Posts Tagged ‘SFP’
…Because, again, we didn’t cook like half the things I SFP’d last week. =)
#1
- Baked Beans
- John’s Mexican Pulled Pork
- rice
#1
- Tandoori-less Tandoori Chicken (from Cook’s Illustrated)
- rice
#2
- Pork Mango Picadillo
- rice
#3
- Ham and Lentil Soup
- cornbread muffins
#4
- Jess’ meatloaf
- roast potatoes
- salad
#5
- Sage and Butternut Squash Penne (from Cook’s Illustrated)
- Endive and Pear Salad
Being home for the holidays has been a challenge. Not only am I homebound for 1.5 weeks with no car in an unfamiliar suburb, I offered to cook for my mom while I was here. How is this a problem, you ask, for someone who loves cooking so?
Well, it wouldn’t be so much of a problem if I had brought my entire kitchen at 54 with me, but I did not. I even forgot to bring my pill case of 7 emergency herbs/spices that I intended to travel with. (Dumb dumb dumb) Because you see, my mother is kind of a spartan when it comes to kitchen supplies, a situation not to be helped by the fact that we are Chinese and the vast majority of Chinese dishes can be cooked with just salt, soy sauce, sugar, rice vinegar, and garlic, in varying combinations/amounts. (Although we do have some other things, like sesame oil, cumin, ground chili pepper… and the most fabulous array of dried fungi imaginable, this is a pretty down-and-dirty, basic Chinese kitchen.)
So this pretty much means I can only cook us up some good ol’ Chinese home cooking. Which, again, wouldn’t be much of a problem if I didn’t spent the last 3 years gleefully trying out dishes from all cuisines EXCEPT for simple Chinese home cooking.
Thus… the challenge. This pretty much means that my entire outlook on food has to change this holiday, if I am going to stay true to my promise. Which, on second thought, is probably a good thing. Because you see, at my apartment, we’ve been more or less spoiled by our newfound adulthood freedom. We’ve happily bought up the entire spice aisle at Shaw’s and therefore got everything you need to tackle nearly any cuisine in the world (albeit a probably Westernized version of it). That, and for some reason the lovely people at work have taken to giving me fabulous collections of spices for presents. As a result we have all the equipment, flavorings, and sundries to churn out quite passable resemblances of Thai, Indian, French, Italian, Japanese, Russian you name it. At 54 I can make anything from Coq au Vin to Eggplant Curry to Man Chili to Nabemono. Here… not so much. Here I have to learn how to make deliciousness happen with one wok, some basic vegetables, and one shelf of ingredients.
Which might just turn out to be awesome. And maybe even temper the way I cook when I get back to Boston.
One final thing I promised myself for cooking here, which might make this even more fun: I am going to try to make dishes my mom usually doesn’t make for herself. Because my mom, due to lack of energy after work, habit, or both, always sticks to a collection of dishes that she knows well, and sometimes she says she wishes there were more variety. So this means I should try to introduce her to some new, easy things to cook. So can’t fall back on the things that I have watched her make with these available ingredients… that would just be too easy, now, wouldn’t it? =P
So with a little research and (I hope) common sense, here are some dishes I want to make/have made this week (all of which are to be served with rice, old skool Chinese style):
- Lamb Stew
Basically I found some chunks of lamb chop in the freezer, and we have potatoes and carrots! So with some cumin and chili pepper, plus some chopped up tomatoes and scallions, this can be quite tasty without those 9,000 spices that usually go into curry. - Sweet Corn and Pine Nuts Stir Fry
I also found some Pine Nuts from who knows how long ago, when my mom was going through her health phase. With a bag of frozen corn and some wok action, I’m going to try to recreate this simple yummy dish we had at Fuloon Restaurant in Malden - Broccoli
My mom does meat the traditional Chinese way: none at all, or only a bit for flavoring. So I’m making teriyaki… broccoli. Which should be good because my favorite part of Fasian dishes is the broccoli, and the way the sauce soaks into the little floretty bits. - Fried Catfish
I also found some catfish fillets in the freezer, and we have a small bag of corn flour, so I am making fried catfish. Hey, we are south of the Mason Dixon line now. Flavored with chili powder, salt, and pepper and subbing soymilk for buttermilk, this should be quite tasty. I will have to come up with some sort of sweet-sour dip for it… maybe with rice vinegar, scallions, and brown sugar. - Shredded Carrots
Julienned carrots stir-fried with rice vinegar, sugar, and pinch of salt. Maybe I’ll add a bag of walnuts (also from health phase). I remember my grandmother making this and loving it when I was little. My mom never eats carrot, which I personally find crazy. They so good man. - Egg Drop Corn Soup
Okay, this is one of those Fasion favorites that I have learned to make due to living with Americanized kids (and being one myself), that I am going to try and introduce to my mom. Chicken broth, egg, scallions, bamboo shoots… and CREAMED CORN, one of the wonders of American cuisine.
Time for yet another week’s. I’m planning more this time since we don’t have as many leftovers to go on this week. Also this time I’ll be pasting some of the actual recipes because I love you all… Also, because I’m too lazy to click on a link or find a cookbook when I actually start cooking…
#1
- Cabbage Roll Casserole
2 pounds ground beef
1 cup chopped onion
1 (29 ounce) can tomato sauce
3 1/2 pounds chopped cabbage
1 cup uncooked white rice
1 teaspoon salt
2 (14 ounce) cans beef broth1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
2. In a large skillet, brown beef in oil over medium high heat until redness is gone. Drain off fat
3. In a large mixing bowl combine the onion, tomato sauce, cabbage, rice and salt. Add meat and mix all together. Pour mixture into a 9×13 inch baking dish. Pour broth over meat mixture and bake in the preheated oven, covered, for 1 hour. Stir, replace cover and bake for another 30 minutes.Courtesy of http://www.cheriestihler.com/CC/recipes.html
#2
- Chicken with Grapes
bit of oil
4 chicken breast halves
1/2 cup white grape juice or apple juice
1 teaspoon chicken bouillon
1 teaspoon cornstarch
1 cup seedless grapes, halved1. Heat skillet over medium-high heat; add oil. Cook chicken in hot skillet for 8-10 minutes or until chicken is tender and no longer pink. Remove from skillet and cover to keep warm.
2. Meanwhile, combine remaining ingredients in a small bowl. Mix. Add to skillet and stir until thick and bubbly. Stir in grapes. Heat through.
3. Spoon over chicken to serve.Courtesy of Easy Healthy Dinners (seriously one of the best cookbooks we own)
#3
- Jamaican Pork and Sweet Potato Stir Fry
1.5 cups of quick-cooking rice
1/4 cup thinly sliced green onions
1 large sweet potato
1 medium tart apple
12 ounces lean boneless pork strips
2-3 teaspoons Jamaican Jerk seasoning
1 tablespoon cooking oil
1/3 cup apple juice or water1. Prepare rice. Stir half of the green onions into cooked rice. Meanwhile, peel sweet potato and cut into quarter-circles. Microwave on high for 4 minutes or until tender. Cut apples into wedges. Sprinkle pork strips with Jerk seasoning; toss to coat.
2. Pour oil into a wok or large skillet. Heat over medium-high heat. Stir-fry pork for 1-2 minutes or until pork is cooked through. Add apples and remaining green onions. Stir in sweet potato and apple juice. Bring to boil; reduce heat, and simmer.
3. Serve pork over rice.Courtesy of Easy Healthy Dinners
#4
Once again, I’ve been slacking off on these SFP things, but only because last weekend my mom was here and I didn’t have time to plan out a grocery list, and the weekend before that… well who knows. Cough anyways. This week is looking like:
#1
- Jambalaya!!! – One of my favorite things to cook-and-serve-over-rice (the others being Paella, Japanese Curry, and my famous Man Chili). Jess may differ as she continues on with her Holy Crusade against the Evil that is tomatoes, but the rice may just win her over once more.
- rice, duh
#2
- Meatloaf dinner! This is actually something Jess will cook, as meatloaf is her specialty, and we all love her for it. (Last year we made a pretty fabulous Meatloaf Cake too, with mashed potato frosting and decorated with peas.) I would offer the recipe, but Jess guards it assiduously and scowls fiercely at any who dare to obtain it.
- mashed potatoes (of course)
- salad
- Apple Crisp – Leave this to me.
#3
- Soba Noodle Soup with Roast Pork, Broccoli Florets and Little Carroty Flower Things – That’s the official name.
So the SFP’s have been getting shorter and shorter… I think the first one had like 5 meals planned out, and now we’re down to 3, one of which is Jess’. I think this is because as the year progressed, I realized that I don’t have as much time as I’d thought for cooking *and* getting enough portfolio items done in time. So as much as I’d like to spend more time crafting a blissful hour of culinary contentment on a daily basis, it isn’t terribly practical. Sigh. In a way, I do admire the people who can dole out 2.5 hours just to assemble a lunchbox. Maybe after I get my application sent in… maybe someday =)
I’m basically discovering more and more that life really is a gigantic balancing act. Mad (career-related) Skillz power-ups or daily life enrichment. Others or self. Adobe Flash or Adobe Flex. Just like how in Spore you only have 30 DNA points left so you can’t have both fairy wingalings and four sets of elbows. Yup. That’s exactly what life is like.









