Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Monday, November 3, 2014

Easiest Sun-Dried Tomato Hummus, EVER!

Sun-Dried Tomato Hummus!

Hummus has to be one of the most tastiest snacks ever.  Served with some baby carrots or some pita chips, I could probably eat a half container all by myself.  I wouldn't say it's super expensive or hard to find...you can find it in any grocery store, and at Costco, they sell em in the huge super sized containers (which I would never be able to finish), but it is SO easy to make on your own!

Traditional hummus calls for chickpeas, tahini, olive oil, salt, pepper, garlic, etc...but every time I have bought tahini, it's so expensive, and I end up wasting it because I don't really use it for anything else!  Wasting is no bueno!

A random dinner I made with things I had on hand...hummus with chips, watermelon, kale salad, and an overcooked hamburger patty :( lol!

Sun-dried tomatoes are my fav..and quite expensive, unless I buy them at Costco.  I had a huge jar that I've been using from time to time for sandwiches, or eating with crackers...but I was trying to figure out a way to use them more so I wouldn't waste them.  I used to make a similar hummus at a sandwich shop I used to work at a few years ago.  It was easy, and tasty, but felt like there was a lot more room for improvement!  My husband isn't a huge fan of the tomatoes in general, but he loves the sun dried tomato hummus that I make...and best of all it does not require any tahini!!! This isn't a recipe that is made down to a science...most of it us just adding things to your liking...but it is so easy to make!  Try this recipe and let me know what you think!

Sun-dried Tomato Hummus

Ingredients

  • 1 can drained chickpeas
  • 1/3 - 1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, with some of the olive oil is ok!
  • 1-2 garlic cloves, rough chopped
  • salt, to taste
  • lemon juice, to taste
  • water
  • additional EVOO
Directions
  1. Put chickpeas, sun-dried tomatoes, salt, and a few squirts of lemon juice into a food processor.  Pulse a few times, then let it go to blend it all together.
  2. Add more EVOO to your taste, and water to thin it out a little bit if it is too thick.
  3. ENJOY with some veggies, pita, or tortilla chips!
NOTES

Not the greatest picture, but here is the artichoke heart hummus!!!  SO delicious and just as easy!
  • For artichoke hummus, follow the above recipe, but replace sun-dried tomatoes with marinated artichoke hearts!

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Tutu's Garlic Roast Pork


Pork.  The other white meat.  My favorite of all meats, and I sure do appreciate a good roast pork!

This is one of my FAVORITE things that my Tutu (grandma) made.  My Tutu is still going strong at 99 years young!
My Tutu and I, Circa 2009-ish :)
She doesn't cook anymore, but I tell you, her roast pork was one of my FAVORITE dishes that she made.  It was this very roast that made Pork become my favorite choice of meat.  I remember going to family gatherings, knowing she was going to be there, and just PRAYING that she would be bringing some for us to enjoy, and I would just about jump for joy whenever she would actually bring some!

I remember asking her how to make it, thinking it was some tedious process with all these mystery ingredients in it that made it so great.

NOPE!

Turns out, it was only, like, 4 ingredients.  I remember hearing the ingredients and in my mind, I was just puzzled..like..how the...?!  Are you serious?   That's IT?!

The ingredients.  Missing from photo:  good 'ol S&P!

It's so easy..ANYONE can do it!  The only slightly tricky part may be the cooking time, depending on how large of a cut of meat you have, but that's why you MUST MUST MUST use a meat thermometer!  Don't have one?  DRIVE YOUR BUTT TO WALMART (or, wherever else you please) and go BUY one.  It is a great (inexpensive) investment to make to help take guesswork out of cooking your meats perfectly every time!

Got leftovers?  SWEET!  Make some killer sandwiches the next day, maybe throw together some tacos?  Use your imagination!  Here's how you can make one of the best roast porks ever!

Ingredients
  • 1 pork shoulder (aka pork butt) roast or pork loin roast
  • 5 + whole, peeled garlic cloves
  • Hawaiian Salt
  • Pepper

Directions
  1. Preheat your oven to 350.
  2. Prepare the pork by placing it fatty side up in a roasting pan.  This allows the fat to drip down the sides of your roast, and keep everything flavorful and moist.
  3. Using a steak knife, poke a hole for each clove of garlic you have.  It needs to be deep enough to slide and fit a whole garlic clove in it.
  4. Place a single garlic clove in each hole that you've made.
  5. Rub a generous amount of hawaiian salt and pepper all over the pork roast, and don't forget the underside!
  6. Bake, uncovered until the pork roast reaches an internal temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit (about 25min a pound). 
  7. Remove from oven and let it sit for at least 5 minutes for the juices to re-distribute throughout the meat!

Notes
  • This also works GREAT in a slow cooker!  Just follow the prep directions above, and place in your slow cooker on low for 8 hours.  You can even add vegetables to the bottom of your slow cooker and place the roast over it.  Be sure to check your internal temp!
  • Wanna add a little MORE depth?  Poke sprigs of rosemary in with your garlic clove pockets!  Looks pretty impressive for not a lot more effort ;)
  • Bone in or boneless?  It's entirely your preference, but I prefer to use boneless!

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Slow Cooker Sundays: Lazy Lau Lau

What would you consider YOUR ultimate comfort food?



Mines would have to be Lau Lau.  Not familiar with it?  Lau Lau is a traditional Hawaiian dish that usually consists of salted fatty meat and fish, wrapped in luau (taro) leaves, then ti leaves.  It is then cooked low and slow in either an imu (an underground oven) or a giant stove top steamer.

Every Christmas/New Year, my family gets together to make Lau Lau.  This is a family tradition that dates back to probably before I was even born.  We gather at my Uncle's house in Haiku around the long picnic table, and form an assembly line, passing down each lau lau down the assembly line until all the ingredients are nestled in there, and then wrap it in foil.  We make enough for the WHOLE family, plus left overs to keep in the freezer to eat for the next few months afterwards.

My Uncle is a real live McGuyver.  He can always make something out of nothing, and to hold all our lau lau at once to cook, he created a giant slow cooker/steamer out of a galvanized trash can (clean of course, and only used for the lau lau).  We would load the cooker to the brim, and let it go for hours and hours, until they were cooked to juicy perfection.  It's a time consuming process, but the end result always makes it worthwhile!

Served with some hot rice and shoyu and or chili pepper water....life cannot get any better than that!  It's kind of weird, but I also like to mix some shoyu with vinegar or lemon, and a splash of sesame seed oil as a dipping sauce.  My MOST favorite part are the luau leaves!  If you've never had them, they're kind of like wilted collard greens or spinach, but SO much flavorful from the drippings of the meat!

Once my personal stash from the freezer is gone, I go through a withdrawal phase.  I'll go and get lau lau plates from Da Kitchen, or Pukalani Superette, but:
  1. It's expensive
  2. It's not as satisfying
Because of those two things, I decided to take matters into my own hands and make my own in the crock pot when I needed a healthy dose of lau lau.  The ingredients are minimal, which is nice, but to make individual packets and wrap them in foil...well, it gets a little tedious!  Plus I normally have to do two batches in the slow cooker, but it takes forever!  I ain't got time to waste and sit around!

So of course, I whipped up my own "Lazy" Lau Lau.  Basically, it's a giant, deconstructed lau lau in the slow cooker, with a couple of non-traditional ingredients.   Yes, you need to blanch stuff, but ot having to individually wrap each lau lau saves time and allows you to do a whole giant lau lau in one batch rather than split them into two batches! Here's how you can do it:

I started by washing my ti-leaves and luau leaves in a sink full of water.  Just swish them around until the dirt settles to the bottom of the sink.  Drain the sink and pat the leaves dry.


Prepare the ti-leaves by removing the center stem, so that the leaf becomes flimsy.  Do this by cutting a tiny slit in the backbone of the stem towards the top of the leaf.  The knife should be at a slight angle from the cutting board, and the sharp edge of the blade going towards the bottom stem of the leaf.



Bring the leaf upright, and remove the backbone of the leaf by folding back the top flimsy part of the leaf and pulling it down and off the ti leaf.


Set the ti-leaves aside.  Now to prepare the luau leaves!  Start by chopping off the stem from the leaves.  These do not go to waste!  They'll cook up nicely with everything else!  Chop the stems into 1-2 inch pieces.  This doesn't have to be perfect :)  Put them aside in a large bowl.


Now for the leaves.  Grab 3 or 4 leaves, and roll them up all together.  Slice into 2 inch-ish pieces and put in the bowl with the stems.  We need to slice them up so they'll blanch easily.



In the biggest pot you have, bring some water to a boil.  In batches, throw a heaping moundful of the leaves (not stems) into the pot.  They'll go above the top of the pot.  This is OK.  Our goal is to wilt the leaves so that they'll fit in the slow cooker!  With tongs, turn the leaves in the water until they've wilted and shrink.  This will take about a minute or two.  Transfer to another bowl for now.  Repeat until all leaves are done.


Let's prepare the meat!  Cut your pork into cubes.  Transfer to a bowl, sprinkle with coarse Hawaiian salt and mix to distribute thoroughly.


I had some leftover bacon in the fridge that needed to be used up, so I thought, meh, WHY NOT?  It's bacon, it'll only add flavor :)  So I chopped that into 1/2 inch slices and mixed it in with the pork, too!  Let the meat mixture sit on the side while you prepare the rest of the ingredients.


I LOVE potatoes.  I really wanted to use sweet potatoes, but didn't want to spend a whole lot more, so I decided to use up my small potato mix from Costco!  They are mini red, yellow and purple potatoes that come in a 5lb bag, and I had a pound or so left.  So I quartered those and set them aside!  Feel free to use sweet potatoes too!  I didn't peel mines because I like the skin.....and I'm lazy LOL.  But if you don't like skins, peel em!  Again, set those aside in a separate bowl.  All these bowls make it easier to assemble our giant lau lau.


Now it's time to prepare the slow cooker!  For good measure, I sprayed the inside of my 6qt slow cooker with non-stick cooking spray.  I then lined the inside of the slow cooker with ti-leaves in a criss - cross pattern, probably about 4-5 leaves.  Sorry folks, forgot to take a pic!  Just make sure the insides of your slow cooker isn't showing, and that the walls are covered with the leaves!

Now it's time to layer!  Start by laying half of your potatoes and luau stems at the bottom of the slow cooker.  Then layer half of your meat mixture.


Next, put half of the blanched luau leaves over the meat, and repeat with the potatoes, stems, meat, and the ret of the luau leaves!


Finally, cover the top with more ti leaves, and fold edges of the ti leaf lining over the top layer.  Pour 1/2 cup of water over everything.


Cook on low for at LEAST 12 hours.  This is important!  If the luau leaves aren't cooked long enough, they'll make your throat itchy!


And this is what it looks like before taking the top layer of ti leaves off!  Do not eat the ti-leaves!  Obviously they aren't poisonous, but they are used to add flavor and aroma to the lau lau.  Take that top layer of ti-leaf off and enjoy!


If you can't find ti leaves, You could use banana leaves.  And if you can't find taro/luau leaves, I am sure you could use a leafy green like swiss chard, collard greens, kale, or even spinach!  If you try any of those, let me know how it is!  And with the potatoes, I prefer sweet potatoes, but using the regular potatoes this time was pretty good too!  Use what you have!  I was very pleased with the results, and will definitely make again.  This makes a HUGE amount, so you'll have lots of leftovers!

Here's the recipe:

LAZY LAU LAU

INGREDIENTS

  • 2.5-3 lbs bonless pork shoulder or boneless pork country style ribs, cut into cubes
  • 2 lbs (two packages) luau (taro) leaves, stems removed, set aside and chopped, leaves blanched 
  • 1-1.5 lbs potatoes (regular or sweet), sliced/quartered
  • 6-10 ti leaves, backbones removed, stems chopped off
  • 1/2 package of bacon, sliced into 1/2" pieces
  • 1/2 c water
  • Hawaiian salt
  • Non-stick cooking spray

DIRECTIONS

  1. Coat the inside of the slow cooker with cooking spray and line the inside with the ti-leaves.
  2. Sprinkle pork generously with Hawaiian salt, add bacon, and mix thoroughly.
  3. Layer half of the potatoes and luau stems on the bottom of the pot.
  4. Layer half of the meat over the potatoes and luau stems.
  5. Layer half of the blanched luau leaves.
  6. Repeat steps 3, 4 and 5.
  7. Cover with more ti-leaves, fold edges of ti leaf lining over, and pour water over everything.
  8. Cover well and cook on low for 12 hours, until meat and leaves are thoroughly cooked.
  9. Serve with hot rice and ENJOY!

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Kimchi

Hi from out of nowhere!

I is back.

Let's see how long this'll last LOL.  So, I've been craving something lately.  Something that I haven't made in a while.  Something time consuming to make, but oh-so-delicious.

Kimchi.

What is it may you ask?  It is fermented, spicy vegetable goodness.  Yes, I said it, FERMENTED.  But it isn't as horrible as you may think. It's actually really good for you, and in Korea, it has been said to have great health benefits, much similar to the benefits of yogurt.

Kimchi ingredients waiting to be chopped up

The most common kind is made from napa cabbage, or as we call it in Hawaii, Chinese cabbage.  You take the cabbage, let it sit in a salt bath until its bulk is cut in half, but still crunchy.  This process takes about an hour and a half.  Every thirty minutes you turn the cabbage so everything is evenly salted.  After the bath, you rinse it several times.  For this Kimchi making extravaganza, I decided to make napa cabbage kimchi AND daikon, or radish, kimchi.

The salted cabbage, along with other vegetables added for crunch and color variety, such as carrot matchsticks, daikon (radish) and green onions, is then mixed with dried chili peppers, a paste made from ground onions, garlic and ginger, and "porridge" comprised of water, sweet rice flour (used to make mochi), and a little sugar.

Daikon and Cabbage kimchi mixed and ready to be put into jars!

STOP.......Fermentation time!

After everything's all mixed together, you pack it carefully into some jars, let it sit out on the counter for a day or two, then put it into the fridge for another few days to finish the fermentation process.

What's left as the end result is this spicy, slightly sour, vegetable goodness that accompanies almost any entree, but can even be so satisfying by just eating it with a plain bowl of hot, steamy rice!

Yes, the process seems lengthy and tiring, but I can promise you that the end result is worth it.

Here is the link to the recipe that I started off using.  Maangchi is a Youtube personality that shows the world how to cook delicious Korean food!  Her website and Youtube channel are both a great resource for those who would like to learn more about korean cooking.  I've tried many of her recipes with success!  If you decide to try and make some kimchi, this is a good recipe for older kimchi that you'd like to get rid of from a huge batch.  Kimchi stew.  OMGAH...sooooo good!  Soooo easy too!

I started a Word document to document my kimchi experiments.  I'm trying to come up with my own recipe that produces the perfect kimchi results that suits and satisfies my palette.  Maybe when it is perfected, I'll post the recipe???  We shall see!  Right now I have my batch sitting on the counter for fermentation.  I'll post results!

Happy Kimchi Making, and wish me luck on this batch!!!!

Fermenting on the counter.  OMNOMNOM.  Can't wait!

Friday, January 20, 2012

My love of food

Wait wait wait...I KNOW it's been a WHILE since I've written..in fact, two years..teehee...but I felt like I needed to get inspired again. Lets face it: I get tired. I get lazy. After work, I just want to plop and do nothing...and I want to stop it! On this day off from work I decided to blog...about one of my favorite things: FOOD, and my memories with it.

Oh how I love food. I love to make it, eat it, and look at it. Often times my eyes are way bigger than my stomach.

Growing up, my mother cooked for us every day. It was her pure love of cooking for us that stuck with me long after she had passed away in 2006. I always appreciated it, and told myself that I wanted to be just as great a cook and baker as she was. We only went out to eat when it was someone's birthday, or for some other special occasion, and it was usually at this old chinese restaurant in town where the old lady who owned it would give us White Rabbit candies when we went to pay the check.

But it wasn't just my mom who cooked like crazy. Our whole family was into food. We always had some kind of occasion, holiday or excuse to get together and have these huge feasts.

New year's was my favorite. My mom would whip out our mochi making machine she had gotten from Shirokiya in the mall, and make fresh mochi on new years eve. I remember when the mochi was ready, we would dump it onto the tray, dust the working surface and our hands with potato starch and try to roll flattened balls of mochi out of the big hot glob of rice. We would eat it with kinako flour and sugar mixed together for the next several days.

We would also gather at my Aunty Honey's house and make laulau - a traditional hawaiian dish of pieces of pork, beef and butter fish wrapped in taro leaves and steamed to perfection. It was a family affair...everyone would gather and start an assembly line down the picnic tables in the downstair's kitchen. My uncle had (and still HAS) a big galvanized trash can he used specifically for cooking and steaming the lau lau in. The whole thing would be full of laulaus, enough for New Years, and left overs for everyone else to take home and freeze for the rest of the year to enjoy.

There are so many memories of family and food that come to mind, and it has become a big part of who I am today. I am always thinking about what I want to make next, constantly scouring the web for new recipes, and perfecting ones I already have tried. Whenever we go out to eat, or I make something for dinner, my boyfriend tries not to laugh every time I stop before we dig in as I take pictures of my food to post on my facebook. I want to share, not only my arts and crafts, but my love of food with the world. I'll be posting some pictures soon of some of the things I've made :)


Thursday, April 22, 2010

Aloha! はじめまして、どうぞよろしく!

I'm finally doing it! A blog! Something I've always wanted to do but just never got around to it. I was always the type of person who would start a journal or diary, write in it for the first 4 days, forget about it for months, and repeat the cycle again...hopefully it wont happen here! I've been posting my creations on my Facebook like crazy, but you're so limited with just a picture and a caption...then there are the notes...but to me it's a humbug and unorganized...I just want a place where I can dedicate and document all the creative and culinary creations that I come up with. Hell, maybe I'll even post some makeup blogs too. I've really gotten into tutorials on Youtube, and have been getting better at my makeup application, so it would be fun to post that stuff here as well!

So, for those of you who don't know.....Who am I? I'm Miss Aiko. Born and raised in Hawaii, currently residing in California. I'm Japanese, Hawaiian, & Korean fun. I love food..eating, cooking, trying new recipes. Growing up, we never really went out to eat unless it was a special occasion, like a birthday, etc...therefore, or family was ALWAYS in the kitchen. My family was always big on food. We never skimped and would always go ALL OUT when it came to family gatherings. Hawaiian food is what I grew up with. I use that term loosely...there IS real deal Hawaiian food: lau lau, poi, lomi salmon, kulolo, etc....but also a huge impact from other cultures as well going back to the Plantation days...mainly Japanese, then Korean, Portuguese, Filipino, etc. I am so fortunate to have grown up in such an environment, as it taught me to be open-minded about different cultures and their foods.

I love art. My mom was an art teacher and so, ever since I could remember, I was always drawing or doing arts and crafts. You name it, I've done it...beading/jewelery, sewing, crocheting, kniting, polymer clay, ceramics, origami..the whole shebang! It's a passion of mines. I love creating something different and unique..seeing something in the store, or something that someone is wearing and thinking to myself "I could make that!". Up until my days at the community college, I was really crafty...after that, you know, life happens, I got busy (or maybe just lazy LOL), and kind of lost touch with my creative side...hopefully by starting this blog, it will kind of force me to keep up with it and showing the world what I have to offer...one day, I would love to sell my creations on Etsy! My problem is that, I always come up with a whole bunch of ideas, get excited about it, start, and not finish. I really need to just take it one project at a time..this might be a good place to start and enforce that!

Well, that's good for now...lets see how this works out..I'm excited!!!