Sunday, July 31, 2011

Weekend Brekkie - Biscuits on a Sunday Morning


Nothing like something fresh out of the oven on a weekend morning. And so quick and easy it is to make too. So quick and easy in fact that I pulled out my cookie cutter and cut out star shapes, just for the fun of it.

I used Dorie Greenspan's basic biscuit recipe, which was super easy and I had everything in my fridge/pantry - fine flour, butter, full milk, baking powder and sugar. Hot, buttery, flaky, we ate these topped with a dark spiced syrup - with cups of freshly brewed South Indian coffee - weekend perfection.

Shortbread & Peanut Butter Crust Lime Tarts



Someone gave us a box of handmade, all-butter Scottish shortbread which unfortunately has gone uneaten. AK and I are not really fans of shortbread, which we find rather bland and slightly too rich for our humbles palates. I also happened to have a pack of roasted peanuts. So I decided to try something out. I whizzed the shortbread and shelled nuts in the processor, added a bit of melted butter and pressed it into tart cases. I baked the cases in the oven at 160 deg C for 15 minutes, and voila, peanut-buttery tart casings.


For the filling, I knew I wanted to make a tart, creamy lime version ala key lime pie. I pored through Dorie Greenspan's Baking: My Home to Yours and Martha Stewart's Baking Handbook, both of which called for condensed milk in their pie filling recipes. I have made desserts with condensed milk before, and really dislike the sickly-sweet, sticky aftertaste, which I find overwhelming. So instead I reduced a cup of milk and a couple of tablespoons of sugar and added this to some beaten egg yolks. I reduced the custard to a thick consistency, and then stirred in the lime juice. I then reduced that further to a thick, spatula-coating mixture before straining the mixture into the tart cases and then baking the whole lot again at a very low heat.


The result? Exactly as I wanted - creamy, tart lime filling juxtaposed against a rich, crunchy peanut-flecked, peanutty crust.


For the crust:

1 1/2 cups shortbread cookies
1/2 cup roasted peanuts
3 tbsps melted butter, cooled

For the filling:

1 cup whole milk
5 tbsps granulated sugar
1/2 cup lime juice
3 large egg yolks

To make the crust, whiz the cookies and peanuts in the food processor. I found that the peanuts started forming peanut butter very fast (another experiment for another time), so pause and stir in between whizzes. Add the melted butter, whiz to mix then press the mixture into 6 tart casings. Bake at 160 deg C for 15 minutes. Cool slightly then pop them in the fridge while you get started on the filling.

For the filling, place the milk in a thick-bottomed saucepan with the sugar and reduce over a low heat until the mixture is about half its volume. Whisk the egg yolks then slowly add the hot milk mixture, whisking all the time. Return the mixture to the pan and add the lime juice, stirring all the time. Reduce the mixture until it thickly coats the back of spoon. Strain the mixture into the tart casings. Bake at 150 deg C for half an hour, or until the custard mixture is firm.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Memento



New look for our living room wall.






Lives of Rajput warriors depicted on this hand-printed piece from Jaipur.







Hand-blown sea-green glass lotus-shaped dish and a solid glass soapdish from Bali (love love love). The soapdish reminds me of a block of ice. White fibreglass vase AK got me from Taiwan that we now use to hold a fat orange-scented candle. Background: carved wooden elephant, also from India. Tower of London collage made of old clock parts, that AK got from, well, London.






One of my favourite pieces (actually,I love them all :)) - this Taj Mahal inspired marble piece inlayed with enamel (I think). While the Taj walls are decorated in vivid garnets, topazes and lapis lazulis, this piece is inlayed with softest pinks and blues.

Dash of colour


I love cushion covers! Turquoise embroidered one from British India - one of my favourite patterns ever. I almost shelled out 500 bucks for the same pattern on a pouf at BI, but was halted by the challenge of having to lug it on a plane.

Hot pink beaded silk cover from the City Palace Atelier in Jaipur (I love saying that - Palace Atelier - makes me feel all haute and rich) - the most money I have spent on a piece of cloth, barring my clothes. The fabric is luxuriously smooth and the sumptuous embroidery - it was some superb craftsmanship that went into its pattern with all its gold, silver thread and glass beads. A piece of old Indian royalty in my home :)

In the back, another piece from India, the Jaipur crafts center also at the City Palace. This one is rustic and country-like - handpainted on natural organic cotton. The comfiest one naturally - we take naps on the sofa with this one.

Weekend Brekkie - The Fry-up


A healthier, home made breakfast fry-up.
Pork "sausage" patties, inspired by Gwyneth Paltrow's homemade turkey sausage patties in her book. Ground pork (I used about 200 grammes of loin with a little bit of fat thrown in), coriander seeds, fennel seeds (half a teaspoon each of seeds, ground with a pestle and mortar), sea salt, black pepper, cayenne. Added a tablespoon of egg white, instant oats for binding. Pan-fry.
Served with a fried egg, yolk still runny for AK and solid, overcooked for me :), roasted oyster mushrooms (olive oil, sea salt, Maggie seasoning). Sprinkle with chopped green tops of spring onions.

In anticipation of travel

Things I am looking forward to:
1) Shopping + eating + spa-ing - girlie vacay in BKK
2) Shopping + eating + sightings + socializing (civilisation here I come!!!!!!!!!!!!) in KL
- How deprived are we???
3) Ultimate holiday this year - haven't even left yet and I'm already sweating bullets over the money we shelled out for our stays in Seville and Venice - October. I have been dreaming of this since...I dont know when. Feverishly frequenting TripAdvisor (lifesaver btw when it comes to planning vacations - don't know what I'd do without it) Reading Venezia, this blog, and Andalusia: Art and Architechture - all books that I already have anyway. Like I said - I have been dreaming of going since a looooong time.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Sun, Sand and Work



Shots of Nexus Karambunai, a massive "integrated" resort in Kota Kinabalu.

Truth be told, I didn't really enjoy the trip (I was there for work, meeting with other O & G company reps) and was longing to come back home. The food was mediocre, the place was too far away from basic amenities and shuttle services cost a bomb, the service was insipid and my room, other than being musty-smelling and in need of a stained-carpet changeout, had its electricity got cut off a couple of times at night.

I could not, however, fault its flawless stretch of white-sanded beach, or its spectacular sunsets.