Monday, May 31, 2010

Oxtail Soup (Sop Buntut)

oxtail soup

Ingredients & spices:

1 kg Oxtail / beef tail, cut into serving pieces
1/2 tablespoon Chopped ginger
1/2 Nutmeg, bruised
1 Spring onion, cut into 2-3 pieces
1 tablespoon Margarine
200 g Carrots, cut into 3 cm piece, then halved or quartered
250 g Potatoes, cut into 4-6 pieces, Salt to taste

Spices
6 Shallots
3 cloves Garlic
1 teaspoon Peppercorns

Garnishing
Fried shallots
Spring onions
Chopped Chinese parsley

How to prepare:

Put oxtail in a pan with 2 liters water and bring to the boil.
Carefully scoop off and discard the scum floating on the surface.
Discard the stock and replace with 2 liters clean water.
Add chopped ginger, nutmeg and spring onion.
Cover the pan and simmer over low heat until tender.
Remove the tail, reserving 1 1/2 liters stock.

Bring the stock to the boil, then add oxtail.
Heat margarine and fry ground spices until fragrant.
Add to the boiling stock, then add carrots and potatoes.
Bring to the boil until the ingredients are thoroughly cooked.
Garnish with fried shallots, spring onions, and Chinese parsley.
Serve hot.

Oxtail Soup (Sop Buntut)

oxtail soup

Ingredients & spices:

1 kg Oxtail / beef tail, cut into serving pieces
1/2 tablespoon Chopped ginger
1/2 Nutmeg, bruised
1 Spring onion, cut into 2-3 pieces
1 tablespoon Margarine
200 g Carrots, cut into 3 cm piece, then halved or quartered
250 g Potatoes, cut into 4-6 pieces, Salt to taste

Spices
6 Shallots
3 cloves Garlic
1 teaspoon Peppercorns

Garnishing
Fried shallots
Spring onions
Chopped Chinese parsley

How to prepare:

Put oxtail in a pan with 2 liters water and bring to the boil.
Carefully scoop off and discard the scum floating on the surface.
Discard the stock and replace with 2 liters clean water.
Add chopped ginger, nutmeg and spring onion.
Cover the pan and simmer over low heat until tender.
Remove the tail, reserving 1 1/2 liters stock.

Bring the stock to the boil, then add oxtail.
Heat margarine and fry ground spices until fragrant.
Add to the boiling stock, then add carrots and potatoes.
Bring to the boil until the ingredients are thoroughly cooked.
Garnish with fried shallots, spring onions, and Chinese parsley.
Serve hot.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

... even the orchestra is beautiful!


I know what you're waiting for. You all want to see pictures from our cabaret party last saturday; I know... but I'm so busy until tomorrow with ne of the works for my coolhunting classes, so I cant do the proper entry until tomorrow.

But anyway, I'm showing you some of the pictures of our night that I'm using for my work. Enjoy them!




And sorry for being so bad blogger these days, I'm so busy :(! I've been all night up finishing this work... and now, i've got to do the big one...!

Thai Style Steamed Fish


Namanya masakan Thai so.... mmg enak, pedas dan asam yummy..
Selara makan siang jadi bertambah deh, gue kemaren beli fillet ikan kerapu, cari pak choi dan cabe merah, jadi pagi2 tadi buat ikan Thai style steamed ini buat menu makan siang ngai di kantor. Kuah nya sih udah dicobain, asin2, pedas dan asam (tp gak terlalu asam, apa kurang banyak jeruk nipisnya). Lain kali bikin, coba lebih asam dan pedas, mak nyosssss pasti hehehe..

Bahan :
2 buah ikan fillet @ 140 gram
1 ruas jari jahe, kupas, cincang
1 siung bawang putih, cincang
1 buah cabe merah kecil, bukan cabe rawit, buang biji nya, cincang
parutan kulit jeruk nipis dan jus nya dari 1 buah jeruk nipis
3 buah baby pak choi, potong 1/4 bagian
2 sdm soy sauce

Cara :
1. Tata ikan fillet bersampingan di atas aluminium foil yang dibentuk mangkok.
2. Taburi ikan dengan jahe, bawang putih, cabe dan parutan kulit jeruk nipis.
3. Tambahkan air jeruk nipis, kemudian beri pak choi di sekeliling ikan, kemudian tuangi
soy sauce ke atas pak choi, lalu bungkus dengan alumunium foil (jangan bungkus terlalu
rapat / kencang).
4. Kukus selama 15 menit sampai ikan matang.

Verging on Blue Soup

I was having a blue soup experience. If you've read or seen Bridget Jones' Diary, you know how she tried to make her friends dinner and ended up serving blue soup. The meal I was making was verging on blue soup.

Okay, that's an exaggeration. But a lot of things were going wrong.

It started when I broke a yolk while separating some eggs, and my whites were tainted. Then when I made a fresh bowl of whites and whipped them, they splattered all over the counter. My chocolate roulade, a rolled log cake, broke when I rolled it up (probably because I lost too many whites in the afore mentioned splatter). My focaccia didn't rise (possibly due to expired yeast). I burned some dried apricots that I was making for a puree to fill the broken cake, and I still can't get the burned bits off the non-stick pan. My new focaccia, made with freshly purchased yeast expiring in 2011, rose and baked up nicely except for the sun-dried tomatoes on top - which burned.

To top it all off, my faucet sprung a leak and drenched the cabinet space under the sink.

So while I'm boiling the rest of the dried apricots for take two of the puree, while swirling it into fresh whipped cream that I whipped in a big enough bowl to avoid splatter, while stuffing the cream and apricot filling into the broken cake hoping it would stick together in some semblance of layers, while picking blackened tomatoes off an otherwise golden focaccia and mopping water up from under the sink, I started thinking that maybe this whole cooking thing had gotten the best of me.

But then I found the cups. Years ago I had acquired a free set of tea cups and since I like to drink my tea from fat mugs I never had any use for them - until now.


I made a cold avocado soup, creamy from avocados, spicy from jalapeno pepper and Tabasco sauce, tangy from lemon juice and yogurt, hearty from navy beans, and frothy and light from pureeing, which whipped air into it. Each serving was more than a sip, less than a cup, a perfect starter to soothe any anxiety that the rest of the meal was less than perfect.

And the soup was green, not blue, and meant to be that way.

Avocado Soup (edited from Cooking Light)

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups fat-free, less-sodium chicken broth
  • 1 3/4 cups chopped avocado (about 2)
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 cup rinsed and drained canned navy beans
  • 1/2 cup fat-free plain yogurt
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon hot pepper sauce (such as Tabasco)
  • 1 small jalapeño pepper, seeded and chopped
Combine broth and next 9 ingredients (through jalapeño) in a blender; puree until smooth, scraping sides. Ladle 1 1/4 cups avocado mixture into each of 4 bowls, or 8 little cups.