Thursday 30 June 2011

KAI SUSHI BAR

IMG_1053

Prawn motoyaki on portobello mushroom.  Rating:  6/6


I’ve been meaning to eat at Kai Sushi Bar for a while.  I received a 10% flyer a while ago but after looking at the menu realized the kiddies wouldn’t have much to eat here because they always want udon noodles. 
Kai Sushi Bar serves primarily izakaya-type dishes and sushi, as advertised in its name. 

The best dish I had was the Prawn motoyaki on portobello.  It was $12.  You tell me if you’re made of money and can afford this awesome tasting dish.  It was so good.  But it was so expensive.  Out of all the dishes, I think I would perhaps pay $12 for this one.  Maybe.  Hey, I don't have deep pockets.

Sunday 26 June 2011

KIRIN SEAFOOD RESTAURANT, CITY SQUARE

IMG_1031

I love Chinese banquet food.  Though we didn’t eat a formal banquet menu today, we had many dishes that were banquet-wow.

Case in point is the Wintermelon soup.  Yowsa, what a neat presentation!  The soup comes in its own hand-carved Wintermelon bowl.  The waiter uses a metal spoon to shave off slices from the melon bowl into each person’s soup bowl.  Every person gets a good portion of seafood and clear flavourful broth. 

IMG_1027

Look at that wintermelon! It’s gargantuan!  We had 16 people (give or take a kid or two) and there were leftovers to take home.  This is a fantastic soup.  My favourite.  Rating:  6/6

Saturday 25 June 2011

KING’S CHINESE CUISINE

IMG_1006

Egg tarts:  rating:  5/6
I’ll let you in on a little secret for cheap eats in Vancouver.

ZOKU ICE POPS MAKER


It's summer and berry season! 
Zoku Quick Pop Maker
What better way to showcase fresh local fruit than in a homemade ice pop? 





Sunday 19 June 2011

CONGEE NOODLE HOUSE

IMG_0978-1
Half a BBQ Duck.  Rating:  6/6  Yum!

The BBQ Duck at Congee Noodle House is so good!  The skin is crispy and the duck isn’t just skin and bones.  There’s some good chunks of meat there.  I hate it when you buy a duck and get just skin and bones.  This one was succulent and came with a plum sauce dip.  It wasn’t too fatty and the flavours were ducky perfect.

Tuesday 14 June 2011

BLACK SESAME CHIFFON WITH CONDENSED MILK WHIPPED CREAM & RASPBERRIES

700_1631


Black Sesame Chiffon Cake with Condensed Milk Whipped Cream and Raspberries


700_1603


Love chiffon.

700_1604


Love Black Sesame!

700_1612


I transformed my favourite Chiffon recipe into a Black Sesame Chiffon recipe that is so tasty that it ought to be illegal.  The chiffon can be eaten straight out of hand or you can gild the lily with Whipped Cream sweetened with Condensed Milk.  Add ruby-red raspberries and you have a dessert that your guests will rave about. 

700_1632


Black sesame has long been touted in Chinese ancient medicine as a perfect food for child-bearing women (for ease of childbirth), for a healthy scalp, to prevent premature white hair and to clarify the complexion. It is purported to even help with constipation, lactation, chronic rhinitis and eyesight.

700_1625


No doubt.

I don’t really care about all these things health attributes my momma told me about as much as the fact that black sesame rocks for flavour. It is nutty and fragrant and makes all your desserts look Goth.
You need to grind your black sesame seeds very finely and perhaps sift it to ensure the particles are fine enough.  Otherwise, you will encounter big chunks of sesame that will sink to the bottom of your tube pan like mine did.  The effect was kind of streusel-like, which wasn’t all so bad.  However, it wasn’t what I was gunning for.  I think that a food processor would not grind the sesame fine enough.  I used my high-speed Bullet.  You might use a spice grinder or clean coffee grinder.  Just ensure you grind in small batches and stop before you create sesame paste. 

700_1635


I insist you make this Whipped Cream sweetened with a touch of Condensed Milk.  It is to die for.  You will find that one dollop is not enough.  You will inevitably do what I just did here and pile it on until you can’t see cake anymore.  It’s not about how it looks…it’s all about yum-factor!

700_1638


Wobbly tender, nutty cake topped with cool sweet whipped cream and punctuated with tart ruby berries make for a fine summer dessert!

CAKEBRAIN’S BLACK SESAME CHIFFON
(adapted and extremely modified from Cooks Illustrated)
(I insist you weigh your dry ingredients as I won’t be responsible for overly dry or wet chiffons if you don’t!)
  • 300 g white granulated sugar
  • 151 g cake flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup black sesame seeds [please check freshness by sniffing]
  • 7 large eggs, room temperature
  • 1/2 cup grapeseed oil
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoon roasted sesame oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 3/4 cup water
  1. Using a Bullet, a spice grinder or a clean coffee grinder, finely grind the black sesame in small batches.  Sift out large chunks.  You can re-grind those large chunks again until everything is powdery fine.  Caution:  do not overwork into sesame paste. 
  2. Adjust rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 325 degrees F.  Whisk sugar, flour, baking powder, salt and ground black sesame into a large bowl.  Whisk in two whole eggs, five egg yolks (reserve the whites), the water, oil, extract and sesame oil until batter is smooth.
  3. Pour reserved 5 egg whites into a standing mixer bowl; beat at low speed with the whisk attachment until  foamy, about 1 minute.  Add cream of tartar, gradually increase speed to medium-high, then beat whites until very thick and stiff, just short of dry approximately 7-8 minutes.  With a large balloon whisk, fold whites into the batter, gently incorporating blobs of white that resist blending.
  4. Pour batter into ungreased large tube pan (9-inch diameter, 16 cup capacity). 
  5. Bake cake until wire cake tester inserted in centre comes out clean, 55-65 minutes.  Immediately turn cake upside down to cool.  Invert pan over bottle of funnel if you don’t have prongs for elevating cake.  Let completely cool, about 2 hours.
  6. Run frosting spatula or thin knife around pan’s circumference between cake and pan wall, pressing against the pan. 
  7. Accompany large slices of the Sesame Chiffon by gilding each just before serving with a large dollop of Condensed Milk Whipped Cream (recipe below) and fresh raspberries.
  8. Chiffon can be wrapped in plastic and stored at room temp 2 days or refrigerated 4 days.
CONDENSED MILK WHIPPED CREAM
  • 11/2  cup heavy whipping cream, cold
  • 1 tablespoon condensed milk
  1. Pour whipping cream into stand mixer bowl and whisk until soft peaks form.
  2. Drizzle in the condensed milk and whip further until the whipping cream holds medium peaks.
 

Saturday 4 June 2011

Wednesday 1 June 2011

REDISCOVERING STEEL-CUT OATMEAL

700_1542
Steel-cut oats with apples, cinnamon and brown sugar brulee

I’m a breakfast person.   I was never much into instant oatmeal though…the kind you pour out of  individual packages and add water.  My kids love the Peaches ‘n Cream instant oatmeal but it just doesn’t turn me on.

I spotted a huge box of steel-cut oatmeal at Costco last week and became all excited at the prospect of eating something I only faintly remember from early childhood.  I was about 5 years old and my mother had made oatmeal that tasted quite unlike the kind of oatmeal we have today.  It was warming, creamy and had a bit of chew.   Mind you, when I was 5, milk was also delivered by truck to your door by the milkman and if you beat everyone else to the new bottle of whole milk, you could be the lucky one to pop off the paper tab and lick the cream stuck to it.

Gosh. Am I aging myself here?  Today, we can still buy milk in those nostalgic glass bottles but you pay a premium for this…but boy is it good!  Or is it?   Does the milk taste any different?  I dunno.  To me, taste is all wrapped up with kinaesthetic experiences.

To me, pouring milk from those old milk bottles is quite like drinking an ice-cold Coke from a glass bottle…no straw please. 

My vivid memory of drinking a Coke from a bottle occurred during elementary school growing up on the East Side.   There was a mom and pop grocery store located across the street from my school.  Children could go there at lunch and buy candies for a penny.  Back then, there was a thing such as Penny Candy.  Chips were 25cents a bag.   

If you were lucky you had enough for a pop after school.  On a sunny day in June with the sound of children  playing ringing in your ears in the schoolyard after school, you head across the street with your friends to the corner store.   You open the Coke bottle’s cap using the built-in opener situated on the front of the banged-up Soda Fridge: pshhhh! clink!   You walk out of the corner grocery store; the bell attached to the door jingling merrily as you allow it to slam shut as you leave.   You cross the busy street back towards your elementary school, walking all the way home with the cold bottle in your hands--the condensation slowly rendering your hands moist.  The experience of the cold, clear bottle opening on your lips is like no other.  As you tilt the bottle to drink, you accidentally bump your teeth against the glass as you walk and send a singular shot of pain up that nerve in your front tooth.  But oh the stinging joy of that first stream of Cola!  Sweet and cold, burning bubbles beautiful!

I don’t drink much Coke anymore, but I do love my bubbly water.  I make my own club soda with my Penguin Soda Maker.  I must confess, I drink tap-water turned club soda instead of plain ol’ water.  I like bubbles.  I don't like to drink sugar anymore.

Drinking Coke from a bottle, pouring milk from a milk bottle and eating steel-cut oatmeal...these are things that people should experience in childhood.

700_1546

My mother’s steel-cut oatmeal was a rare treat for breakfast.  She always served it runny with lots of milk and sugar to taste.   Now I know why she rarely made it.   It takes 30 minutes to prepare on the stovetop.  That’s precious time for mothers getting their kids ready for school.

However, today I’m going to share with you a fantastic way to have your steel-cut oats in short order.  There are even instructions on the back of the box of steel-cut oats telling you to do this.  You simply soak the oats overnight in hot water.  Then it takes you only 10 minutes in the morning to finish cooking it off to your desired consistency on the stovetop.  I go a further step and portion out 1/2 cup servings in tupperware containers in the fridge for heating up in the microwave over the course of the week.    I keep all my fruits and flavourings clear of the plain oatmeal because I like to add that at the last minute.  This gives me a myriad of options for flavouring at my whim each day.   Other people have used rice cookers or crock pots to make big batches ahead of time.  The stove-top method without soaking will take you about 30 minutes.  Either way, after you have portioned everything out, in the morning you simply stir in a little milk of water to loosen it up (as the oatmeal would have congealed into a thick mass), add your flavourings and microwave to heat.  It’s so fast.  I’ll never go back to quick oats again. 

700_1552

Steel-cut oats have a chewy, nutty, creamy consistency.  I love the texture.  I particularly like the creaminess that you can achieve without adding any cream. 

My favourite addition to steel-cut oatmeal is apple.  I don’t  make a  pureed applesauce because I like the chunky texture of chopped apples.  In a separate pot, I add chopped up apples, a dot of butter and a sprinkling of cinnamon.  Granny Smiths are great for this…and if you want, you can add a spoonful of brown sugar.  It is totally unnecessary to add sugar though if you have a sweet apple.  Cook down the apples until they are tender.  Store in a sealed glass container in the fridge until you need it.  Serve it like a condiment with your oatmeal.  I add 2 spoonfuls of apples to my oatmeal before I microwave it.   If you’re feeling special, sprinkle brown sugar on top and brulee until golden brown.  It’s so good.  It tastes like apple pie in a bowl.

700_1553

STEEL-CUT OATMEAL (OVERNIGHT METHOD)
  • 1 1/2 cups steel-cut oats
  • 6 cups water
  1. Bring water to a boil in a large saucepot.   Turn off heat.  Stir in the steel-cut oats.
  2. Cover the pot with a lid.  Allow to sit covered overnight.
  3. Refrigerate until morning.
  4. In the morning, uncover the pot.  Heat the oatmeal over medium heat, stirring constantly, until desired texture is achieved, about 10 minutes.  You may add additional water or milk to loosen the oatmeal if you wish.
  5. Serve with flavouring options and sweetener. 
  6. Leftovers can be refrigerated:  Portion individual 1/2 cup servings of oatmeal in sealed containers in the refrigerator.   Warm in a microwave-safe bowl (2-3 minutes) with a little milk; stir to bring back consistency.  Serve with flavourings.   Pull out your torch and brulee some sugar on top.
  7. If you want to make a smaller batch, the ratio is 4:1 of water to oatmeal.
Flavour Additions for Steel-Cut Oatmeal:
  • Cooked apples, butter, brown sugar and cinnamon
  • Chopped peaches and cream/milk
  • Sauteed chopped pears
  • Fresh raspberries, any berries and cream/milk
  • Sliced bananas & walnuts
  • Milk, sugar/brown sugar & cinnamon
  • Ground flax, hemp, buckwheat, wheat germ
  • Pineapple and coconut
  • Chopped fresh mango & cream/milk
Optional Sweeteners for Steel-Cut Oatmeal:
  • Brown sugar
  • Agave nectar
  • Manuka honey or any wildflower honey
  • Granulated Sugar

LinkWithin

Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin