Mungkin sebaiknya kalau udah mendekati hari H begini, yang dipingit mustinya bukan cuma calon pengantinnya ya, tapi juga keluarga calon pengantin, terutama kedua orang tua. Soalnya hal sekecil apapun berpotensi menyebabkan perang dingin.
Jadi, H-2 gimana kabarnya? *tutup mulut*
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Friday, August 31, 2012
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Nigella's #2: Korean Calamari
This post was in a draft for such a looooong time. I guess I failed to upload the pictures and ended up in nothing but the draft mode. Blah~
There are two reasons why I was so tempted to try this recipe. First, it's Korean food (well, maybe not really authentic, but hey, it contains gochujang - Korean fermented chilli paste - which I was dying to cook with). Second, because it's calamari, and I'm fond of calamari somehow.
So, I bought the gochujang paste (almost months ago before I finally opened the tub) and the paste is easily found in any hypermarket here, so you don't have to peek every single Korean mart around the town to find one.
I did some twists for this recipe. In the original recipe, Ms. Lawson didn't put any garlic at all and I was wondering why. Aren't garlic and Korean food inseparable? Because of that, I put 2 fat cloves of garlic and happily smell the aroma. I didn't use any sugar at all too, just because when I tasted, sugar is an unnecessary item to be added, I think.
Okay, enough blabbing. Here's my own twist on Nigella's Korean Calamari:
5 baby squid (here, they name it 'cumi sero')
2 tablespoons Korean cooking wine
2 tablespoons Korean gochujang paste
2 tablespoons soy sauce
Few dashes sesame oil
2 teaspoons cooking oil
1 fat scallion, sliced
2 fat garlic, diced
I followed her step-by-step directions to make sure that I cook the calamari long (or fast) enough to avoid overcooking it. The result? Nice! The squid is juicy, tender, perfectly cooked and the taste is awesome. I love the unique dominant scent and taste from the gochujang paste and quite surprised of how quick and easy this meal is.
Today's lunch was another success story :D
There are two reasons why I was so tempted to try this recipe. First, it's Korean food (well, maybe not really authentic, but hey, it contains gochujang - Korean fermented chilli paste - which I was dying to cook with). Second, because it's calamari, and I'm fond of calamari somehow.
So, I bought the gochujang paste (almost months ago before I finally opened the tub) and the paste is easily found in any hypermarket here, so you don't have to peek every single Korean mart around the town to find one.
I did some twists for this recipe. In the original recipe, Ms. Lawson didn't put any garlic at all and I was wondering why. Aren't garlic and Korean food inseparable? Because of that, I put 2 fat cloves of garlic and happily smell the aroma. I didn't use any sugar at all too, just because when I tasted, sugar is an unnecessary item to be added, I think.
Okay, enough blabbing. Here's my own twist on Nigella's Korean Calamari:
5 baby squid (here, they name it 'cumi sero')
2 tablespoons Korean cooking wine
2 tablespoons Korean gochujang paste
2 tablespoons soy sauce
Few dashes sesame oil
2 teaspoons cooking oil
1 fat scallion, sliced
2 fat garlic, diced
I followed her step-by-step directions to make sure that I cook the calamari long (or fast) enough to avoid overcooking it. The result? Nice! The squid is juicy, tender, perfectly cooked and the taste is awesome. I love the unique dominant scent and taste from the gochujang paste and quite surprised of how quick and easy this meal is.
chewy yummy spicy |
Today's lunch was another success story :D
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