Pandan Agar Agar recipe

I am going to a potluck dinner today! (More on that another day.) I wanted to bring something a little different that some people may not have tried before. This is a South-East Asian vegetarian and dairy-free gelatin dessert that uses a couple of ingredients that may seem exotic to people unfamiliar with food from Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines or Malaysia.

Pandan Agar Agar

Pandan Agar Agar

Pandan leaves (also known as pandanus or screw pine leaves) are a plant that is often used in South-East Asian cooking and appears in desserts, flavoured rice, curries, etc. The taste and smell of pandan is uniquely floral and slightly grassy. It is often paired with coconut; in fact, if you buy something that is coconut flavoured and it is green coloured, it probably has some pandan in it as well. People sometimes say that pandan leaves are as important to South-East Asian cooking as vanilla is to Western cooking. In Edmonton, you can purchase pandan leaves frozen from Asian grocery stores like T&T Supermarket and 99 Supermarket. I picked up pandan extract at 99 Supermarket.

pandan extract

pandan extract

Agar agar is a derived from an algae and is often used as a substitute for gelatin. It is most commonly used in South-East Asian and Japanese desserts, but sometimes gets used as a general thickener for food. You can sometimes find them in Asian grocery stores as long, dried strips, flakes or as a powder.

I originally was going to use a recipe that I found on the Internet or from a cookbook, but all of the ones I found weren’t quite what I was looking for. I ended up doing a test run and finally settled on these measurements as my preferred recipe.

Pandan Agar Agar

Ingredients
1 1/2 cup water
400 ml (approx 2 cups) thick coconut milk (use a higher fat milk – the one I used had 17 g of fat per 1/2 cup)
2/3 cup sugar
3 tsp powdered agar agar
approx 1/2 tsp pandan (also known as screw pine) extract (also sometimes called essence or paste)

Directions
Place the water, coconut milk and sugar into a pot and bring to a low boil.

Sprinkle the agar agar powder into the pot slowly while continuously stirring the mixture. Be careful because the powder can easily clump in the liquid if you add it too quickly. If it does clump, then break it up as much as you can and keep slowly stirring until the lumps dissolve in the liquid.

Slowly add the pandan extract until the desired green colour is achieved. I added 1/2 tsp, but really the amount added depends on your preference.

Place the mixture into molds or a casserole dish and let cool. Agar agar will become solid at room temperature, but it will solidify faster in cold temperatures. I generally let the agar agar cool down a little bit, and then pop them into the fridge. I recommend making your layer about 1/2 inch tall or less; once you get much bigger than that the mixture will settle toward the bottom and the top part of the agar agar will become translucent. The flavour will fall to the bottom as well.

Once cool, unmold or cut the agar agar into squares, rectangles, parallelograms. I used a small cookie cutter to create fun shapes.

N.B. Alternatively you can use pandan leaves and make a pandan juice instead of using the extract. To create the juice you take about 8 long leaves and rinse them. Chiffonade the leaves if you can, or at least try to slice them into as small pieces as possible. Place them into a blender with 2/3 a cup of water and puree. Strain the mixture with a cheesecloth. If you substitute the juice for the pandan extract, remember to reduce the amount of the water in the above recipe to 1 cup.

This dessert can be made vegan if vegan sugar is used. It is Celiac-friendly as well, but you probably need to use the juice instead as I am not 100% sure the extract is gluten-free.

Momofuku cookbook – fresh oysters and pickled Asian pears

Gong hay fat choy! Happy Chinese New Year! And happy Valentine’s Day to you as well! I’ve got a special treat for you today as a present from me to you, with help from Valerie and Beavie over at A Canadian Foodie. When Valerie found out that I got a copy of the Momofuku cookbook by David Chang and Peter Meehan for Christmas, she had a great idea for us to pick out recipes and do them at the same time in order to compare our experiences.

Momofuku cookbook

Momofuku cookbook

A quick flip through the cookbook told me one thing – David Chang doesn’t do simple recipes. At first glance they may seem simple but this initial impression is deceptive as most of his main recipes comprise of 2+ recipes combined together. Some of them can take days.

I had first choice, and I wanted to start with something simple, so I picked fresh oysters with a pickled Asian pear and black pepper mignonette.

The book has a fairly detailed section on how to choose, clean and open fresh oysters (pages 131-133). I was already familiar with most of these rules, but I thought one rule was a great reminder for myself: smell the oyster before you serve it and see if it smells clean and fresh and sweet – of the sea but not fishy.

I chose some lovely (but small) Malpeque oysters from Prince Edward Island. I gave them a good scrub under cold water, and kept them in the fridge until I was ready to shuck them.

Freshly scrubbed oysters

Freshly scrubbed oysters

Continue reading

Chinese style scrambled eggs and tomato

This dish is great served with rice. If you want a lot of sauce to soak up in the rice, leave the seeds on your tomatoes. If you want a dish that is not as watery, then you should deseed your tomatoes before cooking. Some recipes also add ketchup to boost the tomato-y flavour – if you do that then I recommend you reduce the amount of sugar you add to the dish.

Chinese style scrambled eggs and tomato

Chinese style scrambled eggs and tomato

And why use white pepper instead of black? White peppercorns are fully matured peppercorns, while black peppercorns are green peppercorns that are dried until they become black. White pepper is usually used in Chinese and other Asian cooking. It has a slightly different flavour (more sharp) and cannot be seen once incorporated into food. You don’t usually see black flecks in Chinese food… unless the food is burnt. ;) Use white pepper sparingly when adding it to food as it can be as hot as black pepper, although some people argue that it is milder or hotter than the black.

Chinese style scrambled eggs and tomato
Makes one shared entrée or 5-6 individual servings.

Ingredients
2 medium tomatoes or 3-4  “on the vine” tomatoes, roughly chopped
4-6 eggs (if you want you can use egg whites only, but I would recommend keeping at least one or two yolks for the flavour)
canola or sunflower oil
1 tsp sugar
salt to taste
white pepper to taste

Directions
Whisk your eggs and fry them in a non-stick pan or wok with the oil. Scramble your eggs until they are about 1/2 to 3/4 of the way cooked. Remove the eggs and place them on a plate to the side.

In your pan add all the chopped tomatoes to the pan, and stir-fry until soft.

Add all of the sugar, and salt and pepper to taste.

Add the eggs back into the pan and gently stir until the eggs and tomatoes are incorporated. The eggs should be in large chunks still. Cook for another minute or so until the eggs are done.

Kale chips

The kale I’ve seen in grocery stores over the summer has been limp, pathetic and unappealing. So last weekend when I saw some gorgeous kale at the Sundog Organic Farm at the City Market, I immediately grabbed two bundles. They were $4 per bundle, but seeing that the bundles were quite large they ended up being only slightly more expensive than kale sold at the grocery store and much more healthy looking.

I stuck some in a soup (this one, but without the beans). And the rest went towards my kale chips experiments.

kale chips

kale chips

I’ve seen kale chips on many blogs, and I was dying to try it out myself. I tried varying some of the measurements but I’ve found that keeping it simple is best. I made about four trays that night. And another two the next day. They’re horribly addicting! And once you master this version you can try variations like adding dried chili flakes, or making salt and vinegar chips.

Kale chips

Ingredients
2 tsp olive oil per baking tray
One bunch of kale leaves
Salt

Directions
Wash your kale, rip or cut into potato chip sized pieces, and dry throughly. The more dry the leaves are, the better. (I spun them in a salad spinner, and then ended up leaving them to air dry for a while.)

Preheat your oven at 400 degrees Fahrenheit/200 Celsius.

On a lined baking sheet, spread out a single layer of kale leaves. Drizzle 2 tsp of olive oil over the leaves. This may not look like a lot, but any more than this and your end product may be too oily.

Very lightly sprinkle the leaves with salt.

Pop the baking tray into the oven for approximately 10 minutes. The kale will turn a rich forest green colour during the baking process, but don’t take them out until they start to brown! If you take them out too early the kale won’t be crispy.

Once the leaves start browning, remove from the oven and enjoy. You can add more salt at this point if you think you need it, but I find that less salt makes these taste better.

How do you know that they’re done? Try picking one up. If it’s crisp enough they will crumble in your hand if you’re not careful because they are very fragile and similar in texture to deep fried parsley.

My pee smells funny a.k.a. asparagus is in season)

This past weekend I was a little busy but the weekend before that I managed to make it down to the downtown farmer’s market to pick up a few vegetables and other assorted goodies. I was very excited to see large bunches of fresh asparagus at the Edgar Farms booth, and bought some for that evening’s dinner.

Edgar Farms asparagus

Edgar Farms asparagus

According to the tag on my bunch of asparagus:

“Edgar Farms is a sixth generation family farm established 1907, located in the beautiful parkland just west of Innisfail in central Alberta. Our cool climate produces extremely tender and sweet asparagus. To further enhance the sweetness of our individually hand picked asparagus it is chilled immediately in ice cold water to remove field heat quickly.”

In my experience, their asparagus tastes 10 times better than anything you can buy in a regular grocery store. They sell their food at both the Calgary and Edmonton farmer’s markets so if you have the opportunity to try their products, I highly recommend that you do so. Their farm isn’t quite within a 100 mile radius of Edmonton, but it’s pretty darned close. (It does fit the Calgary 100 mile diet, however.)

The majority of the time I will quickly blanch asparagus, cooking their tips for slightly less time than the bottom halves, and eating them straight up like that instead of bothering to add butter. Since I bought three bunches this time I decided to do something a little different with one bunch. Roasted asparagus tastes best straight from the oven, as when it gets cold it will become slightly soggy.

roasted asparagus

roasted asparagus

Roasted asparagus

1 bunch asparagus
olive oil
some sort of coarse salt like kosher or sea salt
pepper
balsamic vinegar

To prepare your asparagus, the easiest way is to grip the two ends of the asparagus and let the end naturally snap off. The asparagus will snap at the point where the vegetable is harder and more fibrous, leaving you the more tender part to eat. Wide pieces of asparagus will snap higher on the stem; narrow, more younger asparagus will snap closer to the bottom.

Rinse and lay the stalks on a baking tray. Add a liberal amount of olive oil and salt and pepper to taste, and toss to coat. Make sure each asparagus piece has room on the baking tray.

Place in an over at 400 degrees F for 20 minutes.

Serve the asparagus with a splash of balsamic vinegar. This will give the stalks a slightly sweeter taste.