Vanilla Cut Out Cookies

Cutout cookies are cute!
They're a lot more time-consuming to make but they're also a lot of
fun. I used the recipe from the special interest publication
of Better Homes and
Gardens : Christmas Cookies. The
recipe's Vanilla Rounds - but I decided shapes would be more fun.
The little black dots on the cookies are there not because my
camera lens is dirty - they're wonderful vanilla seeds from
Nielsen-Massey
Madagascar
Bourbon Pure Vanilla Bean Paste. I had some trouble icing the
cookies because my nozzle kept getting stuck with dried up micro
bits of icing sugar - which was a cause of real pain and
frustration!! So remember to over your icing with a damp cloth when
not in use or the surface will begin to dry and that's what will
clog up the icing cones.

I was lucky my sister-in-law Kresna dropped by for dinner and chipped in to help. We made 100+ cookies and they're really cute and it was well worth the effort and icing frustration. The result was a little too sweet with the royal icing and all... I would cut the amount of sugar back in future batches.
Read More...Long weekend with endless baking!
150 Muffins (Allspice Applesauce & Blueberry, Cranberry and Walnut, Milo and Banana Bran)
50 Mini Bāos (Red Bean Paste & Green Tea Lotus Seed Paste)
3 Pizzas (Made my own dough from scratch!)

1 Plum Pie

大包 Big Bāo (Big Bun)

When I was a kid - I always stuck to Chā Shāo Bāo
or Red Bean
Paste Bāo. To me the Big Bāo was for bigger people like adults.
It's much bigger than the regular buns and i could never finish
one. The Big Bāo is also a savoury bun, filled with stir fried
gingered chicken, pork and chinese mushrooms in soy and oyster
sauce, with a wedge of hard boiled egg. It could be a meal. The Big
Bāo is also considered the King of the Bāos because it just has a
whole lot more than the other 1 main ingredient Bāo. So being all
grown up now, it's time to have Big Bāo.
The dough used for this Bāo is the regular kind - unlike the one
for the Chā Shāo Bāo
which
required more time and days. This is a lot simpler and you just
need to prepare it in about an hour ahead. The recipe I used is
adapted from Agnes Chang's Delightful Snacks & Dim Sum. With this
dough you can fill your Bāo with a variety of fillings like red
bean paste, lotus seed paste, minced chicken, etc. The possibility
is endless!
The Gingerbread Man

I was about 4 or 5 when I finally got Mum to bake me Gingerbread
Man cookies. We were Christmas shopping at Metro and while lining
up to pay I saw Gingerbread man cookie cutters! I squealed with
delight and begged Mum to get them so we could make Gingerbread Man
cookies like in the storybook she's been reading to me. Mum at that
point of time never made cutout cookies before and didn't have the
recipe for the Gingerbread Man, and her demanding little client
insisted that the cookies had to look the ones in the storybook. My
brothers weren't helping either. Poor Mum.
The cookies she baked were peanut butter cutouts without frosting.
We didn't have a electric mixer then and she had to cream
everything by hand. I wanted so badly to help but I think I was
more trouble then. She had really worked hard to please her little
clients. Little me was disappointed that they weren't frosted and I
think my brothers and I broke my Mum's heart when we said it was
too hard. And consequently I was not allowed to eat them because I
had a sore throat and the peanut butter cookies were too
heaty. I love my
Mum for making them. She worked so hard on the cookies just for her
little kids.

So fast forward 25 years. With the help of modern technology, I am
going to make gingerbread man cookies for my Mum!
叉烧包 Smiling Chā Shāo Bāo (Sweet Pork Bun) for World Bread Day 2006

I haven't met anyone who doesn't like Bāo. It's cheap,
it tastes great and best of all it's fills you up just right. I
remember squealing as a little girl when Mum bought us Chā Shāo
Bāo, the sweet barbecued pork filling oozing out from a soft and
fluffy bun - always made my day. It was always Chā Shāo Bāo for me,
even of there was a huge variety of different bāos
with equally
wonderful treasures within. It took me a few years to tear myself
away from it and discovered Red Bean Paste and Lotus Seed
Paste bāos...
Mmmmm!!
The thing about chinese cuisine - as simple as it may appear, it
usually always takes years to master it right. It's a chinese way
of learning anything - practice, practice, practice (for eons)
until it's drilled into your mind, body and soul. That is why my
asian culinary skills are far weaker than my western
abilities.

This is my first time making bāo
and making
bread from yeast. I obviously
need a lot of
practice on my bāo
wrapping
skills. I know it's not great or impressive, I'm still pleased at
my maiden attempt. The texture of the bun wasn't as fluffy as I
hoped, but that requires time for yeast to age. The filling was
very tasty - I think I might add half a cup more water so it might
be a little more gooier.
To make myself feel better about my first attempt, it is true that
first attempts will never come close to looking like the ones you
get from restaurants or Dim Sum houses. The ones that are
professionally hand crafted by Bāo
Shīfus (Bāo Masters)
use old yeast or starter doughs that have been around for a long
time. The longer the yeast is allowed to proof and age the
fluffier, softer and "Smilier" the bāos
get. Smiling
bāos
are the ones
that are opened and fluffed up at the top (please do not use my
attempt as a good and successful example of smiling
bāos).
Smiling bāos
usually are
used in Chā Shāo Bāos. The recipe is from Agnes Chang's
Delightful Snacks & Dim Sum. I've also
been researching and reading a bāo forum hosted
by Jo's Deli &
Bakery that has been
incredibly helpful.
This is also made specially as a contribution to World Bread Day
2006. The International Union of Bakers and Bakers-Confectioners
(UIB) declared 16th of October as World Bread
Day to celebrate
the basic staple of life that is eaten across all cultures and
tradition.
Go Carbs!
Triple Chocolate Delight

So I've worked on the beta version of Out of Body Experience
Chocolate Cupcake ver1.0. for Caryne - The Chocolate Fiend's
Birthday and added on another thick layer of semi-sweet chocolate
ganache, topped with Hundreds and Thousands! It was very with the
program of Birthday Delight! She named the cakes Triple Chocolate
Delight!

This is the richest and cocoa bountiful cake I've had in my
existence. Warning :
This can burst your artery. And I think
it has come to the point where I am thinking... I've been having
too much chocolate. This is suicide by Chocolate.
Too much chocolate?

Is it possible to have too much chocolate?
Somehow I managed to psyche myself some years back that chocolate
was totally fattening and so it was pointless and I should not eat
it. I actually managed to avoid it - Brownies, Chocolate Cakes,
Devil Cakes, etc. I did that for about 8 years. I found it too rich
and sweet - but I always made room for Cheesecake or Tiramisu. And
then, I was seeing this guy for almost three years and he didn't
like Cheesecakes (and Chocolate Cakes). He never stopped me from
eating them but I just somehow never did when we were dating - we
never had cake when it came to birthdays. Don't get me wrong - it
wasn't a tragic thing then, we just weren't into it very much. And
now somehow, I seem to be making up for lost time.
I am working
on a chocolate cupcake recipe for a chocolate fiend's birthday next
week. So here is a beta version of Out of Body Experience Chocolate
Cupcake ver1.0.
Tomato Tart

I
love tomatoes. As a child, I hated them. I thought they tasted
weird and soggy. I always pulled them out from burgers and salads.
The malaysian tomatoes are probably not a good introduction. I
started to only really enjoy them when I was studying in Melbourne.
Cherry vines are my favourite! And really expensive here. So
tomatoes served uncooked, cooked and sundried - I love them all!
I've always wanted to attempt a tomato tart but my fear of handling
pasties usually is the reason why I never did. So what I did was I
cheated and bought the shortcrust pastry - one shouldn't be overly
ambitious with pastry. There is a lot to be considered and probably
best to prepare it the night before and when you are an
impulsive experimenteur
like me, best
to buy.

Berry Nutty Muffins

It was to the
dismay of many when I walked through the entrance of my office
muffin-less this morning.
"Whacha'
bake?" "Where are my muffins?" "What happened?" "Is it all
gone?"
What have I done? I've spoilt them all!! I of course had to remedy
the drama and had to think up some recipe for belated muffin
monday. Was at the supermarket and decided on blueberries when I
found Dried Roselles.....
mmmmmm!! So Berry Nutty muffins it is to the rescue...





