Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Roast pork belly

Dry pork belly with paper towels, score vertically making sure to cut into the fat but not meat, season generously with salt and let sit uncovered in fridge for a few hours.

Take meat out to temper, dry again and re-season skin.

For the meat side, season with whatever herbs or spice mixture.

Pre-heat oven to 220C. Roast pork in container skin side up for 20 mins, then turn heat down to 150C and cook for 30-40 mins until it looks done. Skin should have rendered a lot of the fat out. Take pork out of oven and turn heat up to highest setting or put broiler on. Broil skin until super crispy making sure you dont burn it.

Scrape off any burnt skin.

Serve with fennel and pomegranate salad, citrus and radish salad, chutney, plum sauce, etc.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Sourdough and ice cream

Basic sour dough at 70% hydration.
275g water + 500g 100% hydration.
400g bread flour + 100g whole wheat mixed with hydrated starter to autolyse for 30 mins.

Stretch and fold x 3 at 10 min intervals.
Rise for 1-2 hrs
Stretch and fold
Rise for 1hr (heat oven at 500F)
Tension pull 
Score
Bake for 20 mins covered, then for 30 mins at 430F


Rum-whiskey raisin, cinnamon and nutmeg ice-cream

- salt a little too much, maybe less cinnamon also.
- fresh vanilla would be nice
- less cream, more milk
- 173g yolks, 173g sugar, salt
- 10 oz milk, 10 oz cream - scalded
- temper eggs, return back to heat and cook until custard like. strain, cool down overnight, churn. Partway churning add whiskey and rum soaked raisins

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Green pea soup

white aromatics, leeks, sweat.
add in green peas, lemon grass, kaffir lime leaves.
cover with stock, bring to boil and cook for 5 mins.
puree, garnish with lime juice and optional lime zest.

saute spam with broccoli florets, garnish for soup for more substance.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

grits

Tomato sauce with anchovies
grits, cooked with water, salt, tomato sauce
heat roasted chicken
parsley, chilies, radish and cheese. mix, bind with one egg.
olive oil, salt, pepper 

Thursday, March 29, 2012

dinner

Oven baked  mashed potatoes (cooked in skin, 450 for 35 mins), peeled and crushed with butter and EVOO. Steamed eggplant, meatballs, oyster sauce, sesame oil, diced cabbage. Needs something green, coriander perhaps. Hot peppers would work.

Steamed egg with ginger-garlic-onion-siracha paste. Roasted pork, dark soy. Water. Stir fried vegetables. Rice and couscous.

black and strawberry ricotta pie

Having made a batch of sweet pie dough from the Ottolenigh cook book which is beautiful to make some tartlets a couple weeks ago, a pie was in order.

The recent trip to the supermarket yeilded a punnet of black berries and a tub of ricotta cheese. A quick search on tastespotting yeilded multiple ricotta pies which as it turns out, is an Italian Easter tradition. We may be two weeks early but who really cares. The dough itself is very easy to make and is not too difficult to work with (butter content isn't too high). The filling itself is also very simple - rich and smooth ricotta cut with the acidity of a little lemon, black berries and strawberries that have been slightly cooked down and pureed. This is then bound with eggs, a little vanilla for body and a little extra sugar for sweetness.







Some thoughts however - the tart could have been baked for way longer. Trying to get it out of a non-spring form pie tin is was a pain and a mess was created, though a neat looking tart never tastes as good as a messy one. Right? Also a little more sugar in the ricotta filling would have been nice, it was borderline bland even with the fruit puree. Finally to make it lighter, I think separating the whites and beating them into soft peaks and then folding it in would have made a lighter filling.

And what does one do with leftover rolled out pie dough? Quasi shortbread!  

















Moving on: Chocolate bacon macarons. There's really no reason why the two can't be combined. A chocolate ganache is enlivened by the textural crunch of rendered bacon and the richness from the fat basically replaces the butter. Couple notes again, the ganache itself could have been slightly sweeter, a less dark chocolate could have been used. Perhaps if I paired it with a maple butter cream or something... gasp, pancake breakfast macarons!




Thursday, January 19, 2012

Tiramisu

A few years ago when I worked in this small Italian restaurant back in Singapore named Alba, I was essentially their pastry guy making the desserts, not that any of the stuff I made was my own recipe but I was the one that did it anyway. We made a really awesome flour-less chocolate cake which is dead easy and once when we had a big party in, some pregnant lady ate like 3 slices of the stuff. Rich, gooey but at the same time light (it was meringue based), its a crowd please-er.

Anyway the other thing i made was Tiramisu, clearly a very Italian restaurant staple. Honestly I have yet to have found a better tasting tiramisu as opposed to the one we made. Some people didn't like it though as when presented it was essentially two peices of coffee soaked lady fingers with the tiramisu cream on top. We heard complaints that it was essentially just lady fingers and cream - which is what it essentially is. You can't please everyone so whatever.

When it was MK's birthday the other week she requested tiramisu since it is now my tradition to make people cake for their birthdays, since we should all have cake, birthday or not. The recipe that I used in the restaurant consisted of mascarpone mixed with egg yolks of which then cream sweetened with icing sugar was folded into along with a bit of rum. It was light, it was silky, it was delicious and i ate way to much of it. The lady fingers we were lazy and just bought them in.

For Christmas, aunt E gave me an Italian cookbook from some lady that she met and learned some stuff from. Anyway her recipe was more or less the same except instead of cream she used the egg whites to make a meringue which was folded into the mascarpone cream. It's been a while since i made the other recipe and i really didn't want to bother with cream, plus, having to store egg whites for another use even though there are plenty is an extra step i couldn't be bothered with. The resulting cream was just as delicious as the one made with cream, and less fattening too if you think about it.

Another thing was the lack of lady fingers at the supermarket, but you know what, lady fingers are pretty easy to make too. It's almost like a basic sponge cake except there's no leavening and in fact, once we ran out of lady fingers in the restaurant so we just used sponge cake. I can now proudly say that i truly made tiramisu from scratch. Though i guess if i milked the cows and grew the wheat...Sorry i don't have any photos, totally forgot to take them in the middle of all the eating.

Tiramisu
Enough for 8, or for one if your like MK and is greedy
250g Lady finger biscuits (since i made them fresh, i used about 7 of the fingers i made, whatever fits into your container i guess)
1 shot of espresso (maybe a little more, just make 2 shots and drink the remaining. If you can't get espresso make the strongest coffee possible. The stronger the better)
250g of mascarpone
3 eggs, seperated
3 tablespoons caster sugar
3 tablespoons marsala/sherry OR 2 tablespoons of rum (whatever liquor is your fancy)
Cocoa powder for dusting

Put the mascarpone and egg yolks in a fairly large bowl and mix until totally incorporated. Refrigerate. Whisk your egg whites with the sugar until you get stiff peaks, either by hand or with a mixer. Fold into the mascarpone mixture in thirds, adding your liquor at the end. Refrigerate whilst you make your espresso/coffee. When you make your coffee, cool it down. Get your lady fingers and line them up on a dish (i used a pyrex rectangular shaped dish). Dip lady fingers into coffee and make a layer full of lady fingers down on the dish. Try to get it as soaked as possible for the fullest coffee flavor, though not too much that it totally breaks apart. Put half of the cream mixture and spread it out evenly then lay on the 2nd layer of the fingers and cover with the remaining cream. Dust with cocoa powder just before serving.

enjoy!

Monday, January 16, 2012

leeks, rice, pesto, stock, mushrooms, tomatoe

saute 1/4 onion in olive oil, green portion of leeks in thin slices added in and sauteed for about 4 mins. 5 thbsp of stock added in, 3 shitakes, and 1/2 cup of cooked dried rice. cook for another 3-4 mins, then 4 thsbp of pesto. season to taste. tomatoes in quarters.