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Showing posts with label cuisine;. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cuisine;. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

This little chicky went to market, and wobbled all the way home...

Monday night, Titus and I had chicken feet for dinner at my house.

Chicken feet...
for dinner...
at my house.


"These morsels of skin and bones are a unique combination of textures: the wrinkled, puffed up skin on the surface and the soft, gelatinous tendons within."

My husband had all the toes cut off before I got home, so I sadly do not have any pictures of the claws. [Click HERE to see a picture from the fabulous www.]   However, I did get plenty of other INTERESTING pictures to initiate your curiosity, and a recipe to satisfy your craving. The following are three simple steps to creating a fabulous feety feast:

  • First, I recommend that you start by removing the claws (you can do this by simply cutting off the toes) as they do not “swallow well.”
  • Next, season the feet in 2-3 cloves of garlic, a few pinches of salt, a few more pinches of pepper, and 3-4 tablespoons of brown sugar.
  • Finally, fry the feet in oil over medium feet. The minute the chicken feet enter the pot, the hot oil will begin to sputter and growl like some form of primordial lava, engulfing the feet until all you can see are the bubbles of the oil.
Something's afoot here...
One foot in the right direction...
Footloose and fancy free...
Put your best foot forward...
Holding one's feet to the fire...
Tip-toeing around...
The shoe is on the other foot...
Going toe to toe...
Putting one foot in front of the other...

Fancy footwork...
Anyone want leftovers??

Love love love, 
Jewel

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Food

My favorite fruit: the mangosteen - a delicious fruit grown on tropical evergreens in Southeast Asia. The taste is really unique and hard to describe; it's sweet and tangy, with the texture of a peach. To open the fruit you pinch at the top by the green stem, cracking the rind, and pulling the soft shell open. The white inside breaks apart like orange slices; those slimy white pieces are the good stuff! Avoid eating the rind; it's really bitter. I understand that presently the U.S.D.A. does not allow the mangosteen to enter the U.S., but they are gradually making their appearance in Asian and International markets in New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles for anywhere between $4-$11.
Other popular fruits include: the jan fruit, kuy fruit, romduol, pineapple, star apple, rose apple, coconut, palmyra fruit, jackfruit, papaya, watermelon, banana, mango and rambutans. Although fruits are usually considered desserts, some fruits such as: mangoes, watermelon, and pineapples are eaten commonly with fish or with plain rice. Popular fruits for shakes are durian, mangoes, and bananas.

Below is a sticky rice cake with mung bean; it is a recipe for special occasions (i.e. weddings.) I was initially hesitant to try it -- since it looks like a thick, cloudy, white jello, and is wrapped in a moist, warm banana leaf -- but it really is very good! There are many varieties of this recipe; I hope Vandy's mum will teach me how to make it!

If you watch Fear Factor, maybe you have seen balut. Balut is a fertilized duck egg with a nearly-developed embryo (aka: baby duck) inside that is boiled and eaten in the shell. "A combination of saltiness and tartness, softness and crunchiness, a sensation of sweetness, the degree of resistance to the bite, the viscosity and stickiness are the rewards."

The staple food for Cambodians is rice. Almost every meal includes a bowl of rice, although noodles are also popular. A wide range of curries, soups and stir fries are served with rice.

Vegetables like mushrooms, cabbage, corn, bamboo shoots, fresh ginger, broccoli, and snow are commonly used in many different stir fry dishes.

Fish is the most common form of meat in Khmer cuisine. Pork is also very popular. Beef and chicken are stewed, grilled or stir fried. Seafood includes an array of shellfish like clams, cockles, crayfish, shrimp and squid; lobsters are not commonly eaten because of their price. Roasted duck is popular during festivals. More unusual meats include: dog, frog, rat, snake, tarantula, and cricket.

Chicken fingers has a whole new meaning!




Love love love, Jewel