Hands of Justice

The Lounge => The Dog & Duck => Topic started by: Warcold on February 08, 2009, 11:19:26 AM

Title: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on February 08, 2009, 11:19:26 AM
As promised to Bethor some months ago and to Beo last week, here is the recipe for Rendang, an Indonesian meatdish, which is my favorite food   :)
Translating to English will be a bit hard, but I'll do my best.

- 2kg of beef meat (chopped to about 1 inch blocks, mebbe wee bit smaller). Hard to find the exact translation, but I use two kinds of rib meat, the one with a streak of fat through the middle (http://www.degroenewegassen.nl/UserUpload/producten/groot_64.jpg (http://www.degroenewegassen.nl/UserUpload/producten/groot_64.jpg)) and the rougher, cheaper one (http://www.degroenewegassen.nl/UserUpload/producten/groot_60.jpg (http://www.degroenewegassen.nl/UserUpload/producten/groot_60.jpg)). About 1:1 ratio. Dictionary calls them simmer steak and stewing steak, but dont know if that is what it really is called. (For Bethor: riblappen & sucadelappen)
- 2 or 3 cans of coconut milk (or 1 block of cocostuff (santen it's called here) in 1 litre of water)
- sunflower oil
- 3 lemon leaves (djoeroek poeroet)
- 3 leaves of indonesion laurel - salam leaves they are called here, guess other laurel could be used too, but use these if you can get em
- 1 beef cube (Oxo cube, acc. to dictionary?)

the spicy bit (boemboe):
- 3 shallots (cut)
- 3 cloves of garlic (cut)
- 1.5 teaspoon of djahé (ginger root powder)
- 1.5 tsp. of laos powder (Galangal)
- 1 tsp. of  koenjit (Ground Tumeric Powder)
- 2 tsp. of sereh (lemon grass powder)
- 3 full tsp. of kemiri nut paste
- 2 full tsp. of green rawit sambal (or sambal oelek (ulek) if you cant get the first), add more to accomodate your freakish english/indian taste for lots of spice, this is how I like it
- 2 tsp of salt
-> stir around till its homogeneous-ish


put bit of oil in braising pan, and add the meat, stir till most is brownish on the outside, i never get everything, but most is ok
add cocomilk till nearly meat is submerged and put on medium heat till it's cooking
then add the spicy bit, the beef block and the leaves give it another stir or two

now most of the work is done, and waiting game has begun, put on a very low fire, so it barely boils (should bubble a bit though) and give it a stir every hour or so
you could add a bit of extra cocomilk if you think its needed, but i rarely do that, also because that will cause the sauce to be too thin to my taste.
think i let it simmer about 6 hours or so, usually the meat starts falling apart when i think it's done.

yummy!!!
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Mangala on February 08, 2009, 11:42:18 AM
Sounds brilliant.

Thank you thank you thank you!
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on February 08, 2009, 11:47:25 AM
edited 2nd picture, was accidentally the same as fist one

oh, and btw, i use rather large teaspoons, so mebbe amounts mentioned are a bit low...
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Caradir on February 08, 2009, 11:58:43 AM
from the pictures its loks like sirloin steak and stewing steak

sounds lovely may have to give this a go ;)
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Bethor on February 23, 2009, 11:59:11 AM
thanks.. trying it this week :D

lets hope this gets the meat more tender than i usually get it.
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Caradir on February 23, 2009, 03:35:16 PM
to get meat more tender COOK IT FOR LONGER ;) simple as that matey
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Bethor on February 24, 2009, 12:04:36 PM
would have though 4 hrs was enough, so doubt that is the problem.
I sooner suspect it is the type of meat i used.
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on February 24, 2009, 12:08:00 PM
nope, 4 hours isnt enough, sometimes 5 hrs isnt even enough, so go for 5-6 hours, really!
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 21, 2010, 12:04:11 PM
picked this topic out of the freezer as gf and I picked up the cooking of non-regular dishes again
the last weeks saw us eating some yummy sweet tarts and some nice dinners, just now I made curry paste from scratch in preparation for a curry that we'll eat tonight
below recipe is planned for the coming week (have to admit I haven't tried it yet so far  :-[)
but ofc the resurrection of this thread is also an incentive for Mang to finally spill his other recipes he picked up in asia  ;)

So - recipe 1 is for a dish called Rhad Na/Lad Na/Rad Na/Lard nar (lot of names all mean same really)  Its basically noodles in gravy.

Transcribed from my very badly written short hand.

Chinese broccoli or broccoli, leaves separated from stalks and chopped (you can use both the stalks and leaves/heads)

2-3 TB thick black soy sauce
2 TB corn starch
1 TB salty soy beans
1/2 lb Chicken, Pork, Fried Gluten or Fried Tofu, chopped into small even pieces
Prik Nam Som (small green and red chilies chopped with garlic in vinegar)
Sen Mee Noodles - (thin dried vermicelli rice noodles) 3/4 of a package
Ground white pepper
sugar
Soy Sauce/Nam Plaa (Fish Sauce)
2 cups Water or Chicken Broth
1-2 cloves garlic, minced
vegetable oil
Directions:

Soak noodles in warm water for one hour (only if using dried noodles!), then stir-fry in hot vegetable oil in a large wok (preferably nonstick) with about 1 TB of the thick soy sauce, until sauce is evenly distributed and noodles are a medium brown color. Stir continuously and briskly while cooking to prevent sticking. Set aside.

In a separate large skillet or wok, sautee the garlic in 1-2 TB vegetable oil. Add your meat/gluten/tofu, then broccoli stalks, then the water or broth, then 1 TB black soy sauce, 1/2 TB salted soy beans, 1 TB soy sauce or fish sauce (or 1/2 TB of each) and if desired, 1/2 TB oyster sauce.

Dissolve 2 TB cornstarch in warm water, stirring well, then add to wok. Mix well. Add white pepper and a dash of sugar.

Add broccoli leaves and mix until sauce becomes thick. Serve the gravy mixture over the noodles, and serve with the "prik nam som" (vinegar chili peppers) and white pepper.
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Mangala on August 21, 2010, 12:05:20 PM
:blushes:

Shall get them up and done by end of the weekend.
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 21, 2010, 12:15:39 PM
heheh, no worries matey :)

I also decided to write down a few more of my favorite Indonesion recipes:

Frikadel (The Indonesian cooks' interpretation of a Dutch snack (frikandel) that they were asked to make by their Dutch 'masters' back in the colonial days)
500 g of minced beef
3 chopped shallots
3 cloves of garlic, chopped or pressed
celery leaves, chopped
3 tsp of djinten (cumin powder)
6 tsp of ketoembar (coriander seed powder)
some salt
2 cooked potatoes in little pieces

knead everything together and make small burgers of about 3cm diameter, fry in sunflower oil (or other oil without too much taste of itself)
this really is a snack and goes pretty well with lager (I can say that from experience  ;))

Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 21, 2010, 03:56:22 PM
Sambal Goreng
+/- 300g of vegetables (e.g. french beans, conical cabbage, Brussels sprouts, etc)
strips of bacon
2 onions, chopped
1-2 eggs
clove of garlic, chopped
1/2 tsp laos (galangal powder)
ketjap manis (Indonesian sweet soy sauce)
trassi (prawnpaste)

Fry the onion, garlic, trassi and bacon and put the laos powder with it. When this is about cooked right, add the vegetables (you might want to cook these for a short while before adding them (without salt!)) and stir regularly. When the veggies are done (have them have a bite still, no sloppy stuff  :)) add the (raw) eggs and stir till they are set. Then pour quite some ketjap manis over it (100-150 ml I guess), and let it simmer a bit more over a small fire. Serve with rice or nasi goreng (baked rice).

As a vegetarian alternative for the trassi and bacon, I usually chafe some santen (solid cocopaste) over the dish which adds a nice flavour.
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 21, 2010, 04:53:00 PM
Babi Ketjap
1 shallot, chopped
1 clove of garlic, pressed
500-750g pork steak
2-3 slices of bacon (that's about 400g of this (http://www.vleesbestelling.nl/shop/images/T/varken_27-speklap.jpg))
nutmeg
sunflower oil
ketjap manis

Cut the meat in ~2 cm pieces, put some nutmeg over it. Put meat, shallot and garlic in a hot pan with another touch of nutmeg over it. Dont overdo the nutmeg. When the meat is ok on the outside go easier on the heat and add ketjap manis till it's about halfway the level of the meat (so quite a lot). Simmer for about an hour, add ketjap in the process if needed.

Quite a rich meat dish that obviously needs other dishes as support. It's quite yummy though :)
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Caradir on August 21, 2010, 10:09:56 PM
some yummy sweet tarts we'll eat tonight


my type of fun
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Caradir on August 21, 2010, 10:19:56 PM
and hers my reci[pe for a sundfay special

take a smuch wine, beer and spirits as you rbody allows.

mix with siome lovely food

marinade sans stomach overnight

et voila

a nice chocco pud for sunday enjoyment
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 22, 2010, 01:04:39 PM
love you + alcohol  :D

 :-*
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Mangala on August 23, 2010, 06:01:23 PM
Yes I use lb's and ounces, but you can always convert :D


Uli Petataws (Sweet Potato Fritters)
Ingredients (makes 6)

1lb sweet potatoes
½ cup grated coconut
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon salt
2 Tablespoons brown sugar

How to (god I miss these after a mornings trekking)

Scrub sweet potatoes, place them in a large saucepan. Cover with water and boil until soft (about 20 to 30 minutes). Drain and allow to cool. When cool enough to handle, peel and mash the potatoes in a mixing bowl. Add in coconut, vanilla, and salt and mix thoroughly. Preheat oven to 450°F. Shape about a 3rd of a cup of the potato mixture into a round pancake, put 1 teaspoon of brown sugar in the center, and roll the pancake into a cylinder about 3 inches long and 1 inch in diameter. Repeat the procedure with the remaining sweet potato mixture and brown sugar. On a lightly oiled baking sheet, bake them for 15 minutes. Serve warm with coffee or tea.

Bahasa foods like this rock - found in indonesia and malaysia.  Good for me as theres a neat little stand in Tanah Rata that does these and after some trekking one of these with a hot sugary tea is brilliant.

Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: peo on August 24, 2010, 07:24:53 AM
Cup?? is that A? B? C? or perhaps DD?
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 24, 2010, 07:57:28 AM
hmm, cup is 237 ml (= 1/2 pint = 8 fluid ounces = 16 tablespoons = 48 teaspoons), so that must be about A, I guess? (if not manboob)
and ofc, 16 ounces = 1 pound ~ 454 gram

(mostly for my own reference, as these I keep losing track of those odd UK measures, I mean... what's the logic about the 16:1 thing, where inches etc. go 12:1? (and I can understand 12:1 as you can count to 12 (and 144) on your fingers, but 16???))
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: peo on August 24, 2010, 09:48:18 AM
hmm, cup is 237 ml (= 1/2 pint = 8 fluid ounces = 16 tablespoons = 48 teaspoons), so that must be about A, I guess? (if not manboob)
and ofc, 16 ounces = 1 pound ~ 454 gram

(mostly for my own reference, as these I keep losing track of those odd UK measures, I mean... what's the logic about the 16:1 thing, where inches etc. go 12:1? (and I can understand 12:1 as you can count to 12 (and 144) on your fingers, but 16???))


Why no bushels or furlongs?? (whatever those are :P)
Title: Re: Recipes
Post by: Warcold on August 24, 2010, 06:00:24 PM
Sateh
- oil
- 1/2-1 onion, chopped
- 1-2 cloves of garlic, chopped
- 1-1 1/2 tsp of sambal (ulek, trassi, w.e.)
- 2 full tbs of peanutbutter
- 1-2 tsp of ketoembar (ground coriander seed)
- 1-2 tsp of djinten (cumin powder)
- ketjap manis
- water
- santen

rough recipe as I always just throw stuff together, making it taste different each time
fry onions, garlic and sambal in some oil till onion is soft, put heat to a minimum and add peanutbutter and a dash of ketjap, stir till it gets soft, add some water if needed, stir more
add spices and some santen (I just scrape some of the block, but let's say about half a tablespoon of grating, rather more than less), add more water, stir more
stir a last time, done

add as much water to give it the consistency of a nice thick sauce. if you added too much, just let it heat a bit more
terrific sauce to go with all sorts of snacks, but also with fries, BBQ, bread, rice-veggie-dishes and whatnot.

quite popular in holland, although most buy ready made in supermarket

the above amount is about what i make for the two of us when we eat rice-veggie