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Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Monday, 2 March 2015

Laotian Laap


Laap (or larp) is considered the Laotian national dish and as such it is served in pretty much every restaurant you go to. It is refreshing in the heat and adds a zing to your day with the mix of spices and herbs it contains. I have also seen it in Thai cookbooks, but then I guess the cuisines here overlap quite often... 

Laap can be prepared with beef, buffalo (as in the photo above - might be a bit more tricky to find in Europe), chicken, pork or fish and vegetarians may substitute the meet with tofu, mushroom and/or potato. 

As with most dishes in Laos, sticky rice is never very far and you can find the recipe for the latter in the next post!

Ingredients (serves  3-4):


300g ground beef 
1 tsb salt
2 tsb fish sauce
2 garlic cloves
1 small onion
2 lemongrass stalks
1 tsp chicken stock
2 tsp dried chilli powder
2-3 bird's eye chillies (depends on your spice tolerance)
2 tbsp fresh coriander (about 4 stems)
2 tbsp fresh galangal
4 small (or 2 big) spring onions
3 tbsp fresh mint (small bunch)
1 bunch of Thai saw coriander (cilantro)
2 kaffir lime leaves
1 lime
2 snake beans or a handful of French beans
1 fresh banana flower (might be impossible to get at home so just leave it out)
Handful of bean sprouts
2 tbsp sticky rice powder (see below for instructions)
Lettuce leaves and/or watercress for serving

Preparation:
First, prepare the sticky rice powder: roast dry sticky rice (unwashed!) in a pan until it turns brown. Then pulverise it in a mortar.
Lightly sauté the beef in a pan with the salt and 1 tsb of fish sauce. Remove it from the heat, add a squeeze of lime juice and set it aside.
Finely chop the garlic, onions, lemongrass (only the white core), chillies, galangal and kaffir lime leaves. Roughly chop the mint, coriander (both), beans and spring onions. If you have succeeded in procuring a banana flower, peel the outer layers (the pink ones) of the flower and thinly slice the white section into a bowl of cold water. Careful, the sap stains and is impossible to get out of clothes (I speak from experience)! Mix all ingredients together and add the fish sauce and sticky rice powder. Squeeze in some lemon juice if you like and then serve the laap with the lettuce leaves and sticky rice. 

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Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Phad Thai


This might well be the most famous Thai dish of them all... In Bangkok, you can hardly walk a street without encountering a small stand where it is freshly prepared in front of you. Having tasted "the real deal" plenty of times there I did not think it was possible to recreate it yourself. Yet with the recipe below (again from the Blue Elephant), you actually stand a chance of bringing Bangkok into your home!
For the vegetarians among you, just leave out the dried shrimp, fish sauce and fresh shrimp and add more tofu and salt (the fish sauce is however what makes part of the taste...).

Ingredients (serves 4):
10 tiger prawns (raw)
4 eggs
320g dried rice noodles
8 tbsp vegetable oil
4 garlic cloves
4 small (or 1 big) shallots
4 tbsp fresh tofu
4 tbsp ground roasted peanuts
4 tbsp sweet turnips (pickled - skip if not available)
2 tbsp dried shrimp powder (or entire dried shrimp)
8 stems of thin spring onion
120g fresh beansprouts
4 tbsp white sugar
4 tbsp fish sauce
2 tbsp rice vinegar
4 tbsp tamarind juice
1 tsp chilli powder
2 limes
Fresh coriander


Preparation:
First, soak the rice noodles in cold water for 20 minutes.Meanwhile, start preparing the ingredients: quarter the prawns (not mandatory), cut the tofu into small cubes and the spring onion into 4-cm long pieces. Thinly chop the garlic and shallots.
In a wok, heat the oil on low heat and stir fry the garlic and shallots until an aroma develops (careful not to burn them). Then add the prawns and fry them until they start to turn pink. Push the mix to the side and crack open the eggs into the wok. Wait until the egg white starts to cook (i.e. turn white) and then scramble it. Once the egg is all scrambled, mix in the prawns and add the tofu and sweet turnip. When they are well mixed, add in the noodles (without the water!) and turn up the heat while stir frying the mix. Lower the heat again and add the seasoning: fish sauce, vinegar, tamarind sauce and half of the sugar (keep the rest for garnish). Continue to stir gently until all ingredients are well mixed. Add the dry shrimp powder and half of the chilli powder and ground peanuts. Finally, throw in the beansprouts and spring onion and mix with the rest. 
Transfer to a serving dish and add the lime, chilli powder, sugar and peanuts on the side. Garnish with fresh coriander leaves. 
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Thursday, 1 May 2014

Oven-roasted Vegetables with Halloumi

Hm, after an almost 6-months silence on this blog, I don't think a lengthy explanation of why there hasn't been any post is particularly helpful. Let's just keep it short: I moved to Iraq in the meantime and have been busy with other things. This has however not kept me in the least from continuing to cook and discovering new cuisines (to be frank, there is not much to discover here). Hence it was just the action of transcribing my activities into posts that was missing.
Many people here have actually encouraged me to continue the efforts and thus I start with renewed motivation (and resolution).

This first recipe came along rather on its own. I was surfing through recipes on the internet and came across the idea to roast carrots in the oven. Somehow, I had never even thought of doing that. And since that discovery, I have been subjecting all kinds of vegetables to the oven-tanning treatment. Today it's zucchini and cauliflower. Two days ago it was capsicum and tomatoes. You can pretty much use any vegetable you like. In this recipe, I have added polenta and halloumi cheese in order to give the dish more substance. For those of you who do not know about polenta and/or halloumi, let me explain.

As Wikipedia describes it, polenta is "cornmeal boiled into porridge". Depending on the type , polenta can have a creamy texture (a bit like mashed potato) or be rather grainy (called "bramata" and looks like bulgur). Personally, I prefer the grainy, rougher texture. Polenta is frequently eaten in the Italian part of Switzerland (I actually assumed that this was its geographical origin but have discovered that it is also part of the Italian cuisine). Polenta can either be eaten right after preparing it (when it is still creamy) or it is baked, fried or grilled after a night in the fridge. Again, personally, I prefer to eat it fried crunchy in a deep layer of butter. 

Halloumi (or Halloum) is, as my grandmother calls it, "the cheese that doesn't melt". Originally from Cyprus (I would claim it is Lebanese, but don't shoot me), halloumi is a very salty (because brined), unripened cheese made of a mixture of goat, sheep and cow milk. Because of its high melting point, it can be fried or grilled without losing its form. 

So, after this introduction to the ingredients, let's start with the recipe!

Ingredients (for 2 hungry persons; if you have polenta leftovers, use them the next day):
125g polenta bramata
60cl water
1 beef-cube (can be chicken or vegetarian of course)
200-250g Halloumi
Vegetables of your choice (2 zucchini or 8 small carrots or 1 capsicum or 2 tomatoes or a handful of cherry tomatoes or half a cauliflower...)
2 cloves of garlic
Olive oil, salt, pepper and herbs (such as basil, oregane or rosemary; include mint, if you prepare zucchini)

Preparation:

Bring the water to the boil and add the polenta and the beef-cube. Let it simmer (with the lid on, but stirring regularly) for about 40 minutes. The polenta should still be slightly grainy, but no longer "al dente".
While the polenta is cooking, cut the vegetables into thin slices (cut the carrots in half lengthwise for example). Then place them in a pyrex tray (try not to "crowd" them) and season with olive oil (be generous), garlic (cut thinly) and the herbs. Then put the tray in the oven (pre-heated at 200°C) and roast the vegetables for about 20-30 minutes (check regularly). When the vegetables are already quite tanned, cut the halloumi in slices roughly 7mm thick and place them in a non-sticky frying pan. The cheese will start sweating at first, then will turn brown. Flip it to grill both sides. If the cheese is too salty, soak it in water for a couple of hours before using it.
Serve the polenta with the vegetables and halloumi. If you have decided to wait another day to fry the polenta (this is best done by storing the polenta in a tupperware so that it is formed into a block), cut the polenta in slices of about 1cm thickness. Place a significant amount of butter (20g) in a frying pan and fry the polenta for at least 10 minutes on each side (careful, the hot butter will make the corn grains jump so cover with a lid) until golden brown and crunchy.
Sahtein!
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Thursday, 15 August 2013

Goat's cheese pancakes with mango salad


I don’t have much to say to “explain” this recipe – other than to say that the pancakes are very yummy (with a nice twist because of the goat's cheese)
and the fruit salad makes this dish very refreshing and healthy. If you don’t like mangoes, you can substitute it for peaches and/or nectarines and strawberries.

Ingredients (for 4 pancakes):
100 g goat’s (or sheep’s) cheese
1 lemon
1 ripe mango
A handful of fresh mint leaves
1 small egg
70 g flour
1 tsp. baking powder
125 ml milk
20 g butter
Liquid honey
Salt

Preparation:
Mix the egg, flour, baking powder and milk in a bowl and whisk until the dough is smooth. Add a pinch of salt and the goat’s cheese (in little crumbs) to the dough. Grate the lemon’s skin and add to the mix, then stir well. Cut the mango into pieces and drizzle some lemon juice over the fruit. Cut the mint into small stripes and add to the mango salad. Bake the pancakes in butter for about 2-3 minutes (until golden brown) and serve with the mango salad. 
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Monday, 12 August 2013

Summer rolls

It seems I have a blog-writing block. This could be related to the fact that I am currently in Italy, enjoying my holidays and not spending loads of time indoors. But let’s overcome this lethargy and be a more active member of the blogging community. And let’s do it with an Asian recipe – that always helps ;-).

So today, I propose a recipe for summer rolls, i.e. non-fried spring rolls.

Ingredients:
Spring rolls sheets (available in bigger supermarkets either frozen or dry)
50 g glass noodles
60 g bean sprouts
½ cucumber
1 carrot
1 spring onion
Cooked shrimp (as many as you have spring roll sheets)
Surimi sticks (1 per sheet as well)
Fresh coriander and mint leaves and chives
2 tbsp. dark soy sauce

Preparation:
Soak the spring roll sheet, one by one, in warm water, until soft. Similarly, “cook” the glass noodles by soaking them in hot water. Cut the cucumber and carrot into long stripes (not too thick) and prepare the filling for the rolls.
Place one spring roll sheet at a time on a damp kitchen paper towel and place the filling of the roll onto it (the mint and coriander leaves first so that they shine through the pastry). Fold in the sides of the roll (so that it looks like a Döner Kebap or an envelope) and roll the sheet.
For the sauces, you can either just use plain soy sauce or sweet chilli sauce or you follow the recipes posted when writing about the dumplings.  
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Friday, 2 August 2013

Raspberry cupcakes

Recently, I was invited to a birthday party and tasted some of the most delicious cupcakes I’ve ever had! I’m normally a) not a big fan of desserts (except if they’re Asian of course ;-) ) and b) don’t like cupcakes that much because they’re just so heavy. But somehow, the version prepared that evening was very convincing and so I am sharing the recipe (which I adapted ever so slightly) with you. I hope I can convince some of you cupcake-doubters too and for those of you who are cupcake-lovers anyway, I hope this one is an addition to your favourites!

Ingredients (for a batch of about 20 big cupcakes or 25-30 smaller ones):

For the dough:
200 g sugar
125 g butter
2 eggs
1 vanilla pod
150 ml sour cream
180 g flour
1 tsp. baking powder
½ tsp. salt
1 basket of raspberries

For the topping:
200 g Philadelphia cream cheese
125 g butter
500 g icing sugar
1 vanilla pod

Preparation:
Mix the (melted) butter, sugar and eggs in a bowl. Cut the vanilla pod in half and scratch out the seeds with a knife; add to the paste. Mix the flour, baking powder and salt and sieve into the butter mix. Add the sour cream in between portions of flour. Put 2-3 raspberries in each cupcake form and add the mix with a spoon. Bake at 180°C for 20 minutes. In the meantime, mix the butter (at room temperature), Philadelphia and the vanilla seeds (scratched out of the pod) in another bowl. Sieve in the icing sugar and stir until it is creamy. Add a handful of raspberries and mix well.
Once the cupcakes are done and cooled, decorate with the topping. 
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Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Summery Salads - N°5: Glass noodle salad


I think this will be the last one of the series for a while since maybe you got a bit tired of just reading about salads. To remain true to myself, it’s yet another Asian salad. Very easy and quick to prepare.

Ingredients (for 1 bowl of salad):
150g glass noodles
50g raw cashew nuts
300g cherry tomatoes
½ red onion
100g bean sprouts
3 tbsp. honey
1 handful of coriander leaves
1 handful of Thai basil leaves (or sweet basil leaves)
Chilli powder
1 garlic clove
2 Chillies
4 tbsp. lime juice
½ tsp. lime zest
4 tbsp. fish sauce


Preparation:
Cook the glass noodles in a saucepan (in boiling water for about 2-3 minutes). Drain the water and rinse the noodles with cold water. Dry the noodles with a paper towel and add them to a salad bowl.
Heat a frying pan (medium-high heat) and add the cashew nuts. Dry-roast until they start to brown. Add the chilli powder and 1 tbsp. of honey and stir until the cashew nuts are well coated. Once the nuts are cooled down, chop them roughly. Add the cherry tomatoes, onion, bean sprouts, coriander and Thai basil to the bowl with the glass noodles. For the dressing, mix the finely chopped garlic with the chillies (deseeded and sliced), lime juice, lime zest, fish sauce and 2 tbsp. honey. Add the dressing to the salad and serve it with the roasted cashew nuts. 
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Thursday, 4 July 2013

Summery Salads - N°4: Malaysian papaya salad


So, number two in the series is, surprise surprise, an Asian summer salad! I don't think it needs much more introduction, so here comes the recipe:


Ingredients (for 2 reasonably big portions):
50g green beans and/or 
50g sugar peas
1 small (unripe) papaya
½ cucumber
¼ Chinese cabbage (optional)
1 mandarin
½ avocado
4 cherry tomatoes
2 tbsp. fresh coriander
1 tbsp. vegetable oil
½ red onion (or 1 spring onion)
1 garlic clove
1 tbsp. sesame seeds
1 tsp. Sambal Oelek
1 tbsp. raw cane sugar
Juice from 1 lemon
1 tbsp. fish sauce

Preparation:
Blanch the beans and/or sugar peas in boiling water for 3 minutes. Half the cucumber and papaya, remove the seeds and cut into small cubes. Fry the onion and the garlic (chopped finely) in the oil. Mix the sugar with the lemon juice and fish sauce. Cut the cabbage (if you choose to put it in), the mandarin and avocado. Roast the sesame seeds. Mix all the ingredients in a bowl and decorate the salad with the sesame seeds, cherry tomatoes and coriander. 
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Summery Salads - N°3 - Tabbouleh


Now, this is the Lebanese version of Tabbouleh (i.e. based on a lot of parsley rather than a lot of bulgur or couscous as is the Moroccan version). Yet, you still need a bit of bulgur for the Lebanese version too. In case you don’t know what that is, let me explain quickly: “Burgul” is the Turkish word whereas in Arabic it is called “burghul”. It looks a lot like couscous, but is a bit thicker. According to Wikipedia, bulgur is made from the groats of several different wheat species, most commonly from durum wheat. You find it a lot in Middle Eastern cuisine, as for example in Tabbouleh. So here comes the recipe:

Ingredients (for a bowl of salad):
4 bunches of flat parsley
1 bunch of fresh mint
½ cucumber (optional)
5 tomatoes
1 small white onion
5 tbsp. bulgur
Olive oil
Juice of 1-2 lemons
Salt and spices (cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves and pepper)
Lettuce and cabbage leaves

Preparation:
Wash the parsley and mint and dry them thoroughly. Chop both finely and add them in a bowl. Cut the cucumber, tomatoes and onion and keep separately (the Tabbouleh gets soggy quite quickly). Shortly before serving, mix in the tomatoes, onions (and cucumber) with the parsley and mint and add the bulgur (no cooking needed!). Add the liquids: lemon juice and olive oil and season with salt and the spices. Mix well and serve with lettuce or cabbage leaves. 
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Saturday, 29 June 2013

Summery Salads - N°2: Quinoa-pomegranate


Yep, you might think that I have a newfound addiction to pomegranates... But actually, I am just trying to use my rests in an intelligent way. So here comes a semi-self invented summery salad with pomegranates, radish and raisins.

Enjoy!

Ingredients (for 1 reasonably filling portion):
150g Quinoa (1 cup)
30 cl water (2 cups)
½ cucumber
½ pomegranate
7 radishes (or more)
Raisins or dried dates to your liking
2 tbsp. fresh mint
Lime juice
Olive oil
Salt

Preparation:
Rinse the Quinoa in water (much like rice) to remove the bitter coating. Bring the water to the boil and add the Quinoa. Cover and cook for about 15 minutes (until the germ separates from the seed and the water is absorbed).
Half the cucumber and remove the seeds. Chop into cubes. Cut the radishes into slices. Mix the Quinoa (cooled down), pomegranates seeds (see Summer Beef salad recipe for instructions on how to best remove the pomegranate seeds), cucumber, radishes, raisins (or dried dates) and mint in a bowl and add the lime juice and olive oil. Season with salt.


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Sunday, 23 June 2013

Summery Salads - N°1: Ebly-strawberry salad


I thought that over the next days, I would put a series of summery salads. Technically, the beef salad with pomegranate could have been the first one of these salads. But well. Now this - own creation - Ebly salad with strawberries will be! Enjoy (and let's hope the weather will play along!).

Ingredients (for 1 person):
1 cup of Ebly
2 cups of broth
1 small onion
½ cucumber
½ capsicum (red bell pepper)
50g sugar peas
Strawberries (as many as you like)
Olive oil
Vinegar (best is a glazing Balsamic vinegar that is a bit fruity)
Salt & pepper

Preparation:

Chop the onions and braise them in olive oil. Add the Ebly and broth and simmer for about 10 minutes (or until the water is absorbed and the Ebly is soft). Cut off the ends of the sugar peas and blanch them in boiling water for about two minutes. Cut the peas, capsicum, strawberries and cucumber into cubes. Put them in a bowl and add the Ebly. Season with vinegar, olive oil, salt & pepper. 
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Thursday, 20 June 2013

Gazpacho (cold tomato soup)


And because it was so hot these past days, here comes the recipe for cold tomato soup, i.e. Gazpacho – a very refreshing starter or main dish for a summer evening. When in Mallorca a couple of years ago, I discovered in a restaurant that they put strawberries on the table to add into the soup: very yummy indeed!
 
Ingredients (for 4 persons):
800g ripe tomatoes
2 onions
2-3 garlic cloves
1 cucumber
1 green & 1 red capsicum (bell peppers)
200g bread (can be toast bread)
100g strawberries
3 tbsp. olive oil
1 tbsp. wine vinegar
Salt, pepper

Preparation:
Skin the tomatoes and cut them into quarters. The easiest way to peel tomatoes is to put them into boiling water for 20 seconds and then to shock them with icewater. Cut the onions, cucumber, capsicum and bread. Put ¼ (of the tomatoes, cucumber, onions, capsicum and bread) away for the “topping”. Purée the rest of the vegetables and the garlic with the oil and vinegar. Season with salt and pepper to your taste. Cool the soup in the fridge (preferably for a couple of hours, but if time is short, just add ice cubes). Before serving, roast the leftover bread (cut into cubes) in oil or butter. Cut the strawberries into small cubes and serve all the vegetables together with the soup. 
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Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Summer beef salad (with pomegranate)

This summery and very yummy beef salad is a creation of my own, inspired by Asian beef salads (with mango for example). The fruits used here can be exchanged, or others added.
Bon appétit!

Ingredients (for 1 person) :
- 150g beef (preferably filet)
- 1 spring onion
- 1 carrot
- 1/3 of a cucumber
- 6 strawberries
- 1/2 pomegranate
- fresh mint
- fresh coriander
- oil

Sauce :
- rice vinegar or lime juice
- soy sauce (preferably sweet)
- fish sauce

Preparation :
Chop the spring onions and fry them in a pan; add the sliced beef. Season with fish sauce and sweet soy sauce and fry until the beef is no longer pink.
Cut the carrot (either in little dice or with a vegetable peeler into thin stripes); half the cucumber and remove the seeds; cut in dice; also cut the strawberries.
Put the halfed pomegranate into a bowl of cold water and, holding the fruit under water, pull it apart. The water limits the amount of pomegranate juice squirting into all directions and the skin between the seeds floats on the water, making it easier to separate the seeds from it.
Put all the ingredients into a bowl; season with rice vinegar (or lime juice), fish sauce and soy sauce and finely cut the mint and coriander over the salad with scissors. 
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