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好心人

Ho Sim Lang

Singapore

Hainanese Chicken Rice

July 19, 2017 by Ho Lang


Hainanese Chicken Rice 

If there is nothing else to eat, Hainanese Chicken Rice is the go-to meal for me. If the world runs out of other types of foods, I can survive on chicken rice everyday. If the world runs out of chickens. Then I guess I will just have to make do with rice. But God won’t let that happen so I will still have chicken rice.

So is this Chicken Rice any better than the famous ones like Boon Tong Kee or Chin Chin at Purvis Street? Yes. This chicken rice and the accompanying Sio Bak is nothing short of tok kong. For $4.50 (SGD) it is cheaper than the branded ones and much much better than the Sambal Petai Fried Rice my woman had yesterday at Yishun Ring Road.

The Chilli sauce is shiok and the soya sauce sweet and savoury. Mixed together, it’s just perfecto! Best part is the coffee-o is only 70 cents (SGD). Best sia. 

Wanna know where? It’s this coffee shop at Block 531 Bedok North Street 3. Hai Tian 531 Coffee Shop. 

Posted in: Reviews Tagged: hainanese chicken rice, Ho Jiaks, local eats, roast pork, Singapore

Stir Fry Puay Leng

September 27, 2016 by Ho Lang

Stir Fry Puay Leng

Puay Leng or Spinach is a vegetable with a good source of vitamins. Even if you didn’t know that if you grew up watching Popeye the Sailorman, you would also have some semblance of understanding that it makes you a strong seaman.

It’s the natural way to have supernatural strength and the healthier way as well. Instead of pill popping to enhance performance, why not eat spinach. Of course eating spinach raw is not very appetizing. You may try and maybe you may enjoy it. But best to cook it the way I do.

It’s easy and simple. And delicious.

Recipe

Ingredients

1 packet Puay Leng vegetables (this vegetable is commonly found in NTUC or any wet market)
1 whole bulb of Garlic (i like lots of garlic and it makes this dish flavourful)
Drizzle of Thai Fish Sauce (IMHO this is the magic ingredient)

Method
1. Wash the Puay Leng. Soak if you need but it is a rather soft vegetable so I would recommend washing only.

2. Crush the garlic whole. If you want, you may slice or chop. But I like it chunky, so I usually bruise the garlic and just fry until slightly brown and you can smell the fragrance of the garlic.

3. After that I dump the whole tray of chopped Puay Leng. No need to chop too small because the vegetable will lose its water content and reduce in size. Add the fish sauce for flavour. Moderate the saltiness. Done!

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: Puay Leng, Singapore, spinach, stir fry

Salmon Cauliflower Porridge

August 4, 2016 by Ho Lang

Salmon Cauliflower Porridge

This is my wife’s favourite quick and easy to prepare meal. It’s easy and it is fuss free, but more importantly, it is delicious.

The tail end of the salmon makes this dish suitable for toddlers as well and cauliflower once cooked this way is a simple and easy way to introduce vegetables to kids.

Top it up with chinese parsley and you can eat. Less than 30 minutes and it is done.

Recipe

Ingredients

Fresh Salmon (I usually get the tail end of the salmon as it is the best part for kids and lesser bones)
Cauliflower (half of a head of cauliflower would be sufficient)
Chinese Parsley (my wife loves lots of parsley in her porridge, so I would usually add in a lot for garnishing)
White Pepper just a dash.
White Rice 1 cup will do.
Thai Fish Sauce add till desired taste.

Method

1. Boil a kettle of water. This is for boiling the porridge faster. Pour the cup of rice into a pot once the water is booked, add it in to boil till rice is broken down.

2. Rough chop the cauliflower and add the pieces into the porridge to boil. The consistency of the porridge has to be watery not thickened. Add more water if necessary.

3. Slice the salmon into thin pieces and add these into the porridge. As salmon cooks relatively quickly, you don’t want to cook for too long. The trick is to cook it for 5 minutes and then off the fire to allow the heat to continue cooking it.

4. Once cooked the salmon should be a hue of bright pink, the cauliflower softened and the rice porridge texture broken down and watery.

5. Add Thai fish sauce to taste and white pepper for flavour. You can add the fish sauce during cooking or after. It is the same. Serve with chopped parsley.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: baby food, cauliflower, porridge, salmon, salmon cauliflower porridge, Singapore

Brown Sauce Pomfret

May 16, 2016 by Ho Lang

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Brown Sauce Pomfret

My wife has been cooking quite a number of meals lately. And this particular dish is my favourite because she does it so well. It is such a simple but flavourful dish that I just got to share it.

The fish here is pomfret and it’s the expensive one which is the white pomfret. This one cost me SGD 15.00 and it wasn’t all that big – probably about 600 grams thereabouts. But it was really fresh and we all loved it.

So my wife loves to cook it in this Brown Sauce that is made up simple of oyster sauce and shao xing hua tiao jiu or chinese rice wine. And it’s so simple and the recipe totally rocks. So to me this dish is called Brown Sauce Pomfret.

The garnishing is also an essential component to making this dish great. A simple combination of Young Ginger slices and shredded Local Celery. The result was simply delicious (I know the photo doesn’t do it justice but try the recipe, it totally rocks!).

Recipe

Ingredients

1 whole White Pomfret (about 600 grams will be sufficient for the pan and for two persons)
3 stalks of Local Celery (I don’t know how else to put it but you can get this vegetable at the local wet market)
3 inches of Young Ginger (sliced very thinly)
Half a bowl of Rice Wine (we use shao xing hua tiao jiu)
2 tbsp of Premium Grade Lee Kum Kee Oyster Sauce (I like to use only the best)
Water (to adjust the saltiness accordingly)

Method

1. Wash and make sure the pomfret is at room temperature.

2. Add 2 tbsp Olive Oil into the pan and then stir fry the ginger slices. Juliene the ginger into thin strips will allow for ease of cooking and also extra the spicy pungent flavours.

3. When you can smell the fragrance of the ginger, add the oyster sauce and rice wine to simmer a little. Then add the pomfret to cook 5 minutes on each side with the wok cover on.

4. Adjust the sauce with a little water. Towards the end add the chopped local celery to the fish. And steam for 1 minute. After that you can serve.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: Brown Sauce, Brown Sauce Pomfret, cooking, pomfret fish, pomfret in Brown sauce, Singapore, white pomfret

Sin Thor Bak Kut Teh

May 9, 2016 by Ho Lang

Chanced upon this Bak Kut Teh stall at block 107 Tampines street 11. The food is actually not too bad. I ordered the long bone ribs and a plate of kiam chye side order. These guys know what they are doing. The ribs are fall off the bone tender, and the kiam chye was nicely done, not too salty.

The only problem I had with the stall is the part where they say “self service”. I mean how to get soup refills if it is self-service? Damn unfriendly I feel. I had to bring my bowl back to the store to ask for a soup refill. I know it is minor issue, but the bowl of soup they gave was so little. The soup’s was fantastic. Nicely peppery and not too over the top.

I wouldn’t go back, but only if I was passing by there. This time round I will get two bowls of soup.

Posted in: Reviews Tagged: kiam chye, peppery soup, pork ribs, Sin Thor Bak Kut Teh, Singapore, tampines bak kut teh

Bak Chor Mee

July 16, 2015 by Ho Lang

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Bak Chor Mee

I love Bak Chor Mee so naturally when I find one that I like a lot. I will keep quiet about it simply because I really like to eat it without having to queue for it. I can’t tahan having to queue for food. Especially when it is my favourite food place.

But that said, there are times when the Bak Chor Mee is so good that I have to share it. This is one of those places. I can’t really remember if I have done a review of this simple stall at Block 524 Hougang Ave 6, but it is a true gem of a noodle stall. The Bak Chor Mee is delicious and interestingly there is something in the mix of the noodles that makes you want to have some more.

I ordered a small bowl with extra fish ball for $3.50, which is a steal if you think about it. Some food courts are already selling a standard portion of Bak Chor Mee for about $3.50 or even $4.00. The Jing Ying Coffee Shop is really old school with some really awesome foods, but this stall is my favourite. Here’s a link to the location, just in case you want to pay them a visit.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Noodles, Reviews Tagged: bak chor mee, fish ball noodles, hougang ave 6, mee kia, mee pok, noodle soup, Singapore

Toast Box Mee Rebus (Review)

March 17, 2015 by Ho Lang

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Toast Box Mee Rebus (Review)

As a child I have loved the old school flavours of local delights such as the humble Mee Rebus. I don’t know where this dish originated from, maybe from the kitchen of some makchik or better still as a result of a mistake in someone’s haste to prepare dinner, and this new dish was discovered.

Whichever the manner it was created, we can only celebrate it by enjoying it. Which is what I am doing now. The one that Toast Box offers is by far one of the more consistent and easily available version. The sauce is thick and the ingredients are always superbly prepared. One of these days I am gonna make this dish and it will be the best and easiest thing to do.

But till then, I will continue to enjoy this yummy breakfast meal. Shiok!

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Eat until like that, buay shiok c kek ae!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Noodles, Perspectives, Reviews Tagged: local delights, mee rebus, Singapore

Tua Cai with Stewed Pork

February 13, 2015 by Ho Lang

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Tua Cai with Stewed Pork

This is my wife’s favourite dish and one that she couldn’t wait for me to come back home to cook. So she decided that she would cook it herself whilst I was still caught in the typical expressway rush hour jam.

I must say she cooked the simple and delicious dish so well and made it look like a walk in the park. The tua cai is so soft and mixed with the stewed pork, it was just simply so amazing. The best part about this dish is, it is so easy to prepare.

Wanna try? Why not.

Recipe

Ingredients

1 whole Tua Cai (vegetable, easily found in wet markets)
1 can of Stewed Pork (narcissis brand)

Method

1. Wash and cut the tua cai and throw into a claypot. Open the stewed pork and dump the entire can into the pot with the vegetable.

2. Turn on high heat, with lid on, cook for about 10 minutes. After that stir and reduce heat to low and allow the tua cai to simmer in the broth. Turn off fire after 20 minutes (total cooking time 30 minutes).

3. Serve with steam rice. Easy.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Vegetables Tagged: Singapore, stewed pork, tua cai

Black Pomfret with Dark Soy Sauce and Rice Wine

November 30, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Black Pomfret with Dark Soy Sauce and Rice Wine

My mother-in-law’s recipe (which she shared in a hazy manner) and my after a few times trial and error to get the right consistency and taste. My official food taster (and my greatest critic), my wife, tends to be a little more critical of the dishes that I copy from her mummy. Naturally if it were my mum’s recipe, I would be a little more strict with the taste-test. This time around though, it is her mother’s recipe and I got to respect the taste. Furthermore, it is a dish that she likes. So I got to get the taste right.

But me, being me, I will usually do it the way that I think is the right way to do it and not the way that people tell me is the right way to do it. I am stubborn like that, but really, it is important to develop your own flair in cooking and be yourself. There are many ways to skin a cat and when it comes to cooking, there is no hard and fast rules to it. To me flavour is everything, everything else is secondary.

Of course this maverick way of cooking only applies to cooking per se and not baking. Where baking is concern, proportions are very important. Baking is more of a science and cooking is like fine art. I can taste my way to perfection if I were cooking Coq Au Vin but if I got the proportions wrong with baking, the Tiramisu will be ruined. There are no two ways about it. So respect always goes to bakery chefs first, and then applause to the celebrity chefs and whatever it is that they are cooking.

So, this I think is perfection. Wifey ate the fish, and enjoyed it silently. Needless to say, I am pleased.

Want to know how it is done? Let me assure you, it is not rocket science. In fact the way I do it, anyone can follow – caveat: you can only if you have the freshest ingredients and the magical Hakka Rice Wine.

Recipe

Ingredients

350-400 grams Black Pomfret

7-8 cm of Ginger

1/4 cup of Hakka Rice Wine

1 tbsp of Dark Soy Sauce

Olive Oil

Method

1. Julienne the ginger into thin strips. Fry in oil until crispy and fragrant. Once ginger strips starts to brown lightly, remove and set aside. Add more oil if needed, and turn the heat down. Pat dry the pomfret and slowly place the fish to fry. You may slowly increase the heat and ensure that the fish is fried till it is crispy.

2. Fry both sides of the fish, turning every so often to prevent it from burning. The skin of the fish is likely to peel off, that is normal. You can only achieve a high level of frying if you have lots of oil in the wok. As for me, I didn’t want to waste oil, so I didn’t use that much. Once the fish is more or less well cooked, you may add the dark soy sauce into the wok and flip the fish a few times so that the sauce gets onto the fish. Then add the magic hakka rice wine and watch the sauce bubble and you know deep in your heart that it is ready for consumption.

3. Once it is ready, garnish the ginger on the fish like in the picture above and you can serve.

Bon Appetit!!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Recipes, Seafood Tagged: black pomfret, fish, Hakka Rice Wine, pomfret, Singapore

Spicy Szechuan Vegetables with Minced and Pork Belly

November 30, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Spicy Szechuan Vegetables with Minced and Pork Belly

This is a childhood classic for me. I remember the nanny cooking this for lunch on a few occasions, although I can’t really remember the details of what she cooked though, I mean who can? It’s been so many years. Alright, I know I said I had a photographic memory before, but this is different. 

So when she told me that it was from Szechuan province, from a far away place and that it traveled very far to get to our home. It was a little unbelievable at first. She said that everyone from that place simply loves and adore the vegetable, and that they would eat it day and night. I thought that they must be extremely proud and sad at the same time eating it. I mean I would be proud knowing that the world was eating my “vegetable”, but yet at the same time, I would be sad because everyone in the world would think that it was all that we ate all day. There was probably nothing much else to eat. Of course I am sure they do eat other vegetables but as a child, we thought in absolutes.

Years past and the dish has become commonplace in many cai fan 菜饭 places. Some places do it well while others just cannot make it. Anyway, wifey wanted to eat this dish and since we had the szechuan vegetable in the fridge, I thought that it was also good time to cook it.

My rendition of the classic dish is to add pork belly and minced pork with some chilli padi and a dash of dark soy sauce. I bought my szechuan vegetable from the wet market, which basically meant that it was likely to be spicy and very high in salt content. There are different types of szechuan vegetable that are being sold in the supermarkets and these are already shredded nicely for the cook and they are not so salty. They come in a variety of spicy and non-spicy which really helps if you want to make a non-spicy version.

Recipe

Ingredients

half a dollop of Szechuan Vegetable – purchased from the wet market, high in salt content and spicy
100 grams of Pork Belly – following from the recipe for preparing boiled pork belly
150-160 grams of Minced Pork
a tbsp of Dark Soy Sauce
4-5 pcs of Garlic
4 pcs of Chilli Padi

 

Method

1. Soak the szechuan vegetables in a bowl of hot water. I realised that it is better to slice them thinly first before soaking. This would help a lot. Recommended to soak at least 30 minutes. While that is soaking, mince the garlic and heat up the oil in the wok. Fry until fragrant.

2. Add in pork belly and fry, moderate the heat to a medium. Then add the minced pork and fry until the colour just change which suggests that it is semi-cooked. Then add in the shredded szechuan vegetable along with the shredded chilli padi. Fry the dish until it is more or less cooked, then add a dash of the dark soy sauce and continue stirring. The end result should look a little bit like the picture below.

Bon Appetit!!

 

Ho Sim Lang

 

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Vegetables Tagged: chilli padi, garlic, minced pork, pork belly, Singapore, szechuan, szechuan vegetables

Chicken in Rice Wine

November 20, 2014 by Ho Lang

 

Ho Sim Lang

Chicken in Rice Wine

I recently discovered this wonderful way of making chicken in rice wine. Hakka Rice Wine to be precise. Somehow when you cook chicken in rice wine and excessive amounts of ginger, over a slow fire, what you usually get is a concoction that literally brings a smile to the face. The rice wine has a sweet sugary taste to it which makes the chicken taste really yummy.

It’s so good that I have decided to bring my six “friends” (drumlets) together for this wonderful confluence of flavours. We already consumed the wings and since then I have been thinking of a nice recipe to send off these guys.

Finally they are ready to go. This is their finest moment.

Recipe

Ingredients

6 Chicken Drumlets *after using the wings in the airfryer*
Lots of Ginger *maybe 8-9 cm of one inch thickness*
Half a bowl of Hakka Rice Wine
White Pepper
2 tbsp of Light Soy Sauce
2 tbsp of Dark Soy Sauce
3-4 tbsp Olive Oil

Method

1. Carve the meat off the chicken drumlets for ease of cooking. Marinate the meat and bones with light soy sauce and white pepper. Allow the meat to marinate at least for 5-10 minutes.

2. Julienne the ginger (I usually diced), and then heat the olive oil in a clay-pot over low fire. Then fry the ginger strips until brown and crispy.

3. Add marinate chicken meat (including bones) into the clay-pot for cooking. Over slow fire continue to cook until chicken pieces turn whitish in colour. Add dark soy sauce and continue cooking. Finally add the Hakka Rice Wine and allow the chicken to simmer and cook. Once cooked serve with steam rice.

Bon Appetit!!

Ho Sim Lang

 

Carve meat off the drumlets

Ho Sim Lang

 

Fry the ginger strips until brown and crispy

Ho Sim Lang

 

Add the marinated meat to cook with ginger

Ho Sim Lang

 

Nicely braised chicken in Hakka Rice Wine

Posted in: Chicken, Food, Local, Recipes Tagged: chicken rice wine, Hakka Rice Wine, poultry, Singapore

Braised Pork Belly in Soya Sauce

November 6, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Braised Pork Belly in Soya Sauce

One of my favourite meat dishes which I grew up eating when we had a maid servant who was Singaporean. I used to call her Ah Soh, and it seems that was a sign of respect. Anyway, it was much later that I realized the term of reference was what my parents called her. I should have used some more polite term.

Anyway she was an excellent cook and would whip up local delicacies some of which I would refer to as our heritage dishes. I call them “heritage dishes” because if we don’t cook enough like our forefathers do and if we aren’t chefs with a passion for local cuisine, then these dishes might become a recipe most suited for the archives, and labeled as “heritage”. Dishes that our parents and their parents brought from where they came from to our shores.

I don’t know if braised pork belly in soya sauce counts as a heritage dish, but I guess if it can’t be found commonly cooked in the homes anymore, it should count as a heritage dish. For example, the delicious bak kwa is considered heritage because nobody in their right mind would attempt making it at home. I might actually make an attempt though, just to see how tough it is to do so.

So I boiled this huge 漂亮 beautiful pork belly last Saturday and I threw it into the freezer, only to defrost it today for such a time as this – to make braised pork belly in soya sauce. It is quite simple to do actually, and because the pork belly is already cooked, making it now is purely assembling all the ingredients together into the pot. So easy.

Recipe

Ingredients:

Boiled Pork Belly *sliced thinly*
2 Chinese spoons x Dark Soya Sauce
5 cm of Cinnamon stick
1 cup Pork Stock
Handful of mini shitake mushrooms

Method:

1. In a pot of water, put shitake in to boil. After mushrooms are soften, discard water.
2. Add cinnamon stick, pork stock, boiled pork belly, two Chinese spoons full of dark soya sauce. Cover lid of Claypot and boil at low heat, stirring every few minutes to ensure pork slices are covered in sauce.
3. Optional: many cloves of unshelled garlic.

Serve with plain congee.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes Tagged: braised pork belly soya sauce, Singapore

Boiled Pork Belly

November 1, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Boiled Pork Belly

This is my mother-in-law’s recipe. Which I tried to follow but failed miserably because I was busy doing some other things – like paying bills. So multitasking is just another word for distraction. Nuff said.

She cooked this lovely pork belly, boiled and it was just the simplest dish in the world. I dipped it in home-made chilli sauce and it was out of this world. I had to learn and do it.

I asked her in my mixture of pidgin Chinese and deciphered enough to know that it was really the easiest recipe in the world. The only criteria was that the pork belly had to be beautiful or 漂亮. I asked her how to know if it was 漂亮, she said that I would know it when I saw it.

And so, I met the butcher this morning and he offered me what he had left for the day. The slab of pork belly had two nipples on it, and I thought maybe this was what she (MIL) meant by 漂亮.

So I asked the uncle to give me pork belly that was 漂亮, and he proudly said “这个很漂亮!”

I guess since he was the butcher, he can’t be wrong, and so I paid the man $15 (SGD) and the rest was as they say, history.

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Recipe

Ingredients:

1 kg of 漂亮 Pork Belly
Sea salt

Method:

1. In a large pot, boil water till boiling. Place pork belly into pot with water covering the meat. With slow fire, boil for at least 45 minutes. After the meat is cooked, turn off the fire and allow it to sit in the pot for another 15 minutes.

2. Take the cooked pork belly and then rub it with sea salt. Allow the meat to cool and then wrap it up in a ziplock bag and throw it into the freezer.

3. You can keep the meat for all kinds of dishes, either sliced and eaten in its own. Or fried with vegetables. The stock can be preserved into plastic containers and used for flavoring for other dishes.

Bon Appetit!

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Posted in: Asian, Local, Pork, Recipes, Soup, Stock Tagged: pork belly, Singapore

Bak Kut Teh

September 30, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Bak Kut Teh

This is my all time favourite local dish. I guess you would know by now that I have a lot of all time favourites. It is okay I supposed since we are Singaporeans. Every local delicacy it seems is an all time favourite with most of us. Anyway, I love Bak Kut Teh and I am always on a lookout for a good Bak Kut Teh stall. To me the one at Prome Road at Balestier rocks. Second in line is the one at Sin Ming Ave. The rest of the Bak Kut Teh stalls that people rave about is just so-so IMHO.

Anyway, so I decided that I would replicate the humble Bak Kut Teh for dinner. A quick search and guess what? Mr Seetoh from Makansutra has already beat me to it and has developed a simple and easy to cook Singapore  styled Bak Kut Teh. Enjoy people. If you noticed, I have already wrote a Bak Kut Teh recipe, but I really love this dish, so this time, I decided to try it again, but without the spice packet that I would usually get from NTUC. I want to see if I can make an awesome Bak Kut Teh without “cheating”.

Recipe

Ingredients

400 grams Garlic

50 grams White Peppercorns

1 kg Pork Ribs

1 kg Pork Bones

5 litres of Water

3 tsp of Sea Salt

 

Method:

1. Par boil the pork ribs, then discard water to get rid of scum. Then boil a fresh pot of water – 5 litres. Add the garlic, (slightly bruised), white peppercorns (slightly cracked and roasted over a pan). Add sea salt.

2. Boil on high heat for 15 minutes, then place the pot into the thermal cooker.

3. When you’re back from work, boil the broth again, and then have a taste test. Adjust with sea salt accordingly. Serve with steam rice.

 

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Soup Tagged: bak kut teh, Singapore, teochew

Braised Duck (Teochew style)

September 15, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Braised Duck (Teochew style)

Braised duck or the teochew like to call it, lo ack  (which basically means braised duck). I decided that I would learn and make an awesome braised duck yesterday, and that’s exactly what I did today. Thanks to this awesome braised duck video that I saw on YouTube.

Grandma’s recipes. Totally rocks! I decided that I would adapt her recipe to my preference and style of cooking. I like using the thermal cooker, so my recipe works with the thermal cooker.

Are you ready? Here goes!

Recipe

Ingredients

1. Half a duck *chopped*
2. Galangal or blue ginger – 6-7 slices
3. Raw sugar – 4 Tbsp
4. 1 cinnamon stick
5. Dark soy sauce *tai hua brand, standard quality* small bottle can liao
6. 250 ml of water.

Method:

1. Salt the duck lightly and then wash it away. I skipped this step because I found it quite dumb. Plus I didn’t want to waste salt.

2. Heat the sugar in a wok until it turns brown. Make sure it doesn’t burn. So moderating the fire is critical.

3. Dump the pieces of duck into the work and allow the sugar to coat the duck. The grandma video say 8 Tbsp of sugar. I think it is too much, so I used half.

4. After you roughly got some sticky sugar onto the duck, you then add half a bottle of dark soy sauce. Don’t go and buy the big bottle and add half a bottle. It is not the same Ok?

5. Add the sliced blue ginger into the pot. If you don’t like the ducky smell, add more ginger. Or par boil the duck first.

6. Add the cinnamon stick. Then add water. Adjust accordingly.

7. Boil at high heat for at least 15 minutes, then dump the pot into the thermal cooker and allow it to slow cook for at least throughout the day or overnight. Up to you.

8. Serve with steam rice.

Bon Appetit !!

Posted in: Asian, braised, Duck, Food, Local Tagged: braised duck, lo ack, Singapore, teochew

Kiam Chye Duck Soup

September 8, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Kiam Chye Duck Soup

I realized while trying to pen down this recipe that there was no way of phrasing this delicacy without murdering the name of the dish. Maybe not murder but definitely it would be a herculean challenge to describe the name in just one language alone or one that everyone would understand.

If I said Kiam Chye Arc, you might think it was a monument of some sort. Or salted mustard duck soup and it might be a tad too literal for some. Furthermore, it might not bring to mind that old familiarity. Or if I were to call it 咸菜鸭, you might wonder why I am writing this recipe in English. Either way it would be best to come to a compromise of terms. So Kiam Chye Duck it is then.

Anyway, this is my first time trying this recipe and according to the law of trying a recipe for the first time, I should really hammer in the works but yet not cloud the original intention of the dish. You got to taste the salted mustard, the indelible flavour of the duck and the sourness of the tomatoes and sour plums. Everyone else in this quintessential Macbeth broth is secondary. Now all you need is a little lightning, thunder and rain and it would be perfect.

Recipe

Ingredients

1. 1 kg or Half a duck *buy from wet market is cheaper*
2. 500 grams of Kiam Chye aka salted mustard
3. Bunch of garlic.
4. 100 grams of ginger *sliced*
5. 4 sour plums *Chinese preserved plums*
6. 3 medium Tomatoes

Method

1. Par boil the chopped duck pieces for about 5 minutes. Discard the water. This is to get rid of scum as duck meat tends to have lots of that. Also it is very oily, so best to boil twice and discard the water.

2. Place the Kiam Chye leaf by leaf into the pot. Cut tomatoes into quarts and dump them in. Dump the garlic in the pot and the sour plums. Dump the sliced ginger into the pot. Once they are all in the pot, make sure the water covers the ingredients.

3. Boil the ingredients in high heat for 15 minutes before putting the pot into the thermal cooker to slowly braise the meat further. By evening it would be ready and delicious.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Duck, Food, Local, Recipes, Savoury, Soup, Vegetables Tagged: duck soup, Kiam Chye Duck, Singapore, soup

Bak Kut Teh Recipe

September 7, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Bak Kut Teh Recipe

My all time favourite (I realized I have a lot of favourites!) Bak Kut Teh – home cooked, and very easy to do actually. These days with the easy herbs spice sachets available at NTUC supermarkets, you have no reason not to try it out.

My only issue with these herbs spices is the taste at the end of the day. Sometimes some brands the taste cannot make it. By far red man brand from phoon huat is the best. The blend and taste is really tok kong. So I couldn’t get to phoon huat that day and so I settled for this other brand Seah’s something-something from ntuc.

The taste is not too bad just that I may have added too much garlic perhaps. But it’s so so easy to make. Try it.

Recipe

Ingredients

1. 500 grams of pork ribs *ask the butcher to give you the type for making bak kut teh.*
2. 1 packet of spices *Seah’s*
3. A bunch of white peppercorns.
4. A bunch of garlic 6-7 pieces.

Method
1. Boil a pot of water. Par boil the ribs for about 5 minutes and discard water to remove the scum. Add a fresh container of water. Then continue boiling the pork ribs in the new water.

2. Add the sachet of bak kut teh spices. Add white peppercorns and garlic pieces. You may leave the skins on.

3. Boil for 15 minutes at high heat. Off the fire and place pot of soup into thermal cooker to allow it to continue cooking in the vacuum pot.

4. By evening it would be perfect. Succulent, meat falling off the bone. I still prefer red man bak kut teh spices though. Much nicer.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Savoury, Soup Tagged: bak kut teh, peppery broth, Singapore

Herbal Black Chicken Soup

July 17, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Herbal Black Chicken Soup

Day four of the new dawn. I could hear the crackling of thunder not too far away. When I looked out of the window, flashes of lightning lighted the twilight sky. It’s gonna be a good day today. I have always loved raindrops on the window of my Aircon bus.

Good days therefore deserves a good pot of soup. I decided that Herbal Black Chicken Soup would really make the day even more special. Don’t worry, baby won’t be partaking in this soup. I will be making plain porridge with minced pork and marmite for him. I know he sure like wan.

So just nice the black chicken would be so totally perfect for dinner. The wife even asked for a bowl when she returns home. I bought the herbs the day before at NTUC and I was sure the end result would be a perfect bowl of soup.

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I was right.

Where I shop?

I got my black chicken from the wet market. There is something more fresh about buying fresh meats from the wet market. Okay, I needed to say that. Of course if there wasn’t a wet market around where I lived, I would have gone in search of one. Fresh meats are more fresh at the wet market (myth#1).

The herbs I got from NTUC. Once I heard from a friend that her child asked her..

Child: “mama, is there a giant in the supermarket?”

My friend thought to herself and polled Facebook for an answer on how to reply the child.

Me being the good-hearted person replied..

Me: “that’s not a problem, wait till she asks you if there is a National Trade Union Congress in the supermarket. That would require much more explanation.”

Okay, that was a lame supermarket joke.

Recipe

Ingredients

1 Black Chicken chopped into 4 parts
1 Packet of Dun Ji Tang herbs
2 bottles of Brands Essence of chicken

Method

1. Dump (I love the word!) the black chicken into the pot. Par boil it and then discard the water. Fill it up again.

2. Dump the herbs into the pot. Turn high heat and boil (bubbling) for 15 minutes. Switch off and load the pot into the thermal cooker.

Bon Appetit!

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Posted in: Asian, Chicken, Family, Food, Local, Recipes, Soup Tagged: black chicken soup, dun ji tang, herbal, Singapore

Eat Bak Chor Mee (review)

July 14, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Eat Bak Chor Mee (review)

Today my colleagues and I went to EAT to eat Bak Chor Mee. We really love eating it at EAT. However, it was not to be so at EAT today when we ate it at EAT. There seemed to be something quite wrong with the EAT BCM noodle master’s powers of estimation.

I asked for BCM but I also wanted to add fish cake, thinking that it was going to be the deep fried fish cake that they sell on the side. I love the EAT deep fried fish cakes by the way, they are excellent, even on their own. The stall lady asked me how much fish cakes I wanted to add and suggested a top up of a dollar. I thought it was fine to add a dollar’s worth of deep fried fish cake.

To my dismay and much disappointment, the fish cake that the noodle master gave me was a mere four slices of the delicacy. I had a shocked when he presented the completed product to me and I could only let out a futile yelp of despair.

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I had to portray exactly what $1 of fish cake was worth at EAT or else you might think I was joking and trying to pull a fast one. What you see in the picture above is one dollar’s worth of fish cake. Wow.

Either inflation has swept through Singapore right under my nose or the noodle master had something against customers who liked adding fish cakes to their BCM. Maybe it was against internationally acceptable BCM standards to not have fish cakes added into BCM. Maybe his strict adherence to this rule might have had some manner of impact on his sense of duty in the guild of international noodle masters that caused his deft fingers to show great restraint when scooping the fish cakes into my bowl.

Four miserable slices of fish cakes.

I hope that your $1 was worth more than mine.

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Noodles, Personal, Perspectives, Pork, Random, Restaurants, Reviews Tagged: bak chor mee, BCM, Eat, Singapore

Soup for Three

July 14, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Soup for Three

Our favourite soup. I guess it is favourite because it is the only soup that I can remember how to make at the snap of the finger. For the other recipes, I can’t seem to recall for some very strange reason. I could only conclude that this was the soup of the day and that I should therefore cook it. Not such a big decision anyway.

A simple soup or four ingredients of corn, carrot, potatoes and pork ribs. My wife calls it ABC soup but I struggled with that definition. As far as the soup is concerned, it should be abbreviated as PPCC or CCPP or PCCP (you get the idea), so maybe I will refer to my own abbreviation for convenience.

Maybe it is so easy to make that some folks might have said that it was as easy as ABC. Okay, that I agree. It is so easy you could train a monkey to do it.

Recipe

Ingredients

1 ear of Corn
1 large Carrot
3 medium Potatoes
250 grams of lean Pork Ribs
Salt

Method

1. Par boil the pork ribs just so to remove the scum. This is good practice so that you only get the good stuff. Don’t boil too long or you might lose all flavour.

2. Slice carrots, corn and potatoes and then dump it into pot. Fill with water until it covers ingredients. Turn on high heat. Boil for about ten to fifteen minutes with lid on.

3. Then place pot into thermal cooker (no electricity needed) and let it cook for the rest of the day. I use a thermal cooker because the meats are tenderized and the vegetables are sufficiently cooked without disintegrating into the soup. For all my morning soups, I use the thermal cooker. It’s great!

4. When you are about to serve, add salt to taste. Easy!

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Family, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Soup Tagged: ABC soup, corn carrots potatoes, Singapore

New Dawn (Musing)

July 12, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

New Dawn (Musing)

It’s a new dawn. Not the twilight sexy good looking kind of new dawn with werewolves running around in their skin tight furs. My parents are moving house, and that presents a couple of issues for us that we have taken for granted till now. If there is someone that says “you are taking your parents for granted” – then let me be the first to admit it. You don’t have to say it. I have always knew from day one that the current arrangement while being perfect for us, was really not a solution in the long run.

Ultimately we have to manage on our own how we are going to do this.

So I have decided that I would do the cooking from now on. I know I have been doing most of the cooking anyway. But going forward, it is now a matter of survival. I won’t be cooking for leisure or pleasure, this is the gritty stuff. I have to be determined to cook my way through. So the next thing is to embark on a plan. Yes, we are going cold turkey from next week onwards and how we balance it will show.

I woke up this morning and I had a severe case of heart burn. Possibly it could be reflux from the ginormous amounts of rainier cherries (I should do a post on that) my wife and I had consume the night before. And in between then and now, I had massive LS and multi-fartilosis. It was bad. You won’t want to be within range.

Anyway, so the heart burn made me really uncomfortable, and I knew the reason why, so I wasn’t so disturbed by it. I went to the wet market as it is my usual practice and this time around, I knew I had to refresh my kitchen condiments and stock up for the week. I wanted to stay within budget so the strategy for the wet market on saturday morning was to really buy the basics and then buy the rest of the items throughout the week. That way I can pace myself with what I want to cook. At the moment, my mind draws a complete blank. It is hard to think when you have heart burn.

I purchased my four best friends – sea salt, olive oil, thai fish sauce and light soy sauce. They have been with me for so many years, and I knew that I could always depend and count on them for flavour. My wife’s a picky eater, so I have to be very careful when I prepare my dinners. But really, food is to be eaten.

So my total marketing for the following groups today is $57.60. I got chicken, pork, fish and vegetables. Not bad for starters.

Now the problem is thinking what to cook and to do it efficiently so that it fits into my time schedules.

Posted in: Asian, Chicken, Ingredient, Personal, Perspectives, Potatoes, Random, Seafood, Vegetables Tagged: cooking for the week, Singapore, wet market

Mao Shan Wang 猫山王

July 4, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

 

Mao Shan Wang 猫山王

There is something about this Mao Shan Wang, that literally drives Durian Lovers to the end of their wits. The colour, flavour, pungent smells of the durian simply overpowers the senses, and even if the box is tightly wounded up with cling wrap, it wasn’t too long before the cat is let out of the bag.

I too have fallen in love with this particular type of Durian, notably not only the king of all fruits, but I feel, it is the king of all durian types. It is worth every dollar that the durian seller tries to hack you for. That’s if they give you the best quality type of Mao Shan Wang or “Cat Mountain King” as so many who cannot speak a word of Chinese have come to use.

The name seems to be synonymous with quality, flavour and its ability to turn any heathen to become so totally devoted to its lovely hue of bright yellow. It is almost like how the baguette is like to the French. The romance between Durian lovers and their craving for bitter (bitter-sweet) Mao Shan Wang is unlikely to pass, not likely in any future. Demand is likely to increase, and this is a good sign for Durian sellers and lovers alike. More demand equals more supply, more supply equal lower prices without compromising quality.

My wife and I have become ardent fans of that elusive flavour; that bitterness. We usually get our Mao Shan Wang from this guy named “Ah Kok” and he ensures that we get what we pay for. There is no tomfoolery or smart conversations with this guy. He is no nonsense Durian seller – the type that we like to transact with. We don’t bargain, and he doesn’t take us for a ride. He delivers what he promises – which is good quality Mao Shan Wang albeit in a transparent tupperware container without the husks. We have been ordering from this guy for quite a while and for the quality, we are happy to pay the price and forgo the enjoyment of prying open the fruits with our bare hands.

Promptly he arrives at the said timing. We pay. He hands over the goods and leaves. And then for us, the ritual begins.

We would firstly gush as we open the lid (pretending that the lid was the husk of the durian) and savour the pungent flavour of that wonderful flesh. We would examine the durians to see if it was exactly what he said it would be; what we know it should be. True enough, the flesh peels over the oily-shiny surface of the seeds which is a good sign and characteristic of this type of durian. And each bite into its lovely flesh leaves us with an indescribable feeling of “Wah Lau Eh” (can’t find the right words). The bitterness is so overwhelming that you just want to yelp out an expression of satisfaction, dance around the room or do some ridiculous breakdance moves.

So far, and sadly, we have also come to love this process of buying durian. As much as I would have preferred the mystery of hacking open the thick thorny husks of the durians with my karate moves and hoping in my heart like a little child that it would be the perfect Mao Shan Wang. I have also come to accept that life is not perfect, and that the uncertainty of getting a lesser than what you expected durian has worn down my perseverance in wanting to be a puritan durian lover.

At the end of the day I concluded that Durian sellers have to sell durians. Good or bad, they have to make sure that they strike the balance between giving all the good stuff to their favourite customers and pushing off the not so good ones to the undiscerning newbie. Some durian sellers have become quite good at the art of selling/pushing durians. They seem to have a phrase to deconflict every objection that the prospective buyer may have.

 

Where to find good Mao Shan Wang in Singapore?

So the next question that most people would ask would be, where to find good quality Mao Shan Wang then? Good question, I honestly don’t know. But I have come across some durian sellers who have sold us durians that we thought was not too bad, and they have also assured us a sense of their trustworthiness and professionalism. Well, maybe not. Again, the term Durian sellers sell durians rings true. They don’t just sell one type of durian. They sell every type to every type of customer.

There is a stall at National Library at Toa Payoh Central that is quite good. Their guys tend to shout “Yellow!” every time they open a durian. I mean of course it is yellow right? What other colour would they be expecting their durians to have? Apparently they like to say it that way and customers seem to like the novelty of seeing these guys shout “Yellow!”.

Besides that place, we also like going to Geylang and buying from Chin Yong Fruits. The guys over there are very savvy and for their regulars, they are pretty good at delivering what their customers want, of course, price is immaterial – getting the right durian is most important.

Lastly, my all time favourite place, 717 along Yio Chu Kang Road. They open and you choose, and if you don’t like, they will open another one. Which is a rare thing these days as most Durian Sellers sell durians. They don’t just sell one type.

If these guys aren’t available, and we want to get our durian fix, we will always call “Ah Kok”, and he always delivers.

Posted in: Asian, Food, Fruits, Perspectives, Random Tagged: chin yong fruits, durian, geylang, king of fruits, mao shan wang, Singapore

Tau Suan

June 26, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Photo Courtesy of LJ *thanks!*

 

Tau Suan

Here is an all time favourite local dessert eaten by virtually anyone, and most people will tell you how difficult it is to cook this delicacy and that you would need to spend a lot of time cooking it etc. Well, half of what people tell you is true, all the other stories are mostly not true.

Let me show you how easy it is to cook this and if I can do it, you can also.

Fortunately for those that need a little more visuals, I found a really good video on YouTube that we can all follow. See Toh from Makansutra does it really well. You can follow his instructions and ingredient list if you like, or you can follow my no frills method.

I shop and got all my ingredients from the dry goods section at NTUC Supermarket.

 

Recipe

Ingredients

250 grams Mung Beans or Green Split Beans (don’t ask me why they are called Green when they are actually Yellow)

1 bunch of Pandan Leaves

Rock Sugar

Sweet Potato Flour

 

Method:

1. You may rinse the mung beans if you like. Most people do this until the water is clear. If you ask me why do people do that, I will tell you that it is totally unnecessary. Why make your life so difficult? Just dump the entire 250 grams into the pot and fill it up with 1.5 litres of water.

2. Wash and twist pandan leaves into two or three bunches. Dump the bundles into the pot of water with the mung beans. Boil until mung beans are jumpy and dancing in the pot. Sing twinkle twinkle little stars.

3. Walk twenty metres away from the pot and stay there. When you start to smell the pandan flavour from 20 metres away, chances are it is almost done. Walk back to the pot and remove the pandan leaves. By now the water should be a watery yellow in colour. You can take a few beads of mung beans and test them for softness. If the required texture is achieved which is basically softened mung beans, you can proceed to add the flour mixture.

4. This is when you mix your sweet potato flour in a bowl of cold water until it is a milky mixture. Slowly pour it into the boiling mung bean broth and stir until it thickens into a starchy mixture. If you have poured the entire bowl into the pot and it is still not starchy like the usual tau suan texture, then feel free to mix some more and continue to pour into the pot.

5. Once ready, add some You Tiao or fried dough fritters, and you can eat. If you’re looking for Halal dough fritters, Old Chang Kee sells them but only in the morning. And don’t forget to add the rock sugar! Add until it is just about starting to be sweet then stop.

Bon Appetit!

 

 

Posted in: Asian, Desserts, Local, Recipes Tagged: green split beans, mung bean, Singapore, tau suan

Nasi Lemak (Toast Box)

June 18, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Nasi Lemak (Toast Box)

Today was one of those “I need to eat Nasi Lemak” days.. We went to our usual Coffee and Toast place but the lady said their supply “not here yet”..

Frantically we went to Ya Kun and the lady over there shook her head as well. Then we finally came to Toast Box and they had one of the best Nasi Lemak money can buy at that point in time. Sometimes when we are wrought for choice we tend to accept whatever sub-standard derivative of the product that we can find to satisfy the cravings.

Thankfully not today. We were greeted with delicious hot steaming coconut infused rice and crispy ikan bilis, sunny side up and delicious chicken wings.

This compared to the usual cold dry Nasi Lemak that we usually get. It was a welcome change. A little pricey though but for the difference it is just right.

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Perspectives, Random, Reviews Tagged: nasi lemak, Singapore

Home-Cooked Prawn Noodles

April 16, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Home-Cooked Prawn Noodles

I have always loved Prawn Noodles and for a long time now I have always wondered what it was that was included in that special broth that is synonymous with great tasting soup. I think it is largely monosodium glutamate is we were to consume the Prawn Noodles at the coffee shop or the hawker centre. But what if we were to try out that old local favourite at home? Would we do it the same way?

I chanced upon a packet of Prawn Noodle mix by Ah Hai (can find at NTUC) and at first glance, I thought that it was just another pre-mix recipe that will probably yield some salty end result. That may be true for some, but I decided to give it a try anyway, and it was one of the best decisions I made (alright you know I am exaggerating a little. This is Prawn Noodles that I am talking about.)

Most people would think that the pre-mix package is probably not good, and probably not great. But it was all good for me. The taste was just right. In fact I went on to make a fresh version of Prawn Noodles eventually, and it tasted just as good. But here is the recipe that I did for the Ah Hai’s Prawn Noodle paste. Enjoy.

 

Recipe – Serving for four

Ingredients

8 Prawns (Large)

Egg Noodles (500g)

Kang Kong (one bunch)

Bean Sprouts (one bunch)

Yakibuta (prepared separately) [optional]

Fish Cake (1 pc)

Red Chilli (1 pc)

Ah Hai’s Instant Prawn Noodle Paste (1 packet)

 

Method

1. Cut off the heads of the Prawns and fry the heads in a large pot with a little oil. Fry till fragrant.

2. Pour Ah Hai’s Instant Prawn Noodle Paste (NTUC sells it) into pot and pour in 2 litres of water. Bring to a boil and keep it at medium heat for 30 minutes.

3. Sieve the broth and pour into another soup pot. Blanch the egg noodles, Kang Kong, Bean Sprouts and Prawns in hot water.

4. Place all the cooked ingredients into a bowl and ladle the steaming hot broth into the bowl. Serve with Red Chilli in dark soy sauce. I use Yakibuta as opposed to the traditional Pork Ribs simply because it is tastier.

Bon Appetit!

 

Bonus Recipe:

 

Yakibuta – Japanese Char Siu

 

Ingredients

Pork Belly (300gm)

Shao Xing Cooking Wine

Mirin (Japanese Sweet Wine)

Light Soy Sauce

Dried Kelp

 

Method

1. Sear the Pork in the bottom of a pot and allow the sides of the meat to cook. Be careful not to cook the meat for too long.

2. Add in the Shao Xing Wine (1 cup), Mirin (3 Tbsp), Light Soy Sauce (3 Tbsp) and fill with water until liquid slightly covers pork. Add in the Dried Kelp. Bring to a boil and cook the meat over a slow fire for about an hour. Use a wooden skewer to test for doneness.

3. Slice the Pork Belly and decorate over Ramen noodles or in this case, Prawn Noodles.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Noodles, Pasta, Recipes, Seafood, Soup Tagged: home cooked, prawn noodles, seafood recipes, Singapore

Somersby Peary (Musing)

April 8, 2014 by Ho Lang

Somersby Peary (Musing)

So after a brief hiatus, this drink that made its debut appearance some years back has now decided to come back and flush our quest for thirst quenchers with a little bit of punch. The Somersby Pear Cider, an alcoholic (kids don’t try this drink) drink is now readily available island wide. So what is this drink actually? Honestly, to me it is just another drink. More importantly from the video, it seems to be targeting youths who can drink legally. So ok, it looks like a cool drink. Maybe I will give it a try.

Also, there seems to be some kind of competition or promotional contest to win some money (I like!) and it seems not a very difficult thing to do. Anyway, I checked out the video for more clues and guess what? I found absolutely nothing. In conclusion, I might not be very smart.

Oh well. Maybe I will find more clues if I bought a bottle. You know how sometimes these contests usually hide their contest entry forms in the packaging. Who knows I might win something.

Posted in: Alcoholic, Beverage, Perspectives, Random, Reviews Tagged: carlsberg, pear cider, Singapore, somersby peary

Celebrate Family Togetherness with Tangyuan

April 5, 2014 by Ho Lang

Ho Sim Lang

Celebrate Family Togetherness with Tangyuan

Tāngyuán is a kind of Chinese dessert made from glutinous rice flour and is mixed with a small amount of water to form balls and is then cooked and served in boiling water spiced with old ginger and castor sugar. It typically comes in one plain white colour, but some families have chosen to add a little food colouring to make the dessert a little prettier.

Culturally for many families in China and also migrant families overseas, it is a meal eaten together. The round shape of the balls served in round bowls symbolises family togetherness. Tāngyuán translated means “Round Dumplings in Soup”.

I got this recipe from my mother-in-law, and this is how it works.

Recipe – serving for a family 

Method

1) Add 400g glutinous flour with 350ml water. Add the water slowly so that the dough mixture will not be too moist. If you accidentally added too much water, just simply balance it out with more glutinous flour.

2) Knead the mixture into dough. Then pinch a little and roll it in between your fingers. If the dough were to crack, it just means that it is too dry. If the dough ball does not hold its shape, then there is too much moisture in the pastry.

3) Divide into the dough into two (02) portions and with one portion, add a few droplets of food colouring – Cherry Red is good – and then knead the food colouring into the dough. The whole dough should now be pink in colour.

4) Put each portion of dough into a plastic bag and place them in the freezer for 30 minutes.

5) Remove from the freezer and begin to roll. (if however, after freezing the dough is too dry, just simply dap it with a little water.

6) Put the balls in boiling water, until they all start to float. Then off the fire and allow the dough balls to sit in the broth for about 5 minutes.

7) Scoop out the dough balls with a ladle and put them inside a bowl of cool tap water.

8) Prepare 300g castor sugar and put into the broth to boil a little, after which place slices of old ginger and pandan leaves into the soup and bring the soup to a boil.

9) Ladle the dough balls into the broth and allow them to sit in the fragrant mixture until the flavour has infused into the dough balls.

10) Allow the dessert to sit in the broth overnight, and when ready to eat, just heat up the soup and serve.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Desserts, Food, Local, Perspectives, Random, Recipes Tagged: Singapore, Tangyuan

Heartland Nasi Lemak (Review)

April 5, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Heartland Nasi Lemak (Review)

I thought that it wouldn’t be fair to do a review of the Qiji interpretation of the humble nasi lemak (I think they glorified it) but not do the heartland version.

So here goes. This is well and truly a more humbled version. It is so no frills I had no trouble identifying everything within the packet in a nano-glance. All I did was blink and that was the end of my meal. I saw in my mind’s eye exactly how I would chow down this plate and it was unglamorous.

My wife saw my somewhat bewildered expression and immediately offered some Belinjo crackers that she had bought earlier, just to make up the color. It sort of looked slightly better after that. But there was just too much white (rice) and not much of anything else.

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This is truly the cookie cutter version with just the ikan bilis and kacang goreng all sealed in individual packets. This nasi lemak reeks of industrial kitchen-ness. Everything seems to be commoditized, right down to the chilli. All sealed ready to be assembled in a production factory-like style.

I had to top up 50 cents for a piece of otah-otah which kind of made it a little better. The only other thing that was not from the industrial kitchen was probably the kuning fish. Interestingly this fella was even smaller than the previous one.

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I was so tempted to make my own masterpiece that I assembled the kuning fish as if like jumping out of a sea of nasi. Kids, don’t do this at home.

I guess you could say I was reasonably bored with my unflattering breakfast. Alright, to be fair what would one be expecting for $1.60 (SGD), by far it was the cheapest nasi lemak I have eaten in a long while. And it was just as delicious as the glorified version.

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Perspectives, Random, Reviews Tagged: food, nasi lemak, Singapore

Qiji Nasi Lemak (Review)

April 4, 2014 by Ho Lang

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Qiji Nasi Lemak (Review)

It’s really a 奇迹 how they managed to open their doors one day and became an instant hit with everyone. With simple staples like nasi lemak, mee rebus and mee siam,  Qiji as their name in mandarin suggests has indeed become a household name and an FNB miracle.

I just had a nasi lemak, a local favorite amongst many. Steamy coconut milk infused white rice with an array of ingredients strategically positioned to maximize your dining experience. Unfortunately, their ingredients have been looking a tad tiny lately though.

Take the kuning fish for example, I couldn’t believe that it could be so small! I mean by Australian standards,  a fish of this size would never pass through the fishery authorities and onto our dinner plates. That said, perhaps it was a midget kuning fish and it had stunted growth. Hey, it’s quite possible you know.

I am just wondering if perhaps this little fellow could have had a much greater potential to co-create even more kuning for their mercenary masters. Instead here it is, on my green mock-banana leaf plate. All shriveled and parched.

The rest of the ingredients were suffering from a severe lack of color. Honestly they looked tired. It was as if they weren’t dressed up properly before they left the food counter. The paper-thin pale yellow egg was like two pieces of highly compressed cheesecakes sitting neatly on top of my nasi (rice).

The otah-otah was also a pale orangey hue of a puddle of *** amidst a setting sunset. Ok,  nuff said, after all, I am still going to eat this. I am famished.

I was fairly disappointed at the quantity of ikan bilis (tiny anchovy) and kacang goreng (fried peanuts) though. Typically the macik (aunty) at the food counter would heap a full scoop. But the dude behind the counter today must have used a teaspoon to scoop the ingredients.

And to top it off, there was this nugget looking item that I couldn’t quite figure out what it was. It tasted like fish and chicken all at the same time with a pillow full of batter coating. Except that it was equally flat and off colored as its other buddies on the plate. Very mysterious nuggety item. It vaguely resembled an ingot of gold.

The chilli,  perhaps the only item that steers everyone back on the same course was sweet and spicy and just right. Very nicely done.

It was a perfect nasi lemak meal to say the least. The taste was just superb. The brains behind the business have got their hearts in the right place. The looks of the ingredients could do with a little bit more color. That said I should qualify, that I don’t just go for looks but I like good quality food – I don’t eat for color’s sake. But it is liken to buying fish at the market, color denotes freshness.

Qiji is indeed doing the basic things well. They have morphed into a somewhat conveyor belt like production house of local common foods but yet maintaining a consistent level of quality and taste in all their outlets. This just means they have a tight control on quality. I like that.

Incidentally the nasi lemak above could have been neatly arranged by an artist of Bugis origins, it reminds me of a tiny sailboat awashed against the tides of changing times, fishing amidst the setting of a crimson sunset and perhaps scouring the seas for hidden treasure.

Nice.

You can have this same experience at Qiji. Just order set number two.

 

Posted in: Asian, Food, Perspectives, Random, Restaurants, Reviews Tagged: food, local favorites, nasi lemak, Singapore

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