Category Archives: Recipe

Recipe: Tiramisu Cheesecake Ice Cream

Ok I am going to be the first to admit that this particular recipe didn’t exactly come out the way I had originally hoped or intended. It was good, don’t get me wrong, and creamy… but it was almost too cheesy and not creamy or milky enough… which was probably my own fault since I didn’t really use much in terms of milk and had too much cheese.

Ah well… you live and learn… right?

So first here are a couple of more legitimate recipes that I used as inspiration… because obviously I used neither of them!

First there is the recipe from Food.com’s Tiramisu Ice Cream Recipe…. and then there is FoodandWine.com’s Once-a-Year Cheesecake Ice Cream Recipe.

Why did I decide to combine two recipes? Well because I had the following ingredients that I wanted to get rid of:

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Recipe: Artichoke Soup

Another attempt on the savory menu during the Bake-a-thon was Artichoke Soup (though technically ours would be better described as Spinach-Artichoke Soup but who is really paying attention here?

Anyway… from the website Examiner.com we have:

Ingredients:
6 cups chicken stock
12 articoke hearts, chopped
1 white onion, chopped
1 tsp. salt
2 cups milk
6 Tbs. yellow cornmeal
2 Tbs. butter
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
2 Tbs. cilantro

Directions:
1: In a medium saucepan over medium heat combine the chicken stock, artichoke hearts, onion and salt and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to a simmer and cook 30 minutes.

2: In a medium bowl whisk together the milk and yellow cornmeal. Whisk this mixture into the soup until it is smooth.

3: Add the remaining ingredients into the soup and cook 5 minutes before serving.

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Recipe: Cheese Bread (aka Pão de Queijo)

Another recipe my friend and I worked on during the Bake-a-Thon was Cheese Bread… or more precisely: Brazilian Cheese Bread (aka Pão de Queijo). So how is this any different from a popover? Well in general:
Popover is a light, hollow roll made from an egg batter typically baked in muffin tins
Bread is prepared by cooking a dough of flour and water and often additional ingredients, such as butter or salt to improve the taste.

After sifting through plenty of recipes I settled on one that I found via AllRecipes.com.
cheesebread
Since there was no tapioca flour on hand traditional flour was used instead… what happened in the end was that our version of the about (though tasted fantastic) didn’t look like the picture. Hmm… How did ours look? Well from my friend’s Facebook Wall
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Recipe: Cheesy Popovers

One of the recipes that me and a friend of mine tried during the Bake-a-Thon in late January was the Cheddar Cheese Popovers. I found several recipes on the internet but the one I ultimately decided to try was from Food.com

From the original recipe below…
popovers
I naturally made changes… like what? Well…
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Recipe: Rau Cau (Vietnamese Jello)

Yesterday I talked a little bit about the inspiration towards what I chose to be the dish brought to the Oscar party that was thrown by friends. Just to keep things simple I actually found a rather common recipe used to make Rau Cau that uses generally the same ingredients that my mother and I used for our version. As always I will start with what I found online that you guys might like and then I’ll talk about how the one I made differs.

Now below is the recipe used by the Ravenous Couple:

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Below are the directions provided:

Have multiple, ideally 3, small saucepans ready. Split the agar packet into thirds for each layer. The amount of condensed milk/sugar is really up to you as some people like this mildly sweet and some really sweet, so adjust according to your tastes.

For the coffee layer, heat about 1.5 cup of water in small pot, add about 1/3 of the agar packet, stir constantly until the agar dissolves. Add 2 tbs of instant coffee, add about 2 tbs of condensed milk or 2 tbs of sugar and a drop of vanilla extract. Taste, adjust condense milk/sugar to your taste and bring to boil. Carefully pour this into your mold. This will slowly set so in the meantime, start the next layer.

For the coconut layer, heat about 1 cup of water and can of coconut milk. Add 1/3 of agar packet and stir constantly. Add about 2 tbs of condensed milk or sugar and then adjust to taste and bring to boil. Before adding to the bottom coffee layer, check to make sure it is not fully set…test with your finger–it should not perforate through but spring back but still slightly sticky. You don’t want it too soft or else the coconut will just mix with the coffee. Conversely, you do not want it to completely harden or else the layers will slide apart when cut. Carefully ladle on the coconut layer to the slightly hardened, but sticky coffee layer.

Finally, for the pandan layer, heat about 1.5 cup of water, the rest of the agar packet, 1 tbs of pandan extract (if using pandan leaves, tie in bundle with twine and remove at last minute), 2 tbs of condensed milk or sugar, and a drop of vanilla extract and 2 drops of green food color. Stir constantly and adjust to taste and bring to boil. Now you’re ready to add the final layer. Again, before adding this layer, check to make sure the coconut layer is slightly hard and still sticky to the touch and then carefully ladle this on.

Let the jelly cool at room temperature or refrigerate to quicken the process (around 10 min-the thinner and larger surface area, the quicker it will set) and enjoy!

For the most part the above is rather close to what we have done… so how did we change it up?

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Recipe: Snickers Brownies

This was a recipe that my friend wanted bake for kids and as thus was primary chef while I just helped out… kind of. 😉 Snickers Brownies, which automatically sounds heavenly and doesn’t really need much worry as to how it came out.

Since she tends to follow the recipe to the tee… here is the recipe that (I believe) she used from My Baking Addiction:

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Recipe: Banh Chung (Yay for Lunar New Year!)

Every year within a month before the new Lunar New Year, I make a point of taking a weekend off from everyone else I know on the planet to be with my mom to make Banh Chung… a rice cake that we only make for the Lunar New Year… not only that, but we make a massive number of them (anywhere from sixteen to twenty cakes total… but usually eighteen cakes) and we give some to my maternal grandparents… I take a cake or two back with me and she takes the rest.

INGREDIENTS:
– approximately 10 pounds of glutinous (or sweet rice)
– approximately 6 pounds of mungbeans
– approximately 6 pounds of pork loins (the more lean the better I always say)
– cleaned banana leaves
– salt (approximately 2 tablespoons)
– pepper
– olive oil (if using lean pork)
(creates 16 rice cakes)
Variation: If you are vegetarian then subtract pork and mix mungbeans with sugar. It is tastier with light brown sugar.

Since we make a massive batch… we went with an eight pound hulk of pork loins from Costco (we ended up using up to seven pounds of it though). If you don’t want to go all out with so many rice cakes for yourself the below are approximations of the above for just one rice cake:
– 2/3 pound (though according to the above it is closer to 1/2 + 1/9) of glutinous (or sweet) rice
– 1/3 pound of mungbeans
– 1/3 pound of pork loins

PREPARATION for MUNGBEANS
Day One

1: Soak the mungbeans in water overnight

Day Two
1: Rinse the mungbeans and toss a little salt
2: Put mungbeans into the steamer until it is just cooked through (how to test: take a small portion in hand and smash, if you have to put pressure then it is good, if falls apart easily then it is bad)
3: Ground mungbeans when completely cooled down

PREPARATION for EVERYTHING ELSE
As with all Vietnamese cooking I don’t really have set directions, so here is what I know:
1: Cut the pork in 1/2 inch to 3/4 inch thick slices. Marinate with salt and pepper. Add olive oil if using lean pork. Set aside
2: Clean the banana leaves and wipe reasonably dry
3: Rinse the glutinous rice, drain, toss with a little salt… set aside

Now here comes the fun part… you will need four sheets of aluminum foil approximately 12 inches by 12 inches square and then fold in accordance to the video below:
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Recipe: Butterbeer Ice Cream (but really Sorbet)

Since I have yet to go to the Magical Wizarding World of Harry Potter down in Orlando, Florida I have to make do by playing with recipes I get off of MuggleNet.com. Last year I posted a recipe about Butterbeer Cupcakes that turned out to be a bit of a hit from various parties and I decided that whenever I get the chance I’ll make actual Butterbeer.

In comes the Bake-a-Thon and a fellow Harry Potter fan… and voila! Butterbeer ended up on the menu. So from the Mugglenet.com Recipe page, which one of the many recipes did we end up using? Well… we settled on the Butterbeer by Nicole as the most proper choice:

Now if only I had actually followed the recipe… >.< Guess what I did wrong? Continue reading

Recipe: Mini Pumpkin Pie Croissants

Another Harry Potter related recipe that my friend wanted to try was the Mini Pumpkin Pie Croissants. Now for me not being a huge fan of pumpkin to begin with was already apprehensive… but she was all for it, especially since she had a can of “canned pumpkin” that she wanted to use.

Unlike the other recipes we’ve tried up to this point, this wasn’t a hit out of the park by any stretch of the imagination. In fact when just mixing the cream cheese with the canned pumpkin the consensus was that the filling was very bland… so my friend (who was the primary chef this time around) decided to spice the filling up before “stuffing” it into the croissants. So what did she add?
– sugar
– powdered sugar
– cinnamon
– nutmeg
– cloves
And those are only the ones I managed to catch… who knows what else she may have added. In fact when looking at the comments below the recipe it appears that anyone that tried the recipe had a similar issue:

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Endeavors: Bake-a-thon! Round One!

This past weekend I met up with a friend for an all day session of baking, cooking, and taste testing. We managed to compare schedules months ago and found a day that the both of us were free. So after weeks of saying “we need to get together to bake and cook” we finally did it.

So what did we make? Well… let’s just say a lot of possibilities across the spectrum… but here are the recipes I decided to start off with:
– Cheesy Popovers
– Cheese Bread
– Creamy Artichoke Soup
Molten Lava Cupcakes (dark chocolate with candy canes)

What else did we make? Other ideas that floated around:
– Butterbeer Ice Cream
– Snickers Brownie
– Pumpkin Croissant

So what actually happened? Well…

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Recipe: Guacamole (yes… really!)

So in a concerted effort to eat healthier (not that I haven’t already been doing that with all the homecook meals I am always eating, and choosing to stay with fresh foods over processed whenever possible)… I’m going to continuously rotate fresh fruits and vegetables in my diet.. or create “fresher” dishes to mix in with some of my ready made ones.

First up GUACAMOLE!

Yes… I know… I copped out. So sue me…

Then again… don’t sue me, because I have no money for you guys to squeeze out of me.

I kid I kid!… Anyway.

A nice simple recipe that I am sure you all already know all about:

Ingredients
– 8 avocados
– 4 limes
– 1 bunch of cilantro
– 2 small onions

Directions
1: Squeeze all the juice from the lime and toss into food processor

2: Scoop the avocado from shell and remove pits… toss into food processor

3: Peel onion and chop into eighths and toss into food processor

4: Remove the majority of stalks and rinse cilantro leaves… then toss into food processor

5: Use food processor to chop, mix, grind, the ingredients until they have reached a consistency you are happy with.

6: Pour guacamole into airtight container and put in refridgerator so the flavors blend together for at least four hours.

7: After the chilling in the fridge, take out and serve.

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Recipe: Dutch Baby Quiche

So during the Chef’s Table there is the theme of “Masterpieces” and I have touched upon my challenged and what my inspiration was that in the end helped me to create the dish that I brought to the group of friends for a spell:

Since researching the background of when and where this particular piece of art (“Family Concert”) was created and conceived by Jan Steen, I found out that the western Dutch province in North Holland actually had influences from northern French cuisine.

Taking that a step further the Dutch’s food staples included:
– potato / bread
– herring / mussels / eels / oyster / shrimp / white fish
– fruits / cheeses / meat / wine / nuts
– eggs / lamp / pig / bread / fish

Whileas the drink of choice was:
– strong pale lager

Hmm… for the longest time I contemplated adding alcohol into my dish, because since the “Family Concert” was a depiction of everyday family life, in the case of Jan Steen – having a “Jan Steen household” meant that you had a “chaotic” or “messy household” – his family owned a tavern and he eventually owned one of his own as well.

But, considering the chances were very likely that there would be more than enough alcohol on hand (as well as lack of time due to the holidays) I decided to forgo the alcoholic addition and focused elsewhere.

In the end I decided that the base would be a mini Dutch Baby pancake (time permitting using potato flour) with a filling reminiscent of a quiche except the cheeses were those found more in Dutch culture and food.

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Endeavors: Chef’s Table “Masterpiece” Inspiration

Over the weekend a set of friends of mine and I continued the bi-monthly tradition of a Chef’s Table where every meet up is a theme and everyone create a dish that is a part of that theme. The theme of this past weekend was “Masterpieces” in which every dish was inspired by some known piece of art.

Mine’s was Jan Steen’s “Family Concert” and as one could imagine I was having a hell of a time with figuring out what to do… let alone where to begin.

If you are unfamiliar with the painting:
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At first glance one would think that this was something of a scene of a fun family affair… and to an extent I would agree until one were to really look upon the painting. In fact according to the Art Institute of Chicago:

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Recipe: (White) Egg Drop Soup

It was one of those weekends… a free weekend to do whatever it is that I needed to get done and instead I was a zombie-esque being due to some food that I had the night before that didn’t set well with me all night.

So in times like this what do I do? I make (white) egg drop soup!

No this is not one of those racist, politically incorrect recipes that various racial groups could shake their fists at and scream bloody murder at the recipe of being racist…

It just so happens that unlike traditional egg drop soup that uses egg yolks (or the whole egg) this recipe calls for ONLY the egg white.

WHAT?!!?!??!

Exactly.

So from the nice sweet simple people at About.com comes a sweet simple recipe for the egg white drop soup.

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Recipe: Vanilla Ice Cream with Chocolate Chunks and Candy Canes

Just in time for the holidays too. After borrowing my friend’s ice cream machine I decided that the first batch of ice cream I would make would include a classic “Chocolate Chip Ice Cream” kind of feel but with the added twist of ground up candy canes for the season.

Needless to say it was full of the awesome.

Now the ice cream maker came with its own book of recipes to use… so for starters I figured good old fashioned vanilla would work…
vanillaicecream
Sweet and simple.

Right “good old fashioned vanilla”… I added a few mix-ins in the form of ground up candy canes and broken down chocolate truffles…
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