Monday, June 27, 2011

Jamie Oliver's Bloomin Brilliant Brownies

This is a great recipe, which he rehashed for 30 minute meals, except he halved the time by halving the proportions; and added clementine zest to 'pimp it up'.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Chicken and prawn Laksa

Been longing for a good laksa, which would you believe it or not, is harder to find in Singapore than you would think. Often its either too oily, or not lemak enough. Given that mine was a 'what's in the fridge' laksa, I had to improvise (e.g I didn't have thick bee hoon, and there wasn't enough yellow noodle, so I just mixed yellow noodle with kway teow). I must say that my dad's fridge is pretty well stocked though, although I would have liked tau pok and fish cake as well. Never mind, after a trip to the supermarket, I added that to the leftovers!



Ingredients (feeds 5)
6 lemon grass, sliced thinly
4 to 5 shallots, skinned and roughly chopped
6 cloves of garlic, skinned
2 big red chillis
1 thumb sized ginger, sliced
4 chilli padi (add more chilli to your own spice tolerance)
150g dried shrimp, soaked in hot water to soften
5 to 6 candle nuts, soaked in hot water to soften
1 tbsp belachan paste
6 chicken thighs
10 prawns, shelled and deveined, sliced into 2
10 to 12 cups of water
200ml packet of coconut milk
200ml milk (full cream preferably. U can use another 200 ml of coconut milk for a better taste if cholesterol isn't an issue)
10 laksa leaves, chopped finely (as a garnish)
3 handfuls of bean sprouts
500g of noodles (thick bee hoon or yellow noodle or both)
5 tbsp oil
pinch of sugar
4 tbsp fish sauce

Optional elements: tau pok, sliced fish cake, hum (cockles)

Method
1) Deshell the prawns, set aside the head and shells. In a hot wok, pour in 1 tbsp of oil and stir fry the prawn heads and shells until fragrant.

2) Add the chicken and brown the chicken. Add the water. Bring to a boil, then down to a simmer.

3) Remove the chicken when cooked (approx 10 to 20 mins, depending on the thickness and size of the thighs). Peel the meat off the bone and shred it, and return the bones to the prawn stock. Simmer the stock for another 20 minutes, then switch off the heat. Remember to skim the stock along the way.

4) In a food processor or pestle and mortar, chop up the items in the following order to make sambal balachan, which serves as the base of your laksa : thinly sliced lemon grass, ginger, dried shrimp and candle nuts (pour the soaking water into the stock pot), chillies, onions, garlic, and lastly, balachan. Items always taste better pounded in the pestle and mortar as the oils esp for the lemon grass are released, but its a long tedious process to get everything into a smooth paste.

5) In a large pot, pour in 3-4 tbsp of oil. Carefully add the sambal balachan as it is very likely to 'spit' once it hits the hot oil. Stir fry everything until the mixture 'splits', aka isn't a smooth paste anymore. It may seem like a lot of oil, but everything gets quickly absorbed. Add 1 tsp of sugar and stir fry until combined.

6) Slowly add the stock ladle by ladle and continue stirring until well combined. Let this simmer for 10 minutes for the spices to infuse into the stock. Add the milk and coconut milk. Bring up to a boil, then down to a simmer for 10 minutes. Switch off the fire.

7) Prepare the noodles by scalding in boiling water for about 3 minutes, and draining. Similarly, prepare the bean sprouts using the same method, scalding them for about 30 seconds before draining.

8) Bring the gravy back to a boil. You will notice that the gravy starts to thicken. Add the shredded chicken, prawns (which only require about 30 seconds of cooking) and fish cake / tau pok if using.

9) To serve, simply assemble. Into a bowl goes the noodles and spouts, then topped off with the gravy. Garnish with chopped laksa leaves. You can also garnish with shredded deseeded cucumber to increase the vegetable content.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Orh Nee (yam paste)

My 2nd attempt at making Orh Nee. It's actually much simplier than it looks and quite customisable to individual tastes and preferences. The key is in the yam - you need to find a yam that isn't too powdery, otherwise it'll end up quite 'dry', which will require a lot of moisture like oil or water to lubricate. Too much water and it becomes watery; too much oil and it becomes oily. In the end, I used Malaysian or Thai yams, which seem the best. They steam very quickly (only took 10 minutes for 2 large yams!) and the finish was velvety smooth even before adding oil and water. (Unfortunately I accidently deleted the photo! )



Ingredients
2 Thai/Malaysian yams (approx 600g each before removing the stem and external skin)
3 cups of water
10 - 11 tsps of cooking oil (use a neutral flavoured vegetable oil, or lard if you are lucky enough to have it and don't mind the calories! There is no other substitute for flavour)
1 cup of ginko nuts (if using. You can use half a can of ginko nuts or about 150g of fresh ones)
Optional: Sweet potato
3 cups water (this really depends on how much yam there is)
9 to 10 tbsp sugar (again, depends on how much yam and how sweet you want the dessert to be. I made it only slightly sweet)

Method
1) Cut the yam up into big cubes (approx 4cm by 4cm) and steam for 10 to 15 minutes until a fork easily passes through.

2) In a food processor, process the steamed yam and drizzle the 1 to 2 tsp into the funnel everything everything is well combined, smooth and glossy. (I used about 1 tsp for every 10 cubes, as I was using a very small food processor) The consistency should be rather pastey and thick.

3) In a big non-stick pot, combine the sugar and water, and bring to a boil until all the sugar has dissolved. I took the extra step of reducing the water slightly into a slightly syrupy mixture, but you don't really need to.

4) Add the processed yam a bit at a time into the pot, making sure to stir continously to prevent burning. The non-stick is important here. Keep stirring until everything is well combined and smooth. If using ginko nuts and cubed steamed sweet potato, this is the time to combine it in. Only add these 2 elements after all the sugar and oil have been well incorporated into the paste, and don't over stir, otherwise you will end up breaking the ginko nuts and cubed sweet potato.

5) Serve warm.

Soya sauce Korean rice cakes