Wednesday, April 2, 2014

I'm back! (with Bread Pudding in my hand)

Yooohooo! Back in Leuven after 7months. Hoe gaat het? Goed???
Now i live with my daughter and husband and life is sooo busy, almost no time to write or TO COOK anything decent. Well, at least i still can do experiment with my daily cooking and sometimes make dessert for myself.

This time i made bread pudding, a survival recipe for someone who got starving in the middle of spring night but lost appetite on main carbs. A warm and sweet pudding to be eaten while watching tv with your loved ones. (I actually had fallen asleep when my husband came home and asked "can i eat this?")

Written below here, recipe measurement for two cups of 3 inches ramekin.

3leaves of white bread (or anykind of bread you have in your kitchen)
100 ml milk
50 gr sugar
1 egg
Vanilla powder or essence

That's the basic recipe for the bread pudding. Actually, you can add anything for toppings but this time i picked green apples and dry grated coconut.

What you have to do is:
Beat egg together with milk, sugar, and vanilla.
Cut bread into 2x2cm size and put inside ramekin cup. I made layers of bread-apple-coconut and repeat until all bread chunks were done.
Pour liquid mixture into cups.
Meanwhile, preheat oven at 170 deg.celcius.
Prepare a flat baking tin and fill with water approximately 1-2cm. Put your ramekin cups in the water.
Bake this bread pudding for about 45 minutes until it turns golden.

Voila! Smakelijk eten!

Friday, February 7, 2014

Mermaid Kiss

Danish Black Bread


We had a guest from Denmark back then, he was my husband's colleague in ITB. He bought us a bucket of Danish black bread and because my husband did not like it, i ate all of it ^^;

This type of bread is common in Denmark and it is their staple food. The bread was slightly sticky, heavier than normal wheat bread, and had nuts in the dough. It smelled like almond but i wasn't sure about it. He said that eating two leaves of the bread can make you full almost all day long.

I personally didn't know how to eat that bread in a more Danish way. Our friend said that Danish usually eat the bread with salted or fresh herring. You know, like Mr. Bean did with his sandwich. But because i am no Mr. Bean, i guess it'd be better to eat it my way.

We made sandwich for our meal before going to Tintin Museum in Louvain La Neuve. We had no herrings so we made it with salmon.

You know how to make sandwich, don't you?
:)))

Of course you need fillings (smoked, salmon, cresswater salad or romaine salad, lettuce, sliced cheese, slice onion, and sliced fresh tomato)
and sauce.

Here i give you tips to make the sauce:
1. Tomato-mayo (there should be a name for this kind of sauce, but i totally forget)
2 spoonful mayonnaise
1 spoonful tomato sauce
half onion, diced in small size
pepper
chopped basil leaves

Stir together all ingredients above in one bowl.

2. Garlic mayonnaise
2 spoonful mayonnaise
1 clove of garlic, crushed and minced
1/4 onion, diced
pepper

Stir together all ingredients above in one bowl.

Add one of those sauce to your sandwich, and voila, smakelijk eten! :9

Monday, December 9, 2013

Soto Betawi


...without minyak samin...*sigh*
I don't know how to explain what minyak samin is to the shopkeeper here in Leuven. So i decided to make a lighter vesion of soto betawi, without using minyak samin nor jeroan. :)))

Here the recipe goes:

1/2 kg beef meat or mutton
1/2 kg potato, peeled, diced, and half-boiled
2 rounds tomato, diced
500 ml thick coconut milk
250 ml fresh milk
750 ml water, bring to boil
4 cloves of garlic, crushed
half round fresh onion, sliced
2 bay leaves
a stick of lemongrass
coriander powder
1/4 teaspoonful ginger powder
a pinch of cumin powder
salt, pepper, sugar to taste.

for garnish:
spring onion, sliced
coriander leave, minced
fried onion

Bring water to boil and make broth out of 1/2 kg beef meat. Simmer until you have approximately 300 ml broth in the pan. Take meat out of the pan and cut into 3x3cm cube. On other stove, saute garlic, onion, bay leaves, and lemongrass until fragrant. Put them into broth. Add milk and coconut milk. Sprinkle coriander, ginger, and cumin powder. Add salt, pepper, and sugar into taste. Stir evenly. Bring all to boil. You will see that your broth become oily. Last, toss half-boiled potato in. Cook until tender.

In a bowl, serve your soto with fresh diced tomato, sliced spring onion, coriander leaves, and fried onion. You would be happy if you have emping (melinjo chips) too. Serve with steamed rice.

Smakelijk eten!

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Shumay / Siomay


Pisang Aroma a la Leuven


This popular Bandung snack was made from wrapped banana slice. We normally use springroll paper to wrap the banana but in Leuven it is difficult to find that particular springroll paper, the one which used for Indonesian springroll. What makes it very special was the ingredients of the paper. Vietnamese or Thai springrolls use rice paper which is rather sticky, while most of Indonesian springrolls use a kind of egg paper. These springroll papers give different texture when fried or steamed.

And in the end i didn't use springroll paper, i used what was available in my fridge: wonton skin :)))

You know that it was really easy for you to make this snack (slice-wrap-fry all the bananas) so i would only give you tips.
1. Banana contains natural sugar. Without adding extra sugar you will have natural caramels. But if you want more sweetness, sprinkle sugar inside your wrapper to avoid melted sugar dropping inside your pan. If you want sugar texture on the skin, make sure that the frying oil has reached it's nearly boiling temperature.
2. Choose a nearly ripe banana, because it will get really soft when it's fried.

Voila, smakelijk eten!

Sweet Martabak :9


Risoles Chicken Ragout



What is risoles in English actually? Nevermind. This is one of my favorite snack ever! One day my husband got an afternoon tea invitation with his professor and he asked me to make an Indonesian specialty. A snack specialty. I chose risoles because the ragout filling tastes like some kind of chicken carbonara sauce. I guess ragout itself was a western food, no?

Although it took a little while to prepare this snack but i could say i was proud of this Holleberg made risoles. Here goes the recipe: for 15 pcs.

RAGOUT FILLING
1/2 kg chicken breast fillet
200 gr carrot, cut in small dice
200 gr sweet corn (i used canned sweet corn)
2 rounds onion, cut in dice
4 cloves of garlic, ground
50 gr cheddar blocks
750 ml milk
500 ml water
4 spoons of tapioca starch or corn starch, diluted in milk (this is gonna be the thickening agent. If you like to use wheat flour instead of cornstarch, make it 250 gr)
chicken stock blocks
salt, sugar, pepper

RISOLES WRAPPING
(Pardon my English. Still looking for any better translation for the Indonesian 'kulit risoles', hehehe)
250 gr wheat flour
3 eggs
500 ml milk
salt and a pinch of sugar

a bowl of fine bread crumbs
2 eggs, battered.
vegetable oil for deep frying

The best way to start making this snack is by preparing your wrappers first. If in the process you somewhat need to cancel finishing this, you can save your wrappers for another purpose. Probably for lumpia.

Mix 500 ml milk with 250 gr of wheat flour and whisk evenly. Put eggs in and season to taste. Heat a flat pan and pour the liquid to make a kind of thin crepe. Do this to all of the mixture and let it set.


Meanwhile, cut chicken breast fillet into a fist size chunk and bring it to boil with 500 ml water. This is gonna be your stock base. Add chicken stock blocks and let it cool down a bit. Take chicken out and cut them into dices.

In a large saucepan, saute sliced onion together with chopped garlic and make it a little caramelized. Don't make it too brown though. If you use wheat flour as thickening agent, pour the flour now and stir quickly. Add diced carrot, corn, cheddar blocks, and diced chicken breast. Stir evenly. Pour milk and chicken stock into the pan, and cook them together until it gets thick. If you use corn/tapioca starch as thickener, you might add them (diluted in milk) after the liquid mixture starts to boil. Let it set.

After ragout and wrappers are done, it's time to do the rollings.
Prepare your crepe. Put one two spoonful of ragout filling in the middle and wrap it like an envelope. Roll it into battered egg and cover it with breadcrumb. Do it until you finish all wrappers and fillings. You can put them in fridge for a night before frying, but it is also OK to fry it directly after you've done rolling. Prepare vegetable oil and heat it up a large cooking bowl. Deep fry your risoles until it gets a nice golden brown color.

Voila, smakelijk eten!

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