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2014/07/31 17:27:40瀏覽171|回應0|推薦0 | |
yes please and thank you As summer rolls around, we all look for ways to escape the steamy city fug. Sometimes that means jetting off to one of our 7,000 (plus, plus) islands to lie on white beaches, sip chilled fruit drinks, and marvel at glorious sunsets. Other times it means packing a whole host of toys and snacks into our car and driving to the suburbs 每 to one of our friends who are lucky enough to have both a garden and a pool 每 for a much needed break from the heat that our concrete jungle so skillfully traps within its walls. The other week, with city-escape in mind, we were at friends* house for swimming and barbecue. They have a wonderful home with spacious garden where the kids can run around, a pool where everyone can cool off, and a grill that looks like a little space pod. They also have a mango tree that produces the best Indian mangoes that are absolute magic with bagoong (shrimp paste). It is usually while lazing on a lounge chair under that tree, eating those mangoes with the aforementioned shrimp paste, listening to the birds we do not hear in our city flat, that C and I dream and wonder, for one glorious minute (or two), about packing it all in and moving to the suburbs. Anyway. It was during that barbecue that I met this lovely girl. We sat beside each other for lunch and chatted away about food and kids and dancing and the possibilities of a zumba class in my future. We talked about feeding our kids healthy stuff, and homemade food that was quick and easy. With a friend, she had written a cookbook about that very subject! And shyly offered me a copy#would I like one? Um, yes please and thank you :) - In a bowl, mix together the marmalade, soy sauce, ginger, water, garlic, sesame oil, and chili oil if using. The original recipe uses chicken breast fillets and pan fries them, and then adds the sauce to the pan, letting it bubble away for a bit. I didn*t have any breast fillets, but I always have chicken thighs hanging around so I used those. And because I prefer cooking in the oven rather than on the hob (because ultimately I am lazy) I decided to bake them. I*ll give myself plus points though because I used homemade marmalade (here*s the recipe). I loved how this turned out. Firstly, let me just say I could drink this sauce. Just from the first lick I knew I would like the finished product. It*s sweet, savory, sticky, and if you use the chili oil, can also have a bit of a kick. Basically all that I gravitate towards in a sauce. So, at that point, I was already sold. Added to that, it*s a breeze to make and quite thrifty too if you consider chicken being one of the most affordable meats here. This is definitely going to be made again#along with other variations: maybe with prawns next time (not so thrifty but we all deserve a splurge sometimes right??). There are more dishes I*ve bookmarked to try, like the World Cup Chilean Chicken and the Sunny Mango Sponge cake. What I like about this cookbook is its relaxed and approachable vibe. It focuses on the basic concepts of healthy eating without being too stringent about it, especially important and appealing I think for moms who, between work and family, have hardly a moment to cook. I also secretly like that it*s written by two Filipino moms 每 I love seeing more Filipinos out there, being published and sharing their great ideas with the world! You see it?above no need to over-use borders on the evangelical 援翍よ蠱腔躓赽 敷蠕腔迾舒 �蛂斕腔泫蹲 ええ廠�① すす筏筏符岆淩倷腦 �①岆ю諾腔�伎 �汜腔�橙笢腔隙� |
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