Thursday, March 6, 2014

I Cook: Ta'amia (Falafel)

What makes Ta'amia or Falafel? Chick beans or Fava Beans or both. Falafel is a middle eastern food which is shaped like meat balls or small patties.Wrapped around with flat or pita bread. We like our Falafel with flat bread or tortillas and just fill in the sandwich with veggies such as tomato, lettuce, cucumber, and french fries (YES french fries!) and voila! A quick fix for lunch or dinner!

 I usually whip something up during the weekends.I seldom buy food from the office because pantry food (to which I call it) sucks. Yes, I did use the word "sucks". They often put cornstarch to any of their viands just to thicken the sauce and the quality just went down. Plus, it's quite unappealing too.

So one work day, I was looking at our groceries and wondering what I can bring to work. I saw Garbanzos (chick peas) and a few spices and I'm like "Let's do this! I'm gonna make Falafel!"  If you want to try it here's how I did it.

I used canned chick peas. I drained it and left it for a while just a bit to dry because the moisture will help the mixture later on.

Since I don't have a food processor, I use my trusty, cheap, over used blender and placed the chick peas in batches.

Press "grind".


It should turn out like this.


Now, I'm going to make my green paste. I made mine with 3-4 cloves of garlic (It really depends how much you want. But I like mine with that garlic kick) , a quarter of chopped onion and parsley. Place the garlic first and chop them using the blender. Add the onion and parsley and blend it. It will give you a green aromatic paste.


 In a mixing bowl, place in the chick peas and the green paste. Make sure that the mixture won't turn out too wet (but if so, don't worry, the bread crumbs will do the trick). The mixture should still have coarse like texture.

Add a tablespoon of flour,  quarter teaspoon of salt, 1/8 teaspoon of cumin and cayenne pepper (adjust if you want it spicy) and 1/3 cup of bread crumbs (I used Marby).Add 1/4 teaspoon of baking powder when I'm about to fry it.

Using a polvoron shaper, I fill it with the mixture making sure that it is tightly packed to avoid it from breaking when frying.

              Heat your pan with oil and set it on medium heat.


When the pan is hot and ready, I fry them until golden brown on both sides. 
Place them on paper towels to drain the excess oil.

 

And that's it! Home made Ta'amia / Falafel!.

Hope you enjoy making this one as much as I did.

Happy Eating!

xx

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Travel Food Series: Random Food We Eat : De Maju

 Street stalls and street food. That has always been in our list. With Malaysia's booming economy and  24/7 business centers, food seems to be the same. You have never been to Malaysia if you haven't tried Mamak food. These Mamak stalls are everywhere! 

Luckily, from where we are staying, right in front of it is called De Maju. They serve Malay-Indian and Western dishes. Sipping Teh Tarik (milk tea) and eating our usual breakfast, lunch and dinner, De Maju has been our kitchen for the week long vacation we had.

Here's how it works. You get a table, settle down and a staff will be with you shortly. Once he approaches you, you gotta have something in mind because everything seems to be a rush (most specially by night because people are off from work and are having dinner). The staff will hand you a piece of paper with your order with the price and that's your tab which you will show him when you pay up.

They even have like a "buffet" type of ordering. They have laid out food and all you have to do is just get the food that you want then they'll charge you after.

Our resident De Maju guy is Ramesh. He knows what we are getting everyday and been very swift that we always give him a tip after. At the end of our trip, BB gave him a Rado cap because he has been very nice to us.

 

 Teh Tarik with Ice RM1

 Roti Canai and Dal (curry dip)

 If you are a bit afraid of trying local food. They do have a western menu. I forgot how much this costs but i think its around RM12 or a little more. 

For one dinner, I had Chicken Chop Maryland, which is boneless chicken with hotdog, coleslaw, fries and soaking with gravy. This by the way is huge! It covers the whole platter and I have never finished this (considering I have a huge appetite). I'm already wishing for this now. I can still remember how juicy the chicken meat was and the well seasoned crust was superb!


Nasi Goreng

This is their fried rice. Stir fried rice with carrots, chili, choice of meat (beef or chicken), garlic, Kecap Manis (Sweet Soy sauce), strips of egg, onions, sambal or tomato sauce. Imagine your whole plate towering with rice. This is around RM7 and don't forget to have fried egg with it. Just don't think about the calories, because you can sweat it out after.

 Hainanese Chicken fried rice served with Fish Sauce.

Now this one is not from De Maju but by the poolside of where we were staying.

I'm pretty sure this was not the Hainanese chicken I was imagining. But HECK IT'S DELICIOUS! Bits of chicken cubes with carrots and corn. Another simple yet uber tasty dish.


Now, this one is their pasta. YES, it's PASTA. it has chicken strips, bean sprouts, crushed nuts in which tasted like our version of Palabok sauce.

Do you know what this dish is called? I totally forgot what it is.Let me know if you do! :)

Gosh I miss this place.

xx

I Cook: Japchae

Oh Hai Guys! I spent one of my Saturdays making my very own Japchae. I was really in the mood of cooking. Japchae is a Korean dish made from sweet potato noodles, stir fried in sesame oil with various vegetables, sometimes served with beef or chicken (whoever cooks it no judging!) and flavored with soy sauce and sugar.


If you want to make this just scroll down. A fairly easy delicious dish!

What you need: 

-Korean Vermicelli Noodles (can be brought at your local Korean Store (Wang Mart).) It is quite different with our version of vermicelli noodles.

The noodles are like light brown in color. As I mentioned above, it can be bought at Korean stores (less than a hundred pesos) or grocery (I saw Robinsons selling it around the same price. Not sure with other huge groceries but to be sure Korean store! :] )

-Garlic
-Onions
-Carrots
-Spinach
-Beef (I bought mine at Wang Mart which are thinly sliced)
-Sesame seeds
-Sesame oil
-Shitake mushroom ( I used canned, but if you are going to use dried shitake, place it on water and   
                                  when it's ready squeeze the water out from it)
-Sugar
-Soy sauce
-Olive oil
-Salt
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Procedure:

-Chop garlic and onions
-julienne carrots and set aside

-in a pan, drizzle olive oil and saute garlic with a pinch of salt then set aside.

-saute onion with a pinch of salt. When translucent, set aside.

-saute carrots with a pinch of salt and set aside

-saute shitake mushroom with a pinch of salt and set aside

-brown beef and season with a little bit of salt and set aside

-blanch spinach and squeeze excess water and set aside

-in a small bowl, place a tablespoon of soy sauce, sugar and sesame oil. When sugar is dissolved, place the spinach and mix and set aside.

-cook noodles in boiling water. When cooked, drain and cut it (because the noodles are really long)

-heat pan and add soy sauce with sugar mixture and sesame oil.

-add noodles and fry.Add more soy and sugar or sesame oil mixture if needed to achieve desired taste.

-Add garlic, onion, carrots, spinach, shitake mushroom, and beef.

-Sprinkle with sesame seeds when plated.

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That's about it! It only involves setting aside but it's not that hard.

If you wish to try this out let me know what you think. By the way you can also place thinly sliced scrambled eggs on top for garnish. Instead of beef, you can put chicken (thinly sliced thigh fillet I guess would be the best )

Enjoy and Happy Eating!

xx


























Monday, March 3, 2014

I Rant: The empty can


We have this saying that "Ang latang walang laman ay maingay" (An empty can makes the most noise). And it is almost impossible to talk to those "know it all". Take note, it's TALK and not ARGUE. Since they "know everything" and always having something to say, they end up looking and sounding like an idiot.

He who has nothing to say says too much.

I am not impressed with all talk.