Showing posts with label coconut milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coconut milk. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Thai Marinate (Fire) Roasted Butterflied Chicken


Ingredients:
  • 1 whole organic chicken, butterflied
For marinate:
  • 2 cloves of Garlic, mashed
  • 1 Lime, juiced
  • 2 tbsp Coriander leaves, chopped or ground coriander
  • 1 teaspoon Chilli Paste (optional)
  • 2 sprigs of Lemongrass, mashed (optional)
  • 1/4 cup Fish Sauce
  • 1 teaspoon of Soya Sauce
  • 1/2 cup Coconut Milk
  • Salt and Pepper


  1. Clean the chicken and place it on a big bowl/plate.
  2. Mix the marinate ingredients well. Pour the ingredients and rub it on the chicken until all parts are covered.
  3. Marinate for at least 4 hours. Even better overnight. Cover the chicken with a wrap and put into the refridgerator. Before cooking, allow the chicken to sit in room temperature for at least 20-30 minutes.
  4. On fire grill, spray some non-sticking oil spray and turn on the lowest heat, covered. Make sure the grill is preheated for about 5 minutes before cooking the chicken. Then, place the chicken skin side up first and cook for 30 mins on the lowest heat. Turn to the other side, spray with more non-stick cooking oil and grill for another 25 minutes. Let it rest for 3-5 minutes before serve.
  5. If cooking with oven, allow oven to preheat at 425 degrees F. Then roast chicken for 15 minutes per pound. (Example, a 3 pound chicken must roast for 45 minutes)

Serving suggestion:

With rice and slices of fresh cucumber.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Malaysian Kaya (Coconut Milk and Egg Custard Jam)





Living abroad makes you think of all the simple good food you used to have during childhood. One of my absolute favorite is Kaya and I was so hyped up to make it after my Mom filled me in on how to make it.
The amount of ingredients is simple, ratios is simple (1:1) and they are easy to find. However, the workload on this homemade jam is quite taxing as it demands your attention every second. I salute and admire our grandmother's generation, who would make kaya for breakfast. No wonder people say good food is made with lots of love and care. Kaya is no easy thing to make, imagine all the amount of energy put into producing something that expire in short time with no refridgerator system, yet the love and care diligently cook it with a wooden spatula because no electric beater ever existed... but even if they do, it is not affordable. You'll know what I mean. And whoever the genius is to create something so scrumptuous? You deserve an award.
Ingredients:
(Equal parts of everything... can be a bowl, a can, or 300 gram)
  • 1 cup of sugar (you may mix brown and white sugar together)
  • 1 cup of coconut milk
  • 1 cup of eggs (beaten until fluffy with electric mixer)
  • A few sprigs of Pandan leaves (Screwpine leaves), tied up with string
Fluffed eggs with a 1/4 cup sugar
Coconut milk warming up in the rice cooker with the tied up Pandan leaves
Caramelized sugar under low heat

  1. Pour the coconut milk into the rice cooker on warm mode with the Pandan leaves.
  2. Meanwhile, crack the eggs into a bowl with a 1/4 cup sugar, and use the electric mixer to fluff them up.
  3. After that, put the rest of the sugar into a small pot and on low heat, caramelize the sugar slowly.
  4. Once it is all melted, pour into the coconut milk immediately. Turn from warm mode to cook. The caramelize sugar will harden once you pour inside but do not worry, it will melt. Stir constantly with an egg beater.
  5. Before the sugar and coconut mixture started bubbling, start pouring the egg mixture ladle by ladle. Stir vigorously to avoid getting solid egg lumps. Every ladle has to mix well before the next ladle of eggs come in.
  6. When it starts to boil, turn the cook mode to warm, stir even more vigorous now that it has thicken. Watch out for splatters.
  7. Once thicken, make sure you turn off the rice cooker quickly to maintain the smooth consistency and avoid curdling. If you have the conventional rice cooker, remove the rice cooker container off from the cooker and let cool. Continue to stir.
  8. Place the Kaya into sterilized jars. Let cool before covering the Kaya with the jar cap.
  9. Keep in refridgerator. If you see water evaporated onto the cap, wipe it away. It will last for about a week.

Serving suggestion:

Best spread onto toasted bread, butter cakes and salted crackers.