Babi Ponteh, Tau Yew Bak & Pork with Beer
Pork stewed with beer and vegetables,
served with lightly buttered mash potatoes
Main Ingredients:
PORK - Twee Bak, Shoulder Butt, Belly Pork
BEER - 1 can
Marinade:
sea salt
white & black pepper corn mix - 3 tbs, crushed
paprika powder - 1 tbs
dried mixed herbs (spaghetti bolognase mix is ok)
HP sauce - 3 tbs
tobasco sauce - 1-2 tsp
light soya sauce - 3 tbs
sukiyaki or yakitori sauce - 2 tbs
honey - 3 tbs
Veg:
carrots - 4 medium sized carrots
chinese celery - a bunch
red shallots / onions - 5 shallots, halved or 2 large red onions cut into quarters
garlic - 3-4 large cloves
me jean loves nyonya food!
- recipes - nyonya food & home-cooked meals
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Sunday, October 21, 2012
no.3 Samsui Chicken & Chicken Rice
CHICKEN RICE
The all important ginger sauce makes this dish
SAMSUI CHICKEN
source: http://sg.entertainment.yahoo.com/news/recipe-gingerly-does-samsui-chicken-122210281.html
The Ingredients:
1 whole chicken
80 g ginger
10 cloves garlic
Cooking the Chicken:
Put ginger and garlic into a plastic bag and bruise them with a cup or pounder.
Prepare a pot of water, deep enough to submerge the whole chicken. Add ginger and garlic into the water and boil over medium high heat.
Holding on to its neck, dip the chicken into the boiling water and then lift it up slowly (this is to firm up the skin and minimise or prevent tears). Repeat this thrice and then gently lower the chicken fully into the water. Cover the pot and leave the water to boil for a minute, then turn off the fire. Leave chicken in the pot for 35 to 45 minutes (depending on the chicken’s size, no lighter than 1.5kg).
Remove chicken from the pot, rinse it under running tap water, strain all the hot water trapped in crevices and then soak it in an ice water bath for about 10 mins. Chop and debone the chicken into in chunky bite-sized portions.
To make sauce:
80 g of young ginger
80 g of old ginger
1 bulb of spring onion, chopped finely (no more than 1cm)
180 ml sesame oil
20 ml Shaoxing wine
1 tbsp sugar
1½ tbsp of light soya sauce / ½ tbsp salt
Blend old and young ginger until minced (not smooth). Take 2 tbsp of the sesame oil and heat it in a pan over small fire. Add chopped spring onions and stir-fry for about 15 secs till fragrant Add blended ginger and stir-fry gently for about 5 mins. Add the remaining sesame oil, sugar and salt. Stir-fry for another 3 minutes. Taste the mixture, and add more salt if it’s not salty enough, or sugar if you find the ginger too stinging for you. Just before turning off the fire, add Shaoxing wine and stir well. Switch off fire.
The all important ginger sauce makes this dish
To serve Lettuce leaves, cut into wrap size pieces. Place chicken on a lettuce leaf, lay a spoonful of ginger sauce atop, wrap the lettuce and pop the thing in your mouth!
Hainanese Chicken Rice Recipe (Boon Tong Kee, Singapore) |
how you eat Samsui Chicken - wrap in lettuce, topped with ginger sauce. |
The all important ginger sauce makes this dish
SAMSUI CHICKEN
source: http://sg.entertainment.yahoo.com/news/recipe-gingerly-does-samsui-chicken-122210281.html
The Ingredients:
1 whole chicken
80 g ginger
10 cloves garlic
Cooking the Chicken:
Put ginger and garlic into a plastic bag and bruise them with a cup or pounder.
Prepare a pot of water, deep enough to submerge the whole chicken. Add ginger and garlic into the water and boil over medium high heat.
Holding on to its neck, dip the chicken into the boiling water and then lift it up slowly (this is to firm up the skin and minimise or prevent tears). Repeat this thrice and then gently lower the chicken fully into the water. Cover the pot and leave the water to boil for a minute, then turn off the fire. Leave chicken in the pot for 35 to 45 minutes (depending on the chicken’s size, no lighter than 1.5kg).
Remove chicken from the pot, rinse it under running tap water, strain all the hot water trapped in crevices and then soak it in an ice water bath for about 10 mins. Chop and debone the chicken into in chunky bite-sized portions.
To make sauce:
80 g of young ginger
80 g of old ginger
1 bulb of spring onion, chopped finely (no more than 1cm)
180 ml sesame oil
20 ml Shaoxing wine
1 tbsp sugar
1½ tbsp of light soya sauce / ½ tbsp salt
Blend old and young ginger until minced (not smooth). Take 2 tbsp of the sesame oil and heat it in a pan over small fire. Add chopped spring onions and stir-fry for about 15 secs till fragrant Add blended ginger and stir-fry gently for about 5 mins. Add the remaining sesame oil, sugar and salt. Stir-fry for another 3 minutes. Taste the mixture, and add more salt if it’s not salty enough, or sugar if you find the ginger too stinging for you. Just before turning off the fire, add Shaoxing wine and stir well. Switch off fire.
The all important ginger sauce makes this dish
To serve Lettuce leaves, cut into wrap size pieces. Place chicken on a lettuce leaf, lay a spoonful of ginger sauce atop, wrap the lettuce and pop the thing in your mouth!
The ingredients for Samsui Chicken (boiled chicken with ginger dip/sauce) |
Sunday, May 29, 2011
no.2 mee siam
food diary 5 May 2011
peranakan nyonya mee siam!
with assam kuah,
prawn sambal,
topped with fresh chives...
... my childhood favourite!!
above: enjoying simple mee siam - using one grandma's recipe, another grandma's traditional bowl |
when i was growing up, sundays were sometimes happy "mee siam days"...
grandma would spend the morning at the wet market to buy chillis, onions, lime, serai (lemongrass), assam, fresh prawns, eggs, tau-kuah (firm toufu), tau-geh (bean sprouts) and gu chye (chives) to prepare my favourite nyonya mee siam for an extended family lunch. then it was back to the nyonya kitchen to grind the rempah (chilli paste), pluck the tau-geh, peel the prawns, cook the toppings (boil eggs and fry cubed tau-kuah), toast the blachan and prepare the garnishes...
i admit i was always reluctant to help pound all those raw chillis and onions in the batu lesung (stone mortar & pestle). most of the time, i'm trying hard not to get any of those raw onion bits or chilli seeds to fly into my eyes while pounding. but i do enjoy the rhythm of the pounding on the cement floor, in an echoey kitchen... pong pong pong pong / pong pong pong pong... when i'm bored with the repeat act of pounding and pounding and pounding, i would then imagine a song to go with the beat of my pounding.
honestly, pounding is the easier task. the next step is the daunting, traumatic one. it's harder to grind them all into a fine paste... it takes practice, patience, practice, more practice, skill and a few strokes of strong hand movements just to blend the mix into a satisfactory, "swee" (beautiful) paste... my muscles would ache and i would be utterly, desperately bored with such a tedious, repetitive task of preparing the rempah (spice paste).
aiyah, but how else would i enjoy the exquisite taste of heat and spice as the rempah is used in the fried bee hoon, sambal prawns and assam kuah (gravy)?
once i get the approval nod from grandma to signal the end of my task, i run out of the kitchen to avoid the sneezing frenzy when she fries the rempah in hot oil. on occasions, i sit on a table nearby to see my rempah sizzling in the hot wok. apart from the initial sneezing fits from the pungent spices being fried, i simply love to see the way rempah cooks and smells and change colours in hot oil...
"are we there yet?" asking this now and then sometimes irritate my grandma!
"not ready, la!" is her curt answer and i shut up and repeat my blurtings when i think the sizzling rempah looks ready... cooking the rempah does take a long time (i want to eat soon!!) and it takes a few "are we there yet?" queries before grandma says, "ah, ok!"
next, the peeled fresh prawns go into the wok, fried till just cooked before being dished out of the wok to fry the bee hoon. a portion of the rempah with prawns are thrown into the wok with more oil and fried a little before the soaked packet of bee hoon goes in. a lot of mixing happens. as grandma is petite, she's got to tip toe and really spread her arms to lift the bee hoon and mix them with the rempah using a very long pair of chop sticks. later, tau-geh (bean sprouts) are thrown in, the bee hoon given a final few tossing over the fire and the bee hoon is done!
last come the assam kuah (mee siam sour assam gravy)... rempah fried in oil with tau-cheoh, serai, then in goes the assam chwee (assam water), a pinch of sugar and a quick boil before the gravy is thicker and ready.
it's time to set the table and bring out the cooked food from the kitchen - fried bee hoon, prawn sambal, assam kuah and prepared assorted toppings - hard boiled eggs sliced into quarters using a white string, chopped gu chye (chives), fried cubed tau-kuah, fresh lime...
"lunch is ready!!!" announces grandma.
and i'm already seated at the dining table :)
no.1 bbq sotong (squid) - recipe
i love barbecued sotong (squid) with hot thai chilli sauce... this is one of my favourite street food in bangkok!
recipe:
1. fresh squid
- season with salt and white pepper,
- grill/bbq or just pan fry with teeny bit of oil
2. thai chilli sauce/dip mix
- lime juice,
- fish sauce,
- light soy sauce,
- a pinch of sugar, or thai sweet chilli sauce,
- chopped birds' eye red and green chillis,
- chopped garlic, red onions, fresh coriander (leaves/stems),
- crushed roasted peanuts
roasted peanuts are added just for extra crunch. you don't really need peanuts unless you have them sitting around doing nothing :)
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