Friday, December 19, 2008
Orange Rhum Cake by SWEET HIBISCUS
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
SWEET HIBISCUS Sweet Christmas Treats
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
ROYCE Chocolates is in Manila!
I was introduced recently by a Chinese lady friend to the Japanese wonder chocolates that go by the name of Royce. After having a tasty lunch at Seryna in Little Tokyo in Makati, we went straight to her place in Rockwell to have tea and yes, generous servings of Royce Chocolates! She had Royce's Nama chocolates - the kind that melts so smoothly and sinfully in your mouth plus the truffles with brandy liqueur and one of the varieties coated with sesame seeds or nuts. My friend has to fly in her Royce chocolates from either Hong Kong or Singapore since they're not available in Manila or so she said. But lo and behold, a copy of Yummy magazine this month pointed me right to where Royce Chocolates can be had for P620/box of 20 pcs for the Nama and the nutty bars at P500 or so a piece!
Yes, all Royce chocoholics can get their fix of these rich and delicate Japanese delights in Konbini Tokyo Market, a Japanese grocery just beside Angel's Kitchen in Connecticut St., Greenhills. I got a box of the Nama chocolates that had no liqueur and so pure and heavenly that you can finish all 20 pieces without guilt. Unfortunately, you can't just buy the chocolates off the Konbini shelves. You have to place an order with the store in advance so they can get your chocolates for you. I promised myself to sample more of the Royce Nama chocolates, the au lait flavor w/ cherry liqueur and maybe the champagne one. Plus, the well-loved Potato Chocolate Chip variety!
The chocolates have a short shelf life and must be savored before the due date stamped on the box to get the full benefit of their goodness. This is one of the reasons why Konbini can't store a lot of the chocolates and you have to call in to order first. You also have to keep them cold lest you end up with your confections turning into one gooey glob of chocolate. The chocolates are kept in a foil with a small pack of ice to make sure you bring them home fresh and intact.
But yes, apart from Truffettes de France that used to come from Canada and that are now sold in Costco Stores in the U.S. and which you can now get from a stall on the second floor of the Shangri-la Plaza Mall, as well as those Leonidas truffles that go for P80 or more per piece, you can now sample Royce Chocolates right here in Manila. Give Konbini a ring first before going over to the store to make sure you get the kind you want. The staff is very helpful and friendly and they will help you sort the varieties. Royce is just one of life's simple pleasures -- and rated highly on Lonely Planet's Blue List of must-eats. :-)
Monday, December 8, 2008
Moistest, Chewiest CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES
Recipe from Sheila Paras
1 cup butter, room temperature
1 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
2 large eggs
2 tbsp milk
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
2 1/2 cups oats (rolled or "quick," but not "instant")
2 cups chocolate chips (about 12-oz.)
1. Preheat the oven to 350F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
2. In a large bowl, cream together the butter and the sugars until mixture is light in color. Beat in the eggs one at a time, followed by the milk and the vanilla extract.
3. In a medium bowl, stir together the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Either by hand or with the mixer on low speed, gradually beat the flour in to the sugar mixture until just incorporated.
4. Stir in the oats and chocolate chips by hand.
5. Drop 1-inch balls of dough onto the cookie sheet, placing about 1 1/2 inches apart so they have room to spread.
6. Bake at 350F for 10-13 minutes, until golden brown at the edges and light golden at the center.
7. Cool on baking sheet for at least 1-2 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
Makes 4 dozen.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Ang Tunay na INASAL
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Of Chocolate Dreams & Memories
Day One of ISCAHM's Pralines Course was all about making Truflle Chocolates. You know, like the ones sold in Leonidas for 80pesos a piece. I thought 80 bucks for a ball of chocolate with a quick shot of gooey, slurpy, liqueur inside is rather steep. But after Day One, the uninitated among us in the making of those truffle chocolate jewels discovered why the stuff costs more than a cup of coffee in Starbucks.
It takes a millionaire to invest in making really good chocolates that you would want to give your very best friends. It requires a tempering apparatus costing P31,000 (and that's the one made in China, which makes the Swiss version of the machine even more expensive), an infrared thermometer to monitor the correct temperature of the tempered chocolate (P3,500 for a really good one), specialty forks and ringed spoons, and for those who wish to make a living doing this, a good cutting machine that will set you back P80,000. AND, that's not even including the marble slab which you must have (to spread the chocolate mix on for the tempering method) that you should keep inside a CHOCOLATE ROOM where you have to spend on expensive chillers to maintain the right temperature for your chocolate. WHEW.
Those of us who enrolled thinking that we could make fancy chocolates for gifts this Christmas could only shake our heads after taking in all these bits of info. They should have included them in the pre-requisites for enrollment. BUT, since we already paid good money for the short course, we had no choice but to relax and just enjoy the experience. I could only wonder to myself how the poor family in the movie "Chocolat" was able to make those marvelous goodies without all these costly gadgets. Oh well, so much for watching too many movies and taking them for real.
So, Day One went really well. We first learned how to make the fancy fillings with the different liqueurs that you want inside the truffle shells. We had Baileys, Kirsch (cherry liqueur), Brandy, and of course, Grand Marnier, mixed with different varieties of tempered chocolate couverture. After doing the fillings and setting them for a day, they had to be piped into the truffle shells and depending on the kind of chocolate gem you're making, you can use three of these pre-made shells: milk chocolate, white and dark.
Piping the fillings into the shells is a skill in itself. You can't pipe in too much of the fillings as if you overfill the shells, they will be too moist and the truffle shells would break. Then there's the whole task of covering the shells with more chocolate couverture and letting them set first before either coating them in Bianca dusting powder or rolling them over wire (for those spiked effects on the truffles).
Looking at the chocolate baths, I was tempted to dip my fingers and licking the chocolate off. BUT YES! I got to do just that after Chef Ernie Babaran (yes, the great pastry chef of Dubai royalty), asked me and my groupmate to dip three fingers into the bath and spread the chocolate onto our palms for rolling the chocolates before coating them in dusting powder! After the rolling task, we had our fill of eating the "rejects" (haha!) and then licking the milk chocolate off of our hands. It was then that I realized why the course was that expensive! You could eat all the chocolate you want and you have a really good excuse to eat melted chocolate from your palms! The course offered sheer pleasure and the realization of every childhood fantasy, short of being locked up in Willy Wonka's chocolate factory and scooping chocolate from the river!
And the final moment, of course, was in eating the delectable treats that passed through our hands. Unlike in the fundamentals culinary arts course where students had to muscle each other out for food to bring home, we all had boxes of the pralines ready to bring with us to sample and brag about to our friends and family. I brought my box of goodies and proudly told my husband, our househelp, my kids and some of our staff that I made them! And they couldn't get enough of the chocolates.
So now, we all know why those truffles are more expensive than a cup of Starbucks. They are made with the most sophisticated ingredients, requires the most expensive tools, and not to mention, a whole lot of patience and love. But the sheer pleasure of each bite is way worth it for what kind of world would this be without chocolate
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
PAELLA Valenciana
Since it's Christmas time and in honor of the opening of our new La Paella branch in one of the malls in Manila, am posting my personal recipe of PAELLA VALENCIANA which I've road-tested several times, to much success.
PAELLA VALENCIANA
¼ cup olive oil
5-6 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup onions, chopped
1 can Purefoods chorizo bilbao, sliced
250 g pork loin or liempo, cut into pieces (seasoned)
6 pcs. boneless chicken breasts (seasoned w/ calamansi, S&P)
red bell pepper / green bell pepper, sliced
150 g tomato paste
450 g long grain rice (soaked in water for 15 mins at least)
6-8 cups hot chicken broth
salt and pepper
pinch of saffron
frozen green peas
Toppings:
boiled mussels or clams (w/ salt and pepper)
squid sliced
8-15 pcs of shrimps (boiled in water w/ slices of calamansi, S&P)
2 pcs small crabs
sliced hard-boiled eggs
- Heat olive oil in paellera. Saute garlic and onions.
- Put in chorizo, pork and chicken. Saute till brown.
- Mix in tomato paste. Saute and stir well.
- Put in soaked rice and pour in some broth.
- Season w/ salt, pepper and saffron. Cover for 10 mins.
- Stir rice well every now and then. Pour more broth if needed.
- Cover and let rice absorb the liquid. Put in frozen green peas. Transfer to an oven and let the rice cook for 10 more mins.
- Top with seafood, garnish w/ eggs, bell pepper slices and lemon.
My first food writing article
The Tibok-Tibok: An Ode to Love from the City of Angels
Pure, unblemished and yes, unpretending. It is true love laid out in a bilao. And to me, it was love at first bite. This is how I fell in love with the tibok-tibok, a soft and silky milk pudding that tenderly melts in your mouth with each bite.
Honestly, I haven’t been much of a “kakanin” person. I fancied cakes, cupcakes, and anything with valrhona chocolate in it, influenced by Manila’s newest thing for dessert buffets. But the tibok-tibok has changed my perception of the kakanin – it is a refreshing change from the designer cupcakes with candy sprinkles, peppermint, bubblegum and strawberry frosting, and yes, even the rich valrhona chocolate that we have been stuffing ourselves with for months now. The tibok-tibok, with its sheer pureness, with its meek tenderness and with its plain white beauty, has made me a convert.
It was in Everybody’s Café in Angeles, Pampanga during a culinary trip where I met my first tibok-tibok. The Kapampangan women in our group said that it was named as such because it was ‘soft as a heartbeat’ (in Filipino, heartbeat is “tibok ng puso”). True enough, there is nothing quite as soft and as creamy as the tibok-tibok. You never even feel it in your mouth until you are swept away by its overwhelming creaminess which, they say, comes from using fresh carabao’s milk – no substitutes. This is probably what makes the tibok-tibok so light on the taste that after downing all those icing-laden cupcakes, you would swear them off the face of the earth.
As unassuming as it looks, this queen of kakanins requires simple ingredients. The key is in using the freshest carabao’s milk one can find. And in keeping with our culinary tradition, one needs good old galapong or rice flour then blended with some coconut milk and bit of dayap zest to make the tibok tibok’s flavor come alive.
Perhaps, the appeal of the tibok-tibok is in its innocence. It is stark white in color minus the latik on top. It’s also not too sweet and with a sprinking of latik, you are treated to a nutty flavor that goes well with its light milky taste. For those wanting a little twist, it can be paired with some ube haleya. But alone, the tibok-tibok is a true delight. It believes in its own beauty and goodness. It needs no frosting to get you to love it.
I do believe that the tibok-tibok is the women of Pampanga’s ode to love. I can only imagine how it is painstakingly and lovingly made for their lovers, husbands, friends and families. I can almost imagine it being cooked, or created, by the women in total silence, like in the wee hours of the morning, so as not to disturb its freshness, its purity. I can almost see the lovely Kapampangan women softly whispering a prayer as each bilao of tibok-tibok comes out of their kitchen. And I can feel the delight of the lovers, husbands, sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, to whom a tibok-tibok has been made and given as a gesture of kindness and of love.
My heart now beats for the tibok-tibok. I am happy to have had a taste of it and to have known how our women can create a love so pure and so real in a simple sweet pudding. It is a culinary masterpiece that comes from the heart.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Singapore: The Republic of Food
I was on a recent quick trip to Singapore and although I get the chance to visit every year or so, it seems like the city-state is forever in a state of flux. Change is the natural course of things in Singapore and it's all for the better as Singaporeans seem almost obsessive about being the best in the region.
The proliferation of museums, galleries and all kinds of venues for the arts in recent years shows how serious they are about cultivating an artistic heritage - something which they have once been accused of lacking, presumably because of the diversity of cultures that make up their population. I guess the thought of becoming a state of human androids (or worse, geeks) would strike fear in the hearts of a people. Which is why the shakers in this part of the region are moving heaven and earth to breed more right-brained people.
The change is all for good. The passion to be Asia's best has reached a high point not just in the visual arts but in culinary arts as well. It's not just malls and museums that dot Singapore's landscapes these days but great food haunts as well. Food in this part of the region was once flavorful but too diverse and there was much "to each/eat his own" going on -- Malays would stick to their spicy laksas, the Indians would have be happy only with curry, and the Chinese want to be left alone with their own dimsum and ducks. But that was the dark ages in Singapore's culinary history.
Today, Singaporeans have embraced their unique diversity and take pride in it. And they're shouting it to the top of their lungs by building what they call the FOOD REPUBLIC. THE FOOD REPUBLIC is actually a foodcourt of sorts as it gathers a variety of cuisines all in one place. It's quick, it's hot and it's good! There is a FOOD REPUBLIC in the biggest malls: Suntec City Mall, Wisma Atria and the huge Vivo City Mall at Harbourfront.
Going through the maze of eateries in the area, one is given a feel of what Singapore must have been like in its early years as a port where Malays, Indians and Chinese once hawked and traded their wares. Each stall is stylized in the traditon of the country it represents, even the uniforms of the servers and cooks were carefully chosen to highlight the individuality of their country. The food is a heady and tasty blend much like the melting pot of cultures that Singapore really is. One stall sells coconut cakes, another sells bao and dumplings that can compete with what's served in our own posh hotels in Manila. There's prawn mee cooked in front of you, fresh fruit shakes and juices, roast duck and chicken, all sorts of curries, seafood, noodles and so much more! And all these in just a foodcourt!
THE FOOD REPUBLIC is a celebration of Singapore's cultural and culinary diversity. It seems that they have found distinction and a unique identity in being a melting pot of cultures in the real and actual sense of the word.
Summer Fiesta Salad w/ Mango Vinaigrette
Since the scorching summer season is right about here, save for a few rains now and then, it's certainly the best time for refreshing salads! What better way to enjoy nature's treats than with some crispy greens livened up with the colors of the fruits of the season?
This is a take from YUMMY Mag's 2007 issue which featured the Summer Fruit Salad with Mango Vinaigrette. I made this as part of my birthday party dinner for some friends and it was an instant hit! The guests couldn't get enough of the colorful visual treat as well as the great sweet flavors of the salad. It's cool, it's fun and it's healthy!
Take a few assorted greens (romaine lettuce), cleaned and pat-dried. For color and flavor, slice up slivers of apples (red), kiwi (peeled), cube up some ripe mangoes and add some sliced fresh strawberries. Top the fruit slices on the greens and chill.
For the mango vinaigrette, you would need:
1/2 cup mango puree
1 tbsp Dijon mustard
a pinch of garlic powder
2 tbsp white wine vinegar
3/4 cup canola oil
salt and pepper to taste
Mix the mango puree, mustard and garlic powder first. Pour into a blender. Add in the white wine vinegar and canola oil. Blend for 2 mins. Season to taste. Chill for around 30mins or so.
Drizzle the vinaigrette on top of your greens and you have a great way to start off your slimming regimen this summer!
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Tilapia w/ Coco Cream Sauce
--George Bernard Shaw
It's been a while since I uploaded the new recipes that I've tested. Work had gotten in the way. It's been a rush since the start of the year and a lot of times, I had asked our househelp to finish the cooking of our food while I dash off to work or to the gym, more to lose the extra weight and to cure my aching back.
But off to another try at anomeletaday.... today, I cooked a simple, 20-minute meal (yep, beat that, Rachael!) w/c has lots of good creamy coco flavor and spice! The good old tilapia (cherry snapper, to some) has come a long way. The fish, which we have plenty to go around here in the Philippines, has enjoyed new-found glamour and popularity even in foreign restos. It has even graced the show IRON CHEF AMERICA as the "Secret Ingredient" and which Molto Mario had transformed into heavenly dishes!
So with that, the Pinoy has borrowed from his Southeast Asian neighbors, to spice up the ever-present tilapia. This time, I tried a simple recipe: TILAPIA in COCO CREAM SAUCE. Here's how it goes:
1. Clean the fish well and then season with some salt and pepper. Rub the S&P into the fish. Two pieces of tilapia for this recipe.
2. Heat some canola oil and fry the fish in till slightly brown on both sides.
3. Slice 2 small onions lengthwise and chop a head of garlic (mince).
4. Prepare some ground turmeric (about 1/4 tsp.) and add around 1 tbsp of water to that. Mix turmeric into water. You can also use grated turmeric (dilaw na luya) and about a tbsp of that will do.
5. Ready your coconut milk -- for this recipe, I used the coco milk by Fiesta which is in a tetra-pack and just pour in. Around 1 tetra pack will do.
6. In a saucepan, heat a tablespoon of cooking oil and saute the garlic and onions for around 3 minutes or till onions are transparent.
7. Pour in the turmeric mixture and around half of the coco cream into the saute mix. Let that simmer till thick.
8. In a separate casserole, put a bunch of pechay leaves, the fried fish and pour in the sauce. Let that simmer a bit more. Add the rest of the coco cream to the casserole. Season with salt and pepper for added flavor. When sauce is thickened and the fish is cooked entirely, you're done!
It's a good meal that's protein-rich, light, with lots of creamy flavor and is ready in 20 minutes or so! And with the pechay in it, you're guaranteed of a healthy serving of veggies :-)
Saturday, January 5, 2008
What's for Breakfast?
Friday, January 4, 2008
Anybody CAN Cook
--Owen Meredith, LUCILE
Last year, there's been a lot, if not too much, attention given to cooking and the whole showbusiness of it. Ever-perky Rachael Ray elbowed out the matronly Martha Stewart, sensual Giada, and goddess Nigella for the attention of TV viewers. Emeril, Mario, Wolfgang, and the rest of the gang had a fair share of following despite competition from gruffy-handsome grillman Bobby Flay, boy wonder(ful) Jamie Oliver and dashing Rocco. And what else is there to say about Hell Kitchen's devilishly yummy Gordon Ramsay, a 6'2" former soccer player who threw in his jersey in favor of kitchen whites?
Cut up some chicken breasts fillets (around 4 breast slices) into bite-size pieces. Mix together 1 tbsp of melted margarine, 1 tbsp of salt, a dash of Spanish paprika and some pepper. Brush this on the cubed chicken breasts. Put in a greased oven-proof casserole dish and bake for 15 mins (175C).
Meanwhile, take a cup of rice, wash and let the grains soak for a while. Better to use the long-grain variety. Mince some onions (1 medium sized one) and chop 2 tbsp of green or red bell pepper and 2 whole red tomatoes. You would also need 2 cups of chicken stock, a dash of ground turmeric (instead of pricey saffron threads) and some frozen green peas (1/2 cup) later.
Once you have everything ready, in a large, non-stick skillet, saute the onions and peppers in some olive oil till soft. Then put the soaked rice. Saute until fully-coated with the oil and until the grains are slightly brown, about 4 mins. Then pour in the chicken broth, throw in the tomatoes and turmeric, for flavor. Cover entirely with a lid or aluminum foil and let the grains cook in the broth, for about 20-25 mins. Season with salt and pepper.
Once that's done and the rice is cooked al dente, put in the baked chicken and garnish with the peas. Let that cook for 10 more mins. and then your one-dish meal is done! Serve hot, serves 4-6 persons.