Sunday, April 17, 2011

Stuffed Bitter Melon Soup




Having never cooked bitter melon but long being curious, I was excited to see it at Fly Mart (as well as TSM and Family Mart). People tend to love it or hate it, but I found it pleasantly bitter. It's also purported to have medicinal properties, and is especially suited for hot, humid weather...read more here.


Ingredients

2 bitter melons (look for larger ones)
1/2 lb ground pork
3-4 dried wood ear mushrooms, soaked and cut into strips
small handful of bean thread noodles (optional)
3 cloves garlic, minced
a shallot or 1/2 onion or 2-3 scallions, minced
1 tablespoon fish sauce
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground pepper

6 cups of a combination of broth and water, seasoned with fish sauce
lime, cilantro, and scallions for garnish

Soak bean thread noodles in hot water until soft but not cooked through, and chop into 1/2-1 inch pieces. Combine with ground pork, mushroom, garlic, onion, fish sauce, sugar, salt, and pepper. Mix well and set aside.

Bring broth and water to a boil. Feel free to use all broth--I use about 3 cups broth and 3 cups water with about 2 tablespoons of fish sauce. You can use just water, but be sure to season liberally with fish sauce.


Trim ends off bitter melon, and slice into roughly 2-3 inch lengths. With a paring knife or a spoon, remove and discard the white pith and seeds, leaving a hollow cylinder. Stuff bitter melon with pork mixture and add to broth. Lower heat and simmer until the melon is tender.

Serve with chopped cilantro and scallions and lots of lime.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Condensed Milk Substitute

SWEETENED CONDENSED MILK SUBSTITUTE
2 eggs
1 c. brown sugar (i've also used half white sugar when I ran out of brown sugar)
1 tsp. vanilla
2 tbsp. flour
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt

Mix all ingredients and use as a substitute for sweetened condensed milk in recipes for pies, bars and desserts.

Cheesecake

Ingredients

  • 7 graham crackers, crushed (or pre-made crust from cost-u-less $1.99)

  • 2 (8 ounce) packages cream cheese
  • 1 (14 ounce) can sweetened condensed milk (See post for condensed milk sub if not available)
  • 1/4 cup lime juice (or Rose's Sweetened lime juice from cost-u-less in liquor section)

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C). Spray the bottom of one 9 inch pie pan with no fat cooking spray. Sprinkle graham cracker crumbs on the bottom of the pan. (or just use pre-made crust tin from cost-u-less)
  2. In a mixing bowl beat the cream cheese until fluffy. Gradually beat in the condensed milk until smooth. Add lemon juice (or lime juice) mixing well. Pour mixture into prepared pan.
  3. Bake at 325 degrees F (165 degrees C) for 40 to 45 minutes or until center is set. Cool and then chill. Keep cake refrigerated. (it takes things too long to cool here so I like to just stick it in the freezer). then move it to the lower fridge if serving the next day.

Add flavors


-to make lime flavored, set aside 2-3tblsp of cheesecake mixture and add up to 1 tablespoon of lime juice. Mix until smooth. frost top of cheesecake before serving.

-to make chocolate swirl, put chocolate chips (from cost-u-less) on top before baking. after 5 min in oven, use a stick/chopstick to swirl the melted chocolate around. follow the rest of the directions. more chips = more chocolatey.

-you can also make chocolate frosting the same way as the lime frosting but just with however many chocolate chips you like depending on preference.

-or you can melt a lot more chocolate chips into the whole mixture on low heat to have a more chocolatey cheesecake.


Monday, April 4, 2011

Chuka don (Chinese rice bowl)


Ingredients:

1 small carrot

4 pieces of green beans

5 leaves or more of lettuce

1/4 cup of dried fungi ($0.95 at TSM mart)

1 onion

7-8 oz shredded turkey

2 tbsp of oyster sauce

1 tsp of soy sauce

1 tbsp of sesame oil for frying, 1 tsp of sesame oil to sprinkle

1 1/2 cups of water

2 tbsp of corn starch and 2 tbsp of water (mix)

black pepper

2 cups of rice


Preparation:

- Hydrate the dried fungi in a bowl of luke warm water for 30 min. then wring them.

- Cut all the vegetables in the similar sizes so that they'll be cooked evenly.


Direction:

1. Stirfry all the vegetables and meat with 2 tbsp of sesame oil.

2. Add oyster sauce, soy sauce, and pepper, to a little stronger taste than you think good enough, then add 1 1/2 cups of water.

3. Let it boil, then add the mixture of corn starch and water while stirring the stirfried food. Make sure corn starch is well dissolved.

4. Stop the heat, and sprinkle 1 tsp of sesame oil for the aroma.

5. Serve it on the bed of rice, and enjoy!


*Serves 3 people


Note:

- "Chuka" means Chinese and "don" means rice bowl in Japanese. We normally serve this food in a big bowl with rice on the bottom and stirfried thing on top of that rice. Don't ask me why it's called Chinese rice bowl in Japan!

- For the lettuce, I just used the leftover vegetable, so any leafy veggie is fine. Ideally, cabbage or Chinese cabbage since I want to save the lettuce for the fresh salad. Use it a lot since they lose the volume easily with the heat which means you can consume a lot of vegetables.

- For the meat, again, I used the leftover turkey meat, but I normally prefer using pork. Slices of chicken or beef are good alternatives too. Can be strips of bacon or lunch meat too. Baically, any meat is great, seafood is even better.

- You can add any other vegetables or eggs. I usually try to make it colorful.

- You'll add the water to make it thick with cornstarch, so you can put a little more spice/sauce than you think enough - the water and the corn starch dilute the whole thing eventually.