-Treat (finished by the adults, hee..)
The kids at the door, they sang for us and posted for the picture