Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Weds, 31st Jan 2007

(Those of you with a particular distaste for liver can move swiftly on as there are several pics of quivery reddish blobs and graphic descriptions coming up)...

Chicken Liver Pate
Finally I made Chicken Liver Pate tonight. Last night, while browsing through some old magazines, I saw a pretty good recipe with a nice pic from Marie Claire magazine and was quite inspired by this. This morning, I looked up more recipes from the net and found out that the methods & ingredients are pretty similar, with some recipes adding sage, or all spice, some even had ketchup and lemon juice.

I rarely follow recipes to the letter but prefer to add/reduce or leave out ingredients to my liking - this therefore is my version of Chicken Liver Pate (first attempt).
Ingredients


1. Butter & Olive Oil
2. Finely chop one onion and four cloves of garlic
3. 250 gm chicken livers ( I bought 300 gms from Supa Save @ 65cents ), after throwing away the attached hearts, I think the weight reduced to 250 gm, but who's counting?
4. Dried Thyme, Marjoram & Parsley
5. Dried Mustard Powder (Colmans)
6. Salt & Black Pepper
7. Brandy (optional, can replace with stock)
8. Cream
Method

1. Wash the livers well - cut into smaller pieces and remove membranes and other unwanted bits. Rinse well and drain. Pat dry.

2. Put a non-stick pan on high heat, add butter and olive oil.
3. Add onions and garlic and fry till lightly browned. Add livers.


4. Stir and add the dried herbs, mustard powder and s & p.



5. Add brandy and stir till well mixed. (For a halal version, just replace brandy with chicken stock).



6. Reduce liquid to concentrate flavours.


7. Add cream and turn down heat.

Stir to combine ingredients.

Further reduction.


8. Simmer gently and adjust seasoning. I tasted it at this point - hmmm - it was g.o.o.d. Strong, bold, gutsy, in-your-face flavours. I think at this point I can happily eat this as it is, on top of crusty bread.... But a pate it is and a pate it should be, so proceed to step 9.

9. Cool slightly and tip the whole thing into a food processor.


10. Puree till smooth but don't over do it. It's ok to have a few small chunks here and there. The chunks add to its rustic charm - hehe.


11. Put into little containers.

12. Melt some butter and allow to cool slightly so that sediment sinks to bottom.


13. Carefully spoon melted butter onto pates to seal, covering the tops completely. Here you can add a bay leaf or perhaps a sprig of cilantro or parsley to garnish.



14. I dusted some dried rosemary and coarsely ground black pepper on top, to add more flavours.


15. Put into little plastic bags and seal with a rubber band to preserve flavours and place it in the refrigerator till required.


Tomorrow I will give a pot each to S & Wm to taste and comment. Hope you'll like them, girls.

Weds, 31st Jan 2007

Soto again - I had a takeaway from Soto Rossmini (again) for lunch today - it was delicious, flavourful soup with tender beef cubes, fried chicken and egg with lots of green vegs, beansprouts, parsley and fried shallots. I added the juice of one lime and topped it with all the chillis... wow, it was spicy and good thing it's nice and cool outside today, with the office kitchen's airconditioning on full blast. Soto is one of my favouritest food.


Fri, 26th Jan 2007

Had dinner by the Poolside at the Sheraton with J & M - from the condiments on the appetisers table, I made this lovely plate of Caesar Salad for us to share.


Added lots of smoked salmon and threw in a handful of corn kernels for added texture and taste. Extra seasoning & dressing, extra anchovies, extra shaved parmesan, extra beef bacon bits and extra croutons as usual.

Starters. Cold Roast Beef, Smoked Salmon, Prawn & Mango Salad, Chicken Caesar Salad & Potato Salad and a piece of Japanese Smoked Eel.



Meaty mains courses. Satay, Chinese Roast Chicken, Roast Leg of Lamb, Grilled Lamb cutlet with Peppersaucce and Sweet & Sour Prawns.



Overall food.

Friday, January 26, 2007

23rd July 2005



Have you been to a dinner party in your pjs?

Food from my archives.

I was already cooking and taking pictures of food back in the 90s - here is a pic of a Chinese New Year's Eve dinner taken at Wm's in 1999. There was chicken salad, prawns with curry leaves and garlic, braised duck, steamed fish, roasted chicken, mixed vegetables, leeks with Chinese sausages, squid with pepper/salt/chilli.



Here is a picture of another dish I cooked -Mud Crab with Ginger & Spring Onion. I have not cooked crab for ages...... hmmmm......


Friday, 26th Jan 2007

Still hungry was I, so I went to the one place where I know there is always food - my camera.

I really could do with this - chicken slowcooked in a claypot.


Tender, juicy, chicken with a salty, tasty, sticky gravy infused with thinly shredded ginger, on steaming hot rice.



This looks good too - mixed tofu with spinach and rice.

p.s Food from Phong Moon Restaurant in town.

Friday, 26th Jan 2007

What do you do when you have a rare afternoon all to yourself?
Get home from work, throw off work clothes, get into home comfies.
Look for food - find nothing, too lazy to cook.
Go watch Channel 11, get hungry.
Look for food again, found packet of keropok.
Fry up a HUGE basket.
Make tea, load tray. Take tray to room.
Plonk on bed - both tray and self.
Munch keropok and sip blackcurrant/apple tea. yummmmm.....


Monday, January 22, 2007

Sunday, 21st Jan 2007

We went to a birthday party today.



Look at the food:



There was:

1. Chicken Beryani


2. Beef Curry


3. Acar


4. Roast Duck



5. Soya Sauce Chicken


6. Prawn Salad


7. Roast Pork



8. Mixed vegetables (fried with garlic and home-made chicken broth & oyster sauce)


9. Noodles


10. Fried Fish



11. Cabbage, carrot, long beans, fish balls, bean curd stick & rice vermicelli in light coconut gravy. (Lodeh)



Nos. 1 to 7 were shop bought, whilst the rest were home cooked by the hostess.
Finally, fruits.

AB - I remembered your advice and took the pics of the pineapple and grapes without flash - good?


And 3 birthday cakes....



Any wonder why this was my dinner that evening?

Blueberry and Orange Friands

Blueberry and Orange Friands


Ingredients
200 gm unsalted butter
250 gm icing sugar
50 gm plain flour
170 gm ground almonds (available from Le Apple)
6 medium egg whites (eggs should be at room temperature)
Grated rind of 1 orange
Blueberries (they were so fresh and firm - Bunny bought them from Soon Lee)

Method

1. Preheat oven to 200C/Gas 6.
2. Butter the muffin tins and put aside.
3. Melt butter and set aside to cool.
4. Sift icing sugar & flour into a bowl.
5. Add almonds and mix icing sugar, flour & almonds together using your fingers. (Bowl 1)
6. Whisk egg whites in another bowl till they form a light & floppy foam.
7. Make a well in the middle of the dry ingredients in Bowl 1 and tip in the egg whites and orange rind and cooled melted butter.
8. Now comes the tricky part of GENTLY but firmly folding in the egg whites into the mixture to form a light batter. Bunny stepped in at this stage.
9. When mixture is smooth and well mixed, divide them into the muffin trays.
10. Pop some blueberries on top.
11. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes until firm to the touch and golden brown. Test with skewer again.
12. Cool in tin for 5 minutes before gently removing them onto a serving tray.



These fairy light cakes were so delicious and look really easy to make when you have Masters as P & B showing you how. The real test is when we have to duplicate this in our own kitchens!
Thank you P & B!