For the love of eating & cooking

Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you who you are - Brillat-Savarin

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all - Harriet Van Horne


THE COOK, THE WIFE, THE MUM, THE LIFE...why this blog was birthed

Here lies the secret 'attic' space to unleash the creative overload of one desperate housewife whose desperation is derived from being held hostage by two too-cute toddlers and the extremely cruel demands of domestic life...exciting content includes recipes of success and disasters, crafting,creative writing and the ramblings of the COOK, the WIFE & the MUM(same woman)who reckons there is valid purpose in striving for whatever is deemed to be domestic bliss...


Friday, June 4, 2010

'PNG KUEH' (Steamed Glutinous Rice Cake)



As far as versatility goes, I can hardly find anything as delicious and satisfying as glutinous rice--you simply can't fault this amazing white grain either as a savoury bite or a sweet dessert.


My favourite savoury kuehs which I miss the most dearly since moving away from Singapore have got to be 'Png Kueh' (as pictured) and 'Soon Kueh'. Between them, the skin remains an unachievable feat for most.  I found the latter to be a tad tricky, but am proud to show off my homemade Png Kueh here, skin not only the right tint of light rouge pink, but most crucially, all intact and not a tear! Yayy


PNG KUEH (Kueh Skin):


300g Rice Flour, sifted
2 T Tapioca Flour, sifted
600ml Water
2 T Oil
1 tsp Salt
2 drops red food colouring (optional, you can make white ones too)


The skin should be made while you are steaming the glutinous rice, then left to cool as you cook the filling.




Method (for skin):
1. First, combine all ingredients for kueh skin in a pot on the stove.
2. Mix well to make sure there are no lumps.
3. Bring mixture to a boil while constantly stirring.
4. Keep stirring till a dough is formed and not lumpy.
5. The dough is ready when it is no longer sticky to the touch.
6. Remove dough from pot and place on a suitable surface dusted lightly with tapioca flour.
7. Knead the dough well and divide into small ball portions.
8. Flatten the dough into a small pancake and using a tablespoon, stuff filling into middle of dough.
9. Seal up all gaps and roll back into a ball shape. Press onto mould
10. Invert mould and place on a greased banana leaf or baking paper cut to size.
11. Cook kueh by steaming over high heat for 10 - 15 minutes.
TIP: Brush steamed kuehs with oil that has been 'cooked'after steaming so they they will not stick to each other.


PNG KUEH (Filling):
300g glutinous Rice (soaked overnight or at least 3 hours, steamed for 30 min or till soft)
60g dried mushrooms (soaked for 1 hour, sliced into strips)
100g dried shrimps (soaked for 30 min in hot water)
80g whole peanuts (skins on, soaked for 1 hour)
2 T minced garlic


Seasoning:
1 T dark soy sauce
1 T light soy sauce
2 T chicken stock
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp pepper


Method (to cook filling):


1. Heat 2 T of oil in wok.
2. Add in garlic, mushroom, dried shrimps and peanuts and stir-fry till the aromas form.
3. Add in seasoning sauces and mix well.
4. Add cooked glutinous rice and mix all ingredients, set aside on a deep bowl to cool.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Kat's Craft Studio: Chinoserie themed Card & Gift Wrap

Eversince we gave up our 'baby' (cafe and restaurant--named Barang) so that I could indeed go have a real one and accomplish becoming a full-time mummy, I seem to still be hanging on to what's remained of my memory and concept of our nostalgic asian-inspired chinoserie themed restaurant, and I haven't seemed to have given up reminding friends and family that Barang shall remain an integral part of me, in much of how I've chosen to express myself through my arts and crafts.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Lazy-Ezy-Yummy Banana Bread (Choc Chip & Vanilla)!

Recipe makes 8 generous slices (only 6 pictured here as 2 got hijacked by hubby C during breakfast this morning!)

Don't you get let down so often by recipes that claim to be quick yet predictably nearly always falls so short of the taste test? I've had my fair share of those baking misadventures but fact is, all us busy bees want it quick and yummy and hey why not?!

My banana bread recipe is one such 'fast-to-bake-yum-to-eat' wonder. Quite hilarious to think that I stumbled upon it while watching an over-animated fast-talking TV chef at work and just couldn't scribble the recipe down fast enough..speaking of stumbling, I definitely had to make it up as I went along! It's become such an easy and fast recipe that it's simply our household staple..I mash a couple of overripe bananas, toss and whisk in all the ingredients in a jiffy, scrape down every drizzle of the batter into a small loaf tin with my silicon spatula and stick it into the oven for 45 minutes. Voila! Breakfast or afternoon tea is served. 

Also a great recipe for using up those blackened crescents that used to look like yellow bananas.

(Makes 8 slices)
Ingredients:
50g butter, melted
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 egg, beaten
3 large cavendish bananas, peeled and mashed
1 C brown sugar (or 3/4 C white sugar)
250g self-raising flour
3/4 C chocolate chips

Icing:
1 C icing sugar
1 TB milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 TB butter, melted

Method:
1. Whisk all the wet ingredients including the sugar.
2. Fold in the flour and then add in the chocolate chips.
3. Pour batter into a greased and lined loaf tin and bake 45 min on 180 degrees.
4. Ice the top of the banana bread when it has cooled.