31 May 2004

Recipe and tips for storing vegetables

Hearing about Svelty’s siomai adventure and Bea’s suggestions for a blog for beginner’s cookery gave me several ideas for this entry.

First, tips on storing vegetables bought in bulk. Ideally, fresh produce is best bought on the day it is to be cooked. However, this is not always practical unless you have a green grocer outside your doorstep. It is always economical, financially and effort-wise, to go to the market at most only once a week. Fresh produce can be stored in the refrigerator. To avoid spoilage, keep tomatoes, lemons and other small items in plastic containers lined with old newspaper. Larger items (cucumbers, carrots, capsicum) and leafy greens such as cabbage, celery and lettuce should also be wrapped in newsprint before storing in the crisper. The refrigerator’s cold moisture is what keeps food fresh but if saturated, it is what hastens spoilage. The wrapping should be changed as it gets soaked.

The complete write-up, recipe and comments have been moved to my food blog, The Pilgrim’s Pots and Pans. Clicking on the links will take you there. Thanks for visiting!

שּׁלוס

27 May 2004

Simplified Recipe for Svelty

Sorry Minnette, I was so successful in avoiding your food blog, I totally forgot to mention it in a previous entry. I made the necessary correction.

To those who don't know, I am an avid reader of food blogs, which definitely include Minnette's. However, I only read Lafang List once or twice a week if I can help it because it's detrimental to my diet. What makes it different from the other food blogs and so bad is that Minnette can make even instant, if not junk food, seem so enticing! Imagine my stomach grumbling after reading her entry on instant noodles and I think it was just after lunch!

Anyway, here's my first instalment on requested recipes. As Lars and I were chatting last night, it struck me how enthusiastic she was about learning how to cook. It was almost like the joy of a child! However, there were things I took for granted and were misinterpreted by the novice cook, e.g. the raw onion in mashed potatoes almost-catastrophe, hehehe!

So, in an attempt to make life easier for dear Svelty, I'll simplify the first recipe. It's almost child's play and shouldn't take more than a few minutes. When I gave similar instructions for a friend who was taking his fellowship in Bonn, I told him I won't include my usual complicated instructions in proportioning spices according to the senses, though I believe those are essential in achieving the right balance to taste. The proportions I indicated in the recipe are just approximations of the average. Personally I am very extravagant with the use of spices. If there are no measurements specified, it means one can use as much as wished. Therefore, dear Svelty the experimenter, use your own judgement. If at first attempt, it doesn't taste the way you want it, then good luck next try!

By the way, Svelty, I'll use European names as much as possible to lessen your time Googling the ingredients, hehehe! Example: capsicum is our bell pepper.

Chicken Afritada

1 1/2 k. chicken, sliced to desired sizes (not too small though)
garlic, finely crushed
onion, finely sliced
1 small can of tomato sauce
2 medium sized potatoes, peeled and quartered
2 capsicum, sliced (preferably one green and one red for presentation purposes)
1 small can of chick peas or two handfuls if using dried, soaked overnight then boiled till half-cooked
bay leaves
peppercorn, crushed (don't grind)
cooking oil
salt to taste
  1. Fry cubed potatoes until golden brown, capsicum till you can smell the aroma, then set aside.

  2. Sautee garlic, then onion till transparent.

  3. Add chicken (plus bay leaves, oregano and peppercorn) and simmer till tender.

  4. Pour tomato sauce and thicken over low heat.

  5. Add chick peas, fried capsicum and fried potatoes.

  6. Simmer for around 5 minutes.

That's about it Svelty! If you don't wish to fry the potatoes beforehand, you can just include them with the meat but it lessens the fritada taste. Frying potatoes also lengthens their shelf life.


שּׁלוס

26 May 2004

A companion blog?

Bea has In Longhand, her companion blog to Chasing Grace and Catsudon has Catsutechie. I'm wondering if I should make this a companion to my blog. How does "The Sensual Cook" sound? Hehehe!

Of course, I'm not exactly original. Minnette has Lafang List to complement her Laundry Day. And what a blog it is! Hehehe!

"The Sensual Cook" is nothing Rated R: it simply refers to my way of cooking, not by weights and measures but by using the senses of smell, sight and taste. I want to centralise all my entries in my Catsudon account but will probably copy all entries in this blog just so one doesn’t have to skim through the other blog.

We'll see.

שּׁלוס

23 May 2004

Gmail!

Finally got my Gmail account!

שּׁלוס

22 May 2004

Public Confession

I’m putting this in a public place so I won’t forget, and of course to have witnesses who’ll remind me now and then, hehehe!

Note to self - send promised recipes to friends:

  1. Catsudon - chicken strips in honey-mushroom sauce, at marami pang iba

  2. Bea - simple recipes that I forgot to send

  3. Svelty - asado, same as those for Catsudon and Bea


Now I really have to start figuring out proportions!

שּׁלוס

20 May 2004

I forgot to link my more permanent blog here.

שּׁלוס

12 May 2004

Bringing back Blogger...

שּׁלוס