October 24, 2007

Merged!

Chocolate Steamed Yoghurt Cup

 
This is a not so actual event. I made this months ago, never remembered I even took a picture. Since most of my laziness to blog was because I didn’t care enough to take photos of the food I made, I figured out this baby deserves a publication.
 
Well, if you’re an Indonesian, or at least, a southeast-asian, pretty sure you’re familiar with Indonesian Steamed Cake, a.k.a. Bolu Kukus. It looks somehting like this:
 
Pretty Steamed Cupcake
 
Steamed cupcake Indonesian Steamed Cake

 
The texture of this cake is soft and cloudy, light and sweet.
 
And you must also know the distinguished Indonesian cup cake, a.k.a. Kue Mangkok. They look like this. They could vary in color, though. Red, green, not blue.
 
Unlike its sister, Bolu Kukus, Kue Mangkok is rather chewy, rich and densed. It boasts the distinguished aroma of fermented cassava used in it, giving a hint of sour and sweet that tingles your tastebud craving for more.
 
One afternoon, they were both merged. Only because I whipped up Bolu Kukus, then decided to use up my homemade yoghurt ‘cause it’s getting too sour –time for me to make a brand new batch. The result: texture of Bolu Kukus, taste and aroma of Kue Mangkok.
 
I guess it took everything good from each kind and combine it in one cup. Although I’m not sure what good the invention was for, except to deceive people who expect Bolu Kukus, but then unavoidably scratch their heads with unavoidable frowns, finding out they didn’t get Bolu Kukus. It’s Kue Mangkok instead, already in their chewing mouth! Gotcha!
 
Me, I just hate to see my yoghurt gone bad.
 
 
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October 10, 2007

Yet Another Year

Wheat Bran Biscuits for Your Digestion

 
Happy Idul Fitri to all muslims in the world.
Deep apology I ask of you. For everything. Everything.
 
Wheat Bran Biscuits

 
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October 8, 2007

Sugarless Banana Bread & Gambang Bread Re-Visited

World Bread Day '07
 
Hey! You! Yes, you! Thank you! Because it’s been a year since the last World Bread Day and you’re still around! You deserve a star for loyalty and dedication to bread. Just like Zorra. Yes, Zorra is again holding the World Bread Day (update: visit the roundup here) and I excitingly wanna take part of it, because she is a wonderful person and bread is just delish to begin with. I’m not just saying this because I want to bribe her to pass this post as qualified for the event *is it so obvious?*, but because I mean it, and I think all foodbloggers must always come together to take all the world and make a new peaceful food-oriented civilization. Who’s with me???
 
Ok, enough.
 

Gambang Bread

 
I wanted to re-visit the post of Roti Gambang I made last year, because… strangely, I suddenly have this urge to promote my country. It’s weird. First of all, I never knew that I have even a slightest hint of nationalism toward my country whatsoever. Yeah, go ahead judge me! I’m just being brutally honest. I never thought I have any. Second of all, I think it’s just cool to see the words “Gambang Bread” among the list of bread names from around the world compiled by the wonderful Zorra. Hey politicians, look, we put you on the map by baking bread!
 
Enough.
 
Gambang bread is an Indonesian traditional bread, made from bread scraps. Bakeries usually have lots of leftover fresh breadcrumbs, so they turned it into a delicious bread that can add to their sales. Yea, baby, we’re a pro in turning garbage into delicious food. That’s how we survived colonialism and Krakatau. This skill of turning crap into gold has made us one of the happiest nations in the world, no matter what had happened.
 
This is a chewy, cinnamony bread bar that looks pretty in its sesame seed dress. The homemade version recipe uses ready-made breadcrumbs you usually use for coating, because we certainly do not want to bake hundreds of bread loaves and collect the scraps. It’s very easy to make and certainly will color your afternoon happy. You know, along with a cup of hot tea and a good book in hand. It’s just the simple, yet perfect, comfort bread. Comfort bread indeed.
 
Gambang Bread recipe here.
 
Sugarless Banana Bread

 
Have I re-visited Gambang Bread, now onto the actual recent baking. This Sugarless Banana Bread is one of my favorites of all the breads of all time. You think your life is miserable without sugar? Well, after baking this, think again! Hell yeah, it’s sweet! It’s sweet, and fragrant, and very banana, and contains more fiber, more complex carbohydrate, and lower cholesterol… Okay, I’ll stop talking like a health-freak, and you stop throwing things on me!
 
One word: you must try this at home.
 
Ow yea, I sell this for one hundred fifty thousand rupiahs a loaf. Expensive? Think again.
 
Happy World Bread Day, everybody. What can we do without breads really? May Allah bless the inventor.
 
A Gift from The Land of Spices

 
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October 7, 2007

After The Rain

Looks Like Weird Mushroom

 
After the rain
washes away the tears
and all the pain
only after the rain
you’ll live again
 
“After The Rain” ~ Nelson

 
As for me, it’s After Disasters. After disasters, I’ll live again.
 
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October 4, 2007

Not Too Cold, Not Too Sweet

Fasting Break!

 
To break my fasting today: the tropical freshy: cold blewah *what is blewah in English?*, passionfruit, a little bit of honey. Stirred together with water, room temperature cold, and… Maghrib time was just so gratefully fresh and naturally sweet. Not too sweet, though. Not too cold, either.
 
Have a nice fasting break, everyone. Isn’t fasting such a bless?








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