Friday 14 February 2014

Jiew He Char (Dried Squid Chop Suey)
























Jiew He Char Recipe

Time taken: 3-4 hours (if you are cooking by yourself)

Ingredients

Broth:
2 pieces pork belly
1 medium pot of water
6 cloves garlic
Salt to taste

Stir fry:
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 bulb garlic, chopped finely
1/2 cup shallots, chopped finely
Cooked pork belly from broth, chopped into small pieces
1 teaspoon sugar
1.5 cups red onion, sliced finely
1.5 cups leek, sliced finely
1.5 cups Beijing cabbage, sliced
1 cup dry Chinese mushrooms, soaked in water and sliced
1 Tablespoon tao jio (fermented bean paste), chopped finely
1 cup dried squid, soaked in water with a tablespoon of rice wine vinegar and cut into very thin slices
2 bang kuan (jicama), peeled & cut into thin matchsticks
2.5 cups carrots, peeled and shredded
Soy sauce to taste
Salt to taste

Method:

Boil pork belly in a medium pot of water with garlic and salt to make broth. Take out the pork bellies and when they are cooled down, chop them into small pieces.

Heat up 1/2 cup oil over medium heat in large wok. Fry garlic and shallots until golden brown. Remove garlic and shallots and most of the oil. Put in a bowl.

Fry pork belly pieces with 1 teaspoon sugar in same wok.  Remove.

Fry leek and red onions for a few minutes until cooked. Remove.

Add more oil with garlic and shallots into wok.

Fry cabbage until cooked. Remove.

Fry mushrooms with 1/2 teaspoon of sugar. Remove.

Fry tao jio with dried squid. Remove when squid is curly and browned.

Add more shallot/garlic oil to wok.

Fry bang kuan and carrots for a few minutes. Add salt to taste and broth until soft.


Mix cooked leeks and onions with bang kuan and carrots. Then add everything together into 2 big woks. Add salt and soy sauce to taste.

Friday 7 February 2014

Mama's Blue Kueh (Kueh Salat)



Ingredients:
1 KG glutinous rice, rinsed well in a sieve
5 cups water (or more)
1.25 cups of dried blue pea flower
1 assam peel (dried tamarind)
2 pandan leaves, knotted
Fresh milk from 1.5 coconuts (3/4 cup coconut milk)
2 teaspoons salt
1 large banana leaf

Boil the water and pour it over the blue flowers. Let it soak for a few minutes until the water turns dark blue. When the water has cooled down, strain out the flowers. 

Pour the blue water over the glutinous rice in a medium pot and add an assam peel in it. Cover and leave overnight for 8 to 10 hours.

Strain the rice in a sieve and remove the assam peel. Place the rice on a muslin cloth that’s already in a steamer. Add the pandan leaves with the rice and steam for about 45-60 minutes until the rice is soft.

Take out the entire muslin cloth with the rice and place in a huge mixing bowl. Add the salt in the coconut milk and stir. Then carefully stir the milk into the rice and mix well. Put the muslin cloth with the rice back into the steamer and steam for another 5 minutes.

After the rice is ready, place in a 9-inch cake tin lined with banana leaf at the bottom and sides. Evenly press the rice down. Then lay saren wrap on top of the rice and place another slightly smaller tin on top with something heavy (dumbbells or a heavy book) pressing it down. The goal is to get the rice pressed down tightly and evenly. Leave it to rest for a few hours.

When cutting it to serve, use a sharp clean knife. Serve with a kaya spread on top.