BAEbingka: Bibingka in Muffin Tins

Standard

Celebrating Christmas as a kid in the Philippines was very different than it is here.  My earliest memory was of my grandmother standing over baked hams and chickens hours before our midnight feast or ‘media noche’ as celebrated by many Filipinos, tending to them with love and careful attention.  My family didn’t have much, so it was not about counting the number of shopping days left, tons of presents under the tree, scanning the Black Friday ads. In short, it wasn’t about stuff.

What it was about was family, food and the ‘exchange gift’ or White Elephant but much kinder because there was no stealing involved. What I remember most about Christmas though is the bibingka, a Filipino rice cake baked in banana leaves and topped with cheese and salted egg. I believe Filipinos started combining the salt/savory thing before it even became en vogue and this is evidenced by our love for the bibingka.

My grandmothers made their own versions of bibingka and I no longer remember which was better but it was always this great combination of salty bites of duck egg and the sweet softness of the rice cake. It was the crowning glory of our media noche, which began with pork barbecue sticks, longanisa and lechon and ended with the bibingka.  Lechon by the way is roasted suckling pig and proclaimed by Anthony Bourdain as the best pork product ever. The Filipinos, we love our pork.

But I digress.

For portion control purposes, I decided I would make my bibingka in muffin tins.

Recipe adapted from Panlasang Pinoy

Ingredients

1 cup rice flour
1/8 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
3 tablespoons butter
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup coconut milk
1/4 cup fresh milk
1 piece salted duck egg, sliced
1/2 cup grated cheese
3 pieces raw eggs
Pre-cut banana leaf

Procedure

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  2. Combine rice flour, baking powder, and salt then mix well. Set aside.
  3. Cream butter then gradually put-in sugar while whisking.
  4. Add the eggs then whisk until every ingredient is well incorporated.
  5. Gradually add the rice flour, salt, and baking powder mixture then continue mixing.
  6. Pour-in coconut milk and fresh milk then whisk some more for 1 to 2 minutes.
  7. Use the bottom of a glass as a template to cut banana leaves in circles slightly larger than the  size of your muffin tin openings.  This allows for a nice overhang and ample size to hold the bibingka batter.
  8. Line muffin tins with your pre-cut banana leaves.
  9. Pour batter into lined muffin tins.
  10. Bake for 15 minutes.
  11. Remove from the oven then top with sliced salted egg and grated cheese (do not turn the oven off).
  12. Put back in the oven and bake for 10 to 15 minutes or until the top turns a medium brown.
  13. Remove from the oven and let cool.
  14. Brush with butter and sprinkle some sugar on top. You can also top this with grated coconut.

Notes:

If you’re thinking about omitting the banana leaf liner, don’t.  The banana leaves give your bibingka a fragrant and authentic look and smell.

If you’re thinking about omitting the salted egg, by all means do.  It’s an acquired taste and also hard to find outside Filipino groceries.  I would, however, include the grated cheese to balance out the sweet and savory.

image

Sriracha and Wasabi Aioli

Standard

I don’t care for Guy Fieri.  There’s this lounge lizard quality about him that no matter how legit he tries to be (game show host?  Really?) he’ll always be this lecherous character to me. But the one thing I learned from Guy is how useful and handy squeeze bottles are. You can control amounts of sauce, you can see what you’re using and they’re super cheap at about $1 a pop and found everywhere.

My favorite condiment right now is my own homemade sriracha and wasabi aoli and they are stored in my Guy Fieri-inspired squeeze bottles (I cringe at the thought of admitting that). I first saw them served at food trucks, usually found on side tables right next to napkins and the like. They were a great flavor boost to Korean tacos and burritos, waffle fries and anything else you care to jazz up. You can use regular mayonnaise but I prefer the Japanese Kewpie Mayo, as I find this to be sweeter and not as gloppy than its American cousin. You can find Kewpie at any Asian grocery.

Sriracha Aioli

1 cup Japanese Kewpie or Best Foods Mayonnaise
3 tablespoons Sriracha
1 teaspoon rice vinegar
1/2 teaspoon sugar

Whisk together the mayonnaise, Sriracha and sugar. Use more or less of the Sriracha to adjust the heat.

Wasabi Aioli

1 cup Japanese Kewpie or Best Foods Mayonnaise
3 teaspoons wasabi paste
1 teaspoon rice vinegar

Whisk together the mayonnaise, wasabi paste and rice vinegar. Use more or less of the wasabi paste to adjust the heat.

20140703-120923-43763176.jpg

These sauces have been wonderful additions to some of my creations:

20140703-123122-45082702.jpg

20140703-123122-45082224.jpg

20140703-123121-45081996.jpg

Garlic Noodles, a la Crustracean

Standard

So this doesn’t look like much.

 

IMG_6593

But I guarantee you that it’s the simplest thing you’ll make and probably one of the more delicious meals you’ll cook up in your dinner in 15-minutes or less repertoire.

I sampled my first garlic noodles at PPQ Dungeness Island and I was wowed by the perfect combination of sweet and savory and I could swear there was probably some crab fat embedded in there, it tasted so rich and creamy.  It was served alongside roasted garlic crab and both were so good, my eyes rolled back momentarily in my head.  A family sized serving will run about 7-8$.  Think I made mine for $2 since I had all the ingredients on hand, except for the fresh noodles.

IMG_6580

Incidentally, my preferred brand is Golden World as they most closely approximate the ones I’ve had at PPQ.

IMG_6586

You’ll have to reach into your inner Asian or go to the nearest Ranch 99 to procure some fish sauce, oyster sauce  and Maggi seasoning.  Or most well stocked Safeways and Albertson’s carry them in their ethnic aisle.  Look away from the jarred pig ears.

And that thing that didn’t start out as much, turns into:

IMG_1756

Roasted Garlic and Crab Noodles

 

 

salmon and garlic

Furikake Salmon and Garlic Noodles

 

  • 1 lb bag of Gold World noodles
  • 3/4 stick of butter’
  • 6 cloves of minced garlic (or more if you prefer a more intense garlicky taste)
  • 4-5 tablespoons of butter
  • 1 tablespoons of garlic power
  • 1 tablespoon of Maggi seasoning
  • 1 tablespoon of oyster sauce
  • Parmesan  or Pecorino Romano grated

Boil noodles according to directions.  Saute garlic in butter, careful not to burn, for about 5 minutes.  Add the rest of the ingredients so flavors meld, for about 10 minutes on low heat.  Toss garlic butter mixture in hot noodles and serve immediately.