These walnuts are delicious and super easy to make.. Even though they are fried they do not have that greasy or oily taste. Walnut is very rich in Omega-3 fatty acids with a lot of other health benefits which includes reducing blood cholestrol.
Redneck ate these decades ago when we were in Hong Kong. It must have made an impression because he still remembers eating it.
Ingredients
250g walnut halves
3/4 cup honey
1 Tbsp lemon juice
1 tsp soy sauce
castor sugar for coating
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Honey Candied Walnuts
Posted by Sinner at 2:38 pm 6 comments
Labels: Asian, snack, sweet n dessert
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Easy Prawn Cocktail
Ingredients
cooked prawns
lettuce, shredded
cucumber, sliced
hard boil egg - sliced
salad dressing
tomato sauce
chilli sauce
salt
Method
1. Arrange lettuce, cucumber, eggs and prawns on a plate.
2. To make the simple seafood dressing, add a few tablespoon of salad dressing into a bowl. Add tomato sauce, a dash of chilli sauce and salt to taste. Mix well.
3. Add to salad and toss to mix thoroughly.
Posted by Sinner at 10:46 am 0 comments
Thursday, February 08, 2007
Kueh Kapit ~ Love Letters
Kueh Kapit aka love letters are a traditional Chinese New Year biscuit. This recipe is from my aunts who have been making these for decades. The love letters are a fragile, crispy and crunchy biscuit and very addictive. Making kueh kapit is not for the faint hearted. It is hot work and very fiddly.
Makes 4 milk powder tins
Ingredients
220 gm sugar
130 gm rice flour
1 tsp tapioca flour
4 large eggs
250 ml thick coconut milk
60-80 ml water
Posted by Sinner at 6:24 am 25 comments
Labels: Asian, biscuit n cookies, festive fare
Thursday, February 01, 2007
Kok Chai with Peanut or Har Mai Fillings
Kok chai (peanut puff) is one of the traditional goodies served during Chinese New Year. They can either have a filling of sweet peanut or savoury har mai (hae bee hiam).
Makes 65
Ingredients for Dough
1 egg yolk
½ egg
70 gm peanut or corn oil
70 gm water
280gm flour
Method
1. Into a food processor add the flour and eggs.
2. Add the oil and water until the mixture begins to look like breadcrumbs.
3. Remove and knead gently into a smooth dough.
4. Rest dough for 2 hours.
5. Divide the dough into several portions.
6. Roll the dough thinly. (I took the easy way out and used the pasta machine to roll)
7. Cut into rounds. Place a round pastry onto the mould, add either peanut or savoury hae bee hiam in the centre. Dip your finger into water, moisten half the edge and shut mould to seal.
8. Deep fry on medium high heat till golden brown.
Note : My kok chai mould measures 2½" in diameter which is the smallest available. If you are good with manual pleating, the kok chai can be made smaller.
Peanut filling
Makes 35 kok chai
150 gm ground roasted peanut
25 gm toasted sesame
85 gm castor sugar
Mix all three ingredients together and used as required.
Recipe : hugbear @ imperial kitchen
Posted by Sinner at 1:56 pm 6 comments
Labels: Asian, biscuit n cookies, festive fare
Sambal Har Mai ~ Spicy Dry Shrimp
I have fried this hae bee hiam as a filling for my savoury kok chai (puff). Any leftovers are delicious eaten as a side dish with rice or noodles. I sprinkled mine on top of our fried beehoon.
Ingredients
Grind together
2 medium red onions or 4 shallots
3 garlic cloves
1 tsp Baba chilli powder or 2 dried chilli
75 gm dried prawns, soaked to soften
1 tsp sugar
dash of pepper and soy sauce
Posted by Sinner at 1:53 pm 5 comments
Labels: Asian, sauce n paste