Wednesday, November 27, 2013

I love sweets! I love champorado! :)


Champorado on the go! :)

Thanks to  http://filipinostylerecipe.com/2012/03/champorado-recipe/ for sharing the recipe, ingredients and the procedures on how cook this food. It helps a lot! :)





(Finished product)

Champorado recipe is a sweet rice porridge popular among Filipinos. It is usually sticky rice boiling with cocoa powder with brown sugar then served with milk on top.
Estimated time of preparation and cooking: 20-30 minutes
Good for 2-3 servings

Ingredients:
1 cup glutinous rice(malagkit)
1/4 cup cocoa powder(dissolve with 1 cup of warm water.)
3 cups water
1/2 cup brown sugar
milk(fresh, evaporated or condensed)

Procedures:
Part 1
1. Wash rice with water until runs clear.

Part 2
2. In a pot, put-in rice with water and bring to boil over medium heat for about 10-15 minutes. Stir occasionally.
4. Pour cocoa mixture into a pot then stir continuously until well blended.
5. Adjust the sweetness with brown sugar then continue cooking until rice is cooked and the texture becomes thick.
6. Transfer to serving plate with swirls of milk on top. Serve hot and enjoy!

 *** You may also add salt and vanilla.

credits to:  http://filipinostylerecipe.com/2012/03/champorado-recipe/

Monday, November 25, 2013

anchovies with tomato :-)


Dried anchovies with tomato! Yummy :-)








 

 

Trivia:
           According to Wikipedia, anchovies  are a family (Engraulidae) of small, common salt-water forage fish.There are 144 species in 17 genera, found in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans. Anchovies are usually classified as an oily fish. They are small, green fish with blue reflections due to a silver longitudinal stripe that runs from the base of the caudal fin. They range from 2 centimeters (0.79 in) to 40 centimeters (16 in) in adult length, and the body shape is variable with more slender fish in northern populations. In our dialect its "Buwad Bolinao".
          It is nice to learn and discover things most especially when it comes to food. Try it at home.

I love, we love spaghetti :-)


Spaghetti
First time cooking spaghetti by my own and I'm proud of it. :-)




This was the final face or output of my first time ever spaghetti by my own knowledge and skills of cooking. :-) I only follow the steps and procedures written at the back of the pasta plastic and that's it.. :-)

Most popular and favorite dish of bisaya! :-)




HUMBA SA MGA BISAYA! :-)

I just want to know the recipes and ingredients of this kind of dish, then try cooking this at home so that my mama will not be mad whenever I want it. Try it also! :-)

 
  
Humba is a Bisayá recipe (Bisayá refers to the people residing in the Visayan Islands as well as on most parts of Mindanao) and is a common dish found on the table during special occasions in the Bisayan household and during town fiestas in the southern parts of the Philippines. Ask any Bisayá for his top favorite food and most often than not humba would be one of the things he will mention. In fact, this is my favorite Filipino dish and would recommend this dish to anyone who would wish to have a taste of authentic comfort food for the Bisayá.



Just like in adobo, humba was made due to the need to preserve the meat for future use. By cooking the meat as humba the meat could last for several days without spoiling due to the vinegar present and especially if it is immersed in oil. There are some versions why this dish is called humba, some would say that it is from the phrase “HUmot nga BAboy” with the first two letters of the first and the last words joined together. Humot is a word in the Bisayan dialect which could be roughly translated to mean “sweet smelling”, “fragrant”, or “with delicious smell”. Baboy, on the other hand, is Filipino for pork or for a pig (it could be interchangeable depending on the usage).




If you want to try cooking humba eat it with some hardboiled egg. It is surprisingly a very tasty food combination, with the richness of the humba mixing well with the mild flavor of the egg.




There are several variations of this dish present out there, but I will provide you with the most common recipe being followed by the Bisayá. This may take some time in cooking for it is best to properly tenderize the meat in slow fire for better flavor.




Ingredients


1 kilo pork belly or the leg part of the pig, cut in cubes
2 tablespoon garlic, crushed
2 small onion; chopped
2/3 cup vinegar
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup sugar or brown sugar (most Bisayá now use Sprite or Coca Cola instead of sugar)
6 bay leaves

7 star anise
1 cup of rice water (if you do not have rice water, good old water would do)
2/4 tablespoon ground black pepper

50 g dried banana blossoms (optional)
½ cup of salted black beans (you could get this in cans and it is best to drain most of the sauce/juice present in the can and only use about 2-4 tablespoons worth of the sauce/juice)
Cooking oil

Salt (add this based on your taste)



Instructions


Separate the meat that contains huge chunks of fat from those that are pure meat. Put on your pan the pork meat that has fat in it and add a small dash of water. Do this till the fat is already reduced to oil and till the meat is brown. Stir every now and then to avoid burning the meat. This is done to reduce the fats in your pork and you can use the pork’s own oil for cooking.



Boil the rest of the pork in 1 cup rice water in a separate pan (put in rice water that will submerge the pork by about ¾ so if the 1 cup is not enough add some more); add 1 table spoon of salt. Do this until meat is tender and the water is properly reduced.




Saute garlic and onion using the pork fat oil until it is brown. Add all the pork together in the pan with the oil. Stir fry for few minutes until pork is slightly brown. If by this time there is too much oil already in the pan, you could remove some of the oil.




Add the water remaining that was used in boiling the pork (see above instruction). Add ½ cup soy sauce, the brown sugar, the bay leaves, the ground black pepper, and the black beans with its sauce. Then bring to a boil until most of the liquid has evaporated.




Add vinegar but do not stir. Add the dried banana blossom. Boil for few minutes (2-3 minutes). Simmer until a saucy consistency is achieved. Taste it to make sure that it is more sweet than vinegary. If it is too sour, add more sugar until the desired taste is achieved. Adjust seasoning and soy sauce according to taste.




credits to : http://petrosabsalon.wordpress.com/2012/02/28/original-bisaya-recipe-for-humba/