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Category Archives: Street food

Rojak salad; tangy, spicy and sweet

07 Wednesday May 2014

Posted by Zoli in gluten free, healthy, Malaysian, salad, Sauces, Singaporean, spices, Street food, vegan, Vegetarian

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

palm sugar, pineapple and cucumber salad, rojak salad, sambal oelek, southeast asian salad, tamarind

vegetarian rojak salad

I first heard of this in a book called Crazy Rich Asians. The heroine was visiting Singapore with her boyfriend and tried this spicy pineapple and cucumber salad in some kind of crazy food court. The best thing about this book was reading about all the (for me) new food. Rojak salad seemed like an approachable recipe for a self-taught homey cook like me. I put down the book and pulled out what I had–cucumber, peanuts, pineapple, tofu, check. Missing: fresh red chilies, palm sugar, tamarind. What the hell, I thought, and squirted some sriracha into the dressing. Um, nope. The salad was edible—a little tasty but a little weird too.

So this time around, after my spice cupboard and fridge and pantry are fairly well-stocked with all sorts of magical things, I did it right. Always the best way. Unless I’ve made a dish a thousand times before, I’m just not the kind of cook who can mess around and bing, zap, boom, voila! I really do have to take my time and concentrate when it comes to new things. Cooking isn’t fun when it’s rushed and stressful after all. But if you can get all zen and in the present about cooking then it’s a fun adventure and you’re putting more love into what you create.

Success! The salad was splendiferous. Soooo good. My mom helped me gobble it up as soon as it was made and maybe she’s a little biased being as she’s my mom but she said, “This is the way I want to eat.” Another keeper. Huzzah. Next time I’ll make a larger batch and maybe some fried rice to serve with it for a summer meal outside on the deck. Yes, it took a little time, but the end result is tasty perfection. It doesn’t matter that it’s vegetarian/vegan, it’s just really good food. And don’t make the same mistake I did and skip out on any of the important things in the dressing. (Well, I didn’t add shrimp paste to the dressing/sauce which I’m sure takes this to another plane. Vegetarianized, this is still a kick-ass meal.) As for the veggies and fruit, well, rojak means ‘mix’ and, from what I have read, all kinds of things can be mixed into this salad–any fresh fruit you have pretty much.

Ingredients for 2

For the dressing
2 fresh red thai chilies
1 lime
1/4 cup dried tamarind (to make 2 tsp tamarind pulp)
sea salt
2 tsp palm sugar
2 tbs quality soy sauce

For the salad
4 small persian cucumbers or 1 large thin cucumber
1 cup fresh pineapple, cut into bite-size pieces
1/2 celeriac, peeled cut into bite-size pieces
1 green mango, diced (I didn’t have this)
1/2 block (or more if you like) of extra firm tofu, cut into bite-size pieces
olive oil for frying
50g chopped peanuts or cashews

1) Start the dressing by soaking the dried tamarind in hot water for 15 minutes. (Prep the other ingredients while this is soaking). Drain the water out. Press the pulp through a fine mesh strainer to squeeze out the pulp. Scrape the bottom of the strainer to get it all.
2) Chop the chilies into small pieces and smash with a pestle and mortar and rough sea salt to help pulverize. I left the seeds in. If you can’t handle much spice you may want to take the seeds out—or out of one chili anyway.
3) Add the juice of one lime, soy sauce, tamarind pulp and palm sugar to the chili mixture and mix to a thick sauce. Taste and adjust seasoning.
4) Chop the cucumber at alternate angles so that you get small, angled chunks of cucumber. Add this to a large bowl along with the other fruits and vegetables.
5) Heat up about 3 tbs of olive oil in a wok and fry the tofu pieces on all sides until nice and crispy. (Or you could buy the puffy, deep-fried tofu that is sold in asian markets and simply add this to the bowl). Drain the crispy tofu on paper towel and add to the bowl of veggies and fruit.
6) Add as much dressing/sauce as you like and mix. (I used all of it.) Serve in two bowls with the ground nuts sprinkled on top. Eat straightaway as the dressing will start to get watery if sitting around for too long.

Enjoy! This is one of my favorites!

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vegetarian rojak salad

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Garlic bok choy and udon with fried bean paste

17 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by Zoli in Chinese, healthy, pasta, pasta sauce, quick and awesome, Sauces, Street food, udon noodles, vegan, Vegetarian

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Tags

bak choy, Chinese vegetables, fried bean paste, jajangmyun, soy bean paste, stir fried bak choy, udon noodles, zha jiang mian

Bok choy with garlic

Normally when I cook bok choy I stir fry it a little with garlic, ginger, maybe some chilies, some soy sauce… or I might throw it into a bowl of ramen. I never put any thought into it. A couple days ago I asked my husband to pick me up some bok choy and so of course he brought back a mammoth-sized bunch of it. He rarely under-does things. So this stuff needed to be eaten pronto. Out of respect for the mass of fresh greenery, I decided to concentrate a little and do it right. A simple recipe, but done with care. All some fresh green produce needs. I made some udon noodles with fried bean paste sauce to go with it and this shall be our lunch and this shall be our dinner too.

Bak choy stir fried with garlic

2 large bunches of bok choy or 6 bunches baby bok choy
3-6 cloves garlic, minced
a light oil such as rapeseed
sea salt

1) Wash the bok choy thoroughly and cut into large pieces. Separate the white stalk pieces from the leafy greener pieces as they have different cooking times.
2) Heat up oil in a wok and then gently fry the garlic for a minute (do not brown) to flavor the oil.
3) Add in the white stalks first and fry on medium heat, stirring, until they are beginning to turn translucent.
4) Add in the leafy greens, sea salt and stir fry another couple minutes, till just cooked. Do not add soy sauce as it will make the vegetables a little mushy. Salt and garlic alone are delicious.

Udon noodles with fried bean paste sauce
serves 2
2 rolls of dried udon noodles (or fresh noodles would be best)
2 tsp soy bean or black bean paste
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp fresh chopped ginger
1/2 cup chopped shitake mushrooms
3-4 tbs of Chinese cooking wine or 1/4 cup of light beer
1 tsp sugar
2 tbs chopped peanuts
light oil, such as rapeseed oil
julienned carrot, cucumber and spring onion for garnish

This is a quick noodle dish similar to Korean jajangmyun or Chinese zha jiang mian. I pretty much tried to make zha jiang mian but didn’t have exactly everything to hand so came up with this tasty version. Seriously, my husband and I were fighting over the chopsticks to eat it straight out of the wok.

1) Cook the noodles according to package instructions. Rinse with cold water, drain and set aside.
2) Heat up oil in a wok and gently fry the garlic and ginger for a minute. Add the mushrooms and cook for another minute.
3) Add in the Chinese cooking wine, sugar and the soy bean paste and fry for a few more minutes on medium heat.
4) Add in the chopped nuts. If the sauce is too thick, it can be thinned with a little water.
5) Turn off the heat. Add in the cold noodles and mix or serve on top of noodles with the vegetable garnishes such as cucumber, carrot and spring onion.

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udon noodles with soy bean paste
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