Friday, April 1, 2011

A Busy Woman Cooks (2): Onigiri Made Super-Easy


One of my favourite "SOS" dishes is the onigiri (rice balls). It's also fortunately my hubby's all-time favourite.

Rice is one of the staples in Japan, so this easy-to-follow rice recipe is naturally acquired in the process of growing up in a Japanese household. This "must-have" goes into children's school bento(lunch-boxes) and picnic baskets.

To make this process of making onigiri easier, I also found a video clip on youtube. This video is a blessing to afficionados of Japanese food who are wondering how to make this. But here's a note: the lady in the video, a seasoned housewife, you bet, is dexterous. The video shows the authentic way of preparing the rice balls and the traditional varieties of ingredients that you can stuff into them.

I don't want to compete with the expert in the video, but I will write how I have discovered the easy way of making these rice balls. However, I still guarantee that the onigiri will be delicious and fuss-free. It's guaranteed success if you follow the steps in this post, which are written for someone who does not cook too often. I know many Singaporeans belong to this category.

(1) First choose a good mould that will absolutely shape rice but will not allow rice to stick to it. The best I have found in Singapore is:

To save you the trouble of hunting for it, this is the venue and price for it:
Takashimaya Shopping Mall, Basement 1, the row of wares beside the cashier counter. The price is SGD4.90 (four dollars ninety cents before tax).

(2)Prepare ingredients that you are fond of. Many ingredients go well with rice: hard-boiled egg, sausage, bonito flakes with soy sauce, sour plum, cod-fish, salmon, tuna, etc. If you have left-overs from a previous meal (e.g. turkey, salmon, cod, grilled chicken or beef), by all means, use them!

Sesame seeds-both black and golden- are great. Buy a genuine,high-quality seaweed, Japanese or Korean. It makes a great difference to your onigiri, taste -wise.

(3) Cook Japanese rice. The short- variety rice is availabe at NTUC (e.g. Kokuho rice) which is about 9.60 a bag (2 kg); Meidi-Ya (many varieties); and Isetan supermarkets. Their prices differ. Those made in Vietnam (Koshihikari) are about one-third the price of that grown in Japan. Newly harvested rice (which I like best) from Mie prefecture costs about SGD20for two kilogrammes at Meidi-Ya.

Wash the rice; cook it using a rice cooker. Three cups of rice (make 6 onigiri ) and require 3.5 cups of water. No soaking required before cooking.

(4)For easy-to-make onigiri, pour all the ingredients into a big bowl, then empty hot cooked rice into the bowl and mix.

(5) Cut the seaweed into pieces of any shape that you like. Don't worry if the seaweed softens when it contacts your hands.

(6) Scoop rice to fill each mould to the top. Cover the lid of the mould to compress.

(7)Remove the lid of the mould. Next turn the plastic mould, with rice inside, upside down. Press the tab in the middle of the mould to push the rice out. The triangular piece falls out nicely.

(8)Wrap the seaweed around the rice pieces - anyway you like. Do it quickly since the seaweed becomes malleable with hot rice.

If you are eating them immediately, serve them at this stage. If not, then continue with the following steps if you are storing them for meals a few days later:

(9)Sit the rice balls on a tray or plate placed in the path of the breeze. If your kitchen is a breezy area, by the time you are done with your sixth rice ball, the onigiri can be wrapped immediately for storage.

(10) Wrap up the cooled rice balls in aluminium foil and put them in the fridge if you are eating them a few days later. Microwave or grill the refrigerated rice balls before eating.

Bon appetit!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

A Busy Woman Cooks (1): Chinese 'Somen' with Fish Fillet


29 March 2011: At last we could eat our dinner without feeling depressed by the images and news reports running via the NHK channel. The situation in the north-eastern region of Japan has stabilized to a certain extent, although tremours and minor earthquakes continue to be felt and the radiation issue still lingers on.

Juggling between work, meals and study, preparing the easiest meal without resorting to sandwiches has always been a challenge for me. My Swiss friend once mentioned that "Asian meals are difficult to prepare and take a long time to do so". Not necessarily so if you know some quick and easy dishes. Such dishes take just 15 minutes to wash, cut and slice, and another 15 to cook. The prep and cook time is thus 30 minutes.

Here I have just discovered a dish by accident which I think is worth sharing: it's the rice noodle with threadfin fillet.


Ingredients:

(1) Slice one threadfin fillet/one red grouper fillet/any fish that is used for soup. (SGD 7.00 for a medium-sized slice, on the average)
(2) Rinse dried anchovies to remove small stones /dirt. (One 1-kg pack costs SGD3.00)
(2) Get ready thin rice noodle that cooks in less than five minutes. Those that are available locally are the mee sua (lit. 'rice thread'; looks like combs of dried white noodle and tastes like somen) and the "Okinawa champa style noodle. (Mee sua: one packet costs SGD1.10 with 6 pieces. Use 3 to 4 for a couple.)
(3) * Slice any amount of young ginger root,leek/spring onions, garlic and shallots/onions, etc.
(4) Optional:One teaspoonful of powdered dashi (Japanese bonito fish stock).
(5) Optional: One egg.

Method:

(1) Boil a pot of water. About five medium-sized bowls.
(2) While boiling, heat some oil in a frying pan. Shallow fry ginger, then onions followed by garlic. Cook them separately if desired. Remove from pan and serve them on smaller plates. If adding an egg, stir it around the pan and remove it. Put it aside.

(3) Boil fish slices and some dried anchovies. If using leek, throw in leek as well.
If desired, add in dashi.
(4) When the soup has come to a boil, throw in the rice noodle. Then add in the egg, if desired, at this stage.
(5) Boil it for about two minutes and it's ready.

Serve it hot with Ingredients * (3) sliced ginger, shallots, etc. Vary the ingredients if you like according to your taste.

Note: The ground white pepper adds magic to this dish.

Bon appetit.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Donate to Japan Earthquake Disaster 2011「東北・関東大震災」義援金について

I've been following news closely on NHK. Just now I found a site on how to help Japan

An update (19.03.2011):

Donate to Japan Earthquake Disaster 2011

* Cash/cheque donations can be made at the Front Office of The Japanese Association, Singapore at 120 Adam Road.
* Cheques should be made payable to: SINGAPORE RED CROSS SOCIETY
* On the reverse side of the cheque, indicate:
"JAPAN DISASTER 2011" and include the donor's name, contact number, and address.

「東北・関東大震災」義援金についてのお知らせ

シンガポール日本人会では、シンガポール赤十字社の協力のもと、義援金の受け付
けを始めております。集められた義援金は、日本赤十字社を通して被災者の元へ届
けられます。皆様の温かいご支援、ご協力をお願いいたします。

...<義援金の受付方法>
・現金、チェックを日本人会フロントオフィスにて受け付けています。

・チェックの場合:

 宛先:SINGAPORE RED CROSS SOCIETY
 裏面:JAPAN DISASTER 2011と明記
    名前、連絡先、住所を記載してください。

Monday, February 28, 2011

Akita Cup


This Akita-brand of porcelain cup makes a lovely piece of art at home and I was really fortunate to have received a pair of them as gifts-one with azalea and the other with a crimson olive flower design.

I use it to drink Japanese tea -which needs to be slightly cooled- and thus explains why the cup is not suitable for coffee, even though coffee doesn't look strange in it. Bone china cups are best for coffee.

Monday, January 17, 2011

A Pretty Star in Can Tho


I thought I'd pamper myself for a night after having lost a night's sleep at the three-star hotel. The walls are thin over there and the guests next door just didn't care what time they were arriving -and how noisy they were.

I checked out this four-star that I saw on the Internet. I was impressed of course. At last I was reminded how a bath robe looked like, but there was attention to more details here:

It's a resort. After ending work at 3 pm, I sped back to the hotel for a rest in my room. Colonial styled fan, wooden flooring, plants in the living area and in the corner of the toilet.

Relaxing. When I looked out of my room, the view of the Mekong was stunning.

In the night I had a decent French (?)-Vietnamese kind of fusion dinner. The waitors were anxious to chat and make my dinner enjoyable.

Great service. I also like the art pieces around the restaurant.

There's a free cruise that I thought I'd love to reserve but ran out of time. So I just took my walk around the hotel along the concrete bank.

I swam at 5:30 am - which was already very bright - and then had a hearty breakfast before checking out.

A great place to be - though the water in the swimming pool made my teeth feel very strange...But I'll be back.

Friday, January 7, 2011

A Small Star in Can Tho


A Picture of the Street on the River Bank

This is a hotel with no international stars on it, and I have no idea if it's got a domestic star or not. Anyway I accidentally checked into it without reservation and pre-trip research.

After alighting from the domestic inter-city public bus, I hopped onto a cab (a black Mai Linh limousine type) and was driven to Ninh Kieu III which I saw on the internet before departing Ho Chi Minh City. Reviewed as modern and clean it was, the lobby did not look welcoming. It is cold and has a "metallic" feel because of a large elevator (lift) that is visible near the check-in.

I asked the receptionist for a room, and she came back with a question of whether I had advanced booking. I said "No" and she said, "No more rooms". So off I went to Ninh Kieu II and then to Ninh Kieu I. I didn't like the look of Ninh Kieu I and went to the hotel beside it. Garden Hotel? Can't recall, but it was fully booked as well. I was left with no choice and checked into Ninh Kieu I which had a room for me.

There was a heater, phone, and a tiled toilet with lights which were working in the room. All these for 280,000 dong and breakfast. I didn't think I would sleep with the very hard bed. But later on I realized that there was something that made me lose my sleep- an annoying mozzie which refused to leave the room. So I kept the dim lights over my head on for fear it would come too near.

When I saw the first ray of sunlight, I packed everything and went out for breakfast at the motel's restaurant across. It was packed with guests from the sister hotels of Ninh Kieu which belongs to the commercial arm of the military, I suppose.

I went around the long table which was overloaded with food: sweet potatoes (yum!), banana, papaya, apple (didn't look too good), baguette, etc. They were not displayed very appealingly but I was happy that it had warm soy milk. That is great in Vietnam. I hesitated to try the snails with noodle (bun oc)because I could imagine what went into the lakes but I wasn't disappointed. Could it be the veg condiments in it that made it so good?


At the end of my breakfast I was quite pleased that I checked into this small place for a night. The laundry staff were pleasant as well. Although I'd expected it to be noisy, it wasn't. The three-star hotel nearby which I later checked into was noisy, indeed, with domestic travellers arriving late in the night.

I found the grilled fish and the restaurant beside that three-star hotel rather unforgettable, though. I remember this restaurant well because it wasn't my first time there. I went there three years ago, and was surprised to find "farm rats" on its menu alongside snake and other animals. Now it's got a "new" variety of fish which I didn't notice before. It's the basa fish.

Gee...what is the basa? I was curious how it would look like but surely grilled fish must be good, I thought. I waited for 30 minutes accompanied by the local Viet kung fu drama serial on TV. Gosh! What a long wait...I was going to give up when the lady manager smiled and said, "It'd be out soon". Really? OK...Waited another five minutes before the fish appeared. Big it was!

It was fleshy rather than crispy and didn't taste bland or bitter like fishes in rivers. It is from the sea I was told. I think I would like to try it again the next time I go to Can Tho. Being on the Mekong delta, the city offers a great variety of fruit, veg, and seafood.

I'd recommend papaya at Saigon-Can Tho Hotel's restaurant. I was craving for some local deep fried tofu (not silken type)in fact, and walked into this hotel by chance. Instead of finding my favourite tofu, I ordered three glasses of papaya juice at one shot. The girl Trang did the papaya shakes superbly... I may try to stay in that hotel in my next chance for those papaya, nice service staff, and the hotel's good location.