Archive for the ‘Great Original Cuisines’ Category

What’r something to Stew about

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Chicken and Vegetable Stew

Ingredients
12-14 meaty pieces of chicken
3 large carrots
2 parsnips
1 medium sized swede ( a kind of turnip)
8 small white onion or 3 large ones
1/2 cup finely diced large onion
3 stalks flour seasoned with salt and pepper
6 tbsps butter or margarine
salt
2 cups water or more
4 cm (1 1/2 inch) piece of cinnamon stick

Method
Skin carrots, parsnips, swede and onions. Leave onions whole,if small; if large, cut each into quarters. Halve the carrots, parsnips and swede lengthwise, and then cut each piece in 5 cm(2 inch) lengths.
Dredge chicken pieces in seasoned flour. Heat 2 tbsp butter in large saucepan which is not too deep, and fry as many pieces of floured chicken as pan can accommodate. Cover pan for 10 minutes or so, to brown the other side. Remove browned chicken to platter and brown the rest of the chicken, adding a little more butter.
Heat remaining butter in pan, fry the diced onion till soft, then add carrots, parsnips, swede and chicken pieces. Mix well together and then add 2 cups of water, celery and cinnamon stick. Add more more water, if necessary, and thicken with plain flour made into a thin paste with cold water, if a thicker gravy is desired. Test for taste before serving.

More ** Low Cholesterol Diets** and ** Stew Diets**

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Something To Stew About

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

It’s no wonder that stew is a perennial favorite; easy to prepare, one pot cooking which can be store and re-heated when wanted it’s  a boon for busy cooks.Chicken and Vegetable Stew is an economical yet tasty addition for your recipe.

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Quick Vegetable Salad

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

Ingredients

2 cucumbers, halved lengthwise and thickly sliced
1 small ripe pineapple, sliced and each slice coarsely shredded in short lengths
300g soy bean cake fried to a golden brown on both sides and sliced thinly (optional) (more…)

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Local Special “Gadoh-Gadoh”

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Ingredients
Vegetables to be boiled
600g kangkong washed thoroughly and cut into short lengths, using the stalks as well as the leaves
300g long beans, cut into 3 cm lengths
300g cabbage coarsely shredded
4 medium sized potatoes, washed, boiled in their skins and sliced (more…)

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What is Epok Epok

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Ingredients for the filling

2 cups finely shredded bamboo shoot (robong)
For conveniece, use tinned bamboo shoots, but wash the pieces in cold water and boil them briskly for 15 minutes before shredding. I recommend a small tin of Sen Tai brand whole green bamboo shoots, drained weight 225 g or 7 ozs.
2 cups finely shredded yam bean (if shredded portions are too long, halve)
4 small soy bean cakes cut each in 2, then cut each half into three pieces lengthwise, and then finely shred. Fry in shallow hot vegetable oil, till golden brown, but not crisp.
4 large cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 dsp salted soy beans washed and finely pounded
salt and pepper
1/2 cup water
3 dsp vegetable oil, left over from frying shredded soy bean cakes. Add more, if necessary, to make up amount required.

Method
Heat oil in pan. Fry garlic till golden brown and then add pounded salted soy beans and when fragrant, add shredded bamboo shoot, yam cakes, salt, pepper and 1/2 (more…)

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Chili Garlic Sauce

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Recommended for chicken

20 fresh red chilies
20 dried chilies -soak to soften
2 cloves garlic
60 g fine sugar
3 cups vinegar
salt to taste

Method
Finely grind the chilies and garlic. Put all ingredients in a pan and bring to the boil. Cool

More ** Slimming Sauce** and ** Great Cuisine**

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About “Flavors” and Textures”

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Many “flavors” and textures were created by inventing many different techniques of cooking; the cuisine boast some 80 odd different ways in all. A few shreds of meat, some diced fresh or dried shrimps or prawns, a handful of cheap chopped vegetables, a touch of garlic, soy or black bean sauce and several mirror (more…)

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Piquant French Dressing

Friday, December 25th, 2009

Recommended for SeaFood

1 cup vinegar
60 g fine sugar or honey
2 bay leave
salt and mustard to taste
1 clove garlic, finely minced
4 tbsp white wine
100 ml olive oil (more…)

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Great Original Cuisine

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

There are few people today, for instance, who have not tasted or at least heard of Sweet and Sour Pork, Fried Rice, Barbecued Spareribs, Crispy Spring Rolls, Wontons. There are quite a few, too, who know how to make these delicacies at home for a lot of Chinese cooking is, once one knows how it should look and taste, not at all difficult. Once one has mastered the basic discipline of preparing the food (more…)

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Cantonese Cooking

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Cantonese cooking, especially has stayed close to the Taoist principle that food should be eaten as near to its natural state as possible, with as little cooking and seasoning as possible. Chemical tenderizers such as vetsin (monosudium glutamate) are avoided, and cutting and scoring the meats, vegetables and fish in such a way as to achieve the required tenderness preferred. This relies of course, not only on a (more…)

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