Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Thingyan Water Festival: Time to Purify


Happy Thingyan! Wash it all out, may the water clean all bad spirits within us and bring peace, prosperity for whole year!

People in Myanmar, also Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, celebrate Thingyan Water Festival every month of Tagu, which means the first month of the 12 months of Myanmar Calendar. I remember the streets are full of people pouring and sprinkling water on each other to purify the bad, evil spirits. Young and old, man and woman, everyone is out to celebrate the Water Festival and welcome the new year in hope of prosperity and happiness to come.

This time of year, I celebrate Thingyan Festival with Ginger Salad, it is one of my favorite, fresh and tasty salad from Burma...
Burmese Ginger Salad (Jin Thoke)
SERVES 4
Some recipes for this salad call for bottled pickled sliced ginger, but the homemade version tastes much fresher. Although it takes two days to make, little hands-on effort is required. We recommend using young ginger, which has very thin, delicate skin and is more succulent than mature ginger. Young ginger is easiest to find in markets during the spring; if it's not available, use the smaller knobs of only very fresh, plump mature ginger.

3" piece young ginger, peeled and thinly sliced lengthwise
Salt
Juice of 2 limes
2 tbsp. channa dal (hulled split dried small chickpeas)
1⁄2 cup peanut oil
10 shallots, peeled and thinly sliced
6 cloves garlic, peeled and thinly sliced

1⁄2 tsp. fish saucehttp://www.flickr.com/photos/saffron59/
1⁄4 cup peeled, roasted, unsalted peanuts
2 tsp. toasted sesame seeds
4 green bird's-eye chiles, stemmed

1. Toss ginger and 1 tsp. salt together in a medium glass or ceramic bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for 24 hours, stirring every 8 hours. Rinse ginger, drain well, and put into a clean glass or ceramic bowl. Add lime juice and mix with your fingers until ginger is well coated. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 24 hours, stirring every 8 hours. Soak chickpeas in a small bowl of water for 8 hours.
2. Drain ginger, then slice into long thin strips. Put ginger into a clean medium glass or ceramic bowl and set aside. Drain chickpeas, thoroughly dry with paper towels, and set aside.
3. Heat oil in a wok or a large heavy-bottomed skillet over medium heat. Add shallots and fry, stirring constantly with a slotted spoon, until lightly golden and crisp, 6–8 minutes. Transfer shallots with slotted spoon to paper towels to drain. Fry garlic in the hot oil, stirring constantly, until just beginning to turn golden around the edges, 1–2 minutes, then transfer to paper towels to drain. Fry chickpeas in the hot oil, stirring constantly, until golden, 4–5 minutes, then transfer to paper towels to drain, setting wok with oil aside. Set shallots, ginger, and chickpeas aside separately to cool completely.
4. Add fish sauce, peanuts, sesame seeds, and fresh chiles to bowl with ginger. Add fried shallots, garlic, and chickpeas and 2 tsp. of the frying oil, season to taste with salt, and toss well. Adjust seasonings. Serve at room temperature.


Friday, March 21, 2008

Chinese Art


This year, the Chinese have outdone themselves again. I first noticed Zang Xio Gang work at Asia Society in '93, his work was going for 90k. This week at the opening of the Asia Contemporary Art show, his work are fetching from 1M- l.5 M..along with my other favorite artist, Yu Minjun...well deserved!www.saffron59.com

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

My Top 5 Restaurants


I have been traveling since age 21...and I always enjoy eating local food.

I've had loads of delightful meals.

There are always meals that are memorable, and I wish they were not always a flight away. Here are my five favorite restaurants from the 43 countries I have traveled to:

Chez Omar- Paris (he is the owner, serves great Moroccan food, amazing succulent lamb shank)

Harmonique- Bangkok, Thailand. A traditional home restaurant, near the river, owned by three sisters. (My favorite dish is striped bass steamed with chili and lime juice…fresh, delicious)

IL Hausen- Alsace, France (Delectable cuisine, chic ambiance, detailed service and great wine--open kitchen with fresh seasonal vegetable and local cheese with wine)

Banana Leaf - On my recent trip to Burma, I stopped by Singapore (Fun, abundance, flavorful sweet and savory Indian dishes served on fresh pieces of banana leaf)

Zen- Hong Kong (hip, cutting edge- I love the drunken prawns, live shrimp dancing in wine and served right away on your table)

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Exotic Cocktail for Your Holiday



Thanks to everyone for the great raves over the parties Saffron 59 has catered, especially the exotic drinks. We've been getting many requests for our special drink recipes. During this holiday season we'd like to share one of our favorites, a simple, fun, and delicious mixed drink created by our mixologist Monamie...


Lychee Martini


Ingredients
1 oz Lychee Liqueur
3 oz Vodka (pref. infuse ahead with Lychees)
1 ½ oz Cointreau
1/2 oz Lychee Juice
Fresh Lychee or from a package to garnish
Instructions
In a shaker filled with ice mix everything together. You can either shake this one or stir - shaken will cloud it up, while a slick stir will leave all things looking pretty.
Garnish with Lychee into the glass with cocktail pick and strain into a martini glass.

Irene Khin Wong: My First Blog Post

http://www.flickr.com/photos/saffron59/

This blog is dedicated to all culinary enthusiasts all around the world.

Food and Travel is always an immense passion for me. Every time and everywhere I go, there have been always great excitements...and big surprises..!

My next trip will be my 43rd country, Cambodia, with a stop off in my home country of Myanmar. 
I just can’t wait.

What fascinates me most about my trip is visiting traditional markets, just like eight years ago when I was in Bali. A typical Balinese sweet is Black Rice Pudding, an everyday street food that is just so delicious. Recipe:

Balinese Black Rice Pudding with Coconut Panna Cotta
black rice pudding-6 servings

1 C black rice
2 C water
3" ginger chunks, bruised
tiny pinch salt
1 can coconut milk
1 pandan leaf, ( tie into knot if usiing the leaf, or 1 t. if using extract)
2 TBSP palm sugar
1 pack of Knox geletin
black and white sesame seeds (optionals)

Instructions
  1. Soak rice over night and rinse.
  2. Cover the rice with water and ginger and pinch of salt, simmer, covered until done, about 30 mins, or water reduced.
  3. Reduce coconut milk with pandan leaf and palm sugar, when lukewarm, stir in and mix in the gelatin.
  4. Serve with one layer of black rice and spoon the coconut milk on top. (sprinkle toasted white and black sesame seeds, optional).