Showing posts with label others. Show all posts
Showing posts with label others. Show all posts

Monday, July 09, 2007

Menu for this week 9-07-07

Monday 09-07-07
Dinner

- Lontong (Mdm Koh class)
- Fried hokkien noodles
- Fried carrot cake
- Fried spicy beensprouts
- Soup: Turnip, dried shrimp, red dates

Tuesday 10-07-07
Lunch

- BoBo ChaCha

Dinner
- Sambal leather jacket fish
- Stir Fry Spinach
- Bu Qi Huo Xue Tang



Wednesday 11-07-07
Dinner

- ABC Soup
- Steam rice with green peas & minced meat

Thursday 12-07-07
Dinner

- Sweet corn soup
- Steam rice with salted eggs, century eggs, minced meat

Friday 13-07-07
Dinner

- Serai Chicken Soup
- Fried Cabbage with dried shrimp

Saturday, December 23, 2006

CNY Vegetarian Cooking Workshop

CNY Vegetarian Cooking Workshop I conducted by Ms Shannon Ang on 22 Dec 2006 (friday) @ Cairnhill cc.

花開富貴Golden Needle Mushrooms Soup with Tofu
黃金蒸糕Steamed Sweet Potato Cake
水果羅惹Fruit Rojak


CNY Vegetarian Cooking Workshop II conducted by Ms Shannon Ang on 29 Dec 2006 (friday) @ Cairnhill cc.

酸梅果凍Sour Plum Konnyaku
楓糖甜薯Sweet Potato In Maple Syrup
酒酿湯圓Rice Dumpling In Wine

Thursday, April 06, 2006

A typical Chinese Kitchen

Many people do realize the difference between what they get in a typical Chinese place and what is actually on the dinner table in a typical Chinese home. There are lots of recipes available for authentic dishes but they all seem to call for 10 different sauces. China is a big country and different regions have different cooking styles. Consequently we stock different things in the kitchen.

If you want to make Chinese food at home, you've gotta have rice, a big bag of rice. There is a reason why you see Chinese drag big bags of rice home all the time. It is served with each meal and accommodates the typical Chinese dish the best. In northern China, people tend to eat less rice and more noodles and dumplings. The fact that rice is grown mostly in the south probably contributed to that. Always buy long-grain rice. It is sticky but still separable when cooked. The white glutinous rice is commonly used for deserts as it has a sticky texture. Don't use that if you plan to eat the rice with other dishes.

Soy sauce is the most important sauce of all. There are many kinds of soy sauce but having two basic varieties at home will surffice for just any Chinese dishes. The thick soy sauce is less salty but has a darker color. It is used to provide a nice red color and an interesting flavor in so called "red-braised" dishes. The thin soy sauce mainly provides the salty flavor and adds little to the color. In most cases a combination of both works the best. Store it at room temperature and as far as I can tell they last forever.

Oyster sauce is made from oyster juice. The taste is not as seafood like as you might think. It has a sweet flavor that is perfect for marinate and dipping. In Chinese cooking, it is often used with stir-fried vegetables. Keep in the fridge.

Fish sauce is quite common in Thai and Vietnamese cooking as well. It is a combination of fish, salt and water. Use it in stir-fry and Thai curry dishes. Store that at room temperature.

Chili sauce is great for making spicy food. Be warned though that even a small amount could make the dish unbearably hot. So always add a little at a time and taste. Often chili sauce and chili oil come in one container. Shake well before use. The Sichuan variety is suitable for most dishes. Southeastern asian variety tends to be too sweet unless the recipe specifically calls for it. Store it in the fridge and don't use it as a dipping sauce.

Olive oil is not so great for deep frying as the temperature never gets hot enough. Seasame oil is another indispensible oil in the Chinese kitchen. It is not suitable for frying or cooking food in, but it is a nice addition to many dishes. Often it is added right before the food is served, since it smells great and provides a complex taste. Use it to make nice dipping sauces.

Zhejiang Rice Vinegar has a nice dark redish brown color and is sweet in taste. It is great for dipping as well. To make sweet and sour soup, just add this and black pepper. There is also the rice vinegar that is almost clear in color. Can use that variety for sushi rice.

Chinese cooking wine tastes much like sherry and serves almost the same purpose as well.

Sunday, April 02, 2006

Sichuan Cuisine

People immediately think of Sichuan food as being hot, sour, sweet, and salty; using fish sauce; or having a strange taste. Actually, these flavors were introduced only in the last 100 years, and initially were popular only in the lower strata of society. Hot pepper, an important flavoring in Sichuan cuisine, was introduced into China only 200 to 300 years ago.

During the period of the Three Kingdoms, the kingdom of Shu was located in Sichuan. According to historical research, the people in Shu liked sweet food. During the Jin Dynasty, they preferred to eat pungent food; however, pungent food at that time referred to food made with ginger, mustard, chives, or onions. As recently as 200 years ago, there were no hot dishes in Sichuan cuisine, and few were cooked with pungent and hot flavorings.

Originally, its flavorings were very mild, unlike the popular dishes of today, such as pockmarked lady’s bean curd and other hot dishes, Even today, some Sichuan dishes, like velvet shark’s fin, braised bear’s paw, crisp duck roasted with camphor and tea, sea cucumber with pungent flavor, minced chicken with hollyhock, boiled pork with mashed garlic, dry – fried carp, and boiled Chinese cabbage have kept their traditional flavors.

Sichuan has been known as the land of plenty since ancient times. While it does not have seafood, it produces abundant domestic animals, poultry, and freshwater fish and crayfish. Sichuan cuisine is well known for cooking fish. As a unique style of food, Sichuan cuisine was already famous more than 800 years ago during the Southern Song Dynasty when Sichuan restaurants were opened in Lin’an, now called Hangzhou, its capital city.

The prevailing Sichuan food consists of popular dishes eaten by common people and characterized by pungent, hot, strange, and salty flavors. Although Sichuan cuisine has only a short history, it has affected and even replaced more sumptuous dishes.

The hot pepper was introduced into China from South America around the end of the 17th century. Once it came to Sichuan, it became a favored food flavoring. Sichuan has high humidity and many rainy or overcast days.

Hot pepper helps reduce internal dampness, so hot pepper was used frequently in dishes, and hot dishes became the norm in Sichuan cuisine. Sichuan food has become the common food for most people in the area, especially since the dishes go well with rice.

In this respect, Sichuan cuisine differs from Beijing cuisine, which was mainly for officials and nobility; Huai – Yang cuisine, which was mainly for rich, important traders; and Jiangsu – Zhejiang cuisine, which was mainly for literati. Typical, modern Sichuan dishes like twice – cooked pork with chili sauce, shredded pork with chili sauce and fish flavor, Crucian carp with thick broad – bean sauce, and boiled mat slices are common dishes eaten by every family.

Sichuan food is famous for its many flavors, and almost every dish has its own unique taste. This is because many flavorings and seasonings are produced in Sichuan Province. These include soy sauce from Zhongba, cooking vinegar from baoning, special vinegar from Sanhui, fermented soy beans from Tongchuan, hot pickled mustard tubers from Fuling, chili sauce from Chongqing, thick, broad – bean sauce from Pixian, and well salt from Zigong.

Sichuan pickles have an appealing smell, and are crisp, tender, salty, sour, hot, and sweet. If pickled elsewhere, even if made the same way using the same raw materials, they still would taste different. This is because the salt, which comes from wells in Zigong, has a unique flavor. In other places, sea salt is often used, which tastes slightly bitter. This example demonstrates that the flavoring materials are very important, apart from the skill of the cooks.

In Sichuan food, a single flavor is rarely used, compound flavors are most common. By blending different seasonings, skilled cooks can make dozens of different sauces each with its own flavor, including creamy, salty, sweet and sour, litchi, sour with chili, hot with chili, spicy and hot, mashed garlic, distiller’s grain, fish sauce with chili, ginger juice, and soy sauce.

The same sauce may be used differently in different dishes. For example, the flavor of the hot with chile sauce for boiled sliced pork is different from the flavor of the hot with chilli sauce for pockmarked lady’s bean curd.

When flavoring foods, sometimes two or more flavorings are combined, and sometimes a hot fire is used to concentrate the extract from the dish to increase the intensity of the flavor, preserve the primary taste of the dish, remove unpleasant flavors, and increase pleasant flavors.

Sichuan cuisine tends to use quick – frying, quick stir – frying, dry – braising, and dry – stewing. In quick – frying and quick stir – frying, the food is fried over a hot fire and stirred quickly without using another pan. For example, it takes about one minute to stir – fry liver and kidney to keep it tender, soft, delicious, and fresh.

The raw materials for dry – braising are mostly fibrous foods like beef, radish, balsam, and kidney beans. These foods are cut into slivers, heated in an iron pot and stirred continuously. Flavorings are added when there is only oil left and the water has disappeared. When the dish is ready, it is dry, fragrant, crisp, and soft.

Dry – stewing is similar to stewing in the Beijing cuisine, but the primary soup or extract in the dish must be condensed over a low fire before the thick broad – bean sauce or hot red pepper is added. No starch is used. When the dish is ready, it looks faddish, oily, and shiny and tastes delicious, crisp and soft. Typical dishes are dry – stewed fish and dry – stewed bamboo shoots.

Sichuan cuisine also has many delicious snacks and desserts, such as Bangbang chicken, chicken with sesame paste, lantern shadow beef, husband and wife’s pork lung slices, steamed beef, noodles with chilli sauce, and rice dumplings stuffed with sesame paste.