This is a cheesy, savoury soufflé that you can serve as an appetiser. We had this during New Year's Eve dinner at home. The soufflé is light and airy and can be an impressive start for a gourmet meal, but it's very easy to make. I asked my teenaged son to help me with this (well, he practically did almost everything...but he just didn't know it!)
Tuesday, 31 December 2013
Four Cheese Chive Souffle
This is a cheesy, savoury soufflé that you can serve as an appetiser. We had this during New Year's Eve dinner at home. The soufflé is light and airy and can be an impressive start for a gourmet meal, but it's very easy to make. I asked my teenaged son to help me with this (well, he practically did almost everything...but he just didn't know it!)
Baked Mushroom Crisp
Easy Puff Pastry Fruit Tart
Homemade Baked Apple Granola
Bihod (Fish Roe) & Clam Pasta
This is a very easy seafood pasta to make, made from bihod, which is fish roe from the Philippines. I suppose you can use other kinds of roe, but the one I use comes in a bottle, and what must be a thousand tiny fish eggs are submerged in olive oil. I don't think it's available in Singapore; I either buy it in Manila when I go there for a trip, or friends and family bring it over for me.
Mulled Wine: Christmas in a Mug
My Mulled Wine. Christmas in a Mug! |
I first heard of (and tasted) mulled wine from my very good friend +marica velasquez-bautista, creator of blog Mama Munch's Kitchen. She has lived in some countries with very cold, icy winters. Marica gave me a bottle of this delicious brew a few years ago one Christmas, when we were both living in hot, humid Singapore.
Mulled wine always reminds me of Christmas, because of, not only its warm temperature, but its warm spices, like cinnamon and cloves. So even if we're here in hot and humid Singapore, it always reminds me of winter!
I recently made some a few days ago for a Christmas party at my home, and all my guests were impressed....and giddy. One of my friends who spent her childhood in Canada exclaimed, "This reminds me of Canada in the winter.....even if we're here in hot and humid Singapore!"
That's what my family calls the "Ratatouille Effect," from the Pixar animated film "Ratatouille". The food critic suddenly remembered his Mom's cooking when he tasted the chef/rat's food!
Our Matcha-misu
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