Tess Harris

Archive for the ‘Snacks’ Category

Spicy Curried Chicken Salad

In American Food, Appetizers, Chicken Recipes, Healthy & Light, Salad Recipes, Sandwiches & Wraps, Snacks on April 13, 2013 at 12:14 PM

Herbed and Rosemary Crackers served with Spicy Curried Chicken Salad

Herbed and Rosemary Crackers served with Spicy Curried Chicken Salad

This chicken salad is a great relief from the old boring, plain salad.  And you can serve it anyway you want… Great with garden salad or serve it with your favorite crackers and of course as sandwiches!

Note:  If you are short on time… you can buy whole roasted chicken from the grocery store or at Sam’s Club.  You’ll save a dollar or two if you buy it at Sam’s Club.  Or you can also use canned chicken chunks.

The skins of these roasted chicken are great to eat - crunchy, when they first came out of the oven.

The skins of these roasted chicken are great to eat – crunchy, when they first came out of the oven.

Shred or chop roasted chicken...

Shred or chop roasted chicken…

What you  need to make Spicy Salad Dressing...

What you need to make Spicy Salad Dressing…

Make the dressing...

Make the dressing…

Mix the chopped chicken and dressing...

Mix the chopped chicken and dressing…

Serve Spicy Chicken Salad over a bed of garden salad...

Serve Spicy Chicken Salad over a bed of garden salad…

Serve Spicy Curried Chicken Salad with your favorite crackers. These are Herbed and Rosemary Crackers served with Spicy Curried Chicken Salad

Serve Spicy Curried Chicken Salad with your favorite crackers.
These are Herbed and Rosemary Crackers served with Spicy Curried Chicken Salad…

Spicy Curried Chicken Salad

Ingredients:

2 large chicken breasts halves (about 2 pounds) – roasted, skinned, deboned, and chopped

2 stalks celery, chopped

½ of small red onion – diced

2 TBSPs. hot banana pepper rings – chopped

Curried Chicken Salad Dressing:

½ cup mayonnaise

1 TBSP. no sugar added sweet relish

1½ tsps. hot madras curry powder

1 tsp. kosher salt (less if using regular table salt)

¾ tsp. smoked paprika

¼ tsp. cayenne pepper

1 TBSP. spicy brown mustard

½ tsp. hot sauce (optional)

In another bowl, combine dressing ingredients.

Pour curried dressing mixture over the chicken.  Stir to mix until dressing coats the chicken pieces.  Add the chopped celery, red onion and hot banana peppers.  Chill in the refrigerator before serving.

Serve over garden salad, with crackers, and as sandwiches.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess

Quick and Easy Nachos

In 15 Minute Meals or Less!, Appetizers, Chili and Bean Dishes, Snacks, Southern & TEX-MEX on May 20, 2012 at 12:55 AM

I’ve been wanting to share this.

Very easy and quick.  A great appetizer.  A snack.  A quick meal.  And a great way to use canned re-fried beans and shredded cheese.

The ingredients are simple…

But first turn on your oven broiler and preheat on HIGH… With the rack placed in the second shelf from the top.

You will need:

A bag of corn tortillas triangles

A small can of re-fried beans

And a 16 ounce bag of Mexican Four Cheese…

Spread a single layer of corn tortillas in a baking sheet.

Spoon about 1 tablespoon of re-fried beans into the corn tortillas.

Top each tortilla with the Mexican Four Cheese.

Now these babies are ready to go under the broiler…

*** Reduce the broiler to LOW…

Place the baking sheet under the broiler until cheese are melted.  About 3 – 5 minutes.

NOTE:  Keep your eyes on the nachos while under the broiler.  They can burn easy.  If your oven is hotter… the cheese can melt faster and the corn tortilla chips can quickly burn.

Remove nachos from the oven just as soon as the cheese melted and the edges of the corn tortilla chips are lightly brown and crisp…

Serve warm.

Enjoy guys! And Happy Cooking…

Tess Harris

 

Barbecued Pork Steaks in a Bun

In American Food, Breads, Rolls & Pizzas, Chinese Food, Food on the Go!, Pork Recipes, Sandwiches & Wraps, Snacks on April 7, 2011 at 9:59 PM

One stormy day several years ago, I was watching Food Network and they were showing one of Pillsbury’s Bake – Off Contests, where contestants win as much as $1 million dollars for their recipes…

My reaction was – WOW!  A $1 million dollar for a recipe?  Are these recipes really worth that much?  Do they really taste that good to be awarded a $million dollars?  So I went to the library and borrow one of Pillsbury’s Cookbooks.  I was curious to try some of these million dollar  recipes.  I want to know, and taste for myself, what makes these recipes won $1 million dollars.

One of the $1 million dollar winning recipes that caught my eye was the Chinese Roast Pork Buns by Wayne Hu.  The picture looked good and the buns reminded me of Siopao, another Chinese dish that I used to enjoy in the Philippines years ago.  Siopao is a steamed bun filled with pork and boiled eggs, served with a sauce.  Thus, I decided to give this dish a try…

The verdict…?

Overall… my family loves these buns.  They are great travel food.  And can be eaten as a snack, lunch, or dinner accompanied with a light soup.

And the preparation is fairly easy because I did not make my own buns.  Instead, I used store bought Pillsbury Buttermilk Biscuits.

My question is… are the really worth $1 million dollars…?

The Barbecued Pork Blade Steaks are awesome.  This is a stand alone dish that can be served with cooked rice and sauteed vegetables on the side.  And they’re easy to make.

As for the buns…

I don’t think so.  They are good… and the preparation is easy, but I don’t think it’s worth a $1 million dollars.  But then again, this is a very good example that food and taste is very subjective!  According to the judges of the Pillsbury Bake – Off Contest in 1994, this recipe – Chinese Roast Pork Buns is worth the $million dollar prize.

The recipe that I am posting here is my own adaptation of that $million dollar winning recipe.  I made a slight deviation from the original recipe by using red wine and olive oil, instead of using sherry and peanut oil, but I think the taste is still pretty close.  Also, I made extra barbecue sauce for the pork and I mixed about ½ cup of the remaining barbecue sauce with the filling below.

This recipe serves 4.  Two buns per person.

(I apologize.  But I don’t have step by step photos for this, yet…)

Prepare the Barbecued Pork Blade Steaks first.

I realized that I cooked four blade steaks but I only need 2 for these buns.  So I made sandwiches with the ones I did not need…

Barbecued Pork Steaks

4 large pork blade steaks – about 3 pounds

Sweet Barbecue Sauce:

1 cup firmly packed brown sugar

1 cup ketchup

½ cup soy sauce

½ cup hoisen sauce

¼ cup red wine

¼ cup deli style mustard with horseradish

2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

6 garlic cloves, smashed and peeled

 

Combine barbecue sauce ingredients in a blender and blend until smooth.  Pour sauce into a large bowl.  Reserve 1/2 cup of this sauce to be used for the Barbecued Pork Steaks in a Bun

 

Preheat oven to 400°F.

 

Line a heavy duty cookie sheet with foil.  Place a wire rack in the cookie sheet.

 

Wash pork steaks and pat dry with paper towels and place them on the wire rack.  Liberally brush both sides of each pork steak with the barbecue sauce.

 

Bake pork steaks in a preheated oven at 400°F for 30 minutes.

Brush pork steaks again, on both sides, with the remaining barbecue sauce.  Return to the oven and bake for another 15 minutes.

Remove pork steaks from the oven and cool enough to handle.  Chop pork steaks into small pieces, discarding the bones.  Serve pork steaks as sandwiches or use as filling for the Barbecued Pork in a Bun.

~~~

So once the pork steaks are ready…

Prepare the filling for the buns:

1 TBSP. olive oil or vegetable oil

½ medium onion – finely diced

1 – 8 ounces can water chestnuts, finely diced

1 TBSP. cornstarch

1 TBSP. red wine or dry sherry

1 TBSP. soy sauce

1 TBSP. hoisen sauce

½ cup chicken stock (broth)

2 Barbecued Pork Blade Steaks – chopped

Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet.  Sauté the onions until translucent.  Add the water chestnuts and stir a few minutes.

In a small bowl, combine soy sauce and hoisen sauce and pour over the sautéed onions and water chestnuts, stirring to combine.  Stir in chicken stock or broth and bring the mixture to a boil over medium heat.

In another small bowl, combine wine or sherry and cornstarch.  Gradually stir in cornstarch mixture into onions and water chestnuts, whisking constantly until thick.  Remove skillet from the heat and add chopped barbecued pork.  I mixed ½ cup of the remaining barbecue sauce to this mixture to make the filling more saucy.

As for the buns, you will need 1 can Pillsbury Buttermilk Biscuits…

Take the biscuits out of the can and separate them…

On a lightly floured board or clean counter, roll each biscuit, using a lightly floured rolling pin, into a 6 inch circle.

Scoop about 6 tablespoons of the barbecued pork and fill the center of the flattened biscuit.  Gather the edges towards the middle, twisting and pressing to seal.

Place buns seam side down on the greased cookie sheet.   Brush each bun with the glaze and bake in a preheated oven at 375°F for 18 minutes or until golden brown.  Serve warm.

Bun Glaze:

1 large egg

1 tsp. brown sugar

1 tsp. water

Beat all ingredients.  Brush each barbecued pork buns with this glaze before baking.

After 18 minutes or so… the buns are ready to serve.

 

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

 

Cranberry Walnut Squares

In American Food, Dairy Free Baking, Dessert, Food on the Go!, Healthy & Light, Snacks, Uncategorized on March 11, 2011 at 6:57 PM

Perfect as an afternoon snack in the office when you’re looking for that extra energy to get you through the day.  Definitely better than getting something from a vending machine.  You might even bring some extra… because if your office mates find out you’re eating one of these delicious and appealing bars… they’re going to want some too!

These Cranberry Walnut Squares are loaded with dried cranberries, chopped walnuts, flaked coconuts and raisins.

These squares are great for picnics.  As travel foods… And if you have kids… are undeniably healthier snacks compared to a regular candy bar.

Once you have gathered al the ingredients you need… these bars only take minutes to prepare.

Yes… it’s simple and easy… and for a little effort, you will be rewarded with all these goodies.  I’ve used Kitchen Aid mixer in mixing the crust.  And I’ve also used spatula and my hands/fingers.  For those who may not have an electric mixer.

Below are what you need for this recipe:

Crust ingredients: old fashioned oatmeal, all purpose flour, brown sugar, baking powder, kosher salt, coconut oil and milk, and ground cinnamon.

These are what you need for the filling ingredients: dried cranberries, raisins, walnuts, sweetened flaked coconut, sugar, all purpose flour, dried orange peel (optional) freshly squeezed orange juice, eggs and vanilla extract.

Making the Crust:

Measure one and one half cup of uncooked oatmeal into a food processor.

Pulse a few times until crumbly.

And pour the contents into a large mixing bowl.

Add to the coarsely ground oatmeal the rest of the crust ingredients.

Mix them up with your hands, breaking up the lumps of brown sugar.

Since the coconut oil is solid.  I melted it in the microwave for 30 seconds.  And added 1/2 cup of coconut milk.

Add these to the oatmeal, flour and sugar mixture.

If you are using butter… this is where you’ll add the melted butter to the  oatmeal and flour mixture.

Oatmeal, flour and sugar mixture with the coconut oil/milk combination.

Mix until crumbly.

Mix well until soft dough chunks are formed.

*** If using butter, the mixture will be more crumbly and will not form into soft chunks of dough.

Reserve half the crust (soft chunks of dough) for topping.

Meanwhile…

Press half of the crust onto a 9 x 13″ rectangular pan.

Bake bottom crust for 8 minutes.

And while you’re cooling the crust.  Mix the filling.

The Filling:

In a large mixing bowl, combine dried fruits, walnuts, and flaked coconuts.

And flour and sugar.

Mix.

Add orange juice.

In another bowl.  Beat eggs and vanilla extract.

Add beaten eggs to the dried fruits, flour, sugar mixture.

Stir until eggs/vanilla extract is absorb and a sticky mixture is formed.

Add the filling to the cooled crust.

Press the remaining crust over the filling.

I made small flat patches out of the remaining crust/soft dough chunks, by either pressing them in between my palms or between two pieces of waxed paper.  And then placing the flat patches (crust) over the filling.

And then bake in preheated oven for 28 – 30 minutes.

After 30 minutes of baking…

Completely cool for at least 2 hours before cutting into squares.

Serve as snacks, travel food, in place of lunch, and for kids lunch pack…

The Recipe:

Cranberry Walnut Squares

Crust:

1 ½ cups uncooked oatmeal – coarsely ground

2 cups unbleached all purpose flour

1 ¼ cup brown sugar

1 ½ tsp. baking powder

¼ tsp. ground cinnamon

1/8 tsp. kosher salt

¼ cup coconut oil melted

½ cup coconut milk

Preheat oven to 350°F.

Measure the coconut oil into a microwavable measuring cup.  Microwave for 30 seconds.  Add ½ cup coconut milk to the melted coconut oil In.  Stir.

Ground Old Fashioned Oatmeal in a food processor until coarse.

Empty the ground oatmeal into a large mixing bowl.  Add flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt.  Mix with your hands, crumbling the brown sugar.  Give the coconut oil/milk a quick stir.  And power over the oatmeal and flour mixture.   Mix with your hands until soft chunks of dough formed.  Divide mixture in half.

Press half of the soft chunks of dough into the bottom of a 9”x13” baking pan… pressing on the corners and sides.

Bake Crust in the preheated oven for 8 minutes.  Remove crust from the oven and cool while you mix the filling.

Filling:

1 (6 ounce) package dried cranberries

1 cup walnuts – chopped

½ cup sweetened flaked coconut

½ cup raisins

½ cup granulated sugar

¼ cup + 1 TBSP. unbleached all purpose flour

1 tsp. dried orange peel – Optional (Available in the “spices section” at your local grocers.)

1/8 tsp. kosher salt

3 TBSPs. freshly squeeze orange juice

1 tsp. vanilla

2 extra large eggs

In a large mixing bowl… combine dried cranberries, chopped walnuts, flaked coconut, raisins, sugar, flour, dried orange peel, and salt.  Using a spatula, stir all these ingredients until well combined.  Add the orange juice and stir to coat all the dry ingredients.

In a separate bowl… whisk together eggs and vanilla extract just until lightly beaten.  Pour over the cranberry – walnut mixture.  Stir with a spatula until all ingredients are combined.

Spread filling mixture onto the cooled crust.

In between your palm, or between two waxed paper, flatten the soft dough chunks into flat patches, and place over the filling.  Press lightly with your hand.

Bake at 350°F for 27 – 30 minutes or until the sides or edges of the crust are golden brown.  Do not over bake.   Cool completely before cutting into bars.

Print a recipe using butter.

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 – Coconut oil and coconut milk make these squares dairy free.  And it  makes the crust a bit more crispy and less crumbly.  And if it weren’t for the eggs, these bars would be considered vegan.

#2 – Walnuts blend so well with these bars.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

Banana Dates Bread

In American Food, Breads, Rolls & Pizzas, Breakfast, Dessert, Healthy & Light, Snacks, Uncategorized on February 25, 2011 at 2:58 PM

Bananas are one of the most inexpensive, most accessible, potassium rich fruit.  My love for bananas is conditional.  There is certain ripeness that’s perfect for me.  That’s when they are golden yellow.  The stems are no longer dark green.  Sweet and lightly firm.  This is the stage before the bananas start to accumulate brown spots.  Once bananas have brown spots on them, they are over-ripe.  The flesh starts to taste mushy and no longer firm.  At this stage, bananas are no longer ideal to eat as they are.  However, at this over-ripe stage, with brown spots all over the peel, they are perfect for making breads, cakes, muffins and pancakes.  They would be perfect for this recipe.

You don’t need an electric mixer to make this banana bread.  You only need your hand, a spatula, a large bowl, and loaf pans.  And of course the ingredients…

You need the following:

Ripe bananas.

Peeled and roughly mashed.

Self-rising flour.

Two (2) sticks unsalted butter. Cut into small pieces.

Superfine sugar.

Dates.

Chopped dates.

Large eggs.

Beaten…

And honey.

Making the Banana Bread:

Preheat oven to 325°F.

Butter 6 mini-loaf pans.

Place loaf pans in a heavy duty baking sheet.

There is something cute about mini-banana breads.  Especially if I’m giving it as a gift.  For me it is a “small treasure.”  A way of saying:  I’m thinking of you.  And for that, here is a small token…

Or,

Two (2) regular loaf pans.

Please excuse my pans here.  I have since retired these pans.  Because my son said so.

Or you can use a combination of both pans.

Using a fine strainer, sift flour into a large mixing bowl.

Mix butter with the flour, by rubbing butter and flour with your finger tips.

(As you can see here.  The butter is soft and at room temperature.  But I found that it is easier and better to work with it cold and cut into small pieces…)

Until they are crumbly in texture.  Like this.

Add sugar.

And chopped dates.

Stir to combine.

Add mashed bananas.

Add beaten eggs.

Add honey.

Stir until mixture forms into a thick batter.

Spoon batter, equally, into the buttered loaf pans.

Bake in a preheated oven at 325°F for 50 – 60 minutes or until breads are golden brown.

Remove from the oven and cool breads in the pans.

Serve bread warm, in thick slices, with honey butter.

The RECIPE:

Banana Dates Bread

4 cups self-rising flour

1 cup or 2 sticks butter – cut into small pieces

2/3 cup + 2 TBSPS. Superfine sugar

1 ¼ cups chopped dates

4 very ripe bananas (with brown spots OK) – roughly mashed

4 large eggs, lightly beaten

4 TBSPs. honey

Preheat oven to 325°F.

Butter 6 mini loaf pans or 2 regular loaf pans.

Peel bananas and place them in a large Ziploc bag.  Zip the bag and mash the bananas with both your hands.  Set aside.

Using a fine strainer, sift flour into a large mixing bowl.

Dump the pieces of butter over the flour and blend with a pastry cutter until mixture resembles coarse sand.  (If you don’t have a pastry cutter, rub flour and butter with your finger tips.)

Add the sugar and chopped dates into the flour mixture.  Stir to combine.

Pour the mashed bananas, beaten eggs, and honey over the flour and dates mixture.

Stir to combine and mixture forms into a thick batter.

Spoon the mixture into the buttered loaf pans.  Filling each pan into three-fourths full.

Bake in a preheated oven at 325°F for 50 – 60 minutes.  Or until golden brown and a toothpick inserted comes out clean.

Remove breads from the oven and let them cool in the pans.

Slice breads into thick slices.  Serve warm or cold, with honey butter.

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 –  To make Honey Butter.  Simply softened ½ stick of butter and mix it with 2 tablespoons honey.

#2 – This bread is excellent served with coffee and hot tea for breakfast or snacks.

#3– If you don’t like dates, you can use dried cranberries or apricots.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

Easy and Simple Egg Rolls (Lumpia)

In Appetizers, Beef Recipes, Chinese Food, Filipino Food, Food on the Go!, Other Asian Foods, Pork Recipes, Side Dishes, Snacks, Uncategorized, Vegetable Recipes on January 14, 2011 at 9:12 AM

Are you Filipino?  Do you make lumpia?

These are two questions that I get asked often by Americans.  Years ago.  I would feel offended by these questions.  What do you mean do I make lumpia?  I can make all kinds of things.  Why does it have to be lumpia?

It’s not until this past several years that these questions no longer offend me.  As much.

I can’t blame my American friends.  We have been conditioned to think of people in terms of their stereotypes.  I am Filipino.  Therefore I make lumpia.  I probably eat balut too.  For those of you who are not familiar with balut.  Balut is a fertilized duck or chicken egg with a nearly developed embryo.  Boiled and eaten on the shell.  And the answer to the balut question is NO.  I have never eaten balut.  And never will.  No offense to those who eat them.  Sorry.  The mere sight of balut makes my insides shakes and grumble.  As if it’s going to invert.

The truth is.  I did not learn how to make egg rolls or lumpia until I was 19.  When I meet my husband, my cooking skills were mediocre.  I had to teach myself how to cook.  Or watch others cook.  And then practice what I had learn in my kitchen.

I had once used a blender to ground pork.  And the blender started smoking.  The motor burn out.  I was 20.  Young and dumb.  I didn’t know I couldn’t use a blender to ground pork!  I forget what it was exactly I was making.  But I wanted to impress my husband, who was then my boyfriend.

To this day.  He remembered the dish.  He said it was good.  And the blender?  He remembers that too.

You’re probably wondering… What do you mean you didn’t know how to cook?  You were poor and had no servants!  So how could you not know how to cook?  Being poor was  exactly the reason.  We were too poor.  There was nothing to cook.  I know how to cook rice.  I learned that at seven.  I know how to stew fish with salt and vinegar.  I learned this at eight.  But these were it.  We did not have the luxury to cook and eat pancit or lumpia.  We eat meat once every six months.  If we’re lucky.

Though there were exceptions.  I helped my mom make “sweets stuff” when I was barely nine.  I was her little helper.  Grating sweet potatoes and cassava.  And rolling them in banana leaves.  And then hawking them on the street until every one of the sweet roll is sold.  Probably explains why I hate selling to this day.

The skills of rolling stuff come naturally to me.  Rolling sweet potatoes and or cassava.  Egg rolls.  Lumpia.  Sushi.  And kimpap.  A Korean dish that sort of like sushi.  I suppose I could roll anything.  My step mother-in-law was highly surprised when I easily caught on on how she made kimpap.  And how at ease I was at rolling them.  I didn’t tell her I’ve been rolling stuff since I was barely nine.

I was with my sister when I first saw how lumpia or egg rolls were made.  She, and her friend, Ate Aida, would have a large tub of raw ground beef and finely chopped vegetables, and some eggs to bind them.  And they’ll start rolling the mixture in lumpia wrapper.  They’d do this on birthdays and special occasion.  This was my first exposure in making lumpia.

You probably notice that I am using the terms lumpia and egg rolls interchangeably.  That’s because the principles in making the two are the same.  The only difference is the thickness of the wrapper.  Lumpia wrapper is thinner and crispier.  More delicate and tears easily.  Whereas the egg roll wrapper is thicker and a lot easier to handle.

There are two types of lumpia:  Fresh (spring rolls) and Fried (egg rolls).

Fresh lumpia or spring rolls are just what the name implies.  The wrapper is not fried.  It is filled with stir fried or fresh vegetables.   And topped with a slightly sweet sauce.  Health aficionados will almost always chose fresh lumpia over fried spring rolls.

The fried egg rolls are of course, fried.  The vegetables are stir fried.  Then wrap with egg roll wrappers.  Deep fried at 350˚F for about 2 minutes on each side.  Or until the wrapper is golden brown and crispy.

The secret in making egg rolls is in the filling.  People have their favorite secret ingredients.  Usually, a combination of meats, shrimp and vegetables.

What I made here are lumpia or egg rolls.  And in my opinion, easy to make.  I used vegetables that I like and quick to cook.

I hardly ever use bean sprouts in my egg rolls.  That’s because my husband hates bean sprouts.  And besides, beans sprouts produce too much liquid which makes the filling a bit runny.  And this I do not want.

And the sauce is fresh from the bottle.  Sweet Chili Sauce.  Available in any Asian stores.  You can make your own if you like.  A simple mixture of vinegar, garlic, freshly ground black pepper, and a little bit of salt will do.

Egg rolls are best served immediately.  While they’re still warm and crispy.

Here’s what you’ll need for this easy and simple egg rolls:

Ground beef.

Ground Pork.

Onions. Chopped.

Garlic. Chopped.

Carrots. Finely diced.

Celery. Finely diced.

Green Beans. Chopped.

Potatoes.  Finely diced.

Green onions.

Lumpia or Eggroll Wrappers.

You can find these at any Asian stores.  Or in Supermarkets.  In the refrigerated section next to the produce department.  And or in the freezer department.

Seasoning:  soy sauce, coarse sea salt, and ground black pepper.

And Sweet Chili Sauce for dipping the lumpia or egg rolls.

~~~~

Once the prep work is done. i.e. chopping the onions, garlic and the vegetables needed…

You need to do the following:

Heat a large skillet and add 3 TBSPs. olive oil.

Add meat – ground beef and pork into the pot.

Stir it up and add sea salt.  Or kosher salt.  Use less if using kosher salt.

Add freshly ground black pepper.

Cook meat until gray.  Until all the juices evaporated and meat starts to sizzle.  If the meat is too watery.  Drain liquid.  You may have to add a tablespoon oil to saute the veggies with the meat.

Add onions and garlic.  Stir a few minutes.  Just until onions are translucent.

Add the potatoes.  Stir and saute a few minutes.

Add the chopped vegetables: carrots, celery and green beans.

Stir and saute until green beans are slightly cooked.

Add the green onions.

Add one to two tablespoons of soy sauce.

Add one tablespoon first.  Then taste.  Add another if needed.

Stir to combine.

By this stage… the potatoes should be soft and mash easily.  It should act as thicker or binder to the whole meat and vegetable mixture.

If the mixture contains a bit of a liquid.  Sprinkle a a tablespoon cornstarch over the meat and vegetable mixture.  And then stir to incorporate.  Over medium heat.  Stir for a few minutes.

~~~

How to roll the lumpia or egg roll:

Step one.  Carefully peel and separate each egg roll wrapper.

Lay one wrapper flat with one corner facing you.

Spoon about two tablespoons of the meat and vegetable mixture onto the wrapper.  About two inches from the corner pointing towards you.

Fold the corner facing you over the filling.  Slightly tucking in the tip under the filling.

Roll it forward up to the middle corners.

Fold the left corner over.

And fold the right corner over.  Forming an envelope.

Lightly brush the folded corners and top wrapper with beaten egg.

And then continue to roll until you have a short cylinder.

Finish rolling the remaining meat and vegetable mixture.  Place each roll seam side down.

Heat a deep skillet or a wok and add about 3 – 4 cups of cooking oil.  Heat oil until it reaches 350˚F.

Fry egg rolls or lumpia, five or six at a time, until golden and crispy.

Remove egg rolls from the pan and drain on paper towels.

Serve immediately.  While warm and crispy.  With a sweet chili sauce on the side for dipping.

This Sweet Chili Sauce is really not spicy.  It is more sweet than it is spicy.

~~~

Easy and Simple Egg Rolls

Filling:

1½ pound ground beef

1 pound ground pork

6 TBSPs. cooking oil – divided

1 large onion – chopped

4 stalks green onions – chopped

6 cloves garlic – smashed, peeled and minced

1 large baking potato – peeled and finely diced

3 large carrots – peeled and finely diced

3 celery sticks – peeled and finely diced

1 pound green beans – finely chopped

6 green or red hot chilies – finely chopped (optional)

1 TBSP. coarse sea salt

½ tsp. ground black pepper

1 package Egg Roll Wrappers

Large egg + 1 tablespoon water – lightly beaten

Heat a large pot and add 3 tablespoons cooking oil.

Add ground beef and pork.  Stir to break up into small chunks.

Add coarse sea salt and ground black pepper.

Stir and cook meat until gray.  Keep stirring until most liquid evaporates and meat starts to sizzle.

If there’s too much liquid in the meat.  Drain the liquid.  And add a tablespoon of oil to the meat.

Add onions and garlic.  Stir until onions are translucent.

Add the potatoes.  Stir for a few minutes.

Add all carrots, celery, green beans.

Stir until vegetables are partially cooked, about 3 minutes.

Add green onions.  Stir to combine.

Add soy sauce.  Stir to incorporate.

At this stage, the potatoes should be soft and mash easily.  It should act as thickener or binder to the whole meat and vegetable mixture.

If the mixture contains a bit of a liquid.  Sprinkle a a tablespoon cornstarch over the meat and vegetable mixture.  And then stir to incorporate, over medium heat.  Stir for a few minutes.

Remove pot from the heat and cool.

How to Roll the Egg Rolls or Lumpia:

Separate the spring rolls wrapper one at a time.  Cover them with damp kitchen towel to keep them from drying.

Using a large chopping board lay the spring roll flat.  One corner facing towards you.

Scoop about two (2) spoonfuls of the meat and vegetables mixture into the spring roll wrapper.  About 1½ inches away from the corner facing you.

Fold the corner facing you over the filling.  And fold both left and right corners over the first fold.  Forming an envelope.

Lightly brush folded and top wrapper with the beaten egg.

Roll and seal.  Place egg roll seam side down.

Repeat the procedures with the remaining filling and egg roll wrappers.

How to Fry Egg Rolls or Lumpia:

Heat a deep skillet or frying pan and add 3 to 4 cups cooking oil.  Heat the oil to about 350˚F.  (Use a thermometer to make sure you have the correct temperature while frying.)  The egg rolls should be fully submerged in the hot oil.

Fry egg rolls about 2 minutes on each side or until golden brown.

Drain on paper towels.

Serve egg rolls immediately.  While still warm and crispy.  Have a small bowl of Sweet Chili Sauce on the side for dipping.

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 – Since the filling has already been cooked.  It only takes a few minutes to fry these egg rolls.

#2 – The finely diced potatoes serves as thickener and binder.  Which makes for a crisper egg rolls.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

It’s Like Chasing Something Mysterious

In Dessert, Healthy & Light, Snacks on October 28, 2010 at 9:20 PM

A life size figure at our apartment office.

Our apartment manager always displays elaborate decorations during the Halloween month of October.

Her favorite holiday.  And she seems to outdo herself every year.

So I came in one Saturday afternoon… and took a few pics…

That ball she’s holding makes a loud scary noise…

more Halloween stuff…

The commissary at our military base also has an elaborate display pumpkins and scare crows… I think that’s what they’re called.

I thought they were interesting…

So I took a few pics…

While I giggled like a little girl…

Simple things make me happy.

And to celebrate Halloween…

Well, I don’t really celebrate it.  But I love these Spiced Pumpkin Dried Fruit Cookies…

And I love all the decorations people displays during Halloween…

I want to share this recipe with you.



I think this is one of the most delicious pumpkin cookies I’ve ever had.

When I took the first bite, my senses kept trying to figure out what’s in the cookie.  Then I took another bite.  And another.  It’s like chasing something while trying to figure out its character.

So I ended up consuming several cookies in one setting.

I made these cookies for my husband to snack on at work.   But my son and I ended up eating most of them.

I plan of  making them again in a few days.

I’ll  post a step by step photos then…

These cookies are very good.  Tender and chewy at the same time.  Moist with a cake like texture.  Loaded with dates, raisins, dried pineapple and walnuts.

Almost guilt free and bordering on the healthy side.  And yet, they are sinfully delicious.

Since Ramon and Willie do not like nuts… I had to split the batter.  Half the batter I baked without nuts.  And the other half with walnuts.  For me.

I love nuts!  Pecans.  Walnuts.  Peanuts.  Though I can’t say it loves me all the time…

~~~

NOTE:  If you don’t have an electric mixer like Kitchen Aid, you could also make these cookies by manually mixing them in a large bowl, using a wooden spoon.  Follow same direction.

Here’s the recipe.

Spiced Pumpkin Dried Fruit Cookies

Ingredients:

2 cups ground old fashioned oatmeal (grind oats before measuring)

1 ½ cups all purpose flour

1 TBSP. baking powder

1 tsp. baking soda

1 tsp. cinnamon

½ tsp. freshly grated nutmeg

¼ tsp. ground cloves

¾ cup or 1 ½ stick unsalted butter, room temperature

1 ¼ cups firmly packed brown sugar

2 extra large eggs – room temperature

1 ½ cups canned pumpkin puree

1 cup pitted dates, chopped

½ cup dried pineapple, finely chopped

1 ½ cups raisins

1 ½ cups walnuts – coarsely chopped (optional)

Preheat oven to 375°F.

Grease 3 baking sheets by rubbing them with butter.  Or line the baking sheets with parchment paper.

Ground oatmeal in a food processor until it resembles a coarse sand.

In a large mixing bowl, combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, and ground cloves.  Add ground oats and stir with spatula until well combined.  Set aside.

Using a stand up mixer, cream the butter and sugar together in the mixing bowl using the paddle attachment.

Add eggs one at a time, beating just until blended with the butter and sugar mixture.  Add the pumpkin puree and continue to blend over medium speed.

Stop the mixer and scrape the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl.

Add the flour and oat mixture.  Blend over low speed (stir) until mixture is smooth and creamy.

Add dates, pineapple, raisins and walnuts.  Blend well.

For each cookie, scoop 3 tablespoons of batter onto the prepared baking sheets.  Allow 9 – 13 cookies per sheet.

Bake in a preheated oven at 375°F for 12 – 14 minutes.  Do not over bake.

Remove and cool in a wire rack.

Stores at room temperature for up to 5 days.

Yield:  3 ½ dozens

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 – Ground oatmeal give these cookies a “cake like” texture.  But if you don’t have a food processor and unable to ground the oatmeal.  You may use them as is.  I just prefer ground oatmeal.

#2 – Dried fruits make these cookies chewy.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

Sauteed Rice Noodles (Pancit Bihon)

In Chinese Food, Filipino Food, Noodles & Pasta Dishes, Pork Recipes, Shrimp and Seafood, Side Dishes, Snacks on September 30, 2010 at 6:00 AM

Pancit Bihon or sauteed rice noodles is one of Filipinos most popular dishes, in addition to lumpia.  Noodle dishes such as this has been introduced to us by Chinese immigrants.  One of the most common and popular dishes served  in parties and family celebrations.

Pancit, just like any other Filipino dishes, is not spicy.  But in our home, I usually make them hot and spicy to please my husband.  He won’t it eat any other way.  He thinks Filipino foods are bland and therefore not very fond of them.   I really can’t argue with him on that.  He is right.  Most Westerners considered Filipino dishes bland, as compared to the dishes in the neighboring countries.  Which is one of the reasons I seldom cook Filipino foods.  Thus reflecting a limited number of Filipino recipes posted in this blog.  He prefers  Thai and Chinese foods.  Thai foods because of all the hot chilies and peppers in it.  And Chinese foods because I can make them spicy and still taste outrageously good.

I don’t cook pancit often.  But I crave them once in a while.  And this week is one of those weeks where I have to have some pancit.

Here’s what you need to cook pancit:

Rice noodles.  Two packages, 8 ounces each.

Noodles need to be washed under cold running water. Water drained and noodles set aside.  This process will soften the noodles.

16 ounces of pork, sliced.  I kept some of the fat for more flavors.  Seasoned with 1/2 tsp. kosher salt and 1/4 tsp. ground black pepper.

16 ounces shrimp.  Peeled and deveined.  Seasoned with 1/2 tsp. kosher salt and 1/4 tsp. ground black pepper.

vegetables…

sliced and chopped…

and garlic… smashed, peeled and chopped.

Heat a large skillet or wok over medium high heat.

Add two tablespoons cooking oil.  Sorry.  I cheated here.  I used pork fat I had rendered few days ago, for more flavor.

Add red onions and green onions.  Stir fry one minute.  Add celery and cabbage.  Stir fry until cabbage turns bright green, about 2 minutes. Remove to a large platter.

Green beans stir fried in one tablespoon oil. Stir fried until green beans are wilted. And remove to the same platter with other stir fried vegetables.

Stir fried the shrimp until pink.  Remove to the same platter with the stir fried vegetables. (Sorry, I forgot to take a pic with this process…)

Add the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil and stir fry the garlic and hot peppers.  That is if you are using hot peppers. Be careful.  Hot peppers are going to be strong on the sinuses.

Add the pork to the wok.

stir fried pork in garlicStir fry pork until golden on the edges.  And then add the sliced tomatoes. Stir for about 2 minutes.  Tomatoes should be slightly cooked with the pork and to the point of disintegrating.

Add 3 1/2 cups chicken stock or water to the wok.

Add fish sauce and soy sauce to the wok.  Bring pork and chicken stock mixture to a boil.

Add stir fried vegetables to the wok.  Stir and keep boiling.

Add the stir fried shrimp.

Add the washed, softened noodles. Stir until combined well.  Reduce heat to medium low.  Keep stirring the until the noodles absorb most of the liquid. And the noodles are tender but not too soft. Turn off heat.

Done and ready to serve!

Sautéed Rice Noodles (Pancit Bihon)

Serves 6 – 8 people

2 – 8 ounces package Rice Noodles or Pancit Bihon

16 ounces boneless pork – sliced

16 ounces shrimp – peeled and deveined

1/3 medium green cabbage

8 ounces fresh green beans

2 celery ribs – chopped

1 medium onion – sliced

4 stalks green onions – chopped

6 cloves garlic – smashed, peeled and chopped

6 – 8 fresh hot chilies (optional)

2 roma tomatoes – sliced

6 TBSPs. cooking oil divided

4 TBSPs. soy sauce

4 TBSPs. fish sauce

3 ½ cups chicken stock or water

1 tsp. kosher salt – divided

1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper divided

½ tsp. ground hot pepper (optional)

Wash rice noodles under cold running water.  Drain water and set aside noodles.

Season sliced pork with ½ tsp. kosher salt and ¼ tsp. black pepper.  Set aside.

Season shrimp with ½ tsp. kosher salt and ¼ tsp. black pepper.  Set aside.

Heat a large wok and add 2 tablespoons oil over medium heat.  Saute onion and green onions for one minute.  Add celery and cabbage.  Stir fry for another two minutes.  Remove to a large platter.

Add another tablespoon cooking oil.  Stir fried green beans until welted, about 5 minutes.  Remove to the same platter with the rest of the stir fried vegetables.

Add the another tablespoon of cooking oil and stir fried the shrimp until

pink.  Remove to another platter and set aside.

Finally, add the remaining two tablespoons cooking oil.  Add garlic and whole hot peppers, if using.  Stir fry until garlic is golden.  Add pork and stir fry about 4 minutes.  Add sliced tomatoes to the pork.  Stir a few minutes.

Turn the heat to medium high.  Add the soy sauce and fish sauce to the pork.  Quickly stir to coat the pork.  Add chicken stock and bring pork to boil.  Once boiling, reduce heat to medium low.  Cover wok and simmer pork for 3 minutes.

Add the platter of stir fried vegetables and shrimp to the simmering pork and stock.  Add the remaining ½ tsp. ground black pepper and ground hot pepper if using.

Turn the heat back to medium and bring the whole mixture to boiling.  Add the rinsed rice noodles.  Stir noodles, pork and the vegetable mixture, until well combined.  Keep stirring until most of the liquid is absorbed and noodles are tender but not overcooked.

Serve hot.  This dish is served by itself or with other Asian dishes.  Serves as a snack, a full meal.

Serve noodles with a small slice of lemon, squeezing the juice over the noodles.

NOTE: This recipe serves a party of 6 – 8 people.  Please cut the recipe in half if only serving a few people.  Left overs can be refrigerated and warmed in the microwave.

Also.  As for the vegetables, you may not include what you do not like and replace them with what you like.

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 – By stir frying the vegetables, individually, as shown, keeps them from getting overcooked.   Thus, keeping them crunchy.

#2 – By also stir frying the shrimps also keeps them from getting overcooked and rubbery.

#3 – Chicken stock enhances the flavor of the noodles.

#4 – An equal amount of fish sauce and lemon juice drizzle over the noodles upon serving, is suggested if additional seasoning is needed for the noodles.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

Everybody Makes Mistakes

In Breakfast, Chinese Food, Healthy & Light, Pork Recipes, Shrimp and Seafood, Side Dishes, Snacks on August 26, 2010 at 4:25 PM

“How intoxicating is the triumph of beauty, and how right it is to name it queen of the universe! How many courtiers, how many slaves, have submitted to it! But alas! Why must it be that what flatters our senses almost always deceives our souls?” Madame de Surin

“What is one big mistake that you’ve made in your life, and what did you do to make it right?” The famous question that cost her.

Her slightly shrill voice betrays her.  She sounds nervous but faintly hides it.  But who wouldn’t  be?

“You know what, Sir in my 22 years of existence I can say that there is nothing major major, I mean, problem that I have done in my life. Because I am very confident with my family, with the love that they are giving to me. So, thank you so much that I am here, thank you thank you so much.”

I watched the the video footage of this particular part where Mr. William Baldwin asked her that famous question.  This is what I observed.  Instead of taking a few seconds to ponder the question and contemplate on her answer, she enthusiastically addressed the crowd like a fake politician running for office, and then delivered her shallow answer.

A very simple question, yet she failed to deliver a meaningful answer.  An answer that would have showed her maturity and wisdom at the age of 22…  Instead she made herself appear as if she’s never made mistakes in her entire life; that she’s a perfect goddess.  And  because of this, most people believed, is what killed Maria Venus Raj chances to be crowned Miss Universe 2010.

Perhaps she’s not ready.

But I know I shouldn’t be too hard on Ms. Raj.  The fact that she made it to represent the Philippines on the Miss Universe Pageant, is already a big accomplishment.  And if her life story is true, she’s already accomplished what most beautiful women could only dreamed of accomplishing in their entire lives.

Though her answer reflects youth and immaturity.  Still young, indeed, so that she hasn’t experience the biggest hurdle in life.  She has yet to face her darkest hour, and feel the incinerating pain in her heart and soul.

But her answer is also a reminder of the attitude of most Filipinos.  There are exceptions, yes.  But we are a people whose true feelings about anything are never expressed – or revealed.  It is unnatural for us to openly express our anger and disgust.  To reveal our frailties and inadequacies.  To express our wants and desires.  We give hints, and we expect the other person to interpret our facial expressions and body language.  To understand our true feelings.  To see the truth behind the facade.

And this type of attitude  seems to be more prevalent among the poor and the uneducated.

This is a country where a YES is a NO and a NO is a YES.  We don’t like to admit that we don’t know anything, or that we are guilty of something.  So instead of admitting to our ignorance, we’d answer yes to a question we don’t understand or don’t know the answer to.  Because admitting to not know anything is far too embarrassing.

The word “hiya” which means “shame” “disgrace” and “humiliation” is rooted too deep in our culture.  And Pride.  Which all too often hinders us from developing our true potential; and of becoming the people we aspired to be.  We are never direct or upfront about what we want, or do not want.  We are wishy-washy.

Unless one is exposed to other culture, especially the western culture.  Where a direct answer is expected.  Only then, that one is inclined to change this attitude.  But change takes time.  And this type of attitude that’s been drilled into our soul since we were babies, takes many, many years to undo.

I know.

A typical Filipino would refuse a dinner invitation from a friend, even if he is hungry, have no money or can’t afford it, because accepting would be too embarrassing.  Again, that word “hiya” or shame and pride is at play here.

However, there is a catch.

We only exhibit this attitude towards people who do not know us very well.  A friend.  An acquaintance.  A colleague. A co-worker.

When it comes to family, especially immediate family, and among siblings, the attitude is completely different.  And again, more prevalent with the poor lower class.

There’s the “obligation” to financially help those who are less fortunate.  Guilt is always used.  It is used as a shameful device against a family member who has more, or they think has more.

~~~

I usually don’t pay attention to beauty pageants, except many years ago when I was a teenager.  When Ate Remy and I, my sister’s friend’s nanny, would sit in front of her small black and white television, inside a dark, cramped room, to watch the Miss Philippines’ beauty pageants.

An interesting fact that I discovered, while searching for information about Ms. Raj, is the increasing number of beauty contestants in the Philippines, vying for the coveted Miss Philippines’ title.  Most are mestizas.  Filipino girls mixed with white European or American Caucasian ancestry.

This shouldn’t surprise me.  Because Philippines is a country that worships mestizas and mestizos –  Filipinos of mixed race.  More specifically, Filipinos mixed with white European or American Caucasian race.

So Filipinos who lived abroad, and or have married foreigners, send their daughters back to the Philippines to enter beauty pageants, and or to become models and actors.  And because of the seeming bias to the meztizas or meztizos, they have a much greater chance of winning beauty pageants, or of becoming models and actors.  A chance they would not have had, had they pursue the same things here in the U.S. and Hollywood.

Maria Venus Raj caught my attention as I clicked through several articles about the 2010 Miss Universe.  As it was trending on Yahoo!

At first, it wasn’t her beauty that caught my attention, it was her last name Raj.  Raj is not a Filipino name. So my first thought was, hmmm… she must be half:  Filipino mixed with Arab ancestry.   And then I told myself: you shouldn’t be surprise.  Filipinos work and live around the world, most especially in the Middle East.  They work in different professions – domestic helpers, drivers, nurses, mechanics, engineers, etc.  So I was thinking:  maybe her mom married a rich man with Middle Eastern descent.  But with further Google on the internet, I find that my assumptions were only partly correct.

So, who is Maria Venus Raj?

Her beauty is mesmerizing and intoxicating. No doubt about that.  Extremely tall for a Filipino woman.  But the question remains.

Who is she?

Where is she from?

Why is her last name Raj?

Several videos and news articles written about her revealed this information:

Ms. Raj was born, out of wedlock, in Doha, Qatar to a Filipino mother and an Indian citizen father.  Her mother, Esther Bayonito, who worked in Qatar as a domestic helper, brought her home to the Philippines when she was merely an infant.  She was raised in the town of San Vicente, Batu, Camarines Sur.  She grew up in a nipa hut and her family is a tenant farmer, cultivating rice.

She is the youngest among five siblings.  (I am presuming her mother had four children before she left for Qatar.)

Her mother was too embarrassed to have born a child out-of-wedlock so that she asked her sister, Maria Venus’ aunt to register her daughter birth – as a child born in the Philippines with catholic parents.  (These facts got her dethroned.  But her powerful and moneyed supporters got her crown reinstated.)

How do you go from living in nipa to getting powerful connections?  That’s what I want to know.  Was it her intoxicating beauty that captivated all these people to her aid?

Her mother was offered $60,000 by a wealthy Arab for the child, a fact that both mother and daughter seems proud to reveal to the world.

She started joining beauty pageants since she was 17 years old.   Joined oratorical contest in high school, coached by her English teacher

Obtained college scholarship from Francis Papica Foundation.    Graduated Cum Laude with a Journalism degree from Bicol University – a prestigious university.

Several months ago, an Asian Journal correspondent, Joseph Pimentel asked her:  “how did you go from a farm girl to where you are now?”

She replied: “Yup, I grew up in a small farm. My parents are farmers. I walked along the rice paddy just to go to school or somewhere else. I did that for 21-22 years. It was a very simple life, not very extravagant. As long as I had my education and a job, life is okay but since winning Miss Philippines and representing the Philippines in the Miss Universe pageant, it’s like an entire different world. I have to be true to myself and try to fit in.”

She did not answer the question.  (It irritates me when people answer questions like the ever evading politicians.)

I think the answer would have been for her to list the specific steps, works, and sacrifices, both she and her family had to do in order for her to achieve her dreams: college education from a prestigious university and international beauty queen title.

How do you go from a poor farm girl to being friends, and connected with wealthy and powerful people, including politicians to rally behind you?

What about her formative years?  How was she raised?  Where there specific things her mother did for her or taught her which helped her become the woman that she is today?

Was she given special privileges because of her beauty?

If her story is true, then there are plenty of poor little girls out there who would want to know the answers to these questions.  Who would be inspired by her accomplishments so that they too can dream big!

But of course, they must meet the pre-requisite.  If they are dreaming of becoming Ms. Philippines, they better be mestizas.  And have the intelligence to back it up.

As for Maria Venus Raj.  I admired her display of confidence and courage.  I admire her audacity to transform herself from a mere farm girl who lived in Nipa Hut, to now an international beauty queen.

With her beauty, anything is possible.

I wouldn’t be surprise if she is pursued by international modeling agencies.

One thing is for sure.  She will have, if not already, an array of very wealthy suitors.  That’s expected of beautiful women.  Her only problem would be is choosing the best one.

~~~

Cook rice as you normally would, using a heavy bottomed pot or rice cooker.  If this is your first time cooking rice using over the stove top.  Follow the instruction below.

Rice that is cooked for the purpose of making fried rice is best cooked the night before.  Chilled in the refrigerator.  This is the key to a perfect fried rice.

If using a rice cooker, the rule of thumb, in my experience, is that the water is always half a cup more than the amount of rice being cooked.  For example, if I’m cooking 2 cups of rice, the water is going to be 2½ cups.  Now, the rice I’m referring here are long grains (Jasmine or Basmati) and short grains (Calrose, Nishiki and other Japanese rice.) This does not include sweet or glutinous rice which is never used for fried rice anyway.

For fried rice, long grains are best.  I prefer Jasmine or Milagrosa rice.  Long grains are less starchy and drier, while short grains tends to have more starch and wetter when cooked.

As for the meat, I have also used salted pork, which is most commonly available here in the South.  I’ve also used ham, Canadian bacon, other type of meat that can be cooked very rapidly, even shrimp.

Here is one of the many different ways to cook fried rice.

Easy Bacon Fried Rice

Ingredients:

8 cups cooked rice (preferably cooled overnight)

5 thick slices bacon – chopped into one inch square.

4 – 5 garlic cloves – peeled and minced

1 medium onion – chopped

2 large eggs – lightly scrambled, and season with a pinch of salt and black pepper

½ tsp. coarse sea salt or kosher salt (less if using regular salt)

¼ – ½ tsp. ground black pepper

3 TBSPs. soy sauce

4 stalks green onions – chopped – white part and green part separated.

Heat a large non-stick skillet over medium heat, and add the chopped bacon.  Stir constantly until slightly crispy and grease or fat has been rendered from the bacon.  Remove the bacon to a plate and pour off all but 1 tablespoon of the bacon grease into a glass cup.  Set aside.

Pour the scrambled eggs into the hot skillet with bacon grease.  Let one side cook for two or three minutes.  Flip to the other side and cook for additional minute.  (It’s like cooking a crepe or a pancake.)  Remove eggs onto the same plate of bacon.

Pour about 3 tablespoons of the bacon grease back into the Hot skillet.

Stir in garlic and sauté for 1 minute.  Push to the side.

Stir in chopped onion and the while part of the green onions.  Stir fry for 2 minutes or until onions are translucent.  Push to the side.

Loosen the rice with spatula and add it into skillet.  Stir to combine all the ingredients.  (The best way to do this is to use 2 wooden spoons/spatulas, using both hands.)

Keep stirring until the rice is fully heated through, about 10 minutes.  Add the bacon and eggs, breaking eggs into small pieces.  Stir until combined.

Sprinkle salt and ground black pepper over the rice.  Stir to combine.

Drizzle the soy sauce over the rice, one tablespoon at a time. Stir so that the soy sauce is well distributed.

Taste to see if additional soy sauce and black pepper is needed.

Stir in the remaining chopped green onions.  Stir for a minute or two.  Serve warm.

Serve by itself as breakfast, a light snack or a side dish.

Fried Rice with bacon

Fried Rice with Salt Pork

Shrimp Fried Rice.  Here, i broke the rule of using only chilled cooked rice.  That is why the fried rice looks a bit sticky.  The fried rice still taste good, just not a perfect texture like it should be.

How to Cooking Rice over the Stove Top?

Measure 3 cups of long grain rice.  Preferably Jasmine or Basmati into a 4 quart heavy bottomed pot with a top or cover.

Wash rice and drain. Do this about three or four times, or until the water is fairly clear.  Pour the rice into a strainer. Pour washed rice back into the pot.

Add 4½ cups filtered water to the rice.  (The rule of thumb is 1½ cup of water per cup of rice for a drier cooked rice.)

Cover the pot and bring rice to a boil over medium heat.  Once boiling, reduce heat to low and keep boiling for about 15 – 20 minutes or until all rice is absorbed.  Turn off heat but keep the pot tightly covered for another 10 minutes.  The rice should be cooked by now.  If so, loosen the rice with a spatula – a wooden spatula is best so that the grain kept intact.  Transfer cooked rice into a plastic container or you can leave it in the pot and store in the refrigerator overnight.

Of course, if you plan to use the cooked rice as a side dish for another meal, instead of using it for fried rice.  Serve it immediately while hot.

Tess’ Kitchen Secrets:

#1 – To attain the perfect fried rice, even better than most Chinese restaurants, chill the cooked rice in the refrigerator overnight.

#2 – You can add finely chopped carrots or green peas to the fried rice for color.  Simply saute the carrots and green peas with the onions, before adding the cooled rice.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

Blowing Wednesday

In American Food, Dessert, Snacks, Uncategorized on August 19, 2010 at 7:23 AM

A mass of dust, world’s momentary slave,

Is man, in state of our old Adam made,

Soon born to die, soon flourishing to fade

(Barnabe Barnes, English Poet)

Today is Wednesday.  Again, I am awakened by the blower outside.  A loud, ear shattering, machine running sound.  That’s the leaf blower.  Instead of it sucking the dirt, it blows it everywhere.  All over the place, which creates a dirty cloud up in the air.

For most people things like this don’t bother them.  But for someone like me, it gets into my skin.  I am highly irritated every Wednesday.  Because every Wednesday, they clean the grounds outside.  They clean! The grounds maintenance crew.  But they sure have a funny way of cleaning the grounds.  These guys, here, they use the leaf blower to blow dirt up in the air – while supposedly blowing the dirt off the parking areas and walkways.  The result?  Cloud of gray and brown particles floating up in the air.  And guess where most of this dirt lands?  Right back down to the ground and right on top of cars, covering them as if a bad dust storm had just hit West Texas.

Dust.  I hate dust.  It’s absolutely disgusting.  I hate looking at it.  Touching it.  That’s why I wait until I couldn’t stand to stare at it any longer before I pick up a rag to dust it off.

They other night I was complaining how much I hate dust.  And both, my husband and son gave me a little education about dust.  They both said that “Dust, inside the house, is really our skin.  We shed.  Our skin sheds.  And that’s the dust everywhere in the house.”

I don’t know.  It is disgusting just thinking about it.  Part of me, don’t want to believe it.  It’s got to be the dust from outside.  Especially the ones they blow out all over the place every Wednesday.  They blow it up in the air and it gets into the chimney; down the fireplace, and into the apartment.  To me this is a more logical explanation of all the dust.  I do believe that we shed.  That our skin sheds.  But not enough that its all over everything in the house!

Whenever we move to another place, especially another state, I always hope that it’s not as dusty as our current place.  I believe Colorado Springs wasn’t as dusty as Las Vegas.  We had a few sand storms while we were in Vegas.  And here in West Texas – is the same way.

West Texas is a bit of a dessert.  There are weeks when it’s very windy, sometimes 40 miles per hour.  So windy in fact, that I struggle not to be blown by the wind at times.  And we’ve have several dust storms.  Where, not only it’s windy.  The wind seems to stir up all the dust and dirt, and anything that can be lifted up from the ground up into the air.

Just like those guys blowing dust all over the place.

Once I made a mistake of having my car washed on Wednesday morning.  It was nice, clean and shiny when I brought it home.  But by the end of the day, it was covered with brown dirt.  I wanted to run around the apartment complex with a stick, and chase the guy with the blower. I so wanted to.  If there’s anything that I hate the most are those blowers and the person that uses it.

I dread going outside every Wednesday.  If I must go outside, I have to be tactical.  I have to have good timing.  It’s like going out in the war zone.  My strategy?  I make sure the blower’s not in front of my door.   They have to be at least 100 feet away.   So I look out through the glass window, listen for the blower sound, and if they are far away enough from my door, I ready myself.  I hurriedly open the door and lock it.  Run to the car, open the door, and then quickly slide myself into the seat and slam the door shut.  Hoping that the door won’t catch my leg.  I hold my breath the whole time, while on the run, from the door to the car.

My husband always asks me – “What is wrong with you? You grow up in the dirt! So all this dirt and dust shouldn’t bother you at all!”

And my reply to him is always – “Well, I am not in the Philippines anymore.  I no longer live in a nipa hut so I don’t have to put up with all this dust and dirt unless I have to.  This is America for god sakes!  This is a country where no rickety house exist.  Everybody lives in nice homes!”

Of course this is untrue.  I was shocked, when four summers ago, we were on our way to Fredericksburg, a German town in Texas, driving down highway 83-84.  Then there they were.  Several rundown houses along the highway.  They were so old and rundown that I had to really focus at them for a few minutes, while driving 70 miles per hour, to see if someone still live there.  I saw chairs out in the porch and car outside.  A sure sign that those houses are still inhabited.

I tell my husband, “Wow, honeyko! Did you see those houses!?  They look so old and seems to be falling apart, but people still live there!”

And his answer was, “Yeah. So?  You’re the only who thinks that America is this perfect country.  That everybody lives in nice homes.  We have poor and homeless people here in America, just like any other country in the world.  The only difference is, people here have more choices and opportunities.  You can rise up from ground zero if you try hard enough.”  “And besides,” he added, “those old and rundown homes? They’re still better than your nipa hut!  You know why?  Because they have electricity, and running water, and TV! You didn’t have that in your nipa hut!”

I have to admit.  Yes, they are.  As bad as those houses.  They are still better than the nipa huts I grew up in.  At least they have running water, and sewer, I’m sure.  And, they probably own the land that their house is built upon.  Most nipa huts in the Philippines are built not on their land.  They are merely sharecroppers.  Those nipa hut dwellers can get evicted by the landowners at any time.  That’s how we were.  We were sharecroppers.  Though the arrangement was not at all bad.  The landowner only demanded that we share half of our harvested rice.  We didn’t have to share our sweet potatoes, cassava, and occasional vegetables.  Though we were willing to share if the landowner stops by and ask.  The landowner did have one specific request: that my Dad take care of the coconut plants scattered around his land.  My Dad was to cut the shrubs and bushes around the young coconut plants so they’ll grow to full size coconut trees, and start producing coconuts.

My Dad did owned a piece of land.  I think it is 16 hectares – close to 40 acres.  He bought it from my Godparents.  But he barely cultivated it.  The guy who owns the land next to ours, keeps extending his marker, stealing a piece of our land every single year.  Each time he has his land surveyed, he moves his fences – a marker, surrounding his land several feet into ours.  And to avoid from having to quarrel with him, which could end up in a bloody massacre, hopefully on the part of that guy, my dad just let him slide.  He let this land-hungry man get away with several infractions, while stealing a piece of our land every year.  I wonder how long will he allow this to go on…?

Again, every Wednesday, the grounds maintenance crew cleans the grounds or so they think.  Personally, I think it’s a waste of money and time.  I can understand them trimming the plants.  But the grounds?  It’s hopeless.  They haven’t figured out how to make grass grow in a lot of areas on the grounds.  In front of our condo, for example.  Right outside our door.  They planted grass outside that small space, about twice already since we been here.  The grass didn’t last.  It was green for about a week, turned brown the following week.  Both times this happened.  So now it’s just bare.  And when it rains, it’s worst.  There is dirt every where.  Dirt washes down into the parking areas and on the walkways.  Because there’s no grass in most places, the soil erode when it rains.  And guess what happens next Wednesday?  They’ll be blowing dirt and dust all over the place again.

I so badly want to tell the manager this “ you know, what your grounds maintenance crew is doing doesn’t make sense.  They blow dirt all over the place and it is counter productive.” But I don’t think she’ll welcome this criticism.   I certainly do not want to ruffle her feathers.  I’m sure she’s going to stop being “sweet” to me in her Texas twang if I do.  So I just put up with it.  I hold it inside.  All this aggravation about dirt.

Sometimes I think – maybe I am just being irrational?

If I am, then so as  the 20 cities in California that ban leaf blowers.  And other states like Arizona, Hawaii and New Jersey which also have laws against Leaf Blowers.

~~~

I want to console myself with this Strawberry Pretzel Salad.

Eleven years ago is when I first ate this.  I was at a ‘pot luck” luncheon in Okinawa, Japan.  Our HR Manager, Beverly Essex brought this dessert.

At first, when I saw it, I kind of looked at it funny.  I mean, eating pretzels and strawberries kind of strange, doesn’t it?  It certainly did for me back then.  I did not plan of having any.  But, when it was almost gone… and everybody was bragging how good it was…  I had a second thought.  I wanted to find out for myself why everyone was bragging about this Strawberry Pretzel Salad.  I thought, hmmmm… I think I better have some of that before it’s all gone.  So I did. Sure enough.  As soon as I took a bite, OMG! All these flavors were dancing in my mouth.  I wanted some more!  And more!  This stuff is addictive.

The combination of salted pretzels, cream cheese, cool whip, gelatin, and frozen whole strawberries, produced an appetizing and unique taste.  Yes, it is weird.  No doubt about that.  But it’s a tasty weird thing.  You really just have to make it to find out for yourself.  Ms. Essex was kind enough to share her recipe with me.  And I would like to share it with you.

Strawberry Pretzel Salad

Ingredients:

5 cups coarsely crushed pretzels – (I buy a 1 pound bag pretzel with salt.)

1½ sticks or ¾ cup butter – melted

5 TBSPs. sugar

1 (8 ounces) pkg. cream cheese – softened

1 cup sugar

10 ounces cool whip

2 (3 ounces) pkgs. Strawberry gelatin

2½ cups boiling water

2 (16 ounces) frozen whole strawberries

Mix pretzels, butter and 5 tablespoons sugar.  Smooth in 10½ x 15 baking pan and bake 8 minutes at 400 degrees.  WATCH CAREFULLY.  It burns easily!

Beat cream cheese and 1 cup sugar until creamy.  Fold in cool whip and spread over cooled crust.  Leave no gaps.

Mix strawberry gelatin, boiling water and frozen strawberries with juice.  Cool until slightly jelled.  Spread over cheese layer.  Chill until set.  Keep refrigerated.

Serve cold.

the whole pan. after it has chilled, and ready to serve.

sort of look weird. but it’s one of those weird tasty stuff.

Tess Kitchen Secret:

I have no secret for this one.  Every ingredient is a critical piece for this dessert as a whole.  Though one thing that stands out is the saltiness of the pretzel and then the sweetness of everything that balances it out.

Enjoy and Happy Cooking!

Tess Harris

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