Showing posts with label FISH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FISH. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Broiled Salmon in Oyster Sauce

Fig and Rose Broiled Salmon in Oyster Sauce

This is the easiest recipe in the entire world.  And the fastest.  BOOM.

This recipe comes from my mother, who is queen of the minimal-effort-to-great-taste cooking ratio.  This one takes a grand total of two ingredients, and one of those is the salmon.  I paired it with pearled couscous and sauteed kale (recipe to come).  The whole meal took about 10 minutes to make, start to finish.  Beat that.

Ingredients:

1 lb. Salmon
Oyster Sauce (find it in the "asian" aisle of the grocery store)

1. Preheat the broiler.  Line the broiling pan with tin foil.

2. Place the salmon on the broiling pan and liberally cover in oyster sauce.


About this much. More wouldn't kill you either.


3. Broil for 5-10 minutes, checking every few minutes until salmon is cooked through (not dark pink/purple in the center).



Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Popia Malaysian Spring Rolls


Fig and Rose Popia Malaysian Spring Rolls

Made these in the Penang cooking class as well.  A million things to chop, but so delicious and so fresh.


Ingredients:

Spring Roll Wrappers
30 Prawns, shelled and deveined 
1 handful Green Beans, diced
4 Garlic Cloves, minced
2 blocks Raw Tofu, julienned
1/2 cup Fried Tofu, chopped
Black Pepper
Plum Sauce
Hoisin Sauce mixed with Chile Sauce
1 bundle Cilantro, chopped
3 leaves of Lettuce, julienned
2 Eggs, cooked and julienned
1/2 Jicama, julienned
1/2 Cucumber, julienned
1 handful Peanuts, roasted and ground
1 handful Dried Shallots
1 handful Bean Sprouts
1 Chile Pepper, seeded and julienned

First - to market. Got the sauces, made fresh:


Got the spring roll wraps, made fresh.  This was so cool - the dough adhered to itself, so the man making them would touch his ball of dough down onto the pan for a split second and then pull it up quickly.  This would leave just a thin layer on the pan, which a woman would scrape off immediately, making each thin wrapper.



Our assembled ingredients (post-chopping):


1. Chop, dice, or julienne all vegetables. To julienne simply means to cut into long, thin strips, like the cucumber below.



The fried tofu:


The green beans:


2. Cook peanuts in wok for 2-3 minutes, stirring constantly.  Take off heat when blackened, and crush.



3. Scramble eggs and cook a thin omelet over high heat, flipping once.  Roll egg and slice.



4. Peel and devein prawns.  



5. Cook garlic in pan for 1 minute over high heat, and stir in prawns. Cook for 1 more minute.


6. Add in raw tofu, green beans and black pepper.  Stir for 2 minutes, then turn off heat.  Allow to sit in pan for a few minutes to let to flavors continue to blend.



7. Place a spring roll wrapper on a plate, and spread a spoonful of plum sauce and sweet and sour sauce on top.


8. Add a lettuce leaf, and a small spoonful of the prawn mixture on top.


9. Add all other ingredients, roll and consume.







Penang Assam Laksa

Fig and Rose Penang Assam Laksa

So this post is going to be a bit different from the usual.

I decided to take a last minute trip to Southeast Asia to meet two friends, Marta and Shannon, traveling there. Not sure where the impulsiveness came from, but here I am.  One week in Indonesia, one in Malaysia, and a few days on an island in Thailand.  The girls are doing a longer trip (one 8 weeks, one 4 months!), so I'm tagging along for this portion of it.

Right now, I'm in Penang, which is just incredible.  Little India and Chinatown press right up against one another, mixed right in with the Malay culture.  It's spectacular - and especially the food. And the stands on the streets are where it's at - Penang is known for its hawker food.


Above, an array of hawker fare. Below, the only way to eat lunch.


We decided to do a cooking class, which I've always dreamed of doing. The cooking class was called Nazlina Spice Station, named after the chef and teacher herself.  It was fantastic, and comes highly recommended.


Nazlina herself above, guiding us through the ingredients.

We started off in the early morning, had a quick breakfast of roti and tea and then headed to the Wet Market.  It was pouring rain, which made all of the colors and smells run together.


The markets were incredible - everything was so fresh. Fruits, vegetables, fish, meat, and spices jostled each other for room; the dull thuds of meat cleavers mingled with the murmurs of early morning shoppers.  I wish I could shop like this every day, in the fresh air and among the unadorned stalls.  This is the way everyone should be allowed to shop, and this is what people should be allowed to buy.




The menu for our lunch was twofold: Assam (or Penang) Laksa and Popia Spring Rolls.  The spring rolls will be in a forthcoming post, but this post will be dedicated to the laksa, Penang's most famous dish. This is a tangy, fish-based noodle soup, garnished with fresh mint, raw onion and pineapple.  It's spectacular. I've never eaten anything that so completely baffled my taste buds. So many flavors all at once.

 I fully intended to keep track of all the ingredients and steps, but there were so many of each that I gave up trying.  We did everything from scratch - the spices, the stock, etc. So here is its creation in pictures, to the best of my abilities.

First, the fish-based broth, from market to creation:


We boiled the fish to make the first part of the stock, adding in tamarind for flavor.


We deboned the fish, and ground up both the flesh and the bones, separately.



Then re-cooked the bones for a second stock.



We then made a fresh chile paste made of chile peppers, onion, garlic and a few other crazier ingredients.



Then added that back to the original stock and fish.


Both stocks were combined, straining out the bones, and adding in gingerflower and mint.


 The gingerflower:


 The mint:


The smoother mint leaves are Vietnamese mint - we used a mixture of both. 



Finally, the fresh rice noodles - I've tried and failed to make these more times than I care to admit. The trick is to buy them pre-cooked and fresh, then to take a bit in a stainer and dip it into boiling water. Separate the noodles, and then drain immediately.


We then poured the stock over the noodles, and added a garnish of pineapple, mint, onion and a dollop of fish sauce. Sprinkle with lime, and there you go:


There were other steps and ingredients that I simply didn't get, so sadly, this recipe will live on in memory only.