Sunday, December 27, 2009

My Kitchen Restaurant -- SUNWAY MAS --




The root of My Kitchen® Restaurant is Heng Hong Tin Kee (HHTK) Restaurant who established since 1950s’ in Melaka by the grandfather who originally from Hainan Island, China. The grandfather started off the business with just selling Hainanese Chicken Rice. Along with business establishment, selected authentic Hainanese cuisine was included in the menu, and it got well-known ever since then, especially the authentic Hainanese Mutton Herbs Soup.







~ HAINANESE CHICKEN RICE BALL ~

~ HAINANESE CURRY CHICKEN ~

~ AUTHENTIC HAINANESE MUTTON-HERBS SOUP ~


















Add.: 26-1, Jln PJU1/3B,
         Sunway Mas Commercial Centre,
         47301 Petaling Jaya,
         Selangor.
Tel / Fax : +603 - 7880 8726
Email : contact@mykitchenrestaurant.com.my
Operating Hours :
Mon – Sun : 10am – 10pm

 

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Kei Tak Sek Shaved Ice Desserts -- KEPONG --



Add.: No. 66 Jalan 7,
          Kepong 52100,
          Kuala Lumpur



Saturday, December 12, 2009

Easy Peasy Ginger Beer

ingredients


ginger


drinks | serves 4-6

Ginger beer is one of my favourite things in the world, especially blooming good in the summer when it's getting hot. I can't think of anything more sexy than having a big jug of iced ginger beer on the table with a barbecue on a hot day. The classic real ginger beers use a starter, and these are fantastic but slow, so here's my shortcut for getting amazing results taking hardly any time.



First of all you need to grate your ginger on a coarse cheese grater – you can leave the skin on if you like. Put the ginger with its pulpy juice into a bowl and sprinkle in your muscovado sugar. Remove the rind from 2 of your lemons with a vegetable peeler, add to the bowl, and slightly bash and squash with something heavy like a pestle or a rolling-pin. Just do this for 10 seconds, to mix up all the flavours. Squeeze the juice from all 3 lemons and add most of it to the bowl. Pour in your fizzy water or soda water. Allow to sit for 10 minutes and then taste. You may feel that the lemons are slightly too sour, therefore add a little more sugar; if it's slightly too sweet, add a little more lemon juice. To be honest, these amounts are always a little variable so just follow your own taste. Pass the ginger beer through a coarse sieve into a large jug and add lots of ice and some sprigs of mint.

The Real Mushroom Soup

 


ingredients

• a small handful of dried porcini
• olive oil
• 600g mixed fresh wild mushrooms (chanterelles, girolles, trompettes de mort, shitake, oyster), cleaned and sliced
• 2 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely sliced
• 1 red onion, peeled and finely chopped
• a knob of butter
• a handful of fresh thyme, leaves picked; sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
• 1 litre chicken or vegetable stock, preferably organic
• a handful of fresh flat-leaf parsley, leaves picked and roughly chopped
• 2 tablespoons mascarpone cheese
• 1 lemon; optional: truffle oil
starter | serves Serves 6

When I first moved to London I worked in the Neal Street Restaurant in Covent Garden. It was famous for its wild mushrooms, and my mate Gennaro used to go out every day during mushroom season to find them. It was in this restaurant that I tasted a real mushroom soup for the first time. Those awful tins of mushroom soup that we've all tasted just became a distant memory!

The nice thing about nearly all mushrooms is that, if cooked correctly, they do have wonderful flavour. If you were to use a field of Portabello mushrooms to make a soup, just adding a tiny bit of dried porcini into the base would make the whole thing more luxurious.


Place the porcini in a small dish, add boiling water just to cover, and leave to soak. Get a large casserole-type pan nice and hot, then add a good couple of lugs of olive oil and your fresh mushrooms. Stir around very quickly for a minute, then add your garlic, onion, butter and thyme and a small amount of seasoning. After about a minute you'll probably notice moisture cooking out of the mushrooms and at this point add half of your porcini, chopped up, and the rest left whole. Strain the soaking liquid to remove any grit, and add it to the pan. Carry on cooking for about 20 minutes until most of the moisture disappears.

Season to taste, and add your stock. Bring to the boil and simmer for around 20 minutes. I usually remove half the soup from the pan and whiz it up to a purée at this point, then pour it back in, adding the parsley and mascarpone, and seasoning carefully to taste.

You can serve this soup as you like, but there are a few things to remember when finishing it off. Mix together a pinch of salt and pepper with the zest of one lemon and the juice of half of it, then spoon a little of this into the middle of the soup. When you go to eat it, stir it in and it gives a wonderful flavour. Other things you can consider are little slices of grilled crostini put into the bottom of the bowls before the soup is poured over. Or you could even quickly fry some nice-looking mushrooms – like girolles, chanterelles or oysters – and sprinkle these on top of the soup. If I was going to use truffle oil, then I would use it on its own – a few drips on the top just before serving.

The Best Mashed Potatoes


Ingredients


1 pound Yukon Gold potatoes
1/2 cup butter
2 cups Parmesan cheese
1 cup chopped fresh chives
1 1/2 cups cream cheese
1/2 medium head garlic, peeled and minced salt and pepper to taste


Directions
Bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Add potatoes; cook until tender but still firm. Drain and return to stove over low heat to dry for 1 to 2 minutes.

Add butter, Parmesan cheese, chives, cream cheese, garlic, salt, and pepper. Use a potato masher to mash until smooth, and serve.

Nutritional Information
Amount Per Serving Calories: 413
Total Fat: 33.9g
Cholesterol: 100mg

Sunday, December 6, 2009

*~ Color City Christmas Giveaway 2009 ~*



This is fun giveaway which I am taking part, it is Christmas giveaway. Giveaway held at colorscityshop.blogspot.com
Colors City is giving away a small christmas gift to fans, friends and anyone that have been visiting my small shop for the pass months. I would like to say thanks and hugs to those that like my handmade crafts.


How to win:

1. Post this giveaway at your blog/facebook/website. Remember to link back to this post so that other people can join too. You can use the picture above with your post.

2. Click on the Follow button on the right on my blog to follow my blog.

3. Finally leave a coment on your link of your post/facebook/website on this post to eligible you to enter the prize draw.



Giveaways ends at 13 December 2009 Sunday 11:59pm Malaysia time. Anyone can enter!!! This giveaway open to both local and international friends.

Giveaway items list which will be stuff in to a Handmade christmas socks:
- 1 pack of random blue colors beads
- Handmade fruit tart earrings
- Pearl with wired ribbon earrings
- 2 packs of Mulberry Paper Flowers
- 2 packs of flower buttons, 1 pack of candy buttons and 1 pack of heart buttons
- 2 rolls of deco tapes.

- I am thinking to adding more on the giveaway slash.....

Good Luck~!

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Behind the Name: Meaning, Origin and History of the Name Cecilia

CECILIA

In the picture: Saint Cecilia is the patron saint of musicians.

Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Finnish, Dutch, German
Pronounced: sə-SEE-lee-ə (English), sə-SEEL-yə (English), che-CHEE-lyah (Italian), the-THEE-lyah (Spanish), se-SEE-lyah (Latin American Spanish) [key]

Latinate feminine form of the Roman family name Caecilius, which was derived from Latin caecus "blind". Saint Cecilia was a semi-legendary 2nd- or 3rd-century martyr who was sentenced to die because she refused to worship the Roman gods. After attempts to suffocate her failed, she was beheaded. She was later regarded as the patron saint of music and musicians.

Due to the popularity of the saint, the name became common in the Christian world during the Middle Ages. It was brought by the Normans to England, where it was commonly spelled Cecily - the Latinate form Cecilia came into use in the 18th century.