Cockonut August 16, 2009
Posted by tuimeltje in dinner, meals.Tags: gluten-free, indonesian
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Recently I bought a bunch of French beans thinking I could do fun things with them. For some reason I thought it’d be a nice idea to make sayur beans. No clue why, really. I’ve never had a particular desire for them before, or even eaten them at any point, and the bumbus (spice pastes) I’ve been able to find around here all contain trassi (some shrimpy thing) at the very least, which doesn’t make me buying and using them particularly likely.
Odd, really. Sayur lodeh en sayur beans seem to have the image of vegetable dishes, yet the bumbus I’ve found are generally not even vegetarian, never mind plants-only.
Still, the idea stuck and I figured there’d be no reason why I would be unable to make my own bumbu. Checking this wonderful web didn’t actually give me much to work with initially, since the bumbu bit of most Dutch recipes were “add X amount of bumbu sayur beans/lodeh” rather than “take XYZ and make a nice paste”.
That’s what you get with easily available spice pastes.
I did end up finding some, but none were specifically for sayur beans. This one, linked to in this post about sayur lodeh, was quite nice and clear and in my mind sayur beans is just sayur lodeh with more limited veg so I deemed it useful.
Of course I didn’t quite follow the recipe, because I never do, but it’s nice to see how other people do things so you can get a fair idea of how to go about it sensibly.
There were more reasons for not following the recipe besides a general habit, though. For one it seemed to make a larger amount than I expected to use. It also seemed slightly more complicated than I wanted, what with grinding, fresh chilis, galangal by the inch rather than the teaspoon, and more shallots than I had available.
This is what I used.

Ingredient-wise, my main deviation was the spices used. I used lemongrass, laos, ginger, and coriander, all powdered, rather than lemongrass, fresh laos, turmeric, and coriander.
It felt weird, not adding turmeric. Usually I chuck in what feels like a fairly liberal amound in anything I feel can do with a bit of that. Nor did I add cumin, another spice of which I generally make liberal use as it’s part of my Big Three of spices.*
The decision of which spices to use was made by checking the Conimex site for the spices used in their two sayur bumbus, checking sites about Indonesian cooking to see what kind of thing they recommended you put in your bumbus, and making sure to use lemongrass since I’d specifically purchased some to use for this.
I didn’t add the shallots either, but made up for that by sautéing a chopped shallot, chopped bottom end of a scallion, and two cloves of garlic. It’s the way I usually treat my Allium friends and for a first time I was more comfortable doing it this way.
Other ingredient differences were my use of kemiri (candle nut) paste instead of candle nuts and sambal ulek instead of fresh peppers. This was solely done for convenience, since it did away with the need to grind things and they were easier to find. I also added some soya sauce, since I didn’t see any directions about adding something salty and I just couldn’t leave that out.
My bumbu didn’t follow any direction as far as measurement goes. I just chucked in what seemed like a reasonable amount and mixed it up. Since I was using pastes and powder, it was very easy. No grinding, just stirring.
Assembly was simple and straightforward. I started by sauting the Allium stuffs for a few minutes, fixing up the paste while that was on, then I added the paste and let that sauté for a minute or two while stirring regularly. Then I added the cut-up French beans and let them sauté for a bit as well (still stirring) before adding the coconut milk.
Because the coconut milk was rather more watery than I wanted the final dish to be, I let it boil down for a while, giving my time to finish off the part baked ciabatta for sopping up whatever liquid was left.
Food!

It’s probably one of the greasier meals I’ve cooked, as you can probably see in the picture.
My one-serving meal contained an entire 165ml tin of coconut milk, rather more veg oil than strictly necessary for the sautéing, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the kemiri paste was fairly high in fat as well.
So while it didn’t look like, and really wasn’t, that big a plate, I did feel like I’d had plenty when I’d just finished half of it.
Still, because it didn’t look like that much and I learned to clean my plate, I ate the rest of it anyway, but was very glad I had the ciabatta near me to help.
It warmed my belly nicely, but left me with the bothersome nausea and lethargy I tend to get for a while after finishing a tasty but sizeable meal during which I ignore certain warnings. Something I, rather stupidly, continue to do even though I can deal with leftovers because apparently I don’t learn. Go me!
This dish, while not nearly as large as some I’ve eaten without a problem, was simply too rich.
Next time I make something like this I’ll have to add more veg to this amount of coconut milk and eat it as several servings over rice rather than on it’s own.
Provided I’ve learned, of course.
*The third is coriander, which I did end up using.
Tofu Joy August 11, 2009
Posted by tuimeltje in dinner, food.Tags: gluten-free, tofu
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Yes, I’m at my aunt’s place again. You know what that means. Easy oven access. Hurrah!
Today I made an easy dish, one very similar to a dish I enjoyed last time I was here.
Watch the beauty unfold.
Ingredients

Gathered from my aunt’s kitchen and the nearby Asian supermarket.
*flavourings: paprika (hot), ground cumin, ground coriander, garlic powder, curcuma, laos powder, thyme, nutritional yeast, soya sauce
I used the entire bell pepper, half the tofu, five-ish of the potatoes (I’ll probably let you know how I used the ones I had left later), and however much I felt like of the spicy bits.
Layer 1: Bell pepper

Layer 2: Potato and thyme (yes, it’s in there somewhere)

Selected precursors to layer 3: Spicy mix and crumbled tofu

Layer 3: Crumbled tofu mixed with spicy mix and soya sauce

Layer 4: Semmelbrösel
[Not photographed]
After some 20(maybe 30)-ish minutes in the oven at about 180C-ish:

By and far, my favourite bit of this dish is the tofu. I never feel like I’m very good at tofu, yet this very easy way of preparing it leaves my tongue most content so maybe I shouldn’t be so hard on myself.
I keep adding breadcrumbs to oven dishes hoping it’ll give them a nicely browned and crunchy top, but that never quite happens. I just get a bunch of boring-looking crumbs on the top of my food, which, in this case, managed to get nicely brown and nearly crunchy anyway.
It doesn’t diminish the taste, provided I mix it all p a bit when putting it on my plate, so it’s not some big disaster or anything. It’s just a bit pointless.
Anyway, maybe I’ll remember to not automatically throw them on next time, which would actually make this dish gluten-free provided you use wheat-free soya sauce.
The way I made it it’s not a very big dish. As a meal, it comfortably fed me, but if you want to feed two people with a decent stomach you’d better get some side dishes.
Pizza May 21, 2009
Posted by tuimeltje in dinner, food, snack.4 comments
I don’t have an oven. I love my flat, but there are two things missing. An oven is one of them.* This could of course be remedied somewhat by getting one of those combination microwaves, but that’s an appliance somewhat low on my list of things to buy. Well above a toaster, but still fairly low.
Because I don’t have an oven, enjoying a nice bit of pizza is somewhat of a rarity for me. But recently a fellow student talked about heating pita bread in a frying pan when lacking a toaster. She may also have mentioned the possibility of preparing pizza this way, I don’t actually remember. All I know is I came away from this conversation intending to try it.
And I did!
I optimistically bought a set of basic pizzas, just dough with a bit of red, to be augmented at home, assuming it’d fit in my frying pan.
It didn’t, but that’s not important. Because, you see, they can be cut up. Say, in quarts. Which I did. Then I added a bit of passata, some bell pepper, and some olives. Put it in my frying pan with a makeshift, incomplete cover for a while, and then I ate it.
So much fun!
And tasty.
One makes a nice snack (or addition to breakfast…), a few make a nice dinner, a lot might just make a party.
If you have more frying pans, anyway.
Ode to pizza:
*The other thing missing is a balcony. Fixing that would require a move.
Royal April 30, 2009
Posted by tuimeltje in dinner, food.Tags: festive, soup
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Today it’s Koninginnedag, the celebration of the Queen’s birthday, which means that I’ve seen an overwhelming amount of orange with the occasional flecks of red, white and blue, of course. As my wardrobe is entirely devoid of orange I did not join in, so I’m making up for it online.
Oh, yes.
Most of the morning was spent in a relatively small fisher’s village next to my city of birth, where things are celebrated with some more enthusiasm and patriotism (both 1st and 6th of the national anthem and the provincial anthem were sung) than you might see in larger cities. Not that nothing is organised in larger cities, mind. I remember very well the decorated bikes and the sundry games (spijkerpoepen!) I played to be rewarded with a brightly-coloured candy stick or lollipop.
And the freemarket. That’s always fun. Mostly kids selling their old toys or playing whatever instrument they can get their barely-trained hands on, but sometimes there’s good stuff to be found there. I’ve not been in a few years, but this year I went near where I live. I bought me a puzzle and some Tartex, considered buying a medical encyclopaedia from the 1970s, and if they’d already had the cables and such, I’d most likely have bought a laptop.
Might still do that next week, once the cables and such are in.
Anyway.
Your exposure to orange isn’t limited to me brushing up on my extremely basic coding skills to give you headache-inducing letters. As I can’t be bothered to show any patriotism, community spirit, or conformity by wearing something orange, I figured I could share my culture and heritage and whatnot through food. Orange food.
Carrot soup.
Carrots aren’t particularly Dutch, as far as I know, though I suppose it’s more indigenous than many of the things easily found in supermarkets these days. But they sure are orange.
While I can find various soups when going through old posts, I can’t find any soups that are specifically carrot soups. A few contain carrots, and a few are orange due to liberal use of things like pumpkin or red lentils, but I couldn’t find a carrot soup.
Odd.
I’m sure I’ve made one before, and I really thought I’d posted about it.
Oh well. It doesn’t really matter now, you’ve got pictures of it right here.
Basically, what I did was do the dishes that have been in my kitchen for some weeks (yes, weeks. I’ve hardly been home these last few weeks, remember?), get my large pan, pop a good many cumin seeds in it, chuck in two chopped onions, then either nine or twelve scrubbed and roughly cut carrots (II stopped counting at some point. You can just go with whatever amount you find appealing, really), some water, a bit of garlic powder, some kentjur powder, and a miso bouillon cube. I let that heat up until the carrots were soft enough to purée. After puréeing it and adding a bit of water to make it more soup-ish and less mash-ish, I added a nice bit of lemon juice. I also added a little bit of salt and tamari as the I’d kind of skimped on the bouillon cubes.
I would’ve liked to have added some ginger. I love the carrot-ginger combination, but as you can see in the picture, the little bit of ginger I had left was all wrinkly and wooden. No longer suitable for consumption, that bit. And what with this being a national holiday and all and me forgetting to buy it earlier, I didn’t have anything fresher, so I used the kentjur as a substitute. Not quite as nice, but better than nothing.
Apparently there’s some comedian somewhat confused about Dutch holidays and trying to figure out Koninginnedag. Go watch!
One, Two, Many, Lots August 21, 2008
Posted by tuimeltje in dinner, food, snack.Tags: cake, chinese supermarket, ice cream, pasta, pizza, scottish
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I figured that, since I would probably not end up at the pleinbios (open-air free movies. Yay! Saw Juno yesterday ♥) tonight, I might as well get some blogging done. There are pictures that need posting.
Unlike my usual posts, this will be a bunch of pictures of different foods, since I can’t be bothered to give each food their own post. That would take me entirely too long. Since doing it this way will make this post entirely too long, I’m going to use that nifty “more” feature right about now. So clicky for piccy, yes?




