How To Make Your Man Happy For Under RM30

Duck and mango salad
Roast duck and mango salad (with char siu surprise)

With the way things have been in the political scene, it’s hard to think of only food all the time.  But if one had to just talk about food, how about that Samantha sushi scene in Sex and the City, eh?  I cackled till I cried.  And talking about Sex and the City, I was reading Kevin Cowherd’s article in The Star the other day where he said that men should refrain from watching this movie…let your wife watch it with her girlfriends, bla bla bla….well, I have only one thing to say.  Bald Eagle is a real man, baybeh, coz he surprised me with tickets and laughed throughout the movie.  But then again, how many straight men can confidently tell you that Blahnik isn’t the name of the latest space shuttle to take off from Russia?  And talking about men, I’ve been faithfully listening to Flyfm for the longest time, for 40 minutes in the morning from Mondays to Fridays which adds up to a gazillion jillion hours, but I’m finally going to change loyalties.  Why?  Have you heard their latest lame car-giveaway-to-Mazlan-almost-a-scam thingy?  Whoever came up with the idea ought to be sacked.  Anyway.  I’m in a dilemma right now.  I don’t know what to listen to in the mornings.  I’m stationless.  Decisions decisions.  And talking about decisions, if you’re like me, a devoted wife who wants to provide only the best to her husband every night (and I’m still talking about food here), I am sure you would be occasionally faced with mental block.  It is even more of a challenge for me ever since we resolved, 6 months ago, to eat salads for dinner at least 3 times a week.  I mean, how many different ways can one present a bunch of leaves?  But I suppose when you’re fast approaching the unmentionable years (grey hair, sagging breasts, et al.), it is wise to eat less and eat healthy.  Or at least, I try.  20% of the time.  Anyway.  Bald Eagle was one very happy man this week thanks to me.  (We’re still talking about food here.)  I fed him this very easy to prepare roast duck and mango salad (with char siu surprise).  The base consisted of a bunch of rocket and coriander leaves, a fistful of sweet and crunchy taugeh (bean sprouts), julienned red capsicum for colour and chopped ripe mangoes for sweetness.  Because it was beginning to feel thai, I added a packet of glass noodles (pre-soaked to soften), and then tossed all the items in a sauce made with olive oil, ground palm sugar, a dash of sesame oil, peanuts, minced dried shrimps (fried) and the sauce that came with the roast duck which I had purchased from a chicken rice stall in Lucky Garden at 9.00pm after a hard day’s work.  Well, we all need cheat tactics.  The sauce had a garlicky sweet flavour, so I didn’t bother adding more garlic.  While waiting for the roast duck to be chopped by the kindly old man at the Lucky Garden stall, I saw a tiny piece of glistening fatty char siu.  If there’s one thing I cannot resist, it’s char siu.  Especially if it’s fatty.  A little bit unpremeditated (and unhealthy!), but like my philosophy in life and everything else, cooking should be an adventure.  So in went the roast duck and the char siu.  I squeezed the be-juice-s out of 5 calamansi limes onto the pasta to lift the flavour, and I can tell you this – Bald Eagle was one very happy man that night. (Are we still talking about food?)

What can you cook for under RM50?

Angel hair pasta with prawns, mussels and ebiko

How about some angel hair pasta with tiger prawns, mussels and ebiko?

I tried Paprika’s recipe (and added mussels which I simmered in the delicious prawny broth before I tossed in the pasta), and I must say that it was the best RM50 I spent in a long time.

And no, there were NO kitchen disasters.

Have a great weekend, folks!

(Note:  RM50 gave me 2 large plates of pasta containing 8 tiger prawns, 6 mussels and a generous sprinkling of ebiko)

Smashed Potatoes and Belanga, The Gardens

1. 

Baby chat potatoes can be quite delusional.

faberge potato

Some think they’re royalty.

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Some gather with the flock and graze on imaginary grass.

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shark eats potato

The brave ones enter the waters like Jacques Cousteau and swim with the sharks.

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But my baby chats…..

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They get smashed. 

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It’s easy, really.  After boiling them in salt water, I smashed them with the back of a mug, sprinkled herbs and added a dollop of garlic butter on each potato, after which I chucked them into the oven and baked them until the skin turned crisp.

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There weren’t any spring onions in my fridge, so I chopped some coriander instead. (The gorgeous plate is a gift from the girl from Abu Dhabi.)

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Just before the potatoes were done in the oven, I sprinkled some grated cheese on them.  I later added some sour cream and topped them off with the chopped coriander.  Now that’s what I call smashing carbs. (And my apologies to them as they never lived to see the Queen.  Or roll in hay.  Or swim with sharks.)

2.

Hubby’s from Kelantan and I love Kelantanese food.  I can’t recall if I loved Kelantanese food before my Kelantanese man, or whether the Kelantanese man came before the Kelantanese food, or whether the Kelantanese food came as a result of the Kelantanese man.  And sometimes, we don’t have to overanalyse things to explain why we love something so dearly.  It’s all about acceptance and drifting along with the currents of Sungai Pahang.

Nasi kerabu

When trying Kelantanese food, there are two staples for me – nasi kerabu and nasi dagang.  The nasi kerabu at Belanga breaks away from the traditional appearance of rice stained in blue, a natural colouring obtained from bunga telang (clitoria).  The rice is a warm yellow, and it is served with various types of ulam or raw vegetables, chopped finely so that the vegetables can be easily mixed with the rice to form a fistful of refreshing green flavours.  I had my nasi kerabu with ayam percik, a barbequed chicken marinated in lemongrass, chilli and turmeric, in a slightly pinkish gravy.  The mound of rice was topped with kerisik (grated coconut) and more gravy.  A slice of hard boiled salted egg and some keropok (fish crackers) completed the meal.

Nasi dagang

On another occasion, upon Paprika’s insistence on eating rice, I tried the nasi dagang at Belanga.  I remember having a packet of uncooked nasi dagang rice sitting in my kitchen for a long time as I didn’t have any inkling how to cook it.  I eventually gave it to my mother-in-law as I figured she’d do more justice to that precious rice.  Nasi dagang has two key ingredients – rice, a combination of glutinous and wild rice (which gives it a slightly purplish tinge) and ikan tongkol.  Everything else is secondary.  The nasi dagang at Belanga was deliciously rich, a perfect foil for the creamy curry.

Nasi dagang

Paprika had the nasi dagang with kerutup daging.  Unfortunately, in Paprika’s words, “the meat was tough as nails”!

Laksam

What we both agreed was that the laksam was outstanding.  The white fish gravy with its somewhat grainy texture was a very good canvas for the rolled noodles (not to be confused with chee cheong fun).  A chilli paste is provided on the side if you want it more spicy.

Asam laksa

Also available is asam laksa (noodles in fish based soup).

Check out Fatboybakes’ review here.

Belanga
LG 230B, The Gardens Mall
KL