Showing posts with label yam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yam. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Tonjiru

Tonjiru

(豚汁)
(豚汁)
(豚汁)


Recipe source : adapted from  Marc Matsumoto's  "No Recipe"



I was trying out a Japanese soup yesterday which was adapted from Marc's No Recipe. I chose this soup because it had meat and a variety of vegetables and konnyaku all in one dish. I was intrigued when I noticed konnyaku was listed as one of the ingredients. I just wanted to try it out and find out for myself how it tasted to have konnyaku in a soup. 

Well, it was sort of like a crunchy jelly except that it was not sweet because now it was cooked in a savoury soup instead. However, when combined with the rest of the ingredients in this broth, it became a refreshing change from the norm.

This is my second attempt at cooking Japanese dishes and I am beginning to get hooked on mirin and sake!

Ingredients


600g pork belly, cut into thick pieces
2 stalks of spring onion, chopped the white parts and sliced the green parts
1 inch piece of ginger, cut into thin slices
1/4 cup sake
2 litres water
20g konbu
160g burdock
1 large carrot, cut into chunks
250g konnyaku
315g taro, peeled and cut into thick slices
1/4 cup yellow miso


miso
Put the pork belly into a cold pan, and turn on the heat to medium. The pork should release some fat as the pan heats up so you shouldn't need to add any oil. Once some oil has rendered out, add the white parts of the scallions and ginger and fry until the surface of the pork is cooked and a brown crust has formed on the bottom of the pan. - See more at: http://norecipes.com/blog/tonjiru-recipe/#sthash.18ezdPeR.dpuf

Instructions

  1. Put the pork belly into a cold pan, and turn on the heat to medium. The pork should release some fat as the pan heats up so you shouldn't need to add any oil. Once some oil has rendered out, add the white parts of the scallions and ginger and fry until the surface of the pork is cooked and a brown crust has formed on the bottom of the pan.
- See more at: http://norecipes.com/blog/tonjiru-recipe/#sthash.18ezdPeR.dpufyellow miso

konnyaku
 
taro

konbu
 cooking sake
 burdock

 carrot

Instructions


1.  Place pork belly into a large pot and turn on the heat.  Dry fry the pork pieces to release some of the lard. 
2.  Add in ginger slices and the white parts of the spring onion and stir the pork pieces. Continue to fry until the pork pieces turned slightly brownish.
3.  Turn up the heat and add in 1/4 cup of sake. Stir and fry until the sake dries up.
4.  Add water and konbu and bring to a boil. Skim off any foam. Cover lid and turn heat to low and simmer for about 30 minutes.
5.  Meanwhile, fill a bowl with water and add 1 tbsp of vinegar to it. Peel the burdock and slice into pieces and soak the pieces in the vinegar solution.
6.  After 30 minutes, remove the konbu and ginger pieces. Skim off excess fat and scum floating on the surface.
7.  Add in burdock pieces, carrots, konnyaku and taro. Turn up heat to medium-high and boil until the vegetables are tender, about 20 minutes.
8.  Once the vegetables become tender, turn off the heat and add miso to taste.




I am submitting this post to Asian Food Fest  #1 Oct 2013 : Japan


 

I am also sharing this post with Little Thumbs Up

 Photobucket

The theme for October is Soy Beans, hosted by Mich of Piece of Cake

Organised by Zoe of Bake For Happy Kids and Doreen of My Little Favourite DIY



Instructions

  1. Put the pork belly into a cold pan, and turn on the heat to medium. The pork should release some fat as the pan heats up so you shouldn't need to add any oil. Once some oil has rendered out, add the white parts of the scallions and ginger and fry until the surface of the pork is cooked and a brown crust has formed on the bottom of the pan.
- See more at: http://norecipes.com/blog/tonjiru-recipe/#sthash.18ezdPeR.dpuf

Sunday, 9 September 2012

Mooncake : Teochew Mooncake With Yam Paste Filling潮州月饼

Mooncake : Teochew Mooncake With Yam Paste Filling

  潮州月饼

 Fresh from the oven

With yam paste filling and salted duck egg yolks



The Mooncake Festival is just round the corner. Shops and supermarkets are already doing brisk business selling a wide variety of mooncakes. Those mooncakes sold commercially are very attractively packaged and beautifully made. However, they are too sweet for my liking. If I have the time I would rather make the mooncakes at home. Though they may not turn out to be as beautiful as those sold in the shops but then I can control the amount of sugar that I put into the mooncakes and they are free from preservatives.

I cannot remember from where I got this recipe because I had been an avid recipe collector since I was a teenager. But I am truly grateful to whoever shared this recipe years ago either via the newspapers or magazines. 


Note : In case you do not know what to do with the excess salted egg whites, click here

 

Ingredients


-8 salted duck egg yolks - (steam the salted egg yolks on an oiled plate for 10 minutes)
-8 large paper cups


Place the salted duck egg yolks on an oiled plate
Steam them  for 10 minutes

 

Lard Pastry Dough


110g high protein flour
60g lard

Mix well together. Allow to rest for 30 minutes. Divide the dough into 8 equal portions


Water pastry Dough


110g high protein flour
1/2 tbsp vinegar ( optional )
20g lard
60ml water

Mix well together. Allow to rest for 30 minutes. Divide the dough into 8 equal portions.


Yam Paste Filling


480g yam ( nett weight after removing the skin )
145g sugar
80g cooking oil
2 shallots, sliced thinly
1 tbsp flour
1/8 tsp salt mix with 1 tbsp water



 
Cut the yam into thin slices.
Steam at high flame for 20 minutes until very soft.
Mash the yam immediately while they are still very hot.
Remove the hard lumps that did not soften and could not be mashed.

 
 Wrap one salted duck egg yolk with one portion of the cooked yam paste filling


Form into smooth round balls. The salted duck egg yolks are wrapped inside the yam paste


Instructions To Prepare The Yam Filling


1.  Steam the yam for about 20 minutes until very soft.
2.  Mash it while it is still very hot. Remove all the hard lumps that did not soften
3.  In a wok, heat 4 tbsp cooking oil and fry the sliced shallots until light brown
4.  Remove all the shallots, leaving the oil in the wok
5.  Add in the mashed yam, sugar, salt solution, flour and the remaining oil
6.  Stir briskly until the yam is dry and forms a lump and is no longer scattered all over the wok
7.  Dish up and leave it to cool
8.  Once the cooked yam filling has cooled down, divide them into 8 portions
9.  Wrap one salted duck egg yolk with one portion of the yam paste filling
10. Form into 8 round balls of yam paste filling


How To Wrap The Mooncakes

 


 1.  Use one portion of the water pastry dough and place it on a flat surface

2.  Use a rolling pin to roll and flatten the water pastry dough into a flat rounded mass.

 3.  Place one portion of the lard pastry dough on top of  the flattened water pastry dough

 4.  Wrap the  water pastry dough round the lard pastry dough

 5.  Seal the edges and form into a ball

 6.  Roll out the ball into an oval shape

 7.  Roll up one end of the oval-shaped dough like in a Swiss roll

 8.  This is how it looks like when rolled up

 9.  Use a rolling pin to press down and once again roll out the dough length wise

 10.  The rolled out dough

 11. Fold it up from one end, Swiss roll style



 12.  End result of the rolled up dough

 13.  Use a rolling pin to press it down

14.  Roll out into a flat rounded flat mass.

15. Place a piece of yam paste filling in the centre and  wrap it up.

15.  Once wrapped up, place it into a large paper cup
16.  It's ready for baking

 











Baking the Mooncakes


1.  Preset the oven at 180 degree Celsius
2.  Place the wrapped Teochew mooncakes into the oven 
3.  Bake at 180 degree Celsius for 30 minutes



 Teochew mooncakes


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