Today I tried to make Balsamic vinegar glazed salmon. It was several weeks ago that over a series of emails between my friends. Who knows what we may have been talking about, but it came to the topic of balsamic glazed salmon and one friend said it was really good. So today, I decided to make it. I used the base recipe from Epicurious and then added some stuff and replaced some stuff to make it my own style. It came out very good for something I never made before.
I followed the recipe (kinda). I didn't really used the quantity since in cooking I'm an eyeballer, which means I prefer to just pour, sprinkle, splash, etc, whatever amount that I "feel" would suffice. I had to make two batch of marinade since the first batch wasn't enough with all the salmon steaks I cut up. Also, instead of orange juice because I didn't have oranges, I used Cutie tangerines--the small tangerines that are oh-so cute (hence the name! ;]) I also used a spoonful of honey to add some sweetness into the marinade. I read the comments on Epicurious and found that some people said adding white wine makes it better, so that's just what I did. I love adding wine into marinade/sauce(remember my strawberry shortcake, ladies?). I can't tell the presence of white wine, but I think that's because I only added a tablespoon of it. But from chemistry, I know that alcohol has a bursting reaction to heat...so good to me! =] Something else I did differently was use the tangerine peels. I cut the peels into strips after I squeezed all the juices out and added them to the marinade. When I fried up the salmon, I also fried up the tangerine peels. They were incredibly good to eat after they caramelized in the sauce; they had this tangy, sweet, citrusy-bitterness to them.
In addition, I made my veggies! Red and green bell peppers, tomatoes, chives, fresh rosemary that was left over from the marinade, and of course, stir fry it up with the marinade sauce that was left over. Totally incredible!
My dad wondered if the balsamic vinegar glazed salmon was an American cuisine, then what was the tangerine for. I simply told him it was my attempt at fusion...I think I have a new love for fusion food.
Love from Allison!
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(^.~)
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Saturday, May 22, 2010
Monday, May 17, 2010
Honey Walnut Shrimp
My sister decided to make honey walnut shrimp. It's like the only thing that she goes back for seconds and thirds at the buffet and the only plate she herself can wolf down at the restaurant. She never made this before, so today was her first try. It turned out pretty well actually, give hilarious moments such as when she tried to get a broken eggshell out of the egg whites and how she dropped the shrimp when she was picking it up. Like I said, hilarious. Now I had my doubts. I ate her home made cookies before...they tasted well, but well...they can break teeth. Not to mention when she was mixing in the mayonnaise, honey, lemon juice, and condense milk, it looked totally funky. However, it turned out quite well. Delicious actually. The walnuts were kind of funky because they weren't fresh. So I suggest using the fresh walnuts since it would be crunchier. Overall, kudos to my sister. So here's what she shared:
-Shrimp, peeled and deveined, dipped into egg whites and covered with corn starch, and fried in a skillet.
-Sauce: mayonnaise, lemon juice, honey, and condense milk mixed together unless you get a desired taste and a slightly liquid concoction.
-Walnuts: heat up sugar and water and put the walnuts into the pot. After it boils, drain and leave walnuts on wax paper so the sugar can caramelized.
-Mix the fried shrimp with sauce and walnuts..and eat!
-Shrimp, peeled and deveined, dipped into egg whites and covered with corn starch, and fried in a skillet.
-Sauce: mayonnaise, lemon juice, honey, and condense milk mixed together unless you get a desired taste and a slightly liquid concoction.
-Walnuts: heat up sugar and water and put the walnuts into the pot. After it boils, drain and leave walnuts on wax paper so the sugar can caramelized.
-Mix the fried shrimp with sauce and walnuts..and eat!
Bánh Xèo (Vietnamese Crepes)
Hello! My finals are over and my summer has started, which strikes much envy from my fellow asianposse blogger(s). So in my first weekend home, my mom made bánh xèo, which is a godsend to someone who has been eating the boring food at school and the ever non-healthy friendly spam and rice (four days in a row...ugh, my doctors would be so not pleased). =D She has her own garden of green lettuce and Vietnamese herbs and she said that the lettuce and herbs were too fresh to pass over eating bánh xèo. I was perfectly content with the idea.
I don't eat bánh xèo much because it's not technically my favorite food, but it's been a while since I ate it and when it's a while since you ate something (especially within the Vietnamese cuisine..IT IS HEAVEN).
So, here it is...bánh xèo, a recipe of my mom, and she probably learned it from the women she went to English class with. Yes, my mother went to class to learn English, but she ended up gaining a zillion of recipes instead. ;]
You will need:
-Bánh Xèo mix (found in every Asian supermarket I know)
-Crisp Fried Powder mix (found right next to the bánh xèo mix)
-Pork (you can use only the lean part or you can buy the one with the part meat, part fat and skin)
-Small-sized Shrimp
-Onions (halved and sliced into thing strips)
-Scallions (diced)
-Bean sprout
-Milk
-Salt (a pinch)
-A pinch of MSG (I know! but...if you eat Asian cuisine, you need MSG or else it would taste all bland)
-Oil
Accessories to accompany the dish:
-Red or green leaf lettuce (I prefer green because it's a bit crunchier than red)
-An array of herbs (Fish Mint-diếp cá; Peppermint-húng cay; Spearmint-húng lũi; Sorrel-rau chua; Vietnamese Coriander-rau răm; Vietnamese perilla-tía tô). Remove the leaves from the stem, wash them several times, and let them dry.
-Fish sauce (made with fish sauce, water, lime juice, garlic, red peppers, sugar)
Directions:
-Mix in half a bag of bánh xèo mix with half a bag of Crisp Fried Powder mix, and 3 cups of milk. Add in the diced scallions, a pinch of salt and a pinch of MSG, and mix until the powder dissolves. Let the mixture stand for about half an hour. Use this time to prepare the other things.
-Clean and wash the pork. Put it into a pot and fill it with enough water to cover it. Boil it. When done, drain and leave the pork out for it to cool a bit. Slice the pork into small strips as shown.
-Peel the shrimp if you've bought the one that isn't pre-peeled. Wash with some salt, drain, and set it aside.
-Gather pork, shrimp, onions, bean sprout, and the bánh xèo mix to one area for efficiency.
-Pour oil into a medium size skillet and let it heat up.
-Put in onions, let it sizzle for several seconds.
-Put in several shrimp and mix them around until the shrimp is cooked.
-Pour in the bánh xèo mix, enough to make a thin layer. This would be easy to do if you put in about one soup ladle and roll the mix around in the pan so the liquid would be spread across the skillet.
-Immediately scatter the pork onto the bánh xèo. Quantity is up to preference.
-Scatter in a handful of bean sprout (again, quantity is up to preference).
-Check the bottom to see if the bánh xèo is browning on the bottom. If it is, fold it in half and put it onto a plate.
-Add oil and repeat again to use up all of the mixture. Depending on the skillet size, this recipe makes about 10-12 bánh xèo.
Fish sauce:
-Pour a bowl of hot water and let it cool down a bit.
-Dice in 3-4 cloves of garlic and 2-3 red peppers and put them into an empty bowl.
-Put in about 4-5 teaspoons of sugar
-Cut a lime and squeeze the juice in. (You can use half or all depending on the size. You know you have enough lime juice when the contents look smoothie-like)
-Add in the half of the water from the bowl, slowly, and stir the contents at the same time.
-Add in the fish sauce until the color looks light reddish brown. Taste and begin to perfect the sauce to your taste buds. If it's too salty, add some sugar and water. If it's too bland, add more fish sauce. Remember, it's the sauce that makes or breaks the cuisine.
Bánh xèo is traditionally eaten by wrapping the lettuce and herbs around it, making it sort of like a spring roll, and then dipping it into fish sauce. However, like my sister likes to eat them (without getting her hands dirty), put everything into a plate, pour fish sauce over it, and eat it with a chopstick. =]
It's a very good dish with all the nutrients needed daily: fibers, proteins, starch. But gosh, with the way my mom likes to cook everything I want to eat, I will need to exercise more!
Much love from Allison to the rest of the posse who have their finals coming up! <3
I don't eat bánh xèo much because it's not technically my favorite food, but it's been a while since I ate it and when it's a while since you ate something (especially within the Vietnamese cuisine..IT IS HEAVEN).
So, here it is...bánh xèo, a recipe of my mom, and she probably learned it from the women she went to English class with. Yes, my mother went to class to learn English, but she ended up gaining a zillion of recipes instead. ;]
You will need:
-Bánh Xèo mix (found in every Asian supermarket I know)
-Crisp Fried Powder mix (found right next to the bánh xèo mix)
-Pork (you can use only the lean part or you can buy the one with the part meat, part fat and skin)
-Small-sized Shrimp
-Onions (halved and sliced into thing strips)
-Scallions (diced)
-Bean sprout
-Milk
-Salt (a pinch)
-A pinch of MSG (I know! but...if you eat Asian cuisine, you need MSG or else it would taste all bland)
-Oil
Accessories to accompany the dish:
-Red or green leaf lettuce (I prefer green because it's a bit crunchier than red)
-An array of herbs (Fish Mint-diếp cá; Peppermint-húng cay; Spearmint-húng lũi; Sorrel-rau chua; Vietnamese Coriander-rau răm; Vietnamese perilla-tía tô). Remove the leaves from the stem, wash them several times, and let them dry.
-Fish sauce (made with fish sauce, water, lime juice, garlic, red peppers, sugar)
Directions:
-Mix in half a bag of bánh xèo mix with half a bag of Crisp Fried Powder mix, and 3 cups of milk. Add in the diced scallions, a pinch of salt and a pinch of MSG, and mix until the powder dissolves. Let the mixture stand for about half an hour. Use this time to prepare the other things.
-Clean and wash the pork. Put it into a pot and fill it with enough water to cover it. Boil it. When done, drain and leave the pork out for it to cool a bit. Slice the pork into small strips as shown.
-Peel the shrimp if you've bought the one that isn't pre-peeled. Wash with some salt, drain, and set it aside.
-Gather pork, shrimp, onions, bean sprout, and the bánh xèo mix to one area for efficiency.
-Pour oil into a medium size skillet and let it heat up.
-Put in onions, let it sizzle for several seconds.
-Put in several shrimp and mix them around until the shrimp is cooked.
-Pour in the bánh xèo mix, enough to make a thin layer. This would be easy to do if you put in about one soup ladle and roll the mix around in the pan so the liquid would be spread across the skillet.
-Immediately scatter the pork onto the bánh xèo. Quantity is up to preference.
-Scatter in a handful of bean sprout (again, quantity is up to preference).
-Check the bottom to see if the bánh xèo is browning on the bottom. If it is, fold it in half and put it onto a plate.
-Add oil and repeat again to use up all of the mixture. Depending on the skillet size, this recipe makes about 10-12 bánh xèo.
Fish sauce:
-Pour a bowl of hot water and let it cool down a bit.
-Dice in 3-4 cloves of garlic and 2-3 red peppers and put them into an empty bowl.
-Put in about 4-5 teaspoons of sugar
-Cut a lime and squeeze the juice in. (You can use half or all depending on the size. You know you have enough lime juice when the contents look smoothie-like)
-Add in the half of the water from the bowl, slowly, and stir the contents at the same time.
-Add in the fish sauce until the color looks light reddish brown. Taste and begin to perfect the sauce to your taste buds. If it's too salty, add some sugar and water. If it's too bland, add more fish sauce. Remember, it's the sauce that makes or breaks the cuisine.
Bánh xèo is traditionally eaten by wrapping the lettuce and herbs around it, making it sort of like a spring roll, and then dipping it into fish sauce. However, like my sister likes to eat them (without getting her hands dirty), put everything into a plate, pour fish sauce over it, and eat it with a chopstick. =]
It's a very good dish with all the nutrients needed daily: fibers, proteins, starch. But gosh, with the way my mom likes to cook everything I want to eat, I will need to exercise more!
Much love from Allison to the rest of the posse who have their finals coming up! <3
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Hunger-pangs creativity.
The other day during the bus ride home, I was SERIOUSLY fricking hungry. Between the hazy, delirious thoughts of "urgh, am I at my stop yet?" and "God, I hate taking the bus", I started fantasizing about the sort of delectables I could consume once I reached the house. I came up with the idea for a quesadilla-ish meal to finish off the Trader Joe's chicken that I've had for like, two weeks, and the Oroweat Whole-grain and Flaxseed bread I've had for like, a month (really disturbing, I know). But alas, when I got home and smelled the bread, was totally disgusted and the idea got trashed, along with the bread. I can't remember what I ended up eating, but this morning, I woke up thinking, HRMM, I want a tuna-melt sunny-side-egg sandwich!
So I "borrowed" two slices of bread and an egg from their kitchen, and made what turned out to be the best sandwich I've had in a long time! :) Very impressed with my own brilliance, hee. Some other stuff that went in were: the remaining Sriracha-sauced tuna salad (left-over from Friday's sushi meal), organic bell pepper, cilantro & jalapeño hummus (it's like a bottomless tub, I swear!), Monterrey jack cheese, and honey mustard. I'm usually not very good at making sunny-side-up that comes out right, but it came out perfect today! The outer yolk was nice and firm while the inside was slightly runny; exactly how I like it. :)
I downloaded Photoscape the other week, so got to try out the "selective coloring" technique today after looking around for tutorials. That's their little cousin behind the sandwich. She likes to snoop around to ask for bites when I'm eating. :/ See the devious grin?
- Jeanne
ETA: Oh yea, yesterday, cooked up the short-grained-rice rice porridge with massive amount of water, and huh, you really can't mess up rice porridge! We ended up going to a Vietnamese restaurant to eat (com tam, yum), but now I'm at a peace of mind that I have an edible tub of rice porridge in the fridge to eat my perusal. :)
So I "borrowed" two slices of bread and an egg from their kitchen, and made what turned out to be the best sandwich I've had in a long time! :) Very impressed with my own brilliance, hee. Some other stuff that went in were: the remaining Sriracha-sauced tuna salad (left-over from Friday's sushi meal), organic bell pepper, cilantro & jalapeño hummus (it's like a bottomless tub, I swear!), Monterrey jack cheese, and honey mustard. I'm usually not very good at making sunny-side-up that comes out right, but it came out perfect today! The outer yolk was nice and firm while the inside was slightly runny; exactly how I like it. :)
I downloaded Photoscape the other week, so got to try out the "selective coloring" technique today after looking around for tutorials. That's their little cousin behind the sandwich. She likes to snoop around to ask for bites when I'm eating. :/ See the devious grin?
- Jeanne
ETA: Oh yea, yesterday, cooked up the short-grained-rice rice porridge with massive amount of water, and huh, you really can't mess up rice porridge! We ended up going to a Vietnamese restaurant to eat (com tam, yum), but now I'm at a peace of mind that I have an edible tub of rice porridge in the fridge to eat my perusal. :)
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Semi-homemade.
I've been so kitchen-productive the past couple of weeks!
These are some of the stuff I've made these past couple of weeks:
- (top left) fried rice with Trader Joe's Thai Curry Sauce, Joe's plain rotisserie chicken, one egg, green beans, onions, carrots. Wasn't a life-changing recipe, not trying this again any time soon until I figure out where I went wrong...
- (top right) macaroni&wheat noodles, Joe's rosemary rotisserie chicken, Joe's organic sweet peas (so cute; super small!), celery, and mushrooms cooked in alfredo sauce, topped with Kraft's Monterrey Jack cheese and SensiblePortions'garlic & chives pita crackers. Was all right; should've added less veggies and more alfredo sauce since I like it creamy.
- (bottom left) more fried rice. Tried to keep it more normal this time and just used the curry sauce, sweet peas, celery and eggs. Added fish sauce too, but came out sort of weird. I can't make good fried rice for some reason! :'(
- (bottom right) Hahaha, the ultimate comfort food: plain rice with dried&shredded pork (which my mom bought for me). The simplest food to prepare always taste the best!
I made some chicken wraps the other week too, but forgot to take a picture. I've also been really into the whole salad thing lately since I bought a bottle of Litehouse's Honey Mustard, which is SERIOUSLY THE ANSWER TO LIFE OMG.
Went to the asian supermarket near my house to buy some short-grained rice to make sushi, and omg rice brands are so confusing! "New crop!" "Premium!" "Harvested using new technology!" they all scream. WHAT DOES THAT BLOODY MEAN? Anyway, ended up buying Shirakiku's premium short-grained rice (because I could actually see the content) after spending like, 15 minutes debating between the brands. Then went home and read other people's reviews on the brands (hrmm, maybe should've done this BEFORE I went?) and apparently Nishiki medium-grained (slightly cheaper) would've worked out fine, too. Despite currently taking a social psychology that covered sales tactics just two weeks ago, I still get suckered in by packaging, sigh.
Attempted to cook it in a pot today since FoodNetwork does that, but came out so weird I just ended up adding more water to make rice porridge. -__- [Short-grained rice isn't very good for making rice porridge, btw; does NOT produce porridge consistency at all.] So for second batch, cooked it in the rice-cooker and it came out pretty decent! Some other stuff that went in:
- Mizkan Rice Vinegar
- Shirakiku toasted sesame seeds
- Chicken of the Sea tuna salad (I added Sriracha Sauce)
- some made-in-China roasted seaweed
- Persian cucumbers
- organic green bell peppers
I topped it off with Trader Joe's Cilantro & Jalapeño Hummus (from the other week!), honey mustard*, and Marukai's pickled ginger. I guess maybe because I had really low expectations of how it would come out due to the troubles with the rice to begin with, but maaaan it came out loads better than I expected! The cucumber I bought was kind of bitter, though; should buy the Japanese variety next time. Also bought imitation crab when I went Marukai Market today; am really looking forward to making the next batch of sushi! :)
*Had some mashed sweet potatoes with honey mustard for "desert". Did I already mention how obsessed I am with honey mustard??
I've yet to figure out what to do with that weird rice porridge, urgh. Suggestions?
- Jeanne
These are some of the stuff I've made these past couple of weeks:
- (top left) fried rice with Trader Joe's Thai Curry Sauce, Joe's plain rotisserie chicken, one egg, green beans, onions, carrots. Wasn't a life-changing recipe, not trying this again any time soon until I figure out where I went wrong...
- (top right) macaroni&wheat noodles, Joe's rosemary rotisserie chicken, Joe's organic sweet peas (so cute; super small!), celery, and mushrooms cooked in alfredo sauce, topped with Kraft's Monterrey Jack cheese and SensiblePortions'garlic & chives pita crackers. Was all right; should've added less veggies and more alfredo sauce since I like it creamy.
- (bottom left) more fried rice. Tried to keep it more normal this time and just used the curry sauce, sweet peas, celery and eggs. Added fish sauce too, but came out sort of weird. I can't make good fried rice for some reason! :'(
- (bottom right) Hahaha, the ultimate comfort food: plain rice with dried&shredded pork (which my mom bought for me). The simplest food to prepare always taste the best!
I made some chicken wraps the other week too, but forgot to take a picture. I've also been really into the whole salad thing lately since I bought a bottle of Litehouse's Honey Mustard, which is SERIOUSLY THE ANSWER TO LIFE OMG.
Went to the asian supermarket near my house to buy some short-grained rice to make sushi, and omg rice brands are so confusing! "New crop!" "Premium!" "Harvested using new technology!" they all scream. WHAT DOES THAT BLOODY MEAN? Anyway, ended up buying Shirakiku's premium short-grained rice (because I could actually see the content) after spending like, 15 minutes debating between the brands. Then went home and read other people's reviews on the brands (hrmm, maybe should've done this BEFORE I went?) and apparently Nishiki medium-grained (slightly cheaper) would've worked out fine, too. Despite currently taking a social psychology that covered sales tactics just two weeks ago, I still get suckered in by packaging, sigh.
Attempted to cook it in a pot today since FoodNetwork does that, but came out so weird I just ended up adding more water to make rice porridge. -__- [Short-grained rice isn't very good for making rice porridge, btw; does NOT produce porridge consistency at all.] So for second batch, cooked it in the rice-cooker and it came out pretty decent! Some other stuff that went in:
- Mizkan Rice Vinegar
- Shirakiku toasted sesame seeds
- Chicken of the Sea tuna salad (I added Sriracha Sauce)
- some made-in-China roasted seaweed
- Persian cucumbers
- organic green bell peppers
I topped it off with Trader Joe's Cilantro & Jalapeño Hummus (from the other week!), honey mustard*, and Marukai's pickled ginger. I guess maybe because I had really low expectations of how it would come out due to the troubles with the rice to begin with, but maaaan it came out loads better than I expected! The cucumber I bought was kind of bitter, though; should buy the Japanese variety next time. Also bought imitation crab when I went Marukai Market today; am really looking forward to making the next batch of sushi! :)
*Had some mashed sweet potatoes with honey mustard for "desert". Did I already mention how obsessed I am with honey mustard??
I've yet to figure out what to do with that weird rice porridge, urgh. Suggestions?
- Jeanne
Labels:
alfredo,
fried rice,
honey mustard,
japanese market,
sushi
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