Category: Recipes

Nov 23

Baking Lessons

Earlier today, my nephew and I took some baking lessons from my mom. She taught us how to bake her famous banana cake. We made two batches, one batch prepared by me, the second one by my nephew. We also threw in some impromptu carrot muffins. The recipe for the banana cake is a secret so I can only share  the photo.

Banana Cake

Looks yummy, don’t they? :D I like it with a little butter spread. Note: this is the only banana cake I eat. :)

The carrot muffins recipe I can share. Well, it’s actually carrot cake but we made muffins instead for the kids. It is Betty Crocker’s recipe and it’s supposed to have nuts and cream cheese frosting. We omitted the nuts because of the kids and we didn’t have cream cheese at the time so no frosting too, like what I said, it was impromptu. But it was still good! It’s so moist and not too sweet. Anyway, you can find the recipe and more info here.

Carrot Muffins

Carrot Cake

1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
3 large eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 cups shredded carrots (5 medium)
1 cup coarsely chopped nuts

Heat oven to 350°. Grease bottom and sides of rectangular pan, 13 x 9 x 2 inches, or 2 round pans, 8 x 1 1/2 or 9 x 1 1/2 inches, with shortening; lightly flour.

Beat sugar, oil and eggs in large bowl with electric mixer on low speed about 30 seconds or until blended. Add remaining ingredients except carrots and nuts; beat on low speed for 1 minute. Stir in carrots and nuts. Pour into pan(s).

Bake rectangle 40 to 45 minutes, rounds 30 to 35 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool rectangle in pan on wire rack. Cool rounds 10 minutes; remove rom pans to wire rack. Cool completely, about 1 hour.

Cream Cheese Frosting

8 ounces cream cheese, softened
1/4 cup butter or stick margarine
2 to 3 teaspoons milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 cups powdered sugar

Beat cream cheese, butter, milk and vanilla in medium bowl with electric mixer on low speed until smooth.

Gradually beat in powdered sugar, 1 cup at a time, on low speed until smooth and spreadable. Store frosted cake or any remaining frosting covered in refrigerator.

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Jul 23

Fish Spring Roll with Honey Mustard Dip

We have a couple of canned Salmon sitting around the kitchen cabinet. Nobody wants to eat it and I hate to see it go to waste so I searched the net for recipes. I came across this Fish Spring Roll recipe and its Google description said it is the best one ever so I had to try it. The verdict: it does taste good, I can almost not distinguish the canned Salmon taste. I am going to try this with non-canned fish next time. Of course you can serve it with sweet and sour sauce of ketchup instead of honey mustard, but I kinda liked it with honey mustard dip. You can find the original recipe here.

Fish Spring Roll with Honey Mustard Dip

Shanghai-style egg roll wrappers

Filling:
1 12oz can pink Salmon
1 onion chopped
1 carrot chopped
2 tablespoons pickle relish
1 tablespoon of flour
8 tablespoons of milk
1 egg
Salt, pepper, sugar

Mix all ingredients for the filling in a bowl. Put a spoonful of filling on the egg-roll wrapper and wrap it. Fry until golden brown. Remove excess oil with a paper napkin then serve with honey mustard dip.

Honey Mustard Dip

1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
1 tablespoon honey
1/2 tablespoon lemon juice

In a small bowl, whisk together the mayonnaise, mustard, honey, and lemon juice. Store covered in the refrigerator.

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Jul 10

Quick Fix: Basic Fried Rice

Here’s something to do with leftover rice. This is also nice if you’re hungry and have no cooked food available except rice. I call it quick fix because it’s easy to make and doesn’t need much preparation and  you can practically throw in any leftovers you want.

Fried Rice

Cooked rice
Cooking oil
Garlic
Frozen vegetables (carrot, corn, peas)
Egg
Salt & pepper

Saute garlic in oil. Add frozen vegetables and cook until tender. Add cooked rice, add the egg and stir-fry. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. And you’re done!

It is that easy. You don’t even have to beat the egg beforehand, just throw it in then stir-fry. And remember that this is just the basic. You can add cut-up hotdog, ham, bacon, fish balls, quid balls, or whatever leftover food you have lying around. You can also experiment by adding other spices that may tickle your taste buds.

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Jun 24

Pata Tim

Here’s one of my my mom’s well-loved recipes. It’s a family favorite and my cousin’s fave too. :D Excuse the crappy photo but I can assure that this is delicious.

1 pork front leg (1.3 kg)
1 pc. ginger, thinly sliced
1/4 cup cooking oil
1/4 cup white sugar
1/4 cup vinegar
1/4 cup soy sauce
8 stalks Pechay Baguio (alternatives: Chinese cabbage or Bok Choi)
2 pcs. dried mushrooms, sliced
3 tbsps. rice wine
5 cups broth or water
2 pcs. Sanque (Star Anise)
2 tbsps. cornstarch for thickening

Marinade:
2 tbsp. Chinese soy sauce
1 tsp. ground pepper
1/4 tsp. garlic, minced
1 tsp. white sugar
2 tsp. leeks, minced

Marinate pork for at least an hour.
Remove pork from marinade.
Heat pan, pour oil, add ginger then fry pork until golden brown.
Transfer the pork in a pressure cooker, add the marinade then set aside.
Heat pan, caramelize sugar, add water when brown.
When boiling, add vinegar, soy sauce, rice wine and Star Anise.
Pour the mixture over the pork leg in the pressure cooker.
Cook for 30 minutes or until pork is very tender then transfer the pork to a serving platter.
Heat pan, pour oil (from pork), stir fry dried mushroom and Pechay then add the sauce from the pressure cooker.
Thicken sauce with cornstarch dispersed in water, pour over pork then serve.

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Feb 05

Jap Chae

My cousin loves to cook and experiment with recipes. He doesn’t take notes so he has no exact recipe of what he has done. One time he cooked Jap Chae and we all loved it but he didn’t have the recipe so my nephew and I just decided to look for a recipe on the net. We found one, tried it and it’s good. It was an impulse act so as always our ingredients weren’t complete. We didn’t have spinach and scallions, so, we just skipped the scallions and replaced the spinach with kangkong (water spinach or water glorybind). It needs a little more tweaking but the recipe is good enough already. Next time, we’re thinking of putting a little more soy sauce and sugar and we’ll add beef sirloin. You can buy the noodles from Korean grocery store for about PH P190 per 1 kilo pack, that’s roughly US $4. Here’s the recipe:

Jap Chae

Jap Chae / Chap Chae / Korean Glass Noodles

1/2 pound dried Korean sweet potato noodles
2 1/2 teaspoons sesame oil, divided
1 tablespoon cooking oil
3/4 cup thinly sliced onions
2 carrots, cut into matchsticks
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
3 stalks scallions, cut into 1″ lengths
1/2 cup wood ear mushrooms, thinly sliced (soak in warm water for 15 minutes then drain)
1/2 pound spinach, washed well and drained
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons sugar (mix with the soy sauce)
1 tablespoon sesame seeds, toasted

Fill a large pot with water and boil. Add the dried noodles and cook for 5 minutes. When noodles are done, drain and rinse with cold water. Drain again and toss with 1 teaspoon of sesame oil so they won’t stick together. Set Aside.

Put the cooking oil in large saute pan. When it is hot already, add the onions and carrots and fry until softened. Add the garlic, scallions and mushrrooms and fry for aboolut 30 seconds. Then add the spinach, soy sauce and sugar, and the noodles. Stir fry everything for about 2-3 minutes until the noodles are cooked through.

Turn off heat, toss in sesame seeds and the remaining sesame and oil and serve.

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