Tag Archives: viking.desserts

Taipei the Primitive Culture Way プリミティヴ・カルチャーの台北

8 Nov

shilinscene

When I went to Thailand last year, I stayed with my friend Alexander and his surprisingly non-French boyfriend Bordeaux. The pair showed me a wonderful time in and around Bangkok, and it was fitting that I experienced Thailand for the first time with their guidance because it was their blogs that made me want to go there in the first place.

Bordeaux’s Marita Says and Alexander’s Primitive Culture are not just enviable; I actually do envy them. Their tantalizing photography, decadent recipes, lucid yet succinct writing, and rapidity of posting are all things that make me feel very inadequate as a fellow food and travel blogger. It’s a good thing I don’t visit the same places they do or I’d probably just give up.

Now, I am in Taiwan, and I find myself in the frustrating/wonderful position of being somewhere that Bordeaux and Alexander have already been. It’s frustrating because I feel like I can’t really add much to their already excellent posts about the island; it’s wonderful because I can use those posts as a very unique travel guide.

Or at least I can to a certain extent. Since I’m visiting Taiwan (and Burma and Thailand) as a field agent for my company, I have annoyingly little control over what I get to see, do, and eat. That’s not to say the trip hasn’t been awesome so far and I haven’t seen, done, and eaten some pretty amazing things. But it’s weird being more or less told where to go on your vacation. Then again, this isn’t a vacation.

breakfast1snakesoup

Luckily, I did have a bit of free time in Taipei. Taipei is an interesting city that reminded me a bit of Pusan, and although it boasts a vibrant food scene and a variety of intriguing local specialties, I found the culinary landscape a bit difficult to take in with only a few free hours to spare in two short days. The breakfast at my hotel was, of course, worthless, as was the dinner provided on one of the coach tours I was forced to take. The tour itself was actually fairly interesting, and it brought me to Huaxi Market where I tried snake soup… but the meal they gave us? Tasty enough, but completely safe and generic: all-you-can-eat Mongolian barbecue and Cantonese hotpot. Yawn.

buffethotpot2

This is where Alexander and Bordeaux came to the rescue; Primitive Culture in particular had some fantastic posts on food in Taipei. I didn’t really plan to follow Alexander’s lead so precisely, but, completely by chance, I kept finding things that he and Bordeaux had eaten. The first “Taiwan treat” I found was a slice of chocolate Swiss roll decorated like a log cabin, at a cafe near Longshan Temple. The little cake struck me as very Japanese – I was reminded of one of Kitakyushu’s more dubious meibutsu, the roll cake.

cake

Initially I was very surprised at how deeply Japanese food and culture in general is ingrained into modern Taiwanese culture. Of course, this makes a lot of sense, considering that Taiwan was a colony of Japan for half a century and today remains on the receiving end of a constant stream of Japanese pop culture and Japanese tourists. So the little log cabin roll cake and a number of similarly kawaii confections sold in Taiwan may be derived from Japan’s adoration of delicate pseudo-European sweets; or it may be purely coincidental that the Taiwanese have developed a similar fetish independently of Japanese influence. At any rate, it was as soft and delicious as it was adorable.

The next night I was mine to enjoy “at leisure,” as we say in the biz. So I hightailed it to Shilin Night Market, by all accounts the best night market in Taipei; here I was delighted to find and taste a number of things highlighted in Primitive Culture. First off was shaved ice, which is a sort of no-brainer when it comes to eating in Taipei, but I was certainly more determined to have some after reading Alexander’s post about it. I decided to forego the typical fruit toppings in favor of something more uniquely Taiwanese: peanut jam, almond jelly, and condensed milk. The mountainous dessert was like powdery snow, melting evenly and smoothly with the gooey sweetness of the peanut jam and milk. The almond jelly was tasteless, overwhelmed by the cold ice and the rich, nutty topping, but it did add a pleasantly weird texture to the whole delicious mess.

ice1

Then there was the sausage, one of Alexander’s first tastes of Taipei, and a specialty, I later learned, of Shilin. I can’t really read Chinese, although occasionally I can figure stuff out based on their Japanese equivalents. In this case my weird obsession with obscure fish, insect, and plant kanji paid off. I could read the character 蒜 that forms part of 大蒜, more commonly written as the hiragana にんにく (ninniku): garlic, as I correctly guessed. The sweet, succulent, sausage was drunk with the stuff – a mellow, musky flavor perfectly tuned to the low frequency of fatty pork.

sausage1sausage21

To wash it all down, I chose… wow!! Frog’s eggs: boba and lemon jelly in a refreshing, lightly sweetened iced tea. As bubble tea goes, it was pretty standard, but like Alexander, I was unable to resist the charmingly bizarre graphics on the cup.

frogseggscoffin

I also saw coffin bread, a specialty of Tainan, but alas, I was too full to partake even though it looked really good, especially in the photos on Primitive Culture. Too full, after only a sausage, a dessert, and a cup of tea? Some viking you are. Ah, but I’ve not mentioned the other things I ate that night at Shilin, the things in which Alexander and Bordeaux didn’t partake. First was pig’s brain soup. This, unlike frog’s eggs, is not just a cute name; in fact, there was little that could be called cute about this simple dish. In a thin, nondescript broth bobbed hunks of porcine cerebral cortex, unadorned but for a few shreds of lettuce and ginger. The brain, which was of course the most interesting thing going on here, had a lovely flavor like cream cheese blended with liver, and yet it just didn’t work in the soup. There was nothing to offset it; the ginger helped a bit, but in the end it was just a bowlful of brain. Though I didn’t like it, I’d definitely try brain again; the mild, funky flavor and supple texture was just too intriguing. I’d like to have it seared, maybe with a passion fruit sauce, or in a pate with fennel and sage.

brain

Finally, I tried the Taipei-only da bing bao xiao bing, literally “small pastry wrapped in little pastry,” which is more or less exactly what they are. The way they are made amused me: a perfectly fine, deep fried and flaky pastry filled with black sesame seeds is smashed to pieces with a hammer, then indelicately dressed with your choice of sweet or savory toppings and sheathed in a chewy round of dough like a burrito. The end result is so much more than the sum of its parts: a chewy mess of a dessert (I got mine with sweet coconut) with a terrifically satiating crunch.

biglittle

Though I was only in Taipei for two days, I feel pretty satisfied with what I ate there, thanks in part to my comrades Alexander and Bordeaux. Eating can be frustrating when you’re in an entirely new place and you don’t read or speak the language and you don’t know east from west, but as Primitive Culture, Marita Says, and hopefully I am a viking have shown, you’ve just got to find a decent night market, and the good food will find you.

Five Summer Recipes 5つの夏レシピー

15 Jul

On account that July is crazy (Kokura Gion, many many birthdays, packing and preparing to go home, sayonara parties, etc.), this may be my last post for a while. But luckily I’ve upped the ante on last year’s summer recipes, bringing you not three, not four, but five original recipes to keep you well-fed until Labor Day. Enjoy!

第一 Thai Rice Salad

A friend of mine made something similar to this in college, and I recreated it on my birthday using red, purple, and black rice I bought in Thailand. With lime juice, coconut milk, sesame oil, chili oil, Thai herbs, and fresh fruit, this salad tastes just as colorful as it looks, an excellent side for all manner of grilled meat.

2 cups (uncooked) red, purple, and/or black Thai rice (substitute brown or wild rice)
1 cup coconut milk
4 tablespoons lime juice
2 tablespoons sesame oil
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon nam pla (fish sauce; substitute soy or Worcestershire sauce)
1 tablespoon honey or sugar
1 red bell pepper, chopped
1 green bell pepper, chopped
1 slightly unripe mango or papaya, peeled, seeded, and chopped
1/2 cup (packed) chopped cilantro
5-6 green onions, thinly sliced
3-4 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 cup cashews, toasted and roughly chopped
2 Kaffir lime leaves, grated or minced
1/4 cup chopped Thai basil (substitute basil)
1-2 teaspoons chili oil
1-2 teaspoons cayenne (optional)
salt and pepper, to taste

  1. Gently rinse rice under cold water. Soak in 3-4 cups water (less water for firmer rice) for 6-7 hours and cook in the same water with a pinch of salt. Refrigerate and cool thoroughly before using.
  2. Whisk together coconut milk, lime juice, sesame oil, soy sauce, nam pla, honey or sugar, garlic, Kaffir lime leaves, Thai basil, chili oil, cayenne, salt, and pepper until well-blended.
  3. Toss together rice, red pepper, green pepper, mango or papaya, cilantro, and green onions. Pour on dressing and cashews and toss again just before serving

第二 Orange and Yuzu Koshō Crème Fraiche for Shellfish

This is adopted from a recipe for lobster that I wanted to make for Laura on her birthday. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find any lobster, but it worked nicely with seared scallops and crab (especially crab), with a sneaky heat from the yuzu koshō that gives this simple sauce a delightfully cool-then-hot flavor.

2/3 cup sour cream
1 cup cream
2 teaspoons finely grated orange zest
2 teaspoons yuzu-kosho (substitute 1 teaspoon lemon zest and 1teaspoon cayenne)
2 teaspoons finely grated ginger
1 tablespoon orange juice
salt, to taste

Blend all ingredients in a bowl until smooth and refrigerate for at least two hours. Dollop onto peeled, prepared shellfish like crab, scallops, or lobster. Garnish with green onion.

第三 Saffron and Chevre Mashed Potatoes

The idea for this also came from the lobster recipe I mentioned above, but I thought mashed potatoes would be more to Laura’s liking than potato soup. The cheese here gives the potatoes an exquisitely dense and smooth texture and a light tang to underscore the delicate fragrance of saffron.

2 medium-size potatoes, peeled and cubed
2 medium-size sweet potatoes, peeled and cubed
2/3 cup Chevre, crumbled
1/2 cup mild Cheddar, crumbled
1 cup cream
1/3 cup butter
about 3/4 tablespoon saffron, torn
1teaspoon oregano
salt and white pepper, to taste

  1. Boil or steam potatoes for 15 minutes or until fork-tender. Drain and return to pot.
  2. Over low heat, add butter, cream, saffron, salt, and pepper to potatoes and mash them together.
  3. Add cheeses and continue to mash until cheese is melted and incorporated with potatoes and potatoes have reached desired consistency.
  4. Cook until mixture is bright yellow-orange and saffron threads have softened.

第四 Green Salad with Feta Cheese and Cranberry Vinaigrette

Cranberries aren’t a summer fruit, but their brisk sourness lends itself nicely to summery meals. This salad counters a tart cranberry vinaigrette with buttery pine nuts and the ripe, salty creaminess of feta cheese.

3 cups mixed baby greens
1/2 green bell pepper, sliced
1/4 cup broccoli sprouts
1/4 cup Feta, crumbled
1 1/2 teaspoons pine nuts, toasted

1/2 cup dried cranberries
1/2 cup cranberry juice
1/2 cup orange juice
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons finely-chopped red onion
1 1/2 tablespoon cider or red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons fresh mint
1 tablespoon honey
2 teaspoons dill
salt and pepper, to taste

  1. In a saucepan, boil cranberries in cranberry juice and orange juice for about 15-20 minutes, or until cranberries have plumped and softened and liquid has reduced slightly.
  2. Pour cranberries and juice into a blender with onions, mint, dill, salt, and pepper and blend into a paste.
  3. Add olive oil, vinegar, and honey and continue to blend until mixture is completely homogenous and smooth. Refrigerate until ready to use.
  4. Toss baby greens and bell pepper together. Top with broccoli sprouts, cheese, and pine nuts. Pour on vinaigrette just before serving.

第五 Passion Fruit-Raspberry Sauce

This is a simple yet noticeable twist on a standard dessert condiment, inspired by an impulse buy while out grocery shopping. For the liqueur, I wanted to use something anise-based like Sambuca or Ouzo, but couldn’t find any. Cointreau worked splendidly as a substitute, but you can use whatever you like to add an extra tangent of flavor to this versatile sauce.

about 1/2 pound fresh or frozen raspberries (1 1/2-2 cups)
2 passion fruits
2 teaspoons fruit or herbal liqueur
1/3 cup sugar
juice of 1/4 lemon

  1. Halve each passion fruit and scoop out the seeds. Add to a saucepan along with all other ingredients and stir to combine.
  2. Cook over medium-high heat until fruit has liquefied.
  3. Press mixture through a strainer or sieve to remove seeds. Serve warm or chilled over ice cream or cake.

More Recipes for Romance もう2つロマンスの作り方

7 May

Our Golden Week plans (and by “plans” I mean “half-assed, too-late attempt to book a trip to Pusan”) fell through, which left Laura and I with lots and lots of precious, precious free time to enjoy ourselves and the gorgeous late-spring weather. On Monday I spent the whole day cooking, and the whole night eating (and drinking and playing truth or dare). Here is the meal around which that wonderful day off revolved: two recipes for two, one very complicated, one very simple, both very delicious and, as always, completely original!

Viking Lasagna

Pasta (adapted from a recipe by Mario Batali)

3 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup rice bran
4 large eggs
2 tablespoons sweet vermouth
1 teaspoon olive oil

  1. Mix all ingredients using either the well method or with a food processor or electric mixer.
  2. Dust your countertop with additional flour or bran and knead the dough until it is firm, homogeneous, and dry. The dough should not stick to the countertop.
  3. Form the dough into a ball, wrap in plastic wrap, and allow to rest at room temperature for one hour.
  4. Cut the dough into eighths and process into lasagne, about nine inches long, according to your pasta maker’s instructions. Alternatively, the dough may be rolled out into very thin sheets and then cut into lasagne.
  5. Dust finished lasagne with a small amount of bran to prevent sticking, cover, and set aside.

Filling

3 small eggplants, thinly sliced into long strips
3/4 bunch maitake mushrooms, roughly chopped
about 3/4 cup grated Pecorino Romano
about 3/4 cup grated Mozzarella
about 1/2 cup Ricotta
about 1/2 pound mixed ground beef and ground pork
1 tablespoon pine nuts
1/2 onion, diced
1 clove garlic, minced
2 or 3 large green olives, minced
7 or 8 capers, halved
1/4 teaspoon garam masala (substitute five-spice and curry powder)
1/2 teaspoon dried marjoram
1/2 teaspoon fennel seeds
salt and pepper, to taste
olive oil, for frying

  1. Salt sliced eggplant and allow to sit for about 15 minutes to sweat.
  2. Mix cheeses together and set aside, reserving about 1/4 cup Pecorino Romano.
  3. Combine meat, capers, garam masala, marjoram, fennel seeds, and pepper in a mixing bowl.
  4. Rinse off salted eggplant and drain and dry well. Toss or brush eggplant with about 2 tablespoons of olive oil.
  5. Warm a non-stick skillet over medium-high heat. When hot, add eggplant and fry until both sides are browned, about 2 or 3 minutes on each side.
  6. Remove eggplant from heat and set aside on paper towel to drain excess oil.
  7. Add about 1 tablespoon of olive oil to the same non-stick skillet. Sauté pine nuts, onion, garlic, and olives until slightly browned.
  8. Add meat and cook just through, making sure to break up any large chunks. Drain excess fat and reserve.

Sauce

about 20 ounces diced canned tomatoes in juice
1 small eggplant, peeled and diced
1/2 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 bunch maitake mushrooms, roughly chopped
2 or 3 large green olives, chopped
2 tablespoons Balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup red wine or fruit liqueur
dried thyme, to taste
dried basil, to taste
dried oregano, to taste
1 bay leaf
1 dash Tabasco sauce
salt and pepper
reserved fat from meat (see above)

  1. Warm reserved fat over medium-high heat. Add eggplant, onion, garlic, mushrooms, olives, salt, and pepper and cook until onions become translucent.
  2. Add tomatoes, vinegar, wine or liqueur, herbs, and Tabasco sauce and bring to a boil.
  3. Cook uncovered to reduce until sauce reaches desired consistency

Assembly

fresh flat-leaf parsley, chopped
olive oil

  1. Boil about 6 cups water in a large pot. Brush excess flour or bran from fresh lasagne and add to water.
  2. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until firmly al dente. Remove from pot and rinse under cold water, then drain and dry on paper towel.
  3. Lightly coat a 9-inch bread pan with olive oil.
  4. Layer pasta, eggplant, mushrooms, meat, sauce, and cheese two or three times until pan is full. Top with pasta, sauce, parsley, and grated Pecorino Romano.
  5. Cover with foil and bake at 350º (180ºC) for about 20 minutes, then remove foil and continue cooking for another 15-20 minutes.

In the end, I had extra ingredients, especially pasta, so I made another lasagna-moussaka type thing with extra sauce, sliced onions, and a mixture of beaten eggs. That’s in my freezer now. I’ll let you know how it turns out. After that I still had extra pasta, which I microwaved with clotted cream, dried herbs, and a splash of sweet vermouth. It was delicious.

Simple Almond and Raspberry Tiramisu

about 12 ounces Mascarpone
about 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
about 12-15 lady fingers or amaretti cookies
1/2 cup espresso or strong coffee, cooled
1/4 cup Amaretto
1/4 cup Crème de Framboise
1 teaspoon almond extract
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon roasted almond oil (optional)
about 1/2 tablespoon cocoa powder
freshly grated nutmeg, to taste
fresh raspberries (optional)

  1. Blend together cheese, sugar, almond extract, vanilla, and almond oil until homogeneous and set aside.
  2. Combine coffee, Amaretto, and Framboise in a bowl. Dip lady fingers into coffee mixture until soaked (but not soggy) and arrange on the bottom of bowls or a baking pan.
  3. Spread out one half of the cheese on top of the first layer of lady fingers.
  4. Add another layer of soaked lady fingers and then another layer of cheese.
  5. Dust with cocoa powder, cover, and refrigerate 1-4 hours before serving. Serve with fresh nutmeg and raspberries.
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