Thursday, July 26, 2012

Wanton Soup

Ingredients 1:

150g minced pork
3 chopped water chestnut
Dash of pepper
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp oyster sauce
1 tsp light soy sauce
Pound- 2 small sole fish (place it in oven for 7-8mins OR microwave for 1min on high)
Wanton skin

Ingredients 2:

1 handful ikan bilis
1 handful dried soy bean


Method:
  1. Add ingredient 1 together and placed it in fridge for an hour .
  2. Bring out and put it in wanton skin. approx, 1cm mixture in 1pcs wanton skin.
  3. Wrap it all up.
  4. Boil a pot of water, when boiled add in wanton.
  5. It is done when the wanton floated up. Dish up.
  6. Boil ingredient 2 for 20mins.
  7. Add in 1/2 tsp sugar.
  8.  Drain away the ikan bilis.
  9. Add in the wanton into the soup and is done!

Ipoh Hor Fun

Gravy for Hor Fun:
(Serve 2)

Ingredients:
5 big dried chinese mushroom
2 cup water
1 tbs oyster sauce
1 tsp light soy sauce
1 tsp sugar
dash of sesame oil
Starch (1tbs corn flour + 1 tbs water)


Method:
  1. Boil the ingredients (dried mushroom, water, oyster sauce, light soy sauce, sugar) together for 30mins on slow fire.
  2. After 30mins, add in starch and stirred evenly.
  3. Once boiled, turn off fire and add in dash of sesame oil.

For the Deep fried Dumpling, use the same recipe for Wanton.
Instead of boiling the wanton, deep fried it.



Sunday, July 22, 2012

Hamburger beef patties


Ingredients:
(serve 4 patties)

500g Minced beef
1 tbs Corriander powder
1 tbs Lee & Perrins sauce
1 tsp Black pepper
1 tsp sugar
1 egg
1.5 tbs plain flour
1 big onion chopped
1 tsp salt
1 tbs honey mustard (optional)

Method:
  1. Mix all ingredients together and marinade for 2 hours.
  2. Make into 4 patties, each about 1 inch thick.
  3. Unused patties can be stored in the freezer. Separated each pattied with a plastic layer.

Lu Rou Fan (braised pork rice)




Ingredients:

500g pork belly
1/2 cup garlic
1/2 cup shallots
2 stalk spring onions
1-2 tbs rock sugar
1tsp five spice podwer
1/2 cup shaoxing wine
1/3 cup light soy sauce
2tbs caramelised sugar(糖色) (instructions in 'Comments' section)
1 tbs peanut butter (optional if you prefer more thick texture and robust flavor)
Water just enough to cover the meat


Directions:
§ Sauté garlic and shallots with oil in a pot until slightly brown.
§ Add in ginger and continue frying until fragrant.
§ Add in meat and five spice powder, fry for a bit.
§ Add in caramelised sugar and mix to coat the meat.
§ Mix in mushrooms, eggs, spring onions, Shaoxing wine, soya sauce, rock sugar, peanut butter and enough water to cover all ingredients.
§ Bring to boil and leave to cook under low heat for 1-2 hrs until meat is tender.
§ Add more soya sauce if not salty enough.
§ Fish out spring onions if you don't want to eat them.


Comments:

The caramelised sugar gives the dish a reddish brown colour instead of the normal dark brown colour you see when light/ dark soya sauce is used.

Can use the same amount of oil to 'fry' more sugar. This can be kept for future use.Do not attempt to lick or try the caramelised sugar once removed from heat, the boiling point of oil is very high and will burn you!

The caramelised sugar will start to harden when it cools, so use it straightaway. 
Ingredients:
1-2 tbs white sugar/ rock sugar
1 tbs oil

Directions:
  1. Heat up oil under medium heat. Add in sugar and leave it to melt.
  2. Reduce to low heat when sugars start to melt. Will be a bit clumpy for rock sugar at first.
  3. Keep stirring when sugar is fully melted.
  4. Cook until dark brown/ brownish red. At this point, large bubbles will form. Remove from heat.







Monday, July 2, 2012

Seafood Sang Mee


Ingredients:

  • Prawns
  • Fish fillets
  • Chye sim/ Baby kailan
  • Garlic chopped
  • 1 egg
  • Mee kia (wanton mee)
  • Hua diao wine (chinese wine)
  • 1 tsp Oyster sauce
  • 1/4 tsp Sugar
  • Light soy sauce
  • Starch (1tsp corn four + 1 tsp water)

Method:

  1. Pour in sufficient oil to deep fried the mee.
  2. Dish out when Mee turn brown.
  3. Fried garlic
  4. Add in fish, prawn, dash of hua diao wine.
  5. Add water, oyster sauce, light soy sauce, sugar, pepper.
  6. Pour in the starch.
  7. Turn of the fire.
  8. Stir the egg and pour it in.

Egg Benedict





Poached Egg:
Tips: Must be fresh eggs

  1. Prepare a pot of water, water must be deep enough to poach the eggs.
  2. Bring it to simmer and turn to slow fire.
  3. Break the egg and place it in a bowl.
  4. Use chopstick to stir the water.
  5. Slowly pour the egg one at each time into the centre of the whirlpool.
  6. Stop stirring and let the egg rest to the bottom of the pot.
  7. Bring the egg up slowly after 1-2 mins, depends on the egg size.
  8. Soaked into a bowl of tap water, to prevent the eggs overcooking (this is important).

Egg Muffins (yields 6 muffins):
  1. 1 cup milk
  2. 1 tbsp butter
  3. 1 tbsp sugar or honey
  4. 1 packet (2¼ tsp) dry yeast
  5. 2 cups flour
  6. 1/2 tsp salt
Heat the milk to simmering, then drop in the butter and the sugar or honey. Stir so they melt and combine, and let the mixture cool. When it’s lukewarm, sprinkle in the yeast, stir, and let it sit for 10 minutes until bubbly. Don’t use an aluminum bowl because that can interfere with the yeast. Glass is best.

While that’s happening, measure out the flour and salt and mix together well. When the yeast mixture is bubbly, add the flour and beat vigorously for a couple minutes. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it sit on the counter (not in the refrigerator) overnight. It will overproof – rise and collapse.
This is what creates the English muffin’s characteristic sourdough taste and large bubbles.

In the morning, scrape the sides of the bowl with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula and remix a little. Then use a spatula and spoon to drop muffin-size globs into a small bowl of cornmeal, as pictured in the previous section. Don’t try to handle the dough – it’s too sticky. Lift each muffin glob from the cornmeal with a slotted spatula, shake off the excess, and place in an ungreased skillet.

When the skillet is full, cover it (with a glass top, if you have one), and let the muffins rise for 30 minutes. They won’t rise much at this point because all the sugar has been eaten by the yeast, but they’ll puff up a little more when they start to cook. Remove the lid before cooking!

Set your stove’s burner to medium-low. If it’s electric, let the burner preheat. If you have an electric skillet, you’ll have to let the muffins rise somewhere else so you can preheat it. I’ve read that electric skillets should be set to 300°F, but I don’t have one so I can’t verify that. I used a cast iron pan and set the burner to medium-low.

Warning: don’t set the temperature too high. The muffins have to cook slowly or the inside will be doughy while the outside is burned. Don’t crank up the heat because it’s not sizzling. It’s not supposed to sizzle. Just because it’s not making any noise doesn’t mean it’s not doing anything. It’s cooking.

The muffins can take anywhere from 10 to 20 minutes per side, depending on how high you set the skillet temperature. Turn them over when the first side is browned.

When the second side is browned, remove the muffins to a cooling rack and let them cool completely. If you don’t let them cool, they will be doughy inside. Also, they taste best if they are fully cooled and then toasted. Split them for toasting by pulling them apart with your fingers, rather than cutting with a knife. This maximizes the nooks and crannies that are so great for holding butter and jam.

Check the original english muffin recipe link here.