Mama’s essentials – How to prepare porridge for baby

When it was time to introduce Zack to rice porridge, I was researching for ways to prepare this typical Asian baby staple for my little one. I tried out a few of the recipes found on the web, and after some tweaking and perfecting; I’m happy to share with all moms (and grandmoms) my fail proof method of cooking yummy porridge for your baby or toddler.

Preparing porridge in small quantities

When Zack familiarised himself with eating instant rice cereal, it was about time he was introduced to the real deal. At 7 months old he still couldn’t eat much, hence the real challenge here was to cook small portions of porridge without it getting burnt.

I first tried a method I picked up from another mom blogger, which was to wash the rice grains, dry it in a slow oven, ground it to powder form, and then cook it for 15-20 minutes stirring over low heat with a small amount of water. Although this may seem like the fastest way to make porridge, it didn’t give the sort of texture I was looking for. It looked and felt like really thick glue!

I continued to look for alternative means of preparing porridge in small quantities, and my mom suggested that I use a ceramic mug that’s meant for double boiling. With the help of this website, I used the recommended ratio of 1 portion of rice to 8 portions of water to get a pretty good consistency.

My mom also shared with me an important step when double boiling – I needed to ensure that I used hot, boiled water in both the crock pot and the ceramic mug. This step is essential in order to start the cooking process immediately as a slow cooker tends to take a longer time to come to a boil.  The water should cover the ceramic mug up to 80% of the way. This makes sure there is even distribution of heat (and cooking power) inside the mug.

Now, I’m using a slow cooker instead of a pot over a gas stove for 2 reasons. With the slow cooker, the heat is more even and constant, and because it does not come to a continuous boil, the ceramic mug does not need to be held in place with a towel / wire rack. Secondly, the slow cooker can be hooked up to a timer, making it an easy and safe way to prepare porridge. When cooking over the gas stove I noticed that when set at the lowest heat, the water still comes to a ferocious boil, making my ceramic mug “dance” around. I also very often have to replenish the water it is immersed in as it evaporates quite a lot.

Tip:

  • Try to keep water level at 70% if cooking over gas. You never know when water may seep into your ceramic mug, esp if it is bubbling constantly. If you have to you may use aluminium foil to cover the mug before closing the lid.
  • Cooking time with slow cooker – approx 3.5 to 4 hours
  • Cooking time over the gas stove at the lowest heat – approx 2 – 2.5 hours

Preparation is key

I am always looking for quick ways to get things done. When it comes to preparing bub’s porridge, I found that preparation is essential to making this mommy duty less of a chore (not that it’s a chore but there are days where I wish there’s some automated porridge maker, lol!). I am an advocate of freezing food—I love to prepare everything in large batches, and keep them stored and frozen in single servings.

For cooking small quantities of porridge, I use ice cube trays and food pots to store soup stocks and pureed vegetables. I use a milk powder scoop to measure the ingredients as I find that it’s a good size, and a pretty handy measuring tool (this is very important when you need to “level” the ingredients to get an accurate quantity). Here are my tried and tested measurements:

1 “milk powder scoop” of rice + 8 “milk powder scoops” of stock + 1 ice cube of pureed vegetable

Alternatively, to save space, you can also use ice cube trays to freeze measured stock (the ones pictured were purchased from Daiso, comes with a lid). I then keep these cubes in Ziploc bags to free up space in the fridge. Here’s the measurement if using stock in cubes:

1 “milk powder scoop” of rice + 3 ice cubes of stock (approx.  8 “milk powder scoops” of stock) + 1 ice cube of pureed vegetable

You can also use ikan bilis powder as an alternative to preparing stock. Simply soak cleaned ikan bilis to get rid of most of the saltiness, bake in the oven until crisp, and then grind into powder form. Add a pinch of this ikan bilis powder to your 8 “milk powder scoops” of plain water. A little goes a long way.

Preparing porridge in larger quantities

As Zack grew older, his appetite (and stomach) also grew bigger. I could now prepare his porridge directly in the slow cooker. All I had to do was simply measure out the ingredients, and put everything into the crock pot before I go to bed. I left it to the timer to switch the power on and off.

Just remember to keep to the tried and tested measurement which is the ratios of 1 portion of grain to 8 portions of water. For Zack, I prepare 2 servings of porridge for his lunch and dinner using the below measurements:

3 “milk powder scoops” of millet + 3 “milk powder scoops” of rice + 2 cubes of vegetables and 1 cube of meat (fish/chicken/pork) + 2 cups of water (approx. 500ml)

This measurement can yield exactly 2 cups of porridge (about 2 regular Chinese rice bowls).

Tip: As I leave all ingredients in the crockpot for 6 hours at room temperature, it is not neccesary to use hot, boiled water as the cooking process will not commence till later. I just use room temperature water. There are some concerns about whether the meat/vege will spoil while immersed in this room temperature water for 6 hours. I can safely say no as the ingredients start off as frozen blocks, plus it does take some time before fully defrosting. The kitchen is also relatively cool at night, hence the crockpot in itself remains cool and insulated until it is time to cook.

Timing is everything

I used my trusty timer (purchased from Ikea) which allowed me to leave my porridge making in auto-cruise.

I set it to start at point “1” every night at about the same time, combine all my ingredients, and let it sit (and soak) until the cooking process begins 6 hours later. I allow the porridge to cook for 4 hours before it switches off automatically.

Choice of ingredients suitable for porridge

You can be creative with the choice of ingredients you put into your bub’s porridge. Just remember the ratio of grains to water is always 1:8 (omg i sound like a broken record already)

Some grains I’ve experimented with are millet, lentils, split pea (dhall), oats and even alphabet pasta. You can substitute white rice with brown rice, and even add grains like quinoa. The combinations are endless!

The quantity of vegetables is also entirely up to you. I personally like to put in a ratio of 2:1 vegetables to meat.

Some vegetables which cook well in porridge include broccoli, pumpkin, carrot, peas, spinach, siew pak choy, cauliflower, potato and sweet potato. For younger babies, remember to pre-cook all vegetables and puree before storing. For older babies who can handle chunks, just chop the vegetables into small pieces and give it a quick mash before serving.

Tip: You can store chopped vegetables in a big Ziploc bags or in ice cube trays. If making into cubes, remember to pour a little water into the ice cube trays to help the vegetables “solidify” or else you’ll be handling a giant mess of vegetable crumbs when trying to remove them from the ice cube tray.

When using pork or chicken, make sure it’s finely minced. My mom helps with chopping it using her trusty cleaver. It has a better texture than working it through a food processor. As for fish, I just keep it sliced, as it’ll flake anyway when cooked. I freeze meat portions in a container, by separating it with cling wrap. You can also portion it out with an ice cube tray. Do whatever that floats your boat.

I hope you have found these tips useful (and helpful!) when preparing porridge for your baby! Happy Cooking!

 

Villa Danieli Review – the worst Italian restaurant in KL (UPDATED)

Update:

Hail the power of social media!!

The F&B Director from Sheraton Imperial contacted me to formally apologise for the bad experience we had while dining at Villa Danieli.
Thanks Greg Hjorth for the courtesy call. It is this kind of response to feedback that will improve the quality of service at your F&B outlets.
Greg’s also informed me that there’s a new chef and restaurant manager at Villa Danieli. Perhaps we can re-visit again soon

The original blog post follows.
__ __ __

I don’t usually do food/restaurant reviews. I only take time to write them when i’m extremely dissapointed with the service and quality of food served. Just like that last time i wrote about the terrible food and service at Logenhaus in Taipan.

We had our team lunch last Monday at Sheraton Imperial’s italian restaurant, the Villa Danieli. The restaurant in itself is quite nice–felt like I was in some cottage in countryside Italy.

The “nice” ended there.

Here’s the bad:

  1. Waiting staff were “lembap”
  2. Restaurant manager was rude, and impatient
  3. Food service was slow
  4. Food quality was crappy

We arrived at 1.20 pm, and when we sat down, the first thing the restaurant manager asked if we were in a rush–and if so he’d suggest a set lunch of 3 choices for us to choose from. My boss insisted that we all went ala carte (i suppose he also wanted to have some choice too, so we all were given our menus). The waiter took our order carefully but the service was slow.  The appetisers came out at different timings, some only arrived after some mains have been served. The waiting staff were not on their feet with the utensils (some needed soup spoons, some didn’t, water wasn’t refilled, drink orders were slow to be served). You wouldn’t expect this level of service from a 5-star F&B outlet.

There were 12 of us, and the last order was served at 2.30pm. Imagine, waiting over an hour, in a restaurant that is not running at full capacity? Lunch was almost turning out to be tea break!

The food quality was also questionable. It was tasteless, the portions were mediocre, and the certainly not worth the price! My saffron risotto had 4 pathetic scallops that cost RM 48.00! The risotto was bland–i ate half of it and i felt pukey already. I thought dessert could save the day but my canolli was horrible! The canolli shell itself wasn’t crisp–and it tasted “old”. When something tastes like yesterday’s frying oil, it can’t be good.

My colleagues also complained of their respective dishes–lamb was not cooked to the requested order of “well done”, pasta sauce was nothing to shout about, pizza toppings were stingy. Seriously, the only saving grace were the bread rolls!

The thing i was most pissed at with is the attitude of the restaurant manager. He was so rude! He was probably having a bad day but that doesn’t mean you can be rude to your customers lor! I totally lost it when we were trying to order our desserts. My boss wanted something that wasn’t in the menu–he asked for an Affogato which is merely vanilla ice cream drizzled with espresso. Mr Restaurant Manager took the order–then came back and mentioned that they ran out of vanilla ice cream. DUDE–you’re in a freaking hotel, don’t tell me you can get vanilla ice cream from your other 3 F&B outlets?

Sure enough, he came back with our Affogato in a coffee cup–but to our horror, the ice cream had already melted as he had drowned it with the piping hot espresso. Okay, I don’t know jack shit about Italian desserts, but I do know that an Affogato looks like this:

It’s supposed to look like this because, you serve the ice cream AND the espresso separately, so we can do this:

And guess what Mr Restaurant Manager responded with?

“This is the way we serve Affogato here.”

Wahlaueh…*speechless*

And the drama didn’t end there. After the affogato incident my boss complained that everything was not up to expectation. We didn’t get billed for the affogato but we did get more excuses from Mr Restaurant Manager. Among the other remarks he made were:

“We are understaffed in our kitchen today”

“Our usual chef is not in today”

“I suggested the set lunch so you could have been served quicker”

I’ll stop here and let you make your own conclusion.

Mooncake Mania

Did you know that on the 15th day of the eighth month in the Chinese calendar, the moon is at its roundest? On that day too Chinese from around the world celebrate Mid Autumn Festival. It appears that it’s the 2nd largest celebration after Chinese New Year, possibly because “back-in-the-days”, farmers celebrate the end of summer harvesting season. There also seem to be a love story linked to the celebration of the mooncake festival, but i’ll leave you to explore Wikipedia cos there’s like 5 versions of “that” love story.

For the 2nd year in a row I have been baking my own mooncakes to be given away to relatives. Last year I took up a lesson in mooncake making from a local baking supply shop–I needed to learn the trick of getting the mooncake skin really thin while the cake is filled with a generous amount of paste filling. I must say the lesson costing RM 80, was worth every single sen.

The secret to having a very pliable dough lied in the golden syrup that I used–to be specific Tate and Lyle’s. Westerners are familiar with this syrup at the breakfast table, drizzled over plump and fluffy pancakes or that crispy waffle. The consistency of the syrup allowed the well-rested dough to remain pliable while I stretch it thin, wrapping it around a ball of paste.

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Mom was my mooncake moulding helper. I passed the mooncakes over to her and using her body weight and strong arms she pressed out these lovely cakes like a machine. I have 3 designs which I use to differentiate the type of filling per mooncake.

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With 4 kilos of lotus and pandan paste filling we managed to output approx 70+ moonies in about 3 hours. Baking them was the easy part–they had to go into the oven for 30 minutes, stopping 2 times at 10 minutes and 20 minutes for the egg glaze. The result after 30 minutes doesn’t look very appetizing–the skin is slightly spotty, dry, not shiny and is very tough. Crispy too.

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The secret is to leave them to release its oils, usually appearing after 3-4 days in a container. The skin starts to soften, the colour turns darker, the oil is started to secrete slowly giving it a very good shine and the mooncake design comes up even sharper.

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After a week, this is how it looks like. Notice how the colours has evened out? Mooncakes are not difficult to make at all, it’s just time consuming. And, uses a lot of elbow grease, particularly if you’re using those traditional wooden moulds. All the knocking may even hurt your eardrums!

mooncake.005This year we attempted an all time favourite, the mixed nuts mooncake. Traditionally, it contains bits of ham but we stuck to the nuts combo. The filling was a challenge, toasting everything, chopping them, getting them to bind together, shaping into 55g balls–argh–next year probably think twice about this. Now I know why these are so pricey!

If you ever thought of making your own mooncakes, go for a class. It’s really the technique that you pay money to master, and then it’s a smooth ride after. Happy Mid Autumn Festival!

muah lunchbox

We don’t have a microwave oven in the office and believe it or not I’ve been eating cold meals for the last 2 years at my current working place. I finally took out my trusty Thermos lunchbox that I’ve had since my Sony days and boy, Thermos IS good. After 5 hours my lunch is still warm and the cuteness of this lunchbox gets some extra points. I like how the containers are really tiny so I can control the volume of the food — means not so sleepy also lah since lunch ain’t so heavy. Comes with a mini chopstick and a matching carry bag too. Cutie! I got this for RM 93.00, value value value!

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Handmade Fresh Pasta

Sunday. The day when anything is possible. At least to me it is. Lina bought me a ravioli cutter from Perth which gave me the idea of making fresh pasta from scratch. However, I didn’t have any filling I could make to fill the raviolis so I decided that fettucini it’ll be.

Inspired by Pastor Ryan’s handmade pasta, I fiddled around with the measurements (the eggs mom bought were rather small) and came up with my own combination — 4 eggs, 3 cups of flour and plenty, PLENTY of elbow grease. Oh, remember to tie back your hair and pin up your fringe. You’ll sweat like you’re running a marathon. OK, maybe you’ll sweat like you’re walking up a flight of staircase like 25 times.

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Anyhoo, after endless kneading for about 30 mins, I split the dough into smaller balls so that we could put it through the noodle maker to roll into thin sheets.

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Once the sheets were rolled out, we dusted it with plenty of flour, just to make sure they don’t stick to each other when we stack ‘em up.

Mom’s trusty noodle make is older than me. Seriously. It still looks new sturdy cos we use it like once in 2 years. Ok, maybe once in 5 years. Anyhoo, we then cut out the sheets into lovely strands of 0.5 cm thick fettucine…

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…and continue to shower them with lotsa flour to keep them all from clumping up–like a cold instant noodles.

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Then, we boil them in salted water, and once they begin to float to the surface, we transfer them into a cold bath so it’ll stop the cooking process and get all chewy, bouncy with a slight bite to it. My Italian friends would say–al dente.

Serve with your favourite pasta sauce.

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Totally Rawking Durian Cheesecake

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This is not my first attempt at baking a cheesecake, in fact I’ve done it so many times, it’s quite a walk in the park for me. IF there’s one thing you should know when baking a cheesecake, is to not OVER bake it. As long as the filling ain’t jiggly, it’s done! If you see a crack in your cheesecake, don’t fret, try again till you get it rite. This is however my first shot at having durian in my cheesecake. I’ve never thought the nasty fruit could complement the creaminess of the cheese but after hearing so much about it and tasting Secret Recipe’s Durian Cheesecake at FIL’s birthday, I decided to give it a try. Turned out pretty tasty. Give it a try!

Step 1 – The biscuit base

  1. Line the base of a 9” springform pan
  2. 40 pcs or more, marie biscuit crumbs, depending on the thickness of the crust you’re looking for
  3. Melt a knob of butter enough to combine the biscuit crumbs together
  4. With a spoon, compact the crumbs to the sides of the pan and the base
  5. Bake in a preheated oven at 150 ° Celsius for 10 mins
  6. Remove to cool then using aluminum foil, wrap the base of the springform pan to avoid water seeping through during the steam bake process

Step 2 – The cheese filling ingredients

  • 500 g cream cheese at room temperature
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 3 egg yolks
  • 2 tbsp all purpose flour
  • 2/3 cup of milk
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 200 g durian flesh, mashed with a fork
  • 3 egg whites
  • 1/2 tsp cream of tartar
  • 1/4 cup of sugar
  1. Beat cream cheese until smooth, scraping the sides of the bowl 2 – 3 times during the process to ensure there are no lumps
  2. Add sugar and continue beating for a further 5 mins
  3. Add in egg yolks and flour and beat until combined
  4. Pour in the milk and vanilla extract and beat on low speed until the mixture has come together into a smooth batter
  5. Finally add in the durian flesh, and mix till combined, set aside
  6. In a separate clean and dry bowl, whisk the egg whites with the cream of tartar + sugar until stiff.
  7. Fold egg whites into the cheese mixture and using a spatula, careful not to deflate the egg whites
  8. Pour batter into the biscuit base
  9. Steam bake for 30 minutes at 150 ° Celsius
  10. Leave to cool before chilling in the fridge overnight before serving
  11. Warning, makes everything in your fridge smells funky!

Pecan, Walnut and Almond Cookies

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Earlier I baked these “not-for-those-who-have-nut-allergy” cookies. It has 2 whole cups of chopped pecans, walnuts and almonds. Something in the nuts gave the cookies a slight spicy flavour. I also added rind from one orange to give it a lil bit of a citrus tang. This is a semi chewy cookie so, here’s the recipe:

170g butter
1 1/4 cups brown sugar
2 tbsp milk
1 tbsp vanilla extract
1 egg
1 3/4 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp salt
3/4 tsp baking soda
2 cups chopped pecans, walnuts, almonds combined

  • Cream butter and brown sugar until pale, for about 7-10 minutes
  • Add in milk, vanilla extract and the egg, mix on low speed until combined
  • Sift all dry ingredients together and fold into the butter mixture. Mix on low speed until everything is evenly combined
  • Pour in the chopped nuts and mix on low speed for another 1 minute.
  • Using a spoon, drop spoonfuls of the cookie batter onto a lined tray, keeping it well spaced in between each cookie. It will expand.
  • Bake at a preheated oven at 150 degrees Celcius for 20 – 25 minutes, or until golden brown.
  • Cool before storing in an air tight container

As I was grating the orange rind last nite for this recipe, I thought I’d like to introduce you to my favourite kitchen tool. My very very precious Microplane grater. I love how it can get the rind out without much effort, just like how Anna Olson does it on Sugar. People, meet my really great, grater.

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Make your own vanilla extract

Did you know that vanilla essence is merely a chemically produced flavouring agent? Which is what got me to start using vanilla extract in all my baking adventures. But, buying it off the shelf costs a bomb, and after Googling for some simple make-it-yourself-at-home methods, I decided to make my own! You can make you own too … anything with vodka would be tasty rite?

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Pineapple Cinnamon Crumble Rolls

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I had some leftover pineapple jam from CNY hidden away in the freezer, and some leftover unbaked quiche crust from the Cheating Spinach Quiche I made last month. My brain went *tick tick tick* and I decided to turn them into Pineapple Cinnamon Crumble Rolls. I refered to (and modified the method a lil) Pioneer Woman’s fantabulous Cinnamon Roll dough (half recipe) and used up all my leftover pineapple jam as the filling. I then made a crumble topping with the leftover unbaked quiche crust, brown sugar, ground cinnamon and chopped almonds. Boy … they were surprisingly tasty (and crunchy on top yums!)

So here goes (makes approx. 30 rolls):

Dough
-A-
470 ml milk
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup oil
7g dry yeast
4 cups all purpose flour
-B-
1/2 cup all purpose flour
3/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tbsp salt

Filling
1/2 cup – 1 cup Pineapple Jam (the same stuff that you’d use for pineapple tarts, available at all baking supply shops) — or u can use any jam that you have.

Crumble topping – combine everything in a bowl and mix thoroughly
Leftover unbaked quiche crust, about the size of a soap bar (quiche crust mainly contains almost equal amounts of flour and butter, some salt, sugar, and sometimes egg yolks to bind it together)
2 tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/3 cup of chopped almonds

  1. In a saucepan, heat up milk until lukewarm (the kinda heat that you can leave your finger in the milk and don’t feel like you’re cooking ur flesh). Then add in the sugar and stir till dissolved. Then throw in the yeast and let it rest for about 5 minutes.
  2. In a big mixing bowl, put in the 4 cups of flour. Then, pour in the milk mixture and the 1/2 cup of oil. Using a spatula, mix until everything is combined, then cover with cling film and leave to rise for 1 hour.
  3. In another bowl, combine the 1/2 cup of flour + baking powder + baking soda + salt. Then add onto the risen dough (after 1 hour) and with your hands knead the dough until all the flour has been incorporated.
  4. Generously flour your work table and roll out the dough into a rectangle approx. 1 cm thick.
  5. Using your fingers evenly spread the pineapple jam all over the dough. Roll up (like a Swiss Roll) and pinch the edges to seal. Then using a knife/plastic scraper, cut the roll into 1.5 inch thick pieces.
  6. Using your fingers, stuff some crumble on top of the rolls, just enough to cover it. Repeat with the remaining 29 rolls.
  7. Set aside to rise for another 20 minutes before baking it in a pre-heated oven at 160 degrees Celcius for 20 – 30 minutes.
  8. Leave to cool on a wire rack before storing in air tight containers.

Schwartie’s Cotton Cheesecake

3rd time lucky, it seems. My first and second attempt of this delicate cheesecake were a complete failure. At the 3rd attempt, I reduced the oven temperature, turned off the fan, and increased the level of water bath the cake was being steam-baked in. Result? Purrr-fect. Here’s my version of Shwartie’s recipe.

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-A-
250gm Cream cheese
100ml Milk
50gm Butter

-B-
6 Egg yolks
70gm Castor sugar
1 tsp lemon oil *optional
60gm all purpose flour
20gm cornflour
(Sift both flours together)

-C-
6 Egg whites
1/4tsp Cream of tartar
70gm Castor sugar

Method:
1. Cut up cream cheese and butter into small cubes (to ease the melting process) and put into heat proof bowl over double boiler with milk and heat till everything melts and well incorporated. Leave to cool.
2. Mix egg yolks, sugar, lemon oil and slowly add in sifted flour making sure there’s no lumps. Add into cheese mixture and mix well.
3. Beat egg whites, add in cream of tartar when foamy followed by sugar slowly and continue beating till soft peaks form – slightly stiff but not dry.
4. Pour cream cheese mixture into egg whites and fold in both mixtures.
5. Pour into a silicone 8 inch round pan and bake in a water bath (filled about 1inch) at preheated oven at 120′c for 1 hour and  or until top is golden brown and clean when inserted with tester. The cake shouldn’t be wiggly and will be firm to the touch.
6. Do not remove cake from oven and leave to cool in oven with door ajar. Cake will slightly shrink and loosen from sides. Chill well in fridge before serving.