Posts Tagged ‘manila’
Posted by
Pass the Bib on 25 Dec 2010 under
Recipes,
Tips |
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Help for My Butterfly Prawns
December 25, 2010 – Home – Presented with a huge container of fresh prawns, I was racking my brain for things to do when I decided on stuffing, baking and serving them with Hollandaise sauce. It was perfect! Except for one problem – I had no idea how to make Hollandaise sauce. Enter, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” by Julia Child.
It was simple. It was accessible. It. Was. Brilliant!

Baked and Stuffed Butterflly Prawns with Hollandaise, Gouda and Swiss Cheese
The Hollandaise Sauce (with my twist)
Everything starts with an electric blender. Genius (cue angelic reverb). Separate six eggs, taking only the yolks for this recipe and pour into the blender jar. Add a teaspoon of salt, and half a teaspoon of cayenne pepper and the same amount of white pepper. Drizzle in the juice from two lemons. Buzz the entire thing for five seconds at high speed. Adjust the seasoning according to taste. I like the hint of heat from the cayenne, and a bit of tang from the lemon to cut the richness of the sauce.
On a separate sauce pan, melt a brick of butter on low heat until frothy. Start the blender up again and buzz in high speed. Open the access hatch from the jar’s lid and gingerly stream the hot, melted butter into the blending sauce. The sauce will quickly turn into scrambled egg if you do more than just pour in a continuous, thin stream. When you’ve finished the butter, continue to blend for five more seconds and you should be set! Easy. Rich. Delicious.
Assembling the Dish
Butterfly two-thirds of your prawns by slitting down its back from the base of the head down to the tip of the tail. Remove the intestines – those aren’t pretty and taste nasty. Make your incision deep enough without splitting it in half. Keep the flesh attached to the now split shell. I got through a kilo of it with NPR playing on my earphones to keep myself entertained. Open up your prawns and arrange in a row on a baking pan – not a cookie sheet or all the juice from your prawns will make a mess in your oven. Lightly season the flesh with salt, pepper and an extra drizzling of extra virgin olive oil.
Clean and butterfly the rest of your prawns but remove them from the shells this time and chop into small pieces. This will be what you stuff the butterflied prawns with. Prawn on prawn. Yum.
On a saucepan, sweat some chopped onions over extra virgin olive oil and add the chopped prawns. Season with salt and pepper. Cook the prawns until they are pink, but not fully cooked. Add a touch of cream and half of your Hollandaise towards the end and take the pan off the fire.
Scoop some of the hot mixture into the butterflied prawns, then top of with sauteed garlic. Engulf the prawns with the rest of the Hollandaise sauce. Top with shavings of Swiss cheese, Gouda or Parmesan. I did two of the three.
Preheat the oven for 15 minutes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit . Place the baking pan inside and let cook for another 15 to 20 minutes. You can garnish with some crushed, dried oregano before serving, if you’d like.
Posted by
Pass the Bib on 25 Dec 2010 under
Recipes,
Tips |
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Mushroom Rice
December 25, 2010 – Home – This variation of the Mushroom Rice is definitely a recipe anyone can do and customize as needed. If you know how to steam rice, you’ll know how to do this.
Take one medium-sized onion and chop. Depending on how much mushroom you want, you can end up using up the whole can of sliced mushrooms or just some of it. These usually come in a broth that you should remember to set aside – we’ll be using that.
On a pot, drizzle a few swirls of extra virgin olive oil. Sweat the onions. At this point, you can add in your flavor components and customize this dish. Add in the sliced mushrooms and saute until they take a nice caramelized look, taking care not to burn them. Add in a cup of rice that you’ve cleaned beforehand and saute them with the mushrooms and onions. Feel free to add a touch more extra virgin olive oil if the pan starts to dry out. Sprinkle a teaspoon of salt and white pepper.
Measure a cup and half of steaming liquid – use the mushroom broth and fill the rest with water (or chicken broth if you have it). Get you pot to a rolling boil at medium fire until the grains absorb most of the liquid. After 10 minutes, or when most of the liquid has been absorbed, continue cooking the rice for an additional five minutes at low heat. Try a few bites of the rice to check if cooked.
I wouldn’t have chicken broth immediately accessible if I’m doing this impromptu. What I’d do is crumble half a cube of chicken bullion while I saute the rice. That works really well for extra flavor instead of just plain water for my steaming liquid.
Posted by
Pass the Bib on 23 Dec 2010 under
Featured Posts,
Musings |
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Blueberry Birthday Cheesecake
December 23, 2010 – Home – It’s been talked about and insisted upon months ahead. “We have to spend your birthday together,” he says. It wasn’t a banner year, but we persevere nonetheless. The circumstances are different, but I was still on my merry way.
Late December afternoons have been rather dull lately. Overcast and chill, the threat of rain pervades the atmosphere. “It just wasn’t conducive to celebration,” I said to myself as I wondered what he had planned this time. Pulling up to the curb, the rear doors opened almost immediately and what followed were rustling sounds of much activity and pleas for me to keep looking forward at the street – this was it. What next?
I had a few gift certificates left, so we decided to go to the mall and spend the rest of the day there. Tron was showing and GCs meant I could see the movie despite lukewarm reviews, guilt-free.
The parking annex was especially dark – bad lighting and an already somber sky didn’t help. He was excited of course. “Close your eyes. No peeking!” I did what I was told just when the radio started to play “Marry You.” And after what seemed like five long minutes, I opened my eyes to a lighted birthday cheesecake. I blushed. I loved the cake, and I loved how everything fell into place.

Lighted
We saw the movie and came back to a melted cake. It wasn’t nearly as presentable – okay it wasn’t at all presentable – but I’ll consume it with gusto (as soon as I get it firmed up in my freezer).
Someone told me that people take the beautiful things in life for granted because people expect that it is what is owed, while the few occasions things didn’t go as planned are remembered to bitter end – it’s human nature. We had a terrible year and things aren’t the way they were, but the few exceptional moments when everything went as planned will always be remembered, cherished, and in this case – preserved in cyberspace.

An Intimate Celebration
Posted by
Pass the Bib on 19 Dec 2010 under
Reviews,
Travels |
2 Comments
December 19, 2010 – Mercato Centrale, Taguig – I. Love. Sunday. Market. Whether it’s the wet market at the sleepy town of Tagudin in Ilocos, or slightly more upscale food fairs like the Mercato Centrale located near Bonifacio High Street. The energy and aroma are just intoxicating. And you can’t help but admire the unique creations from some hardworking artisans.
I haven’t had the time to go around the whole venue on my first go, but I have already managed to run into some really interesting food items I would like to recommend:
5. Rafael’s Smoked Fish in Olive Oil
Definitely sharing these with my guests at Christmas.

Smoked Fish in Oil
4. Meaty Mama’s Lasagna
Marie Hugo is Meaty Mama. For inquiries, contact her at asuncion_hugo@yahoo.com.

Marie Hugo’s Delicious Lasagna

Marie Hugo is Meaty Mama
3. Ha Yuan’s Open-Faced Sandwiches
Of course, I couldn’t settle with just one so I tried them all!

Refreshing Chicken and Mango

Tofu and Mushroom

Pulled Pork Sandwich
2. Baked by Anita’s Cupcakes
Unique must-try mini cupcakes that come in some really interesting flavors like Peanut Butter Truffle, Saffron and Black Salt, Bacon Maple and (all-time favorite) Red Velvet.

Red Velvet Cupcakes
1. (My Top Mercato Find) Spring Fortune Cookies
Single most memorable taste and purchase were these unassuming Fortune Cookies in Green Tea and Pink Lemonade flavors. Other available flavors are Lemon Almond and Black Sesame. I do not kid when I say, “The Green Tea Fortune Cookies gave me goosebumps.” Do not miss this treat! Send your inquiries to springbyhy@gmail.com.

Green Tea and Pink Lemonade Fortune Cookies

Fortune Cookies by Spring
Posted by
Pass the Bib on 05 Dec 2010 under
Musings |
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December 5, 2010 – Ortigas – The past few weeks have been about me asking – nay – begging people to help me feel the Christmas spirit. I long for the childish wonderment that came with witnessing the hypnotic cadence of Christmas lanterns, and frustrated sense of accomplishment that came with dressing the entire house for the holiday.
Evening walks home from the office to my parking space leads me inevitably to a mall or two. At 10pm, malls are still open and for a few days every year, I get to experience the unique energy that comes from excited and hurried shoppers. Any other day of the year, the legion would have annoyed me enough to strangle a couple of cats, but during the evening’s mad Christmas rush I like to stay a few minutes longer in their company. Across the shop, the enthusiastic and dangerously petulant child screaming for her mother to get the latest Wii game reminds me of myself during Christmas. I smile.

Holidays at Mercato Centrale
Maybe helping out in the kitchen during Christmas dinner preparations will help get me going. I’ve been trying out other people’s food for so long during my free time, I’ve neglected my own skills. It may be about time I got the dust off my apron and created something new.
Yup. I’ll definitely do that.