MORE RECIPES

July 08, 2008

Matcha (Green Tea) Ice Cream Recipe

Matcha (Green Tea) Ice Cream(Click the above to view 5 pictures. Best viewed with Internet Explorer 7.)
How do you turn a bucket of plain old vanilla ice cream into something exotic and lickylicious without having to splurge US$3 per scoop?

Easy. Very easy!

I learned this trick recently and thought I would share it with you, especially now when it's sizzling hot outside with temperatures pushing the 90's or even 100's Fahrenheit in the United States.

Matcha (抹茶) is a prized powdered form of green tea used particularly in the Japanese tea ceremony. Matcha has gained popularity and is now used in many baked goods, noodles, drinks, and all sorts of desserts...

Matcha (Green Tea) Ice CreamSo, what did I do?

The recipe is really easy and you need only two ingredients below.

Recipe: Matcha (Green Tea) Ice Cream

Matcha (Green Tea Powder)1) A bucket of vanilla ice cream of your choice.
2) Matcha or green tea powder where you can find here on my Food Store.

Leave the ice cream out for 30 minutes or until they turn slightly soft. Add in a few tablespoons of matcha (depends how matcha-y you wanted your ice cream to be), then stir and blend well with the ice cream. The ice cream should turn light green in color and tastes exotic with a slight tint of bitter flavor derived from the matcha.

Freeze the ice cream, scoop it up and serve cold.

See, I said it was very easy!

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February 24, 2008

Flan/Crème Caramel/Caramel Custard Recipe

Flan/Crème Caramel/Caramel Custard(Click the above image to view the complete photoset of 5 pictures)
I will be honest with you...I didn't make these flans. I wanted to, but paying $2.50 for both flans is definitely cheaper than buying all the specialty flan cook ware and ramekins--not mentioning the time I would spend pottering in my kitchen preparing them and making sure they come out right. I have no doubt that making flans is a fulfilling experience--a skill I would love to acquire eventually--but with my busy schedules lately, I simply can't afford to attempt them at home.

I first tasted flans in the late 1990's--I had just graduated from college and started working in the US. (I had never seen or tasted flans when I was in Malaysia.) My then co-worker invited me for dinner and his wife made flans for dessert. I remember vividly the first taste; it was a dessert so delicate, beautiful and sublime--egg custard served in a bath of amber-hued caramel--it was smooth and melted in my mouth. It was the taste of heaven...

Since then, I have had many flans in a lot of interesting places--in Texas on my road trip down to Florida; in a traditional Mexican restaurant on a side street in Cabo San Lucas; at a food store in Calistoga; most recently, in Cannes where the flan was rather different in taste, shape and form; and countless more. None of them beats the flans prepared by my ex co-worker's wife.

Flan/Crème Caramel/Caramel CustardThis weekend, when I was shopping in Little Saigon here in Orange County, I chanced upon these flans at Lee's Sandwiches. I was overjoyed.

They turned out to be very good flans; almost as good as the first ones I had in my friend's house. I got the recipe and have kept it with me for years. I will make these flans one day, but for now, please find the secret recipe that introduces me to the world of flans.

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Looking for an entree to pair with flans? Try these recipes on Rasa Malaysia:
  1. NOBU Black Cod with Miso
  2. Panko-crusted Soft Shell Crab with Ginger Ponzu Sauce
  3. Baked Scallops with Creamy Spicy Sauce
  4. Baked Sea Bass
  5. Seared Scallops with Spicy Cream Sauce with Buna Shimeji Mushrooms
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Recipe: Flan (Crème Caramel/Caramel Custard)

Ingredients:

4 eggs
1/2 cup sugar
2 cups milk (whole milk preferred
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

For Caramel:

1 cup sugar
1/2 cup water

Method:

In a small sauce pan, prepare the caramel by blending the sugar and water in medium heat. Keep stirring it until it thickens and the syrup turns deep amber in color. Turn off heat.

Arrange 6 ramekins and add the caramel (in equal portion) into the ramekins. (Save some caramel for topping purposes.) Tilt the ramekins and make sure that the caramel is coated evenly at the bottom of the ramekins.

Preheat the oven to 350 degree F.

Clean the sauce pan and heat it up (use low heat). Add in the milk and 1/2 cup of sugar. As soon as the sugar dissolves, turn off the heat. In a big bowl, whisk the eggs until blended, and add in the warm milk slowly. Add the vanilla extract and do a quick whisk. Strain the custard mixture into the 6 ramekins and set aside.

Arrange the 6 ramekins in a baking pan big enough to fit them. Pour hot water in the baking pan about halfway up the ramekins. Transfer the baking pan into the oven and bake for about 50-60 minutes or until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove the ramekins from the baking pan and let cool. Once they turn cool, transfer them to the fridge and chill them for a few hours. When they are ready to serve, slide a knife around the side of each ramekin to loosen the flan. Turn it out on a dessert plate and top it with extra caramel, if you want.

Notes:
  1. If the caramel turns solid, heat it up in a microwave for 10 seconds to dissolve it.
  2. For other flan recipes, try out fellow bloggers Danielle's and Elise's recipes here and here.

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