Carrot, Spinach, and Raisin Fried Rice

For some reason I got inspired to make a bento-esque lunch today.
Using some old rice, I made the below lunch:

  • flax seeds
  • raisins
  • carrots
  • spinach
  • soy sauce

Sides were: grapes and baybel light star cheese, pumpkin toast, and white pear tea.

The grapes were really fresh, they tasted like juice! The raisins you might think wouldn’t go with this savory rice, but I had remembered making an egg omelet in Japan with raisins (and peppers) in it and it was mighty delicious.

Sorry for the not so great quality pictures. My camera broke at the end of 2007 (button went missing) and I got a $20 IXY camera from eBay that never ever has enough battery for me to actually change the settings around on it to take a decent picture.

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Cute Eggs

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Just thought I’d share some recent breakfasts.

I used the silicone egg rings to make the star and heart shapes.

The first one I made (star), I accidentally cracked the yolk when I cracked the egg. I also didn’t grease the silicone, so I had to use a knife to go around the edges. Once most (2/3rd) of the edges were ‘cut’, I was able to just bend the silicone star to pop the egg out.

The heart egg was my first successful sunny-side up egg! I put it in the pan and put a lid on it. I left it on low for about 5-10 minutes (I totally forget), and the egg had a slight film over it and hard yolk. I dabbed some oil on the ring (via a paper napkin) and the ring popped the egg out super clean!

I’ll experiment later with more runny yolks — I also want to try and make some poached eggs! For bonus round, I’m going to teach danny how to make hard-boiled eggs in the rice cooker (with rice!)!

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Mint Chutney

Danny and I just made this super easy recipe for mint chutney! I’ve never had it, but he loves it so he asked his Indian co-worker for the recipe.

We worked with the recipe we got, but upon tasting I’ve modified the amounts to what would taste better. (Ours wasn’t that thick and was too spicy. We also want to double the recipe, so all amounts for greens shown below are half what they should be)

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  • 1 6oz carton plain yogurt
  • 2 packets of mint (bushels)
  • 24 stems cilantro
  • 1-2 serrano peppers
  • 1/2 a lemon’s juice
  • 2 pinches of salt
  • 1 tsp. cumin powder

Blend everything in blender! Keeps in the fridge for a few weeks.

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Chinese Sausage (臘腸)

So I finally got my hands on some Chinese sausage (臘腸, lop chung as we call it in Cantonese. I’m not going to go into the romanization variations). I bought it via Great Wall Supermarket at Gallows road. Lets just say that while the Chinese-ness was comforting, I like judgmental Koreans better than judgmental Chinese. At least the Korean marts have some Chinese stuff–the Chinese mart was all Chinese. Chinese signs, Chinese foods, Chinese labels — no regard for English translation here. I didn’t know the names, let alone the ingredients, of things I was looking at. I had to rely on my dusty dusty 漢字 character reading skills to get me to the right area. I also had made the mistake of visiting on a weekend. The place was packed, not to mention smelly and dirty, and not in a nice, comforting, homely way (I’m blanking on relevant examples here…). I also was looked at in a “what the heck–white girl. you’re lost” way every second I was in there. Never thought I’d want to go back to Grand Mart, Super/Non-Super H, or Lotte, but it’s true.

I thought there’d be three or four kinds of sausage there, but the whole top row of the refrigerated meats section was sausage. Lets just say… overwhelmed. I bought the kind that actually had some semblance of English on it, and I think I chose wrong. The only kind I’ve ever had was a mixture of Chinese/Portuguese sausage, and we got it from the local butcher on Maui. Let’s just say I’ll never eat this again, never go here again, and I’m never venturing in the Chinese sausage realm again without my dad or other relatives from his side of the family.

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Originally, I wanted to make a Chinese sausage breakfast rice patty type meal with furikake’d rice, some sausages on top and a sunny-side up egg (or in my case, over-easy). But, I researched cooking the sausage online and people recommended cooking the sausage in the rice cooker at the same time as the rice. this resulted in both undercooked rice and sausage (or maybe just weird looking) that were then re-cooked and re-cooked again. The sausage was kinda grey-ish and I then decided to take the casing off (the casing wasn’t even cut on some of them!), cut into slices and stir-fry to try and salvage this. I knew it wasn’t going to taste good — it smelled off. I don’t know why, but it did.

I mixed the sausage slices, some onion, enoki mushrooms, napa, flax seed, and spices (rooster sauce, soy sauce, pepper, sugar), but there was no hope. I added some dried shrimp furikake to the rice, but not too much because the furikake was a tad old and let’s just say…’ripe’ (I tossed it out after this). The rice tasted okay, but I’m the type of person that likes plain rice. The sausage… I ate a few pieces but it got to a point where I started chewing one and then I just spit it out. After that, I was done. I made a bowl of cereal and called it a night.

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The Wisdom of Sai Min

So, yesterday I decided to research “Sai Min” (saimin/saimen/saimian), one of my favorite dishes that combines the best things in the world in one bowl of happiness and yumminess. I’ve had it at the hands of my island-famous great-grandfather (who used to own a store/restaurant in Hawai’i, and would cut the noodles by hand).

I thought it was a Cantonese dish, but after much research, I have found that it is unique to the islands! No wonder everyone I talked to about it had no clue what I was saying. Now of course, my family’s Sai Min (famous, let me remind you) is the Chinese version, with no spam, sausages, eggs, or fish cakes like the Filipino/Japanese/Portuguese versions. This has led me to realize that I’m not ethnically or culturally Chinese at all – my family is Hawai’ian, and any Chinese parts of us came as a result of being Hawai’ian, and got mixed up with the Japanese and Filipino aspects that also worked their ways in there. In fact—even our Chinese New Years dinners have Guava Chiffon Pie and Lau Lau sometimes.

Sai Min Noodles

Recipe and pictures under the cut. Continue reading