Yes, i can still cook

Hello friends- yes i still cook, no not as much, and yes in Malaysia.

I started work in August-ish after coming back here early July, and now live in KL! It’s great but the living room and kitchen aren’t exactly separated, so I have no idea why the below dish is the one dish i actually cook in my home- it kind of smells…

Anyways, this is basically pan fried salmon with an arugula salad. The salmon really tells you i ain’t shit because it has the most basic seasoning. But that’s also salmon at its best for me. Anyways the arugula salad is the best part. Also basic but whatever.

Arugula salad:

Arugula(rocket), dried cranberries, walnuts, olive oil and balsamic.

That’s it. Just chop the cranberries and walnuts and throw them in the arugula. I’d pour the dressing on the arugula, mix it and then only add the chopped stuff.

Salmon:

Salmon, lemon, salt, pepper

Scour salmon skin side. Season with above. Marinate. Heat a pan lightly greased with oil. Fry no skin side first and then skin side till crispy. That’s it.

Here’s photos of the salmon on different ocassions. Think i marinated the salmon in garlic and shallots for the first one:

And here’s a bonus photo of my living room! I decorated it with all my heart. Definitely more clutter now, plus some dying plants.

Lets hope i find another favourite dish to cook so i’d actually post something. But till then, bye!

not my own recipe- çilbir

Hello friends! This blog is seemingly dead and you’re right- it is. But here’s an attempt to revive it with no creativity on my own behalf whatsoever but the dish turned out well and my roommate and I spent 10 minutes taking photos, hence the blog post.

This took me only about 15 minutes to make, maybe + another 5 minutes for dishes because I had to use an unnecessary amount of utensils(I followed the Nigella recipe to the bone- which explains why).

I’ve always been a sucker for Turkish dishes, the colours usually look so amazing which just makes me want to try out the recipes, but this one looked easy+pretty, and I also had aleppo pepper which I just bought (from Manousheh on West 3rd hehe) and have been dying to use in a dish, so I ended up making it.

This one’s called çilbir and is pretty much an egg dish with three components; poached eggs, a spicy butter sauce, and garlic yoghurt. Here’s the recipe and video (and pics that Hana and I took!)

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This was my first time poaching an egg and I actually got it perfectly done, thanks to Nigella and excessive utensil use.The aleppo pepper butter was amazing with the egg and yoghurt, and wasn’t too overpowering in terms of oiliness. I also had no dill so I used mint instead as a garnish. Had this with lavash bread that’s been in my freezer for months. Describing that made me hungry again…it was so good. You have to try this out!!!

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Recipe 2- Filo Stuff

Hey friends! I wanted to post this last night but that didn’t end up happening…but 1-day procrastination looks good given my history so I’ll give myself a pat on the back for doing this.

Ingredients-

Saganaki: filo pastry, feta cheese, honey, sesame seeds

Meat filling: ground beef, onion, lemon, pepper, ras el hanout, harissa powder, salt, tomato, walnuts, optional seasoning(oregano, parsley etc.)

Pie base and crust: filo pastry, melted butter, olive oil, milk, egg

Yoghurt sauce: tomato, yoghurt, salt, pepper, olive oil

I bought filo pastry a while ago because I wanted to make this Greek dish I saw online called saganaki. Found a bunch of recipes online which essentially were just wrapping feta cubes in filo pastry, frying them(yes), topping them with honey and sesame! Good stuff.

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I had leftover filo and wanted to do something savoury, so I sort of came up with this meat-filo-pie-pastry thing one night. If you have any suggestion as to what I should call it let me know please. I suck at naming things, and I know this blog has a pretty smart name but it was all Eeraj.

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You’ll need some ground beef, to which I added salt, pepper, lemon, harissa powder and ras el hanout (both are North African seasonings, and add amazing flavour to beef). This made it taste super Middle Eastern immediately, which was what I was looking for to begin with. I guess you could add whatever seasonings you wanted and make it a regional specialty thing. Like imagine making meat seasoned with taco spices or a rendang pie (RIP…). You would have to switch everything up in the recipe depending on what would go with how you spice your meat, but that’s really where the fun in cooking lies.

After adding spices to my beef and mixing it thoroughly, I chopped up a lot of onion, tomato and walnuts. I began with sautéing about half (look, an accurate estimate) of the onions I chopped initally (oh look, no accurate estimate) in olive oil, and adding the beef and the rest of the onion after the onions were lightly browned. You could easily add in garlic, oregano, parsley, whatever tickles your fancy. I think I added oregano the second time I made it and it added good flavour to the dish.

After cooking the beef for a bit, there should still be a lot of liquid, which is normal if you’re working with ground beef. I then added the tomato I chopped initially, and let it cook and sort of caramelise/dry out. After all the liquid evaporated, I added the chopped walnuts and let them toast for a bit. The tricky part here is making sure the beef isn’t extremely dry. I did make a yoghurt sauce for this though, and that may have helped with the slight dryness of the beef. You’ll be baking it and you don’t want the juices to seep through and give it a soggy bottom (I can’t believe I’m able to use this phrase irl…GBBO reference-if you don’t get it you don’t get it).

Once you’re done with the beef, you can begin assembling the filo. This was the worst part and I wanted to die doing this. I made a mixture of melted butter and olive oil to brush between the layers, and alternated between that and 4 layers of filo first. I then spooned in and smoothened the meat filling before finishing off with another 4 layers of alternating filo and butter+OO. I then cut the pie into 1/8ths, and then pouring a mixture of beaten egg and milk over it. One egg and a splash of milk should do the trick.

Bake it for a good 30 minutes, then keep checking every 4-5 minutes. I ended up baking it for a good 50 minutes at 375, but this would depend on the thickness of the pie as well as your oven, so feel it out. For the sauce, I mixed diced tomato, olive oil, pepper, and Greek yogurt. Wait for the pie to cool slightly, and that’s pretty much it!

here’s a nice photo that adds no value but could probably propel me to cookstagram fame

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Recipe 1- Panko Brussels Sprouts

Hi friends! It’s 2am and I cannot be bothered to type out an introductory post; so I’ll just be going straight to this recipe.

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Ingredients: brussels sprouts, salt, pepper, panko(Japanese bread crumbs), minced garlic, parsley, butter, salt, sriracha, honey, mayo and lime

I first tried this at Tanoreen, and 1) realised I love brussels sprouts, and 2) decided to put my own twist on it.

The first part is roasting the sprouts. As per the Tanoreen recipe; the sprouts are deep fried(explains why I fell in love), but I enjoy the crispiness from roasting. And I hate using a lot of oil, because $$$ and more cleanup.

What you need: brussels sprouts, salt, pepper

Wash the sprouts, and then cut them in half. Wash again slightly, drain properly(important) and place onto foil lined baking tray. Drizzle with generous helping of olive oil, salt, and a dash of pepper. I usually preheat the oven(or try to; most times i forget) to about 400-450(sorry I use an American stove), and then roast for about 7 minutes, flip, and another 5-7 minutes. I love the stray brussels sprouts leaves because they roast super crispy. I mentioned that draining was important, because once I didn’t drain the sprouts properly and they steamed more than they roasted and crisped up. Still good though.

While the sprouts are roasting, you can prepare the panko mixture.

What you need: panko(Japanese bread crumbs), minced garlic, parsley, butter, salt, whatever you’re feeling like honestly. I add whatever I can find or reach in my cabinet, but the panko, salt and butter are crucial.

Melt the butter and add to panko, just to moisten and flavour it slightly. And then add the rest of the seasoning, to your taste. Yes I know this is supposed to be a recipe, but honestly, cook however you want. Exact reason why I don’t have measurements here, I don’t know them(but if I did they would be in metric…). Once you’re pleased with what you have(or not, whatever), toast them with the sprouts in the last 3-4 minutes. And that’s it!
The first time I made this, I made a sriracha-honey-mayo sauce(which was just sriracha, honey, mayo and lime) to go with the sprouts. The Tanoreen recipe served it with a pomegranate molasses tahini sauce, which really took the dish to a different level. Sriracha honey mayo probably wouldn’t do that much, but it’ll probably still make it better. Nowadays I’m too lazy so I just eat it as is, or maybe add some lemon, Nando’s sauce, or some Kewpie mayonnaise! Im thinking of trying out other sauces but honestly I don’t have an extensive supply of ingredients so I’m pretty zen with this.

bonus: a photo which explains why I have a food blog and not a photography blog.

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There it is! My baby, my first post! If you make it, let me know-and if you want me to make it for you, never mind.

-Ain

p/s: Thank you Eeraj for the blog name. Also sorry Eeraj because this blog took a good 4  months to come into existence.