Cooking Archives

Fun food


Yesterday, I came across SheChive.com that showed some really awesome images of what we can do with food. It’s too fabulous, really. The ones below are all raw food.

apple_food_fun

bird_food_fun

butterfly_food_fun

fish_food_fun

frog_food_fun

oranges_food_fun

slave_to_orange_food_fun

prison_break_food_fun

roman_food_face

scary_face_food_fun

skeleton_food_fun

tomato_food_fun

My personal favorite is the orange skin carrying the orange segments to the food processor.

What do you like?

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More on raw food

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Making a cool looking ice bowl

Hubby and I were having lunch at a Japanese restaurant yesterday afternoon.

He was served his favorite Salmon sashimi (raw food) in what looked like frosted glass bowl. Halfway through the meal, he realized that the bowl was not frosted glass but was actually a bowl made of ice.

How cool is that? (Pardon the pun! LOL)

It’s definitely something I would like to make sometime to serve to guests.

Here’s a video of how to make one.


Make An Ice Bowl !Funny bloopers R us

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Often times, we want kids to play with finger paints but we don’t want them to eat the paint. Know what I mean? Besides I noticed that food grade colors purchased at baking stores  stain my kids fingers, clothes and everywhere else like mad.  Not only do I not want  artificial coloring away from my children’s mouths, body and stuff, just think how a Barney the Purple Dinosaur color will look stuck all over a 2 year old for a couple of hours? How would you explain that to people who stare?

So, what to do?

Make our own, with food.

One lady in a forum I’m a member of says she gives her kids the pulp of vegetable after juicing. That’s a really great recycling idea. And good for the environment too.

I make my own colors.

First, I make a simple glue paste by cooking corn starch and water. You can use other types of flour like arrowroot or rice starch (not plain rice flour) if you are allergic to corn.

Then, I add vegetable juices as coloring. Spinach is green. Carrots is orange. Beet is red. I live in Malaysia now, and they have this beautiful edible bright blue flower which we use as safe blue coloring.  You can easily google for other vegetable color choices.

It’s not Play-Doh, but it’s equally fun. It was what my mum made for me and my brothers to finger paint on paper when we were in preschool, way back then.

P1090006My kids splashing about, out in the sunshine after a particularly fun but dirty episode.
Mummy doesn’t want them in until they are nice and clean.

I just hate cleaning up after my kids, especially when they dirty up the living room, so what I do is strip them down and let them go wild in the bathroom with the colored pastes. I let them finger paint the tiled walls to their hearts content. Inevitably, everything gets colored. Hair, body, everything. *horrors*  When it’s time to come out, I just hose my kids and wash them. Meanwhile, I’d grab a sponge and wash the bathroom as I go ( a perfect excuse to clean the bathroom, ya know). My mum used to let us out of the house. She’d set up a large table and place some large papers on the tables for us to finger paint. I can’t remember, but we probably were washed outside before we were allowed to walk into the house, clean!

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Pongal Festival

Video of the Taman Universiti Sathya Sai Baba Centre celebrating pongal in 2007.

Two days ago, Tamil Indians all over celebrated the start of the Thai Pongal festival. The Thai Pongal is a harvest festival event which coincides with the festival Makara Sankranthi celebrated in various other parts of India. Pongal in Tamil means “boiling over or spill over.” The act of boiling over of milk in the clay pot is considered to denote future wishes for the family.

Traditionally Thai Ponggal is celebrated at harvest time, it’s a celebration of the prosperity associated with the harvest by thanking the sun god, rain and the farm animals that have helped in the harvest. In villages, new clothes are worn and people owning cows find this festival more important.

The saying “Thai Pirandhal Vazhi Pirakkum” (தை பிறந்தால் வழி பிறக்கும்) meaning “the birth of the month of Thai will pave the way for new opportunities” is often quoted regarding the Ponggal festival.

The Ponggal festival is at least 1000 years old although some believe that the festival is older. As per epigraphic evidence, it used to be celebrated as Puthiyeedu during Medieval Chola empire days. It is thought that Puthiyeedu meant the first harvest of the year. Tamils refer to Pongal as “Tamizhar Thirunal” (meaning “the festival of Tamils”).

The moment the rice boils over and bubbles out of the vessel, the tradition is to shout of “Ponggalo Ponggal!” and blowing the sangu (a conch), a custom practiced during the Ponggal festival to announce it was going to be a year blessed with good tidings. For Tamils, it is considered a good sign to watch it boil over, …since it means that good luck and prosperity is forthcoming.

Quoted from Mr. Sivakumar Varatharaju, the first ethnic Indian to become the speaker of a Malaysian legislative body.

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Jasmin says,

The cooking of milk in the claypot with a variety of ingredients is an important part of the Pongal tradition. The end result is the yummiest (eggless) rice dessert ever. Here an easy recipe which can be recreated at home over the stove.

Ingredients :

Rice – 1 cup
Fresh milk – 3 cups
Jaggery (A traditional Indian sweetener) or Brown sugar – 1/2 cup (I don’t like it so sweet but you can adjust to taste)
Cashew nuts – 1/4 cup
Raisins – 2 tbsp
1 Cardamom pod – pound the cardamom pod to get the seeds. Pound the seeds to powder using a mortar and pestle
Ghee (clarified butter) or butter if you can’t find ghee – 4 tbsp
A spash of Rose water (you can get this from an Indian or Middle Eastern grocery store or you can omit if you don’t have it)

Method :

1. Wash the rice.
2. Boil the milk, add rice.
3. Add sugar and stir for few minutes until sugar is dissolved. Add cardamoms powder, stir for few minutes.
4. Meanwhile, heat the ghee in a frying pan, add the cashew nuts and raisins. Fry till fragrant.
5. Pour into the rice mixture. Add little rose water to the rice and stir gently. Keep simmer in low flame.
6. When the rice mixture looks like it’s almost dry, turn off the fire and close the lid for another 5 mins. The secret to this dish is that the dish is not sticky but shiny looking.
7. Serve hot.

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Cooking in your hotel room!

My 2nd son Ethan, always putting things into his mouth

Hubby and I have been planning to bring our two kids on a holiday in March, and because my 2nd child is allergic to eggs and seafood, meals for him can be a bit of a problem. Eating out can be really unsafe for him because if he eats food that is tainted with eggs or seafood, he could wind up in the hospital. So how do a kid, allergic to so many things eat while his traveling?

Ethan, eating some pears on his own


One of the things he can eat is raw food like fruits, or smoothies from juice shops at shopping centers. Luckily, little Ethan loves bananas so that’s an easy snack to carry around. I have been doing some checking on the internet on ways to prepare meals in the hotel room for my little one as well. Sandwiches is an easy one to prepare. I’m even considering bringing along a mini slow cooker, just so Ethan can have some hot food.   Lots of pre planning here as you can see. Actually, the slow cooker idea came from my sister-in-law. She actually carried one with her when she traveled to Hong Kong. You can read about it in her blog.

Today though, I came across a downright outrageous video of a British comedian cooking a proper meal for himself in a hotel room no less. He’s made a tortellini pasta with spinach, rocket and crème fraîche that he cooks in the room’s electric tea kettle, and he made bread rolls which he used an iron to cook with. Genius I tell you. Though, I’m not sure about what the next hotel occupant will think of the taste of his tea when he uses the kettle.

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Beautiful home made Bento box meals

Ever since I found out that my 2nd son was highly allergic to lots of stuff, we have literally stopped eating out much.

The bonus is of course, we now eat healthier food, no artificial flavorings, no artificial coloring, no preservatives and no additives if I can help it.  More importantly, we saved tons of money, which pleases the cheapskate part of me to no end.

Pork,apples,grapes,sweets

Recently, I have been very inspired by a Singaporean mum, Angela, who creates beautiful Bento (lunch box) meals for her son to bring to school. She says, although it looks complicated and looks like it took a lot of effort to make the meals, it actually didn’t take that long a time at all.

Here’s what she says “it didn’t take a lot of time cos I try to make use of what I have on hand. When I didn’t have much stuff, then it would be really simple, like PBJ sandwich. But I tried to work on the presentation, like cutting the PBJ sandwich into dino shapes. Also, have fruits like grapes and cherries on hand makes it easy to add colour and contrast.

If you are thinking of bringing a packed meal from home to school, office or whatever, I hope Angela’s photos will inspire you to do it tomorrow.

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