So I am not having much time to do inventive cooking because I'm working around 10 or 11 hours a day, plus another 2 hours of commuting.. when I get home it's 9pm and I just want a quick meal, so in goes a microwave dinner...
However this past weekend I did try cook... and I learned some valuable lessons. 1) my 'hot plate' is an incinerator plate (technically I already knew this, but now it is confirmed). 2) you can't boil rice in soup. Or at least not 'cream of chicken' soup. I was going for a psuedo rissoto thing... in my mind it was going to be fantastic... but it just didn't work and I created an epic burned up mess.
No photos, sorry.
Perhaps this weekend I'll do something successful, like a stirfry or something. Otherwise me and the microwave will continue to be best friends.
A place to document my adventures in cooking... I'm new at this, but I want to be good at it! So feel free to give me pointers or recipes or anything else! Cheers!
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Micro-Cooking
Well exams are finally over and I'm exhausted. I don't think I'll be picking up cooking for a few days.
Then it will be an adventure in Microwave cooking. I'll be in London (UK) for June, July and August, living with a mini-fridge and a microwave. I'm determined to be inventive.. not just eating the micro dinner every night, like I did last summer...
So if anything interesting is created, I'll post it up here! Stay tunned!
Then it will be an adventure in Microwave cooking. I'll be in London (UK) for June, July and August, living with a mini-fridge and a microwave. I'm determined to be inventive.. not just eating the micro dinner every night, like I did last summer...
So if anything interesting is created, I'll post it up here! Stay tunned!
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
pressing pause
Well obviously I've had to press 'pause' on the cooking stuff... school has just taken over, along with a small thing called the 2010 Olympic Games, and having had a nasty cold back at the start of February...
I still intend to continue this epic journey of learning to cook, but it's on hold until my exams are over.
So check back in... June???
I still intend to continue this epic journey of learning to cook, but it's on hold until my exams are over.
So check back in... June???
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Cake.. well not really...
So my Aunt turned an important age this week (see how nice I am, not saying the age??). For the momentous occasion my Uncle stealthily planned to steal her away to Las Vegas (and area) for a week. This involved a night at our place in Vancouver, so I saw it as an opportunity for my blog...
That being said, I've got a sniffle and am behind with school, so wasn't able to actually find a 'scratch' cake recipe, so madam crocker assisted with the cake itself. However instead of the 'water' I usually add to the mix, I added milk, and it was an interesting, and tasty, outcome. The cake was more dense and creamy, not as 'sticky' as water based cake is. Anyway.
I did make the frosting from scratch. I used a different recipe than last time at Mum's request. I followed all the instructions to the T, but something was wrong - it was too watery. I added more icing sugar, and then it was suddenly far too 'sugary'. So I added more butter. In the end It tasted fine, but I know it wasn't quite right. Who knows.
Butter Frosting
Ingredients:
(From Five Roses)
1/4 cup butter
pinch of salt
3 tablespoons milk
2 1/2 cups icing sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Method:
Cream butter with pinch of salt. Gradually add milk and icing sugar, alternating. Then add vanilla.
As I say, I added more icing sugar, and then more butter, to try get the right consistency. Mum thinks that she usually adds all the icing sugar, and then later puts in the right amount of milk, watching the consistency as it goes. Who knows, I'll just have to experiment later.
That being said, I've got a sniffle and am behind with school, so wasn't able to actually find a 'scratch' cake recipe, so madam crocker assisted with the cake itself. However instead of the 'water' I usually add to the mix, I added milk, and it was an interesting, and tasty, outcome. The cake was more dense and creamy, not as 'sticky' as water based cake is. Anyway.
I did make the frosting from scratch. I used a different recipe than last time at Mum's request. I followed all the instructions to the T, but something was wrong - it was too watery. I added more icing sugar, and then it was suddenly far too 'sugary'. So I added more butter. In the end It tasted fine, but I know it wasn't quite right. Who knows.
Butter Frosting
Ingredients:
(From Five Roses)
1/4 cup butter
pinch of salt
3 tablespoons milk
2 1/2 cups icing sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Method:
Cream butter with pinch of salt. Gradually add milk and icing sugar, alternating. Then add vanilla.
As I say, I added more icing sugar, and then more butter, to try get the right consistency. Mum thinks that she usually adds all the icing sugar, and then later puts in the right amount of milk, watching the consistency as it goes. Who knows, I'll just have to experiment later.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
mmm Frosting
So I found a frozen cake in the freezer (half a cake, leftover shrapnel from Mum's trifle over Christmas). Since the weekend prior to this I'd eaten some lovely wedding cake, I was inpsired to eat it (that's my story and I'm sticking to it... nothing to do with stress and developments with school, nothing at all...). All the cake needed with icing.
So I looked in my Five Roses cook book and found an easy butter icing recipe.
Rich Butter Frosting
Ingredients:
1/3 cup butter
1 egg
2 cups icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla
Method:
Cream the butter then add the egg. Slowly add in the icing sugar, and finally the vanilla. This icing is delicious!
So I looked in my Five Roses cook book and found an easy butter icing recipe.
Ingredients:
1/3 cup butter
1 egg
2 cups icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla
Method:
Cream the butter then add the egg. Slowly add in the icing sugar, and finally the vanilla. This icing is delicious!
Friday, January 22, 2010
success!!
I have finally successfully made a mac and cheese sauce!!! wooo!!!!
So I followed the same recipe as below, but halfed it, and went super super slow. I made the roux properly and added the milk and cheese super slowly and it worked like a charm! This time I used regular cheddar and spicy jalapeno cheddar and I'd definitely reccomend it.
So the only problem? I forgot to take a photo as I ate it too quickly!
WOOO! Finally, success!
So I followed the same recipe as below, but halfed it, and went super super slow. I made the roux properly and added the milk and cheese super slowly and it worked like a charm! This time I used regular cheddar and spicy jalapeno cheddar and I'd definitely reccomend it.
So the only problem? I forgot to take a photo as I ate it too quickly!
WOOO! Finally, success!
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Revisiting Mac & Cheese...
No helpers this time (and no cans of soup).
I looked up a 'roux' recipe after some comments on the last time I tried to make it from scratch. I turned to my new Julia Child cookbook. It sounded easy. Just add 3 tablespoons of flour to 2 tablespoons of butter, mix until nicely blended and 'frothy'. Then add 2 cups of milk and later 1.5 cups of a cheddar/parmesan mix of cheese. Add cayenne pepper if desired.
Sigh.
Well, no, not sigh, lesson learned. You can't just plunk all the flour in with the butter (unless you want your flour mixture to look like breadcrumbs), and the pan can't be too warm, and the milk must be warm and added SLOWLY. Otherwise you get a hissing lumpy mess.
With a lot of patience (more than I have), I squished out most of the lumps and added the cheese and ate it on top of some fusilli pasta. It tasted quite flour-y, but cheesie enough, so I'm going to have to play with it all at a later stage.
I'm not giving up!!
I looked up a 'roux' recipe after some comments on the last time I tried to make it from scratch. I turned to my new Julia Child cookbook. It sounded easy. Just add 3 tablespoons of flour to 2 tablespoons of butter, mix until nicely blended and 'frothy'. Then add 2 cups of milk and later 1.5 cups of a cheddar/parmesan mix of cheese. Add cayenne pepper if desired.
Sigh.
Well, no, not sigh, lesson learned. You can't just plunk all the flour in with the butter (unless you want your flour mixture to look like breadcrumbs), and the pan can't be too warm, and the milk must be warm and added SLOWLY. Otherwise you get a hissing lumpy mess.
With a lot of patience (more than I have), I squished out most of the lumps and added the cheese and ate it on top of some fusilli pasta. It tasted quite flour-y, but cheesie enough, so I'm going to have to play with it all at a later stage.
I'm not giving up!!
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