Archive for the ‘Singaporean’ Category
* Kaya – Coconut and Egg Jam
Posted on October 25th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Breakfast, Coconut, Cuisine, Eggs, Malaysian, Pandan, Singaporean.
Singapore and Malaysia’s favorite kopi tiam breakfast – kaya on toast (with slabs of butter, and preferably on white, fluffy bread), a cup of coffee with condensed milk and two half-boiled eggs with a dash of dark soy sauce and lots of white pepper. We’ll settle for just kaya on wholewheat toast and a Starbucks latte here.
There are 2 schools of thoughts in kaya – the smooth, dark brown jam and the greenish curd ones. Some say the former is for toast only, and the latter is to serve with glutinous rice such as pulut tai-tai or pulut tekan. The brown kaya has more of a caramel flavor to it. I have always liked the fragrance of the greenish one – somehow pandan and coconut just go so well together. A union made in food heaven This recipe is for the greenish version.
Chef’s tip: Tempering eggs is the process of blending uncooked eggs into a hot or warm liquid without having the eggs scramble or curdle. To do this, you gently add a little hot liquid at a time, streaming it into the beaten eggs while whisking continuously. You continue to do this until the temperature of the bowl holding the eggs is close to the temperature of the hot liquid. Another tip is using a double boiler while making a custard. It will prevent the custard from scorching.
Ingredients:
1 250-ml can coconut milk
1¼ cups sugar
5 large eggs, or 6 small ones
6 pieces pandan leaves, tied into 2 knots
1. In a double boiler, heat the coconut milk with the sugar until the sugar dissolves. Remove from heat.
2. In a large bowl, whisk the eggs. Using a ladle, stream in the hot coconut milk into the egg mixture, while whisking continuously. Add one ladle at a time. It is very important to whisk continuously and pour the hot liquid in a stream while tempering eggs so that the eggs won’t cook and curdle.
3. When done tempering the eggs, return mixture into the double boiler, add pandan leaves (tie into a knot) and cook under a simmering boil. Continuously stir the first 20 minutes until the liquid has thickened, do not let the eggs curdle.
4. Once thickened, you need to stir it every 5 minutes, until it reaches the desired consistency, about 20 minutes more.
5. Remove pandan leaves.
Makes: 2 cups
* Butter Prawns with Curry Leaves
Posted on September 6th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Coconut, Curry leaves, Entree, Malaysian, Seafood, Shrimp, Singaporean.
A true fusion of Malay, Chinese, Indian and Western flavors. It is highly advisable to fry the shrimps with shells on to capture the full flavor of the shrimps.
Chef’s tip: If you prefer to have your dish without the prawn shells, follow these steps: Remove head and shells, leaving tail-on. Separately, fry the shells and heads in a cup of oil. Pass oil through a sift to make a scampi oil. Fry the peeled prawns as main recipe above, however, substitute half the butter with 3 tablespoons of the scampi oil. Reserve remaining delicious scampi oil to toss with pasta or drizzle on fish.
Ingredients
2 cup of desiccated coconut
1 teaspoon kosher salt
5 tablespoon sugar
2 Tablespoons light soy sauce
2 Tablespoons Chinese rice wine or sake
2 lb large shrimps, shells on, heads on, deveined
1 cup of canola oil for deep frying
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 red jalapeno chilies – sliced
10 sprigs of Indian curry leaves*
4 cloves of garlic – minced
Cilantro
Preparing the mise en place
1. In a clean pan over medium heat, dry fry coconut till golden and fragrant. Set aside.
2. Mix salt, sugar, soy sauce and rice wine together. Set aside.
Preparing the prawns
3. Clean prawns – trim legs and tentacles, deveined. Keep shells and heads on. Pat dry thoroughly.
4. Heat about ½ inch oil, and fry the prawns in small batches. Drain and set aside. Remove all but 3 Tablespoons of the shrimp oil.
5. Add butter to the pan high heat. Add chilies, curry leaves, garlic and salt and fry for 1-2 minutes.
6. Add sauce mixture. Toss in coconut. Toss in fried prawns.
7. Stir fry over high heat for another 1 min.
8. Garnish with cilantro.
Serves: 6
* Dungeness Chili Crab
Posted on September 6th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Chili Peppers, Crab, Entree, Malaysian, Seafood, Singaporean.
The Singaporeans claim the Chili Crab as their national dish. As a good Malaysian, this was ^our^ dish! But since my good friend, Karina Lee, gave me the original recipe for the dish, which I have now adapted to the abundance of this side of the Pacific pond, and she lives in Singapore now, I will gladly attribute this dish as Singaporean.
When you fly into Changi, after a grueling 16 hour flight, your food obsessed Singaporean friends (every Singaporean is a foodie) would say “Let’s go for Chili Crabs” and before you can say no as you struggle with your jet-lag stupor, you are already at one of the outdoor, jumbo seafood restaurants on East Coast Road!
Chili Crabs are finger lickin’ good. With the meaty Dungeness crab, you will have a little bit more crab meat to soak up the wonderful sauce and not be tempted to eat your fingers, too. Serve it with a loaf of baguette or horrors! toasted white wonderbread.
Chef’s tip: You will need live crabs for this dish. Some stores like Wholefoods will take orders ahead, otherwise, many Asian fishmongers carry live crabs.
Ingredients
Sauce:
6 tablespoon Asian sweet chili sauce
10 tablespoon ketchup
4 tablespoon vinegar
2 cups of water
2 egg white, beaten with 1 tablespoon water
3 tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 3 tablespoons water
5 tablespoon canola oil
2 Dungeness crabs (2 ½ lbs each)
10 cloves of garlic, coarsely chopped
10 slices of ginger, julienned finely
4 tablespoon sugar (to taste)
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup of cilantro, cut into 2 inches sprigs
1 cup of scallions, sliced into 2 inches strips
Preparing mise-en-place
1. Mix chili sauce, ketchup, vinegar and water together; set aside
2. Beat egg whites with water; set aside.
3. Mix cornstarch with water; set aside.
Preparing the crab
4. Ask your fishmonger to kill and clean the shellfish for you, but you must cook it within 2-3 hours of killing. Remove gills and innards. Clean and pat dry shellfish. Crabs should be cut into 6 pieces each. Keep the crab roe.
5. Heat 4 tablespoon oil in wok. Fry shellfish including crab roe till bright vermillon red and fragrant. Remove crabs from wok. Do not wash the wok!
6. Using same wok, brown garlic, ginger with the rest of the oil till fragrant; about 2 minutes.
7. Add chili-ketchup sauce mixture. Add more sugar and salt to taste.
8. Add egg white, wait half a minute then stir to get silky threads of whites.
9. Add cornstarch mixture and stir to thicken.
10. Add back the crab. Mix well.
11. Toss in the cilantro and scallions, leaving a small handful for garnish.
12. Serve immediately garnish of cilantro and scallions.
Serves: 6
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