Friday, May 27, 2011

Tao You Bak (Stewed Soy Sauce Pork Belly).


All Chinese families must have a Tao You Bak recipe of their own. It's especially useful when you're in a foreign country and just can't get your hands on the traditional pork belly dish that your mum cooked for you when you were little.

So, let's get started...

Step 1: Marinate (min. 30 mins before cooking begins) 2kg of Pork Belly (uncut slabs) with salt, pepper, oyster sauce (optional), 5 pieces of anistars, 5 cardamoms, a pinch of peppercorns and a stick of cinnamon.

Step 2: Boil 5-6 rice bowls of water in a pot. Add carrot, tomatoes, ginger, and/or vegetables of your choice, which you will remove once the flavour builds in the soup. Add groundnuts too (optional), but only if you fancy them. And/or mushrooms for extra flavour.

Step 3: Remove all the spices used as marinate and place them into the boiling vegetable soup plus 5 tablespoons of premium light soy sauce.

Step 4: Pan sear marinated pork belly slabs till golden brown on the skin. This helps to retain the flavour.

Steps 5: Place pan-seared pork belly into the pot of boiling soup, along with 5 cloves of garlic (whole) and 5 tablespoons of caramalised soy sauce – for 50 mins if you're using a pressure cooker, then leave for another 30 mins. (The sauce should just cover the slabs of pork belly). For claypots, cook on slow fire for an hour and a half or less, depending on how soft you like your Tao You Bak.

Step 6: Remove the slabs of pork belly, and it should look something like this :P

Step 7: Cut to chunks or thin slices; serve with sauce and cut chili padi on the side.


Monday, May 23, 2011

New World Mutton Soup.

I've heard of so many stories about what I will find in Bedok, being one of the oldest Singaporean residential township and all.

And I've been moving around from one bus stop to another via Tampines, looking for the good stuff.

On this particular trip, I've found one of the best herbal mutton soup after alighting bus 69 at the Bedok North Interchange.

This is one of my favourites in Singapore, so far: New World Mutton Soup.

The soup is no doubt potent, but not too strong on herbs. It's just enough to complement the aromatic mutton ribs, tripes, mutton balls and tendons. You will also enjoy the prominent taste of liquorice roots that leaves a tantalising aftertaste.

And you can have this with rice, or as it is.

Right next door to the New World Mutton Soup stall, you'll probably notice a long queue most of the time.

That will be the place where you can get the famous Bedok Chwee Kueh (Water Cake) that melts in your mouth, and in your hands. Malaysians will know this appetising side dish or dessert as Woon Chye Kou (Bowl Cake).