Showing posts with label restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restaurant. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

Cone Bread with Custard Filling Recipe (Bánh Mì Ốc Quế Nhân Kem)

Cone Bread with Custard Filling (Bánh Mì Ốc Quế Nhâm Kem) is one of my favorite dishes when I was a child. My mom and aunts usually made them in weekends. This dish comes from many delicious Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes. I bet if you have kids, they will totally fall in love like me if they have a chance to taste. Today, I want to make it for my mom. If you guys want to cook with me, do not miss this recipe.

When you are ready, please follow our instructions below and let us start making one of stunningVietnamese Sandwich Recipes. You will not regret with this decision when you follow carefully step by step with us.

Ingredients:

500g wheat flour
200ml fresh milk (no sugar)
2 eggs
1 teaspoon salt
100g white sugar
50g butter
1 ½ teaspoons yeast bread
For Fillings: 350ml fresh milk (no sugar), 3 eggs, 70g white sugar, ¼ bowl tapioca starch or wheat flour, ½ teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon vanilla
Pattern for making cone bread or aluminum papers.

Process:

Step 1: Making filling: Stir eggs gently in 15 – 20 minutes. Next, add tapioca starch into bowl and mix well until they combine together.

Step 2: Pour fresh milk + sugar into pot, bring to cook until sugar is melted.

Step 3: Pour the hot mixture milk into mixture eggs in step 1, stir gently and nonstop to make sure eggs will not be cooked. Then, bring this mixture to cook again in small heat. Do not stop stirring when cooking. When mixture becomes thick and boil, turn off the heat. Wait to get cold and add vanilla starch into pot. Here is also the important step to create a delicious filling for one of stunning Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes.

Step 4: Pour mixture egg in step 3 into nylon bag like photo below and put in fridge (on vegetable drawer).

Step 5: For cover: If you do not have cone pattern, you can use aluminum paper instead. Cut these papers into square shapes (25 * 25cm). Next, fold into triangle shapes and use your hand to create a cone.

Step 6: Cook fresh milk until it reaches 60 degree. Pour slowly yeast bread into this mixture. Wait in 5 minutes to blow.


Step 7: Mix well all dried ingredients for making bread: wheat flour, salt, sugar.


Step 8: Pierce a hole on the center of mixture flour and add more eggs and mixture yeast in step 6. Use your hands to stuff well. Stuff until it is soft and smooth. Add slowly sliced butter and stuff more 2 minutes.


Step 9: Cover carefully this mixture by nylon bag and wait in 1 – 2 hours. Next, separate into small balls equally. Then, use nylon bag and cover each ball again, wait more 5 minutes.

Step 10: Use hands to roll them into long pieces.


Step 11: Roll gently each long piece around aluminum paper corn shape from top to bottom. Put on grilling tray. Cover carefully in 15 minutes before bring to grill.

Step 12: Stir well 1 egg with 1 tablespoon water.


Step 13: Use small brush to spread mixture egg on face of breads.


Step 14: Bring to grill at 180 degree in 10 – 20 minutes. When their faces turn brown yellow, bring it out the grilling stove. Wait to get cold, pull the aluminum paper out and add filling into breads.


Finally, you finished one of amazing Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes for your beloved family. Even this dish requires many steps for making, but you will not regret when you can create a stunning dish for family and friends. You can use for breakfast with a glass of milk. It will bring many energy to start new day. Hope you love it and Good Luck for your Cooking.



Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Fried Chicken with Bread Recipe (Bánh Mì Gà)

Instead of using normal breakfast meals, you can eat Fried Chicken with Bread (Bánh Mì Gà). It can make your day better. Today, I will introduce one of amazing Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes to you. Enjoy this dish with hot milk coffee will create a stunning flavor in your mouth. Breakfast is always the most important meal for whole day. Make sure you will not skip it, always take care health for youself and your own family.
It is quite simple for cooking. If you want to change your bring daily breakfast meals, please follow our instructions below carefully to create one of stunning Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes. So, let us cook now.

Ingredients:

300 – 400gr Chicken Meat
Mayonnaise Sauce
Chili Sauce/Soya Sauce (Depend on your flavor)
Vietnamese Bread.


Coriander, Scallion.
Spices: Salt, sugar, dish sauce, pepper, vegetable oil.

Process:

Step 1: Clean chicken meat 2 – 3 times. Bring to boil with hot water about 15 – 20 minutes. Next, wait to cold, and tear into small pieces.


Step 2: Put pan on cooking stove, add oil and wait to hot. Next, add chicken + 1 teaspoon  salt + 1 teaspoon sugar + 1 teaspoon fish sauce + a little pepper and fry about 5 minutes. Taste again to season again to suit your flavor. Turn off the heat.

Step 3: Clean coriander + scallion, slice small. The reason why all Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes become famous around the workd is here.

Step 4: Split bread across body, spread a little mayonnaise on 2 faces. Next, add more fried chicken + sliced coriander + scallion + chili sauce/soya sauce.

Now, your dish is ready to serve. If you love cucumber, you can add more sliced cucumber before eating. I bet your kids will love it a lot. It contains enough energy for half day. You can make it and bring to school or work as well. So convenient, right? Hope you like this dish and do not miss our other Vietnamese Sandwich Recipes next time. Good Luck for your Cooking.










Monday, May 4, 2015

Pho – Vietnamese Beef Noodle Soup

There is a grace that permeates through every nook and cranny of my home when this pot is brewing in the kitchen. It is the thing that gives my body a sense of safety and nurture. It is the meal that I call home, and whenever I catch a whiff of the precious spices simmering along with the marrow bones, my neck instantly arches up and my nose points up into the air. “Yes, a fresh pot is brewing”. An engaged and knowing smile crosses my heart and I know I must give in to the temptation to what Vietnamese call Phở.
There must be some magical formula that causes the hard-working people of Vietnam to participate in the ritual of eating this morning, noon and night. It is too good to save for one time of the day, and if your cravings dictate when you eat, you too may find yourself huddling at a table, slurping away at the smooth as silk rice noodles first thing in the morning with your family.
There is also the never ending search for the ultimate broth. No matter how unapologetically perfect one’s broth has become… it could be better. Every chef or cook of a pho noodle house understands that no matter how good their broth is, they will never cease to make adjustments to find the ultimate, most succulent broth known to humans.
Then there are the rumours, perhaps pedalled along by non-believers, accusing that the addictive nature of this dish can be caused by either the copious amounts of MSG dumped into the soup, or that one of the secret herbs and spice is marijuana. pift. whatever.
I have attempted a few recipes from different cookbooks. This one comes very close to the taste of my mother’s broth. In fact, my mother’s pho is the best I have ever eaten. She somehow manages to make one of the clearest, most potent, heart warming, delightful broths I have ever come across. She makes everybody else’s taste like watery soup. I cackle whenever I witness her in the kitchen making one of these. When my mother makes pho, the entire neighbourhood comes for a visit. Therefore she uses a pot the size of a truck. I call it the “Jail Pot”. Mum is small in size and delicate in bone structure, it is one of the most humbling and humourous things to watch when she is stirring this mean-monster of a pot.
My best advice is to not cut corners. Do not buy ready made beef stock and simmer it with the spices, in the hopes that you will not have to deal with parboiling the bones and the long cooking time. Firstly, you will not get that hearty flavour that comes from hours of simmering the marrow bones. Secondly, even though you will be boiling this soup for almost 4 hours, you don’t need to be hanging around the kitchen for the entire time. It is a lot easier than it looks, and a home made broth from your kitchen will make you the talk of the town!
Broth
2 brown onions, cut in halves
7cm (3 inch) chubby fresh ginger, sliced thinly
2 carrots, thickly sliced
2.5kg to 3kg (5-6 pounds) beef leg (marrow) bones and knuckle
6 Litres of water
600g (1.5 pounds) boneless beef chuck
2 tablespoons rock salt or sea salt
2.5cm (1 inch) chunk yellow rock sugar
1/4 cup Vietnamese fish sauce
Spice Bag
5 star anise
6 whole cloves
7cm (3 inch) cinnamon stick
1 tablespoon fennel seeds
Bowls
2kg (4 pounds) fresh small flat rice noodles (Bánh Phở’)
Cooked beef from the broth
500g (1 pound) lean rump steak, sliced paper thin
1 brown onion, sliced paper thin
2 spring onions, sliced thinly
250g beef tendon balls, sliced
Garnish
250g (1/2 pounds) bean sprouts (two large handfuls)
Basil
Fresh Chilli, sliced thinly
Hoisin sauce
1 lime, cut into wedges















MAKING THE BROTH
1/ Place the onions and ginger on a tray and under the grill (broiler), set the heat on high. When the onions and ginger are charred, approximately 15 minutes, remove from the heat and allow to cool.
2/ To achieve a clear broth, you must first parboil and rinse the beef bones. Put them in a 12 litre pot and add cold water just to cover. Bring to a boil over high heat and allow to boil vigourously for 10 minutes to release the impurities. Dump the bones into a clean sink and then rinse them with water. Scrub the pot clean and return the bones to the pot.
3/ Place the cinnamon stick, star anise, whole cloves and fennel seeds in a cheesecloth and secure with kitchen string (or tie together with a strip of the cheesecloth).

4/ Pour in the 6 litres of water, bring to a boil over high heat, then lower the heat to a gentle simmer. Use a ladle or a spoon to skim off any scum that rises to the top. Add the onions, ginger, carrots, spice bag and beef chuck. Allow the broth to simmer, skimming the scum every now and then. Leave the lid on, but slightly askew, covering 90% of the pot only.
5/ After 1.5 hours remove the beef chuck. Place it on a plate and loosely cover with foil, allow to rest. Allow the broth to continue simmering for another 1.5 hours.
6/ Remove the bones and spice bag from the broth. Add the rock sugar, salt and fish sauce. Allow to simmer for another 30 minutes.





ASSEMBLE THE BOWLS
1/ Cut the cooked beef chuck across the grain into thin slices. For the best results make sure that it is cold.

2/ Freeze the raw beef rump for 30 minutes, slice it across the grain into thin pieces.
3/ Ready the onions, spring onions and beef balls
4/ Arrange the garnishes on a plate and put on the table.
5/ To ensure good timing, bring the broth to a simmer over medium heat as you are assembling the bowls. At the same time, fill a large pot with water and bring to a rolling boil. For each bowl, place a portion of the noodles on a vertical-handle strainer (or mesh sieve) and dunk the noodles in the boiling water. As soon as they have collapsed and lost their stiffness (10 to 20 seconds), pull the strainer from the water letting the water drain back into the pot. Empty the noodles into a bowl.
6/ Top each bowl of noodles with cooked and raw beef arranging the slices flat. Place a mound of onion in the centre and shower some spring onions on top.
7/ Raise the heat and bring the broth to a rolling boil. Ladle approximately 2 cups of broth into each bowl, distributing the hot liquid evenly to warm all the ingredients. Serve immediately with the plate of garnishes.


Tips from the cookbookmaniac
* When pouring the soup from the pot into the bowls, use a fine sieve to catch any excess fat or marrow deposits.
* Do not skip the charring of the ginger and the onion. It is what gives the broth its colour and adds to the complex flavour.
* If you cannot find Yellow Rock Sugar then use 2 tablespoons of normal sugar instead.
* Do not allow the noodles to sit in the hot broth for too long. They will wilt and take on a tacky texture. That said, do not cook the noodles in the big pot of broth, it will ruin it. And do not overcook the noodles. Therefore, only assemble the noodles if it is be eaten straight away.
* This made enough for approximately 15 bowls. You can freeze the broth for later use. However, the herbal headiness of it will deteriorate.
* Call everyone you know – that loves beef – to the table. They’ll adore you.
See more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XISOLCkDVTM