Featured Recipe
Whey Honey Baton adapted from Dan Lepard
Thursday, July 23, 2009I was pleased and honoured when Natasha, author of 5 Star Foodie, one of the most popular and well-respected food blogs, invited me to contribute a guest post on her blog while she is on a vacation. Natasha is a professional web developer from Northern Virginia, with a passion for fine food. She has always enjoyed the creative process of inventing something new and different in the kitchen. More recently, 5 Star Foodie aka Natasha has begun an adventure, exploring the cuisine available in some of the best restaurants in the United States and around the world. The more innovative the food, the more Natasha is inspired to innovate at home for her two most appreciative "customers" - her husband and her daughter. Check out her restaurant reviews and recipes at 5 Star Foodie.
Whey is the liquid remaining after milk has been curdled and strained. Whey is quite simple to make. Fill a bowl or wide-mouthed jar with fresh, unpasteurized milk. Cover tightly and let sit at room temperature until it curdles and separates. This may take 3-4 days. Strain through cheesecloth, catching the liquid in a bowl. This is whey-- it is a by-product of the manufacture of cheese. It will keep in the fridge for up to six months. For a quicker whey, whip Fromage frais or Quark into unpasteurized milk and leave them overnight to sour.
Whey | Dough |
---|---|
|
|
- Whisk together the quark and milk in a medium bowl. Set aside in a counter at room temperature overnight. The following day, gently warm the sour milk so that curds form. Strain the sour milk for a few of hours through a sieve lined with cheese cloth set over a pot. The strained curds can either be seasoned with sugar (salt if preferred) and used as a spread, or to make a cheesecake.
- To make a dough, whisk the yeast with whey and honey. Stir in half flour and salt to make a yeast batter. Leave the batter, covered, in a warm place for 30 minutes. Rub the butter into the remaining half flour, until it is evenly incorporated and the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.
- Stir the yeast batter into the butter-flour mixture. Combine together until a soft dough forms. Cover the bowl and leave for 10 minutes. Rub the work-surface with 1 teaspoon of olive oil and knead the dough for 10 seconds, ending with the dough in a smooth, round ball. Wipe the bowl clean and rub with 1 teaspoon of olive oil, return the dough to it, cover and leave for 10 minutes. Repeat the light kneading twice more, at 10-minute intervals, then leave the dough for 30 minutes until it has become soft and elastic.
- Shape the dough into a baton (or a ball)place it smooth-side down into a flour-dusted cloth. Leave it for about 1 hour at room temperature. Preheat the oven to 210C/410F. Upturn the dough on to a flour-dusted baking tray. Make a few of slashes over the top and bake the bread in the center of the oven for about 40 minutes or until the loaf is a good brown colour. Cool on a wire rack.
Stir-fried Shredded Chicken with Beansprouts and Goji Berries
Tuesday, July 21, 2009Beansprouts are a distinctively oriental vegetable, they don't have a long shelf life and usually consumed within a couple of days after cultivation or of purchase. To clean bean sprouts, drop into a basin of clear water, lift handful of bean sprouts out of the water and place in a colander, leaving behind the bean cases and broken off roots. Do not soak bean sprouts because they will exude water when cooked.
|
|
- Wash and drain bean sprouts. Rinse the goji berries, drain and set aside. Thinly slice the chicken breast. Add in cornstarch and egg white. Mix well.
- Heat some oil over high heat. When it begins to bubble, drop in shredded chicken and stir to separate. Remove when they turn white. Leave 1 tablespoon of oil in the pan and remove the rest.
- Add in bean sprouts and goji berries, stirring briefly, add salt, vinegar chicken bouillon and shredded spring onion, stir for a couple of minutes. Return the shredded chicken to the pan, stir to mix well. Drizzle in the sesame oil, stirring briefly, and transfer to a serving plate.
Diced Chicken Southeast Asian Style
Saturday, July 18, 2009The distinctive taste of southeastern Asian cooking comes from the merging of all five of the palatable tastes; sour, salty, sweet, spicy and bitter.
Southeast Asian region, countries like Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, and Filipino islands are a melting pot of flavors and plenty of exotic ingredients, like coconut milk, Thai basil, fish sauce, chillies. The region stretches east from India and Bangladesh to the southern border of China, encompassing the mainland countries of Burma, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and the island countries of Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines.
Angie
Angie's Recipes is an interactive blog dedicated to sharing yummy & creative recipes, helpful cooking hints and tips. Enjoy your visit and spread the word!
If you enjoy my recipes and want to support me, THANKS!
Friends
Recipes Archive
+/- Food Sources
+/- Blog Fever
- Whats Cooking
- Weight Watchers Recipes
- Uncovering Food
- The Witchy Kitchen
- Thai Healthy Foods
- Taste Hong Kong
- Spreadable Ideas
- Spicy Tasty
- SP Cookie Queen
- Soup Belly
- Simply Trini Cooking
- Saving Room 4 Dessert
- Sankeerthanam
- Rose Tea Cottage
- Pigpigs Corner
- Patty's Food
- No-Frills Recipes
- Natural Selection
- Nasi Lemak Lover
- My Mothers Apron Strings
- My Carolina Kitchen
- Kopiaste
- Kitchen Flavours
- Just Making Noise
- Honey Bee Sweets
- Happy Home Baking
- Grace Kitchen Corner
- Gourmet Traveller 88
- Fuss Free Recipes
- Foodie Kitchen
- Foodblogger Network
- Foodalution
- Food Wine Fun
- Food For A Hungry Soul
- Food and Style
- Food 4 Tots
- Felice Kitchen
- Donuts To Delirium
- Cooking and Capturing
- Come Have A Bite
- Cinnamon Spice N Everything Nice
- Chow N Chatter
- Canela Kitchen
- Baking Dairy
- Bake Away With Me
- Art and Appetite
- Anncoo Journal
- All About Cakes
- 6 Bittersweets
- 5 Star Foodie
+/- Blog How-tos
© Angie's Recipe 2007-2020 | Datenschutzerklärung | Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest | RSS Feed | Instagram |
"Cellar Heat" Brought to you by EvanEckard.com and Smashing Magazine. Blogspot Magazine by MagzNetwork.