Sunday, March 20, 2011

Phnom Penh Revisited

Got a chance to go to Phnom Penh again. This time I figure I will try their famous Luc Luc... but I was kinda disappointed though. I can see why kids would like it, it's kinda sweet and savory, but lack some depth for my taste.


Beef Brisket Noodle in Soup


Luc Luc Beef Fried Rice (the name is deceiving, it is not really fried rice)

Famous Chicken Wings

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Taro Balls in Sugar Water

Taro has always been a favorite treat to our family... well, as least for my mom and my brother. The dry powdery texture of it often bothers my dad and me. And this is why we like these taro balls - the taro are processed and added starch to give it a smooth and chewy texture.


The first steps of making this nice treat are peel, cut up the taro, and steam it till you can use a pair of chopsticks to snip and break the pieces apart. At my first batch I cut the taro to 1/3 inch slices, but then realize the slices stick together and I might as well steam the whole taro as one. So for my second batch I cut it to cubes, which allows steam to get into every corner and cook everything through.

Now comes the fun and labour intensive part of mashing the taro. I tried to use a electric blender but because of the lack of liquid taro pieces are flying everywhere and that is when I hoped I had bought the potato ricer that was on sale. It ends up a big spoon (rice spoon) is not bad for the job too. It you prefer some texture then don't mash the taro too much and leave little pieces.


All you need to add to the mashed taro are a little bit of sugar and some starch. The sugar is just to highlight the taro flavour so you don't need too much - eventually you are eating this with sugar water so a little bit is all you need. For the starch, different recipes tell me different things. This time I went with the Potato Powder and sadly did not turn out so well - not enough binding strength so the balls falls apart if you cook it too long. So Tapioca Starch might be a better choice. You don't need too much starch since the starch will also take away the natural flavour of the taro, so just put enough so the taro paste can form into a dough and not stick to your hands.

I was busy making the dough and forgot to take pictures... but basically I form it into a large cube and just cut the dough to small 1/3 inch cubes, sprinkle with more starch to prevent them sticking to each other, or spread it out on a baking sheet and set in the freezer till harden. And here they are, a pile of taro balls... or cubes... whatever shape I want them to be, okay? Traditionally you roll the dough into a long finger-width stick and cut diagonally so it become small elliptical pieces. But because in the dough I have small un-mashed pieces of taro for texture which make rolling the dough very difficult, so cubes/chunks will do.

Cooking them is very easy, just brown sugar and water (plus ginger if you want an extra kick), and throw the balls in, cook till they float to the surface (actually pretty quick). The starch on the taro balls actually thickens the sugar water quite a bit. So cook the balls separately if you prefer a thin sugar water drink.

In theory you can also make yam balls with the same recipe, but unfortunately for me I left the yam in the steamer while I was working on the taro dough, so the yam absorbed all the steam. Too much liquid means I get yam paste instead of yam dough.


But anyway, dispite of all the unfortunate events, sugar water makes everything tastes good.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Taiwanese Cold Noodle

When I am upset, I cut something..... Don't worry, no animal was harmed during making this blog. But poor carrots and cucumber are not so lucky.

So to make the Taiwanese Cold Noodles is easy. The sauce is pretty much made of lots of garlic, peanut butter (traditionally made with sesame paste), salt, pepper, sugar, and white vinegar. Throw everything into a food processor and let it rip. For Taiwanese Cold Noodle there is no such thing as too much sauce, you really want to noodle to swim in the sauce, so be sure to make a lot of it.

Served. Sorry the photo is turned to the side. But you can still see my whole dinner.

Sauced.

For those who live in the Vancouver area and thinking I am crazy to have a cold dinner when there are still snow on the groud - I am not totally crazy. I made a good batch of Ginger Chicken Soup with Shitake Mushroom and Goji Berries - that should warm me up.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Ikea Breakfast + Snack Dog

Went into Richmond this morning to run an errand and suddenly realized there is something I rarely have the opportunity to do - eat at Ikea for its 99-cent breakfast. Really it is nothing special except these are things I don't make at home, so it gets me a little bit excited. I think I heard the coffee are free before 10 o'clock, but I was planning to get a free coffee from McD so I didn't go for it. On my way out I saw the 50-cent hot dog sign and thought no Ikea trip is complete without a couple of these snack dogs, so I happily inhaled one between the checkout counters and the exit.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Cold

Waking up to see "feel like-14"... let me go back to bed!!