Monday, February 22, 2010
Kaeng Phanaeng Kung (Shrimp Curry with Basil)
A friend recently told me that I make a lot of North African dishes, and that is true. Moroccan tagines are a great way to whip up something quick, easy and exotic. However, it was also a signal, at least from myself, that I need to explore and develop more. For me, that means confronting my fear of authentic asian cuisine. Fear is probably too strong a word, trepidation may be better, but it is that feeling in the face of something complex and poorly understood. The last shrimp recipe I posted last week was very simple. Coming from Portugal, it is easy to see why. It contained ingredients that could survive on a ship for 6 months sailing back from the spice islands to Europe. Basically, from a barrel of curry powder.
This recipe from The Food of Thailand: A Journey for Food Lovers represents the next step in my journey into the complexity and beauty of Asian cuisine. In addition to our curry base, come not only coconut milk, but also fish sauce and palm sugar. The latter is something for which brown sugar can substitute, but their is no substitute for Thai fish sauce. While used sparingly, it adds layers of complexity impossible to find elsewhere. This recipe also uses yellow curry paste instead of the more common green or red curries. Yellow is my favorite because it contains the cumin and turmeric spices I love. Red curry paste is also made from red peppers, but uses less coriander and includes galangal (ginger) and no cumin. Green curry from green peppers instead of red will also include lime skin or leaves. All that said, just go buy a jar of your favorite at the store, along with a little bottle of fish sauce. Stick it in a shelf in your fridge and use it for dishes like this. A further note, I like my dishes very "saucey" so that not only the meat and vegetables are coated, but the rice added to a bowl can soak up the broth. If you don't need so much sauce, just cut the recipe in half. Serves 2.
Ingredients:
1/2 lb shrimp, shelled
2 tbsp vegetable oil
2 tbsp yellow (or green or red) curry paste
1 can coconut milk
2 tsp fish sauce
1 tsp palm (or brown) sugar
1/2 red bell pepper, julienned
handful of sweet basil leaves, torn
Directions:
Heat the oil over medium heat in a saucepan or wok and stir fry the paste a minute or two to release the flavors. Add the coconut milk, fish sauce, sugar and bell pepper and cook for a minute, mixing the ingredients fully and bringing them to a simmer. Add the shrimp and cook a few minutes until the shrimp are cooked through. Mix in the basil leaves if desired, or serve the dish and garnish by dropping the leaves on top.
What Celina Tio’s up to these days

The last time, I mentioned Celina Tio, she was planning on opening a restaurant called Julia(n) in Charlotte, N.C.
Well, plans for that fell through awhile back — something to do with a disagreement with the landlord, if memory serves — and it turns out that she’s back in Kansas City and is the proud chef and owner of Julian (sans parenthesis — as a general rule, it’s a good idea when you’re thinking of putting parentheses in your restaurant’s name to think again).
Celina’s billing the food as refined but comforting food made with local, seasonal ingredients, which is to say that she’s doing what most other fine-dining chefs in the country are doing.
I don’t mean that in a bad way, in fact, I mean that in a good way. It makes sense to respond to the Zeitgeist, after all, doesn’t it?
The full menu’s on the restaurant’s web site, but it includes things like lobster shepherds pie, cassoulet, short ribs with gratin potatoes and Brussels sprouts, a cheeseburger — you get the idea.
There are also "popcorn sweetbreads" for appetizers, and a lobster salad with grapefruit, fennel and argan oil.
Who knew argan oil would get so popular?
Japanese Sugar Coated Fish

You read that right. There are no typos or Monday induced mistakes. These really are candied fish.
Despite proclivities to slam two disparate ingredients together in new and interesting ways, this was not one I dreamt up. A tart made with lemon and chilli, perhaps. Tiny shrimp, needlefish and whitebait dried then dipped in sugar syrup? Not one from my brain, nor even from this country.

Japanese through and through, these were brought over by a friend currently plying his trade in Tokyo. ‘They’re good,’ he reassured me before suffixing it with ‘if they are what I think they are.’
Three, four, five bottles of something down and drawing close to 3am, happy on port and still full of steak, the box was opened.
Expecting a dock-like stench, aching under the niff of a thousand trawler decks each with rotting nets, it was a pleasant surprise to find the odour was subtle. Faintly fishy, of course, but no more.

There were tiny pink commas of shrimp, near translucent they were so small. Next to them skewers of larger fish, threaded onto cocktail sticks in order of size. Brown and grey needlefish were piled up in the centre of the tray and another hierarchy, this time of prawns, completed the set.
Everything was glossy, shining under a neat coating of lightly caramelised sugar like Poseidon’s homage to St. Valentine. A cross-cultural melding of something possibly lost in translation.
Knowing the largest fish were the inevitable dénouement of this whole episode, itself threatening to turn into an exercise in extreme eating machismo, we began with the smallest offerings – the tiny needlefish and the small pink shrimp.
The flavour was oddly pleasant. Texturally there was a little crunch, the whole shellfish offering a bite of resistance before yielding and giving up their sweet-savoury contents.

There was an unmistakable flavour of the sea, slightly fermented with the pungent intensity that only comes from preserved specimens but it was neatly countered by the caramel exterior.
Finding our stride we went back for more gathering pace and gusto with each mouthful until we ended with the largest complete fishes clamped between chopsticks. Heads, tails and guts in they went to be chewed up and chewed over. Savoured and swallowed. Sweet, bitter, salty – was this the elusive umami flavour neatly captured in a single morsel?
We didn’t finish the entire tray. It remains in the fridge but not for reasons of disgust. On the contrary – they were very pleasant indeed and would make the ideal companion to a few chilled beers and a bowl of steaming, salty edamame beans. I’m just waiting for the right occasion.
Ginger Olive Curry Rice

Hello dancing lemons and bouncing cinnamon!
I just arrived from my Cambodia trip the other week. It was a tiring trip crossing the border from Ho Chi Minh to Phnom Penh. It took me and my friend 6 hours to go to the city of Phnom Penh. Then another 6 hours going o Siem Reap to witness the Angkor Wat. That's a long story to tell. I have an upcoming blog for that definitely. One thing I learned about Cambodia is: There's no such thing as Cambodian dishes. I didn't enjoy my food trip there so I was really starving for a good food since I came back to Saigon.
So last Saturday I whipped up this amazing rice dish inspired by Jamie Oliver's Turmeric Rice. I read that recipe from his Ministry of Food book. So my paellera turned out to be my default pan when I cook rice dishes. This rice is so good when you eat with my Chicken Kebab recipe or my Morrocan chicken recipe. In the meantime lemme share you guys this recent concoction I have.
I just arrived from my Cambodia trip the other week. It was a tiring trip crossing the border from Ho Chi Minh to Phnom Penh. It took me and my friend 6 hours to go to the city of Phnom Penh. Then another 6 hours going o Siem Reap to witness the Angkor Wat. That's a long story to tell. I have an upcoming blog for that definitely. One thing I learned about Cambodia is: There's no such thing as Cambodian dishes. I didn't enjoy my food trip there so I was really starving for a good food since I came back to Saigon.
So last Saturday I whipped up this amazing rice dish inspired by Jamie Oliver's Turmeric Rice. I read that recipe from his Ministry of Food book. So my paellera turned out to be my default pan when I cook rice dishes. This rice is so good when you eat with my Chicken Kebab recipe or my Morrocan chicken recipe. In the meantime lemme share you guys this recent concoction I have.

Ginger Olive Curry Rice
Ingredients:
• Jasmine Rice
• Olives and the broth
• Curry Powder
• Coconut Milk
• Ginger
• Lemon
• Ground Black Pepper
• Cayenne Pepper
• Salt & Sugar
• Butter
Procedure:
Heat the pan with butter in medium temperature then add shredded ginger. Saute then add olives, squeezed lemon and olive's broth. Continue stirring for 2 minutes. Add curry powder and cayenne pepper then the coconut milk. Stir and simmer for about 3 minutes then add the rice. Fold the rice with the mixture then add salt, pepper and sugar. Topped it with the olives and serve hot.
Quick and easy to prepare sumptuous dish is always a winner!
Heat the pan with butter in medium temperature then add shredded ginger. Saute then add olives, squeezed lemon and olive's broth. Continue stirring for 2 minutes. Add curry powder and cayenne pepper then the coconut milk. Stir and simmer for about 3 minutes then add the rice. Fold the rice with the mixture then add salt, pepper and sugar. Topped it with the olives and serve hot.
Quick and easy to prepare sumptuous dish is always a winner!
hugs,
joanie xxx
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Oh Johnny, oh Johnny oh!
So, this is it!! Yesterday night was THE NIGHT!! 50's party with my friends! Lots of fun and cool looks! Be prepared for a good bunch of pictures!
This story started like a month ago, when Esther, Laia, Kim and I discovered a 50's burguer in the center of Barcelona... we decided that we should go there dressed like the Grease's characters, so that's what we did yesterday!
Delicious burguer!
Dani & Kim with "the milkshake of love"
Deborah with the hairstyle I made for her
A lovely picture of Esther!
Cris, so cute too... isn't she lovely? And I love David's face, like boring!
Of course, we were all dressed for the party... check the looks!
Laia
Me!
I was wearing a real 50's vintage dress I found the other day at Gracia; my Stradivarious old cardigan, Mustang shoes and my beloved navy brooche by La Virgen de los Broches". Aren't our hairstyles cool?
After having dinner, we went into The Foxy Ladies, a very nice pub where we drunk good cocktails and listened to excellent music!
Cristina's dress was lovely too!
Beautiful girls!
And the party ended at Demonix's Club, dancing and having a great time!
I love these picture!
You can see some more pictures at Laia's blog!
So, did you enjoyed your picture? And did you go to the Sonia Rykiel's event at H&M?
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