Showing posts with label Foods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foods. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2008

My Most Favorite and Least Favorite Foods

As Captioned.
Favorites:
Sushi - Toro, Salmon, Eels, Softshell crabs, crabs
Pizza and Breads - any kinds
Pastas and Lasanga - any kinds, but more cheese please
Dairy Products - Parmasen cheese, soft cream cheese, 2% milk, yogurt of any kinds.
Noodles - any kinds, except 'lai fun'
Rice - Jasimine, Thai
Seafoods - fish, shrimps, crabs, shellfishs, octupus, squlids, etc
Veggies - any kinds, particularly carrots, 'sai guo', bean spouts, mushooms or all kinds, tofu, etc.
Meat - beef, pork, lamb, chicken, ducks, hams, all are fine
Ice-creams - love those with nuts and grapes, e.g. Haggen Daz's Rum Raisien. Also, green tea, and berries
Desserts - pies, tarts, cakes, etc. as long as it is not too sweet. Love blueberry cheese cakes, and tiramisu, and apple pies.
Fruits - almost any kinds. Orange, apples, banana, water-melons, 'san joke', any type of berries.
Soups - Clam chowder. All types of Chinese soups.
Beers - Asahi, Kirin, Coronna
Eggs - from chicken and duck
Dim sums - buns and dumplings

Foods that I will not pick if there is alternative:
Noodles - 'lai fun'
Rice - boiled Uncle Ben
Soda
Most candies, colorful snacks with perservatives.
Spam
Canned veggies
Snakes

Foods that I don't eat:
Dairy Products - blue cheese, can't stand the taste.
Meat - frogs, rabbit, wild animals of all kinds, chicken or duck feets, and fatty stuffs and internal organs.
Fruits - 'Lau lin'
Veggie - 'smelly tofu'
Anything that is rotten, expired, stink, unhealthy.
Tobacco of any kinds

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Home-cooking : Pan Fried Meat Pie

In the past weekend, I went on grocery shopping on Sunday to prepare dishes for the working week. Usually, the dishes that I prepare are quite simple, firstly it is because I don’t have much time in both preparation in the weekend, and secondly I don’t want to spend too much time when I actually cook the food during the week. Therefore, there is a limit on what I can buy in the market. The raw ingredients that I bought must have some sort of ‘staying power’, i.e. they are able to stay relatively fresh in the frig after few days. As a result, many of my dishes will include eggs, tomato, pork, and some veggies that must be dry, so I can wrap them in newspaper and store in my frig. I usually have to put off from buying something like fresh tofu, fish, or foods that have to be consumed on the same day except for dinner on Sundays.

Since I was a little bit free in the past weekend, and both Cora and I are a little tired of what I’ve been cooking all these weeks, so I was trying to explore what new dishes that I can cook. Certainly, because of the nutrient needs that Cora has, I try to stay away something that requires too much seasoning and oily. As I flip through the cookbooks on the shelf, Cora suggested me to cook a meat pie from a newspaper clipping, which was saved by us from time to time. Of course, I say yes, because I also like meat pie myself.

The recipe of this ‘Mushroom, Corn, Pork and Fish Meat Pie’ is as follow:
¾ lb of minced pork
¾ lb of minced fish meat (could be any type)
1 stalk of fresh corn
8-10 piece of dry takashi mushroom
12 table spoon of chopped green onion
Salt and white pepper (amount depends on your preference)

Wash and put those mushrooms in a bowl of cold water for 1 or 2 hours to soften the texture, then cut the stem and chop them in small piece (about the ¼ or ½ the size of a key on a typical keyboard).
Boil some water in a pot, put the mushroom and the chopped corn in it and cooked them for 2-3 minutes. Drains the water and cool them down for later usage.
Mix the minced pork and fish meat together, in a bowl by using a fork. Add salt and pepper.
Then, add the mushroom, corn and green onion and mix them as well. Once they are mixed, keep the bowl in the frig for 10 minutes.

Actually, that’s all. When I got home from work, I took the bowl out and scoop the mixed meat out, put on a plate and press it into the shape of a pie. Then, heat up the pan with ‘medium fire’, add some olive oil and put the pie in it. Let it fry for few minutes and turn it upside down. Make sure both sides are a little bit burned. Then, pick it up and put on the plate. It can be served with some soya sauce, or hot sauce if needed. We just keep it like that and serve with rice and boiled veggies. Then, that’s it. It is done:




Certainly, because of my skill, the pies were broken into pieces, but the taste was good. Cora and I like it so much that she even told her mom to cook it for herself.