Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Refreshing Sweet Potatoes Dessert

Having a bowl of refreshing sweet potatoes dessert on a lazy raining Sunday is heaven!  I would usually cook dessert during weekends when every member of my family is at home and we have time to enjoy it at our own sweet time instead of in a rush rush.
Ingredients :
- 4 medium sized sweet potatoes (peeled, cut and soaked in water so as to prevent it from turning dark, drained)
- 2 thumb sized ginger (crushed)
- 1 bunch of pandan leaves/screw pine leaves (washed, knotted)
- honeycomb sugar (to taste)
- enough water
Method :
1)  Fill water in a pot and add sweet potatoes and ginger.
2)  Bring to boil and let it simmer until the sweet potatoes is semi-cooked.
3)  Add pandan leaves and honeycomb sugar and continue to simmer until the potatoes are soft.
4)  Serve hot.
A very refreshing dessert.  Reduce the ginger is you are not a ginger lover.  As for me, I LOVE ginger and I like to add extra into the dessert.
Alternatively, you can also cook Barley with Sweet Potatoes (<-- click here for the recipe) too and it's also very refreshing. 

I am submitting this Post to Little Thumbs Up September - Pandan hosted by Joceline @ Butter, Flour & Me, organized by Z OE @ Bake For Happy Kids and Little Mui Mui @ My Favourites DIY .

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Monday, 2 September 2013

Sweet Fragrant Wheat (Gandum) Porridge

Are you having the same breakfast beverages such as Milo, milk, coffee, tea, etc over and over again?  Instead, why not prepare a healthy breakfast porridge for your family?  It's Wheat Porridge and it's simple and yummy.  In order to have a very sweet aroma of wheat porridge, you need to add lots of pandan leaves (screwpine leaves).  Adding pandan leaves into your wheat porridge is a MUST.  Without it, it's like eating nasi lemak without the sambal!
Ingredients : (depending on individual's preferences and to taste)
- 1 cup wheat (washed and soaked overnight)
- 100ml santan/coconut milk (I used ready packed)
- 2.5 litres water
- 1 bunch of pandan leaves (washed, slit the leaves in the centre and knotted)
- sugar (to taste)
- a dash of salt (to taste)
Method :
1)  Fill water in a pot and add drained wheat.
2)  Boil over high heat for 20 minutes. 
3) Then, lower the heat, add pandan leaves and slow boil for another 1 hour or until the wheat is cooked and expanded.  
3)  Should you need to add extra water in between, be advised to add only hot boiling water.
4)  Add sugar and simmer for a while.
5)  Lastly, add santan and keep stirring.  Season with a dash of salt.
6)  Serve hot.
Hope you enjoy this simple breakfast :)

I am submitting this Post to Little Thumbs Up September - Pandan hosted by Joceline @ Butter, Flour & Me, organized by Z OE @ Bake For Happy Kids and Little Mui Mui @ My Favourites DIY .

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Friday, 30 August 2013

Chinese Cabbage Egg Miso Soup (Meatless Recipe)

I like Chinese Cabbage, be it stir fried, braised or soup and will never get bored eating it everyday!  Chinese cabbage is very refreshing especially if you make it into soup.  For this recipe, it's a meatless soup and I omitted anchovies stock and meat.  Hence, I added miso into it.  It's very refreshing and I had it for lunch; just the soup only and without any rice or noodles.  You can add fish balls, prawns, meat or any ingredients that come to your mind.  
Ingredients :
- 1 small Chinese cabbage (washed and cut)
- 3 dried mushrooms (soaked and sliced)
- 1/2 carrot (shredded)
- 1/2 tbsp Chinese Wolfberries/goji berries (washed)
- 2 eggs (beaten)
- 1 thumbsized ginger (crushed)
- 3 cloves garlic (chopped)
- enough water for the soup
- 1 tbsp oil
Seasonings : (to taste)
- 1 tbsp miso
- a dash of salt
- soy sauce
- pepper

Method :
1)  Heat oil in a wok and saute ginger and garlic until aromatic.
2)  Add Chinese cabbage, mushrooms and carrots.  Stir and mix well.
3)  Add water.  Cover and bring to a boil over high heat.
4)  Pour in beaten egg.  Gently stir it.
5)  Lower the heat to medium low. Add miso and Chinese Wolfberries.  Stir and mix well.
6)  Season with salt, soy sauce and pepper.
7)  Serve hot.
Simple, healthy and refreshing soup for your family
Do enjoy :)

I am submitting this to the Little Thumbs Up "Egg" event organized by Bake for Happy Kids, my little favourite DIY and hosted by Baby Sumo of Eat Your Heart Out.

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Thursday, 29 August 2013

Simple Sweet Fragrant Omelette


This is a very simple and healthy breakfast which my children like it.  As long as it's not plain bread with jam and butter, they will be grinning from ear to ear. It could be anything; sandwich or just omelette.  We have half-boiled free ranged chicken eggs almost every morning too and they are more or less being 'forced' to eat!  So this type of simple omelette for breakfast is enough to bring smiles to their faces as they know that they would not be able to have any homemade bread, cakes, cookies or buns from their mummy.  Sigh.... I think it's high time for me take up simple baking...:) 
Simple but healthy breakfast consists of simple omelette with barley green beans dessert

Ingredients :
- 6 eggs (beaten and mixed with seasonings)
- 3 cheesy hot dogs (sliced)
- 1 big tomatoes (sliced)
- 1 big onions (chopped)
- some fresh basil
- some butter for frying

Seasonings : (to taste)
- salt
- pepper
- soy sauce

Method :
1)  Heat butter in a pan or wok.  I used happy call pan.
2)  Saute onions and hot dogs until fragrant and spread it evenly all over the pan.
3)  Pour in beaten egg and cover the lid.
4)  Cook over slow medium heat.  When the omelette is semi-cooked, add tomato and basil.
5)  Slow cook both sides until slightly brown.
6)  Dish out and serve immediately with tomato sauce.
It's quick, easy and simple breakfast!

I am submitting this to the Little Thumbs Up "Egg" event organized by Bake for Happy Kids, my little favourite DIY and hosted by Baby Sumo of Eat Your Heart Out.

I'm linking this post to September 2013 Cooking With Herbs Blog Challenge hosted by Lavender and Lovage.


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Thanks!http://www.bloglovin.com/en/blog/6015563 Follow this blog with bloglovin Follow on Bloglovin Thanks for visiting my blog and leaving me comments.. I really appreciate all your visits and comments! Have a nice day :)

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Stir Fried Da Bai Chai (Bak Choy) with Dried Shrimps and Egg

This is a very simple dish which I adapted it from Flavours from My Kampung and was surprised to see that this dish is in fact from Gunung Rapat, Ipoh, Perak. Well, since I have some bok choy in my fridge, so I decided to try this recipe with minor adjustment.

Recipe adapted from Flavours from My Kampung, page 72
Ingredients :-
- 4 stalks of da bai chai (washed and cut)
- 2 tbsp dried shrimps (washed and coarsely chopped)
- 2 eggs (beaten)
- 1 tbsp finely chopped garlic
- 1 red chili (I omitted as I didn't have available red chili on that day)
- oil
Seasonings : (to taste)
- 1 tsp fish sauce
- 1/4 sugar (I omitted this)
- salt

Method :
1) Heat oil in a wok and saute garlic and dried shrimps until aromatic.
2) Add beaten egg and scramble until set.
3) Add da bai chai and stir fry over high heat. Add seasonings.
4) Dish up and serve.


You may substitute da bai chai with choy sum/sawi


I am submitting this post to Malaysian Food Fest Perak month hosted by WendyinKK of Table for Two….or more

I am also submitting this to the Little Thumbs Up "Egg" event organized by Bake for Happy Kids, my little favourite DIY and hosted by Baby Sumo of Eat Your Heart Out.


and this post is also linked to Cook-Your-Books #3 hosted by Joyce of Kitchen Flavours.
 

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Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Stewed Pork Belly with Fried Tofu

Whenever my late dad wanted to have plain porridge, he would ask mum to cook pork belly with tofu and with added dark caramel sauce.  Besides him, practically we have grown up eating this dish since my grandparents' era!  I still remember back in my kampung/hometown in Ayer Tawar, our neighbours used to cook this dish and most of them would have it with porridge too.  Are you curious how we eat it with porridge?  I do not know about the others, but back in my kampung, my family and neighbours would mix the thick gravy tofu into their piping hot porridge.  Then, we would use a spoon or chopsticks to break/cut the tofu into small pieces, mix it with porridge, then, 1 spoon of porridge into the mouth, slurrpppp.... followed by a piece of the pork belly... close your eyes, ehmmmm..... so yummy.  Back then, in the 1970s, this is considered quite a luxurious meal for kampung folks in Ayer Tawar where majority of them were rubber tappers.  However, nowadays it's just a common dish and everyone knows how to cook it.  In fact my children like too.
This time I didn't eat it with porridge but with steamed rice.  Then, I noticed that my children mixed the pieces of tofu and gravy into their rice.  It's indeed very delish.....

Ingredients :
- 1 strip of pork belly (blanched and cut)
- 5 pcs hard tofu (cut into four, slightly fried until golden brown)
- 1/2 tbsp fermented soy bean paste/tau cheong (for frying)
- 1 1/2 tbsp fermented soy bean paste/tau cheong (to taste)
- 1 bulb of garlic (finely chopped)
- 1 star anise
- 1 cinnamon stick
- water (enough for stewing)
Seasonings : (to taste)
- a dash of salt
- 2 tbsp light soy sauce
- 3 tbsp caramel sauce (reduce the amount if you don't like your dish to be in dark colour)
- 1 tsp sugar
Method :
1)  Heat some oil in a wok and pan fry the tofu until slightly brown. (You can deep fry until golden brown if you like but I prefer it to be pan fried).
2)  Push the tofu to the side of the wok.  Saute garlic, star anise, cinnamon stick and 1/2 tbsp of fermented soy bean paste until aromatic.
 3)  Add pork belly and tofu. Stir fry for a while and mix well.
4)  Add water, the remaining fermented bean paste and caramel sauce. Mix well. Cover and let it boil over high heat for about 5 minutes. Then, lower the heat and let it simmer until the gravy is thickened and/or the meat is cooked and tender. It takes about 30 to 45 minutes depending on the fire and pot/wok used. Add water if you want more gravy.
5)  Lastly, add in the remaining seasonings and bring it to a boil again for 1 or 2 minutes.  
6)  Dish up and serve with plain porridge or steamed rice.
The tofu is very flavourful as it's being stewed together with the meat.
No doubt this is a very simple and common dish, my family members have fond memory of this dish as it reminds us of our beloved dad ~



I am submitting this post to Malaysian Food Fest Perak month hosted by WendyinKK of Table for Two….or more

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