Showing posts with label #danielfooddiary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #danielfooddiary. Show all posts

Friday, August 03, 2012

Beating the heat with a bowl of ai yu jelly and fruit cocktail #Cookforfamily


Ai Yu 愛玉 2
Seeds.
Say what?
And thankfully before I buried them into soil,
I got a call to tell me about the seeds.
These were 愛玉 (aiyu) seeds!

Now if you've been to taiwan, or been to a bubble tea shop, you would've seen or heard of the existence of this jelly.
It's like konnyaku.
But.
Not quite.
It's softer than a konnyaku and firmer than jello.


And just a little bit about aiyu seeds.
Most that are produced in Kaoshiung are collected from wild plants which are actually a species of figs.
The harvest season runs from from September to February. 
After harvest, fruits are peeled, cut and sun-dried for 2 days.
The seeds are then pulled out from dried fruits afterwards.
The seeds can be consumed after another week of drying out in the sun.

And here at home, we're no stranger to the ice jelly dessert!
文头雪 (wen tou xue or wan tao long) 


To make Aiyu jelly,
Wrap the seeds in a piece of cheese cloth, immerse it in water and rub it using your hands.
You'll begin to see thick liquid released into water. After solidification, jelly is ready to serve.

Cut them into cubes.
Open up a can of Del Monte Tropical Fruit Mix.
Throw in some ice cubes and water to dilute the sugar syrup.
Squeeze in a lime or two.
And.
Serve CHILLED.

Enjoy. :)

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

It's a simple act but #CookForFamily - simply overlooked?

 Herbal Chicken soup for relief of tiredness and to improve vitality.



Ingredients

- 1 fresh spring chicken
- Běi Qí (北芪) 5g
-Dǎng shēn (当参) 15g
-Huái Shān (淮山) 10g or more if it's fresh!
-Wolfberries (枸杞子) 25g or more if you'd like
-Yù Zhú (玉竹) 25g
-Nán Xìng  (南杏) a sprinkle (optional)
-dried baby scallops (optional)
- 1.5 litres of water or just enough to cover the chicken
-salt to taste and a dash of light soya sauce for color

*The ingredients were taken from a combination of different prepacked herbal mixes.
I've tried Chwee Song and Claypot brands before and they are similar in taste.
 These quantities that I've listed above can be adjusted accordingly. :)

Directions
  1. Clean the chicken, cut into parts and blanch in hot water to remove excess dirt, broken bone pieces and unwanted fat. This improves texture and taste of the soup by leaps and bounds! You don't want cloudy soup, do you?
  2. Place chicken parts and the rest of ingredients into a pot (or pressure cooker) and ensure that it is covered with water.
  3. Bring to a boil to make sure chicken parts are cooked.
  4. Simmer on low heat for about an hour for the taste of the herbs to come through. Your sense of smell will tell you when it's ready!
  5. Season to taste with salt and soya sauce and bring to a quick boil by turning up the heat.
  6. Serve with white rice. Or simply drink up! :)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

omySG and panasonic @ the singapore flyer food trail


feeling a little undressed without the sauce.


tasty.
but watered down.


drowned in rojak sauce.
too sweet.


i'll <3 all hokkien mees.
but these were hokkien braised noodles.
where's my wok hei?


never enough of this.
sambal was sedapnya!


and this?
ohmyyum.
and for everything else.
there's ORHLUAK.

;)