~pictures for the header and about masak geng are compliments of yuin yi- awesome chef and great photographer~

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Fried Rice

I’m particularly interested in fried rice because there are a hundred ways you can cook it, but very few of them stand out. I still remember this stall outside my tuition centre which sells really good ones – too bad it closed down though.

Serves one hungry person, or two not so hungry persons.

 

INGREDIENTS (based on feel – vegetable ratios are flexible, sauce ratio is  more important)
One cup of rice – cooked.

Garlic – 2 to 3 pips. More garlic more flavor
Onion – 1/16 or 1/8 of a palm size onion
Carrot – equal to the amount of onions you’re using
Scallions – equal to amount of onions, or depending
Dried shrimps

Oyster sauce – 1 tbsp
Light soy sauce – 1 tbsp
Dark soy sauce – 1tbsp

Black pepper
Curry powder (quite irrelevant)
Chilli powder (quite irrelevant)

 

INSTRUCTIONS
**HAVE YOU COOKED THE RICE YET??**
1. Fry whatever meat you’re using. I usually use fish fillets.
Tip: Fry fillets with low heat (on a scale of 0 to 7, use 4). It turns brown and crispy, and no pesky oil splattering. Put it aside. You can also fry scrambled eggs – just push them to one side of the pan.

2. Saute the garlic til brown. Fry the onions until they smell. Add in carrots. (Do it in this order). Push everything to one side of the pan.

3. Make sure there’s at least one tbsp of oil. Add in the rice, the 3 sauces, and cover (literally) the whole thing with black pepper (and the other 2 powders). Before stirring the rice, heat up the oil again – the frying sound.

Note: Fry only the rice – keep the spices and eggs separate. Make swift choppy motions.

4. Now, mix everything up. Add in the scallions and dried shrimp and continue mixing.  You’re done :)

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I think the only thing about this is the amount of black pepper and the sauce combination. Well, it keeps me happy during exam period. lol

 

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Note for beginners: Don’t be afraid of using oil. Embrace it. Rice cannot fry without oil. Learn with trial and error to gauge your oil usage. LOL

Let me know how it works out for you :D

CedZH

Sweet Sour Fish

*recipe from home :D

INGREDIENTS

One onion -  slice into rings or half rings
One tomato- cut into wedges
One third Carrot- cut into strips
One third Cucumber - remove skin - Cut into half and then quarter  lengthwise, remove the centre(seeds)- cut into strips like carrot
[I usually don’t bother adding it lol]

2 dessertspoons Tomato sauce
1 dessertspoon chilli sauce
1 teaspoon oyster sauce(optional)
A slice of lemon or one lime- squeeze the juice( can use  vinegar instead)
One tablespoon Tapioca or corn flour mix with water

INSTRUCTIONS

Heat up the wok
Add enough oil for frying the fish
Fry fish until golden brown on both sides
Remove from the wok.
Turn off the flame.
Remove some oil from the wok after frying the fish.
Leave enough for preparing the sauce.
Turn on the flame.
Saute the garlic till light brown
Add in the onion, carrot and tomato, Stir fry. add tomato sauce and chilli sauce( and oyster sauce)
Add in salt to taste. Add water to slightly cover the whole mixture
Add a bit of sugar
Add lemon or lime juice( or vinegar)
Add in the cucumber, continue stirring
Thicken gravy with starch solution.(Just enough so that the gravy can still flow when u test with spoon)
Dish up gravy and put on top of the fish.

It’s a sweet and sour dish, so it’s really nice if served with oranges. (especially Florida oranges, heavenly). Balance it out with cool vegetables.

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Have fun~

CedZH

Nasi Lemma

This is not cooked by me, but it's awesome so I must post it here.

Ta-daa! Nasi lemak cooked by Foong Yi Chia! It has inspired CJ to try to cook nasi lemak too! =p


rice cooked with santan accompanied by cucumber and boiled egg and fried anchovies

yummy spicy sambal made from ginger, onion, tomato paste, dried chili powder and other stuff i forgot to take note of =p


At any rate, awesome Malaysian fare ^^ Thanks to Foong Yi for yummylicious cooking~!


p/s- the name "nasi lemma" was written in a bubble next to a dinosaur someone drew on foong yi's whiteboard. it's a t-rex saying "i'ma eat nasi lemma!" XD

Saturday, August 28, 2010

It's all very corny.

Fall semester started and I haven't really found many chances to cook something good and nice.

Just as an update, I'm promoting.. CORNS today! Do you all know that Illinois is famous for.. corns? XD When I decided that I'm going to study in the U of I, I've accepted and resigned to the fate that I would be surrounded by corns and corns and more corns.

Clearly, I was mistaken. :) There are plenty of cornfields around, but we do have malls and cinemas and plenty (*cough*) of stuff to do around here besides eating corns. XD

But! I've always been a fan of corns and today, I've fallen even deeper in love with the sweet corn in Illinois.



THIS. This is the BEST thing on earth.

Me and several other Malaysian peeps went for this Sweet Corn Festival today (because I thought it would be interesting to see what they have to offer, and being in Illinois, how can I not see a Corn Festival?) and they were selling two of this for 1 USD! Is that cheap or what!

The first bite brought me to heaven. Haha! But really, it was heavenly. It was literally dripping with butter, but it was good. It was so sweet that I wouldn't have it with salt and pepper at all. It was very very juicy too! This is really the best corn I have ever tasted. :D

We had at least two each. Our MaSA president decided to have 4. Shows just how incredibly good it is. :)

So next time you come to Illinois, remember to buy back some of our sweet corn! It's definitely one thing not to be missed!


I am CORNY!


Saturday, August 14, 2010

Yummy Pai Kuat (Pork Ribs)

I remembered this dish as me and my sister's favourite dish among all other yummy dishes cooked by our grandma.
Now, she'll probably remember it or not. I actually forgot how to cook it after about 8 months and i decided to refresh my memory again by asking my grandma how to make it.
And I am proud to say, Jia Ling has mastered it!!! XD XD
This is a really really nice dish to be served with rice for you Malaysian students in US or any where else in the world. You won't need supper! =D

First, you will need:
1 kg/ 2.2 pounds pork ribs/pai kuat.
7-8 tablespoon black bean paste (more or less depending on size of meat)
Two cucumbers
1 lime or 2-3 kat chai
Sugar
Salt

Method:
1. Cut the cucumber into thin slices and add about 3 tablespoon of salt. Mix the cucumber with the salt and leave for about 30-40 minutes.
2. Squeeze out the salt water from the cucumber slices. Then, rinse them with water to remove the excess salt. We don't want them to be overly salty!
3. Add about 2-3 teaspoon of sugar and mix with the cucumber slices.Leave aside for later.
4. Half cook the pork ribs in water so that they are easier to cook later. Drain the water and leave the meat to cool.
5. Heat some oil in a pot and put the pork ribs in. Stir in the black bean paste and fry till all the pieces of meat are coated with the sauce. Add more sauce if the meat pieces are not fully coated.

coat em' like this =)
6. Add sufficient water to cover all the meat in the pot. Make sure the water really covers all the meat so that they can be cooked till tender and soft.
7. Cover the pot and leave the stew to cook over low fire for about two hours or till the meat are soft and tender.
8. Once at least 3/4 of water is evaporated, the sauce will be thick and the meat will be soft and tender. Squeeze the lime or kat chai into the stew and stir well.
9. Scatter the cucumber slices generously over a plate and pour in the stew.

Ze' end result
Voila! Yummy sweet and sour pork ribs.
Good Luck!
Satisfaction guaranteed. =D

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Crème brûlée

Crème brûlée is French for "burnt cream", a dessert made of rich custard and topped with caramel, and it is the best thing I have ever tasted. I fell in love with it the first time I had it in a restaurant by the Melaka River, but I've forgotten about it until I had it again in a Korean restaurant in Champaign-Urbana. It has been one of the things in my "to cook" list since then.

So, while I am still in holidays with nothing else to do and I am desperately in need of something to occupy my mind with, I've decided to try making this heavenly dessert.

With this recipe I found on this website called "Cooking for Engineers" (wow), which I think gives very very good instructions (with pictures too!), I set off to Walmart to get a lot of eggs, cream, and Ramekins (which aren't cheap). Oh and the blowtorch (ALSO expensive, and requires you to be 18 to buy it, so make sure you bring an ID along with you if you are thinking of getting one).

With that,

I get my Crème Brûlée! :D

As I was too eager to taste it, I did not refrigerate it as long as it says in the recipe, but another recipe that I just randomly looked up online says that refrigerating it for 2 hours is enough, as long as it is completely cooled. My Crème Brûlée tasted pretty okay, a little too sweet maybe, and I think it was a little not done (as I used Ramekins of a different size, so I guess the baking time differs as well?).
Oh and I had help with the blowtorch (haha). :P Credits to Andrew Chu for doing the burning thing for me. :P

I would say it was quite a success, but I will definitely try again and improve it! :D

YAY!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

tomatoes!

i am very excited to find out that cj yang has taken a nice picture of his garden harvest! it's so pretty! he also planted squash, but i think most people won't go around buying squash. or will you? hmmm...



home grown tomatoes!!!


so when we have about a gazillion tomatoes on our hands, we give them to neighbors, and try to finish them before they rot (and we actually succeeded!)

this is one of my favorite tomato dish: lasagna XD


now please forgive how much this slice of lasagna look like it's about to collapse: i didn't give it enough time to cool before putting it on my plate (i was hungry and it was 2pm) so the cheese didn't solidify enough yet and hold the meat together neatly =(


but it tastes pretty good. a little like spaghetti too actually =)

this is the recipe based on what i cooked last sunday, but you can substitute as you see fit. i've done pure beef lasagna, beef+pork lasagna, pork+turkey lasagna, pork+chicken lasagna... it doesn't matter lol. whether you want veg or not, more tomatoes or less, more flavor or less, you can modify to fit your tastes.

(extremely modified) lasagna recipe

Servings: four to six, depending on how much you eat.
Baking tray size: approximately 8in by 8in

ingredients:

7 lasagna noodles
500 - 600 lbs of meat, minced
10 - 15 tablespoons of tomato based pasta sauce
4-6 tablespoons of tomato sauce
4 shitake mushrooms, sliced
1/4 cup of peas
1/3 cup onions, diced
10 mini tomatoes (see pic above), quartered
or 1 tomato on vine (giant size), sliced thinly
or 2 small roma tomatoes, sliced into eight pieces
1-2 cloves of garlic, minced
~6 slices of cheddar cheese
or rough equivalent in quantity of other type of shredded/bar cheese
cooking oil
salt and sugar to taste
(optional) 1 tsp oregano
(optional) 1 tsp chili powder
(optional) 1 tsp black pepper


1) (Optional) After mincing meat, mix with 1 tsp of oregano, chili powder, black pepper and some salt to marinate for about 10-15 minutes.
2)Boil the lasagna noodles with a little salt for about 10-15 minutes, or until tender. Drain and set aside.
3) Saute minced garlic until slightly brown before adding onions and minced meat. Fry until the meat looks thoroughly cooked.
4) Add the pasta and tomato sauce until sauce is enough to cover the meat. Make sure that it is not too watery (else the lasagna won't hold properly)
5) Add mushrooms and peas, and about half of the quartered tomatoes. Stir fry for about 1-2 minutes more.
6) Add a pinch of salt and sugar. If the pasta/tomato sauce is sour, you might need to add a bit more salt and sugar to balance it out. Set aside.
7) Grease your baking tray with oil or butter. Lay three lasagna noodle down as base. "Frame" the pan: Let the ends of the lasagna noodles lie on the side of the pan.
8) Cut each cheese slice into 12 pieces. Place them along the "seams" where the noodles meet.
9) Layer the noodles with approximately half the fried meat/vege combo.
10) Place half of the uncooked quartered tomatoes on the meat. Layer with more cheese if desired (recommended)
11) Cut the remaining noodles to fit the size of the pan. (Most noodles are longer than 8in). Save the "prettier" pieces for the top. Use the others as the second layer.
12) Again, place the cut cheese slices along the "seams" where the second layer of noodles meet.
13) Layer with the remaining fried meat-vege, decorate with the rest of the tomatoes, and layer with more cheese (must do if you want the upper layer to stick)
14) Layer with the last of the lasagna noodles. Sprinkle shredded cheese on the top as decoration if desired.
15) Cover with aluminum foil and bake in a preheated oven for 30 minutes at 375 F.
16) Remove aluminum foil and continue baking for another 10 minutes (or until it turns slightly golden brown. Do not overbake -> the noodles will turn really hard)
17) Let cool for 5-10 minutes before serving, so that the cheese will solidify again and make sure your lasagna doesn't fall apart.


actually, it's a real simple dish in the sense that you can modify it however you like. the original recipe i obtained needed cottage cheese (i really dislike the taste lol) and it didn't have any vege in it, and it required more spices that my kitchen holds, so i modified according to what i have on hand (that's how i ended up mixing two kinds of meat in one lasagna. they taste good nonetheless. and i didn't get stomachache) if you do try to make this with two types of meat, i would recommend frying them separately and then putting them on different layers.

i love making this on sundays because then i will have leftovers to pack as lunch on monday =p microwave it for 1-2 minutes after it is defrosted, and voila! lunch~!

toodles for now! i can't believe i wrote a whole (albeit slightly incoherent) recipe just because i wanted to show off the home-grown tomatoes (shakes head). ja' ne~!

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

A Nice, Simple Meal to Share


Kroger's best sauce for cooking, at least to me, is the Bourbon Peppercorn Sauce. And, more importantly, it makes a good dish with chickens and porks! But, wait, I am not the one who cooked this yummy dish. You will have to ask our great chef Jia Mun for her secret behind this tasty dish! :)

By the way, I still think that the sausage looks like fake carrots, just like fake chicken in a vegetarian menu. :P

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Pan-Fried Shrimp

Sorry I've been on such a cooking spree lately. :P Blame it on me who bought too much groceries and food and now I realize I need to finish cooking and eating all those in a week's time, since I'm leaving Champaign Urbana for two weeks on Saturday! :P

When I was shopping for supplies for the Ipoh Bean Sprout Chicken last Friday, I found these fresh (I'm not sure exactly how fresh but it's better than the frozen ones in American supermarkets) shrimps and immediately sapu everything. :P I'm a shrimp lover. XD

I now have some butterfly pork chop pieces, chicken breasts, two pieces of fish, and some more shrimps that I have to finish within a week. Ouch.

Anyway after being so deprived from shrimps for the past year, I happily looked up recipes for shrimps online, and as usual, Rasa Malaysia was my first stop, and I found this. I have to admit, Rasa Malaysia almost never failed me. ;)

And so,


My Pan-Fried Shrimp! :D


I kinda altered the recipe a little (as usual) but it still worked! Whee~

Go try out the recipe, people! It's really easy. :)


And hopefully no more after this! Must study for finals! Good luck to me!