Friday, August 23, 2013

2013 Heirloom Tomatoes - Home Grown Veges

Every summer, I wonder what's growing this year in my brother's vege garden.  This year, he had a bumper corps of heirloom tomatoes.   They are so unbelievably delicious, so tasty, so tomato!   I wish they stop those 'hot house' tomatoes that are so taste less! 

 When you have the real thing, you don't need to roast or blanch the tomatoes to peel it.
You can just use a nice sharp pairing knife and peeeeel!
TIP:  How to save an opened canned tomato paste.
 Save the extra canned tomato paste in  freezer bag.  Scoop a Tablespoon and drop in the bag.  Then, freeze.  Take the portion you need the next time.
Do the same for the fresh ginger.  Peel them, chop them, slice them, dice them, and freeze them.

 My fresh home made tomato sauce.  I can see why women's job is never done in the old days.  They got to can and preserve all the produces and fruits at their peak to prevent waste.

 Tomato sauce and candied watermelon rinds.

OKONOMIYAKI - Vegetarian style or with meat (Japanese vegetable pancake)

OKONOMIYAI is one of my childhood favorites.  It just bring back the wonderful memory of after a good hot bath at the Japanese bath house  - OFURO YA SAN  -- sitting around the Teppan and watch it being prepared in front of you.

Ingredients:
1 Cup of shredded veges of all sorts that you love.   I just bought a bag of shredded broccoli vege mix.

1 Cup Shredded Cabbage
2  chopped green onions
Your favorite meat varieties - chopped meat, small steak pieces, shrimps, chopped KAMABOKO, fish cakes cut into pieces, chicken pieces, etc.
1/2 C flour
1 egg
1/2 C water
salt & pepper to taste

Japanese OKONOMIYAKI sauce, or TONKATSU sauce  or your favorite BBQ sauce and any sauce you like
Dry seaweed -- NORI -  flakes or sheet of dry seaweed torn apart in to small pieces, Bonita flakes.

The amount of veges are all up to you and flour and water mixture is all measured visually.
Shred cabbage and your favorite veges - e.g. onions, spinach, carrots, broccoli.   At least all the veges that produce less water.

Technique:
Break up the egg in a bowl, mix in flour and water - the consistency is thin batter mixture.
Add all the shredded veges and chopped onions and chopped fish cakes and mix well.

Pre-heat the fry pan and add oil.  Once the oil is shimmering, add a nice big scoop of vege mixtures.  Flatten them with the back of the scoop or spatula.   Top with Meat or Shrimp, etc.


Tip:  If the vege pancake is quite large -- as I tend to make my personal preferred size - Cover with lid and cook.  Turn it over when the bottom is nicely browned. 
The proportion is up to you visually.  If larger and thicker (in height) the mixture, the better method is to cover the fray pan.  No need to cover for the smaller size.

Turn over and cook the other side.
Serve with NORI flakes, Bonita flakes, and drizzle with your favorite sauce.



If you have an electric Griddle, that is an ideal way to prepare the OKONOMIYAKI at the table top. 
Enjoy!

Look Who Has been Cooking!

Oh, Wow!   I have been offline for a while, and I checked my daily connection to see who has been cooking and Wow!.  Maha has just been cooking up a storm! 
How delicious all these food sound.   Hope you can visit some of my favorite bloggers' sites and find out what they have been cooking - Happy Cooking!