Monday, August 19, 2013

Peach Blueberry Muffins #MuffinMonday


There is always a certain tone to his voice.  A little excited, a tad bit nervous even.  “Guess what?”  And I give him a long, penetrating look.  And I know.  And a shiver of anticipation runs up my own spine.  “Where to this time and what’s the timeframe?”  So much planning to do, starting with how and when to tell our daughters.  It’s the WE-have-been-transferred conversation.  Because when you are an expat family, it’s not just the worker that is being transferred, we are all moving on.  As with most things in life, there is bad and there is good.  Bad is leaving behind the home you know, the friends and family you love, the community you’ve become an integral part of, where people know you and love you and you can contribute.  Good is a fresh start with new places to explore, sometimes just within yourself.  Can I do this again?  Can I make a new place home, find new friends, fit in again, have fun exploring and be happy?

When my husband found out about our second to last move, the talk came as a phone call.  “Guess what?”  And I could hear the tone.  “Will I like it?” was my first question.  “I think so,” he responded, “It’s Cairo!”  And he was right.  “I’ve always wanted to go to Cairo,” I responded, “but not as a tourist.”  I just had the feeling that Egypt was the kind of place that wouldn’t let a mere tourist in.  Sure, you could see the sights and sites, but to get the deep down feeling for the place and people, it wouldn’t do to scratch the surface with a tour guide.

Truth is, I’m not a very good tourist.  I’m not crazy about tour guides and seeing all the hot spots.  I want to go to the local market and buy new ingredients and cook the food.  I want to sit in a corner cafĂ© and watch the people go by and sip whatever the locals are drinking.  I want to immerse myself and make friends from all over.  I want to learn about the culture and the people.  I want greet the folks at my nearby grocery store and get to know them.  I want to become a familiar friendly face to them as well.

All of this is a very long way around telling you that Egypt became that home, despite our short time there.  In a little less than a year, I made friends.  I volunteered at the community center.  I visited orphanages and charity clinics.  In short, from my very first impressions, I fell in love with the people, Muslim and Christian alike, for their warm hearts and expansive giving natures.  Everything is done in wide-open gestures.  Normal conversations are often shouted, which I must admit I found alarming at first.  But I soon realized that the raised voices were normal in that culture and didn’t mean animosity or even anger.  Just enthusiasm.  Such was the elated optimism before the first-ever democratic election that I almost cannot bear to watch the news right now.  And all I can do is pray.  For peace, for reconciliation, for wisdom, for the leaders of Egypt and the world to find a quick resolution to the strife.  As lovely as Dubai is, a big part of me wishes I were still in Cairo, peacefully baking my muffins every Thursday, in readiness for the Muffin Monday post, and, as I always did, sending them home with my sweetheart housekeeper, Reda, and wishing her and her family a restful weekend.

If you haven’t met my fellow blogger and friend, Marilyn of Communicating Across Boundaries, she is in my blog roll of Favorite Blogs up there in the left column, but, since Egypt’s on my mind, I’d like to share her post from yesterday: Egypt – a Call to Prayer.  Marilyn grew up as an expat child, lived in Cairo as an adult and also has a heart for Egypt.  If you are the praying sort, they can use all the prayers they can get right now.   Or you could just bake muffins for someone you love.  Because this world could use more love in the form of muffins.

Ingredients
1 medium peach
3 oz or 1/2 cup or 85g blueberries
1 3/4 cups or 220g flour
3/4 cup or 170g sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 egg
1/2 cup or 120ml milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup or 60ml canola oil

Method
Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C and prepare your 12-cup muffin tin by greasing it or lining it with muffin papers.

Cut the peach in half and remove the pit.  Cut 12 thin slices out of one half, set them aside for garnish, and then chop the rest of the peach in small chunks.  Set aside 12 blueberries as well for garnish.


In a large mixing bowl, combine your flour, sugar, salt and baking powder.


In another smaller bowl, whisk together your eggs, milk, vanilla and oil.


Pour your wet mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until they are just combined.  There should be some dry flour still showing.  Don't worry about how dry this looks.  The juicy peaches will make up for that while baking.


Fold in the peach pieces and blueberries.



Divide the batter evenly between the muffin cups.


Top each muffin with a peach slice and a blueberry.



Bake for about 20 minutes or until the muffins are golden and a toothpick comes out clean when inserted in the middle.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool for a few minutes.


Remove the muffins from the pan and cool further on a wire rack.


Enjoy!











Sunday, August 18, 2013

Madam Wong’s Pizza Rolls

Imagine a soft dough, shaped like cinnamon rolls, but savory, baked up with pizza sauce and mozzarella. Madam Wong's Pizza rolls are delicious and portable. Perfect in a lunchbox!

Food Lust People Love: Imagine a soft dough, shaped like cinnamon rolls, but savory, baked up with pizza sauce and mozzarella. Madam Wong's Pizza rolls are delicious and portable. Perfect in a lunchbox!

Our family moved to Kuala Lumpur at the end of 2001 so our daughters started school mid-year at the International School of Kuala Lumpur in early January.  This was right after September 11 and the school decided that it would be a good idea to make sure that everyone on campus - students, teachers, administrators and parents alike - had photo identification cards.  And, while they were at it, a new system was put in place where parents could add monetary value to the cards and elementary students could use them to buy lunch and snacks in the canteen.

Within the first few days, we had met Madam Wong.  A diminutive Malaysian Chinese woman, Madam Wong was the ultimate lunch lady, kind-hearted to a fault and a very good cook and baker.  She managed to keep track of which child belonged to which mother, who wasn’t eating their lunch and who was buying all his or her friends snacks on the ID card after school.  She was not beyond chiding a child into choosing a healthier option.

When a student’s credit balance got low, parents were sent an email asking them to top it up.  If there was a delay and the child ran out completely, Madam Wong would still feed him or her, keeping a separate ledger of debts.  Technically this was against the rules but she just couldn’t bear to see a child go hungry.

Madam Wong in her normal attire -
Photo credit: Sandy Fuda

Madam Wong was also the official caterer for Girl Scout events, giving us leaders a price that I am sure left little margin for profit.  She never failed to have a kind word and a cold Diet Coke for us, even when soft drinks were banned on campus.  Needless to say, we adored her for that.  And she provided the snacks for the monthly PTA meetings.

She made a great selection of sweet and savory items but my favorite were her pizza rolls.  Soft yeast dough, rolled out flat and covered in delicious garlicky tomato sauce and cheese and then rolled up, cinnamon roll style, sliced and baked to tender perfection.  When I read that our Sunday Supper theme this week was lunchbox ideas, Madam Wong and her pizza rolls sprang to mind.  Why not make a larger version of her rolls, perhaps with added pepperoni?  These make the perfect, portable take-along lunch.  In fact, I wrapped them up and we ate them on the road, in the car, as we zipped along the highway to Abu Dhabi on Saturday. Divine.

Ingredients for eight large rolls
For the dough
2 cups or 500g strong bread flour plus extra for rolling out the dough
1 packet dried yeast (1/4 oz or 21g) – I used Fleischmann’s Rapid Rise.
1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1 1/3 cups or 315ml warm (between 105° F–115° F or 41° C–46° C)  water

To assemble
1 1/2 cups or 400g pizza sauce -  I used homemade but feel free to use your favorite jarred sauce, if that makes your life easier.
1 ball fresh mozzarella (About 4 1/2 oz or 125g, drained)
1/2 cup or 50g grated mozzarella
1 3/4 oz or 50g thinly sliced pepperoni – optional
Sprinkle dried oregano - optional

Method
Pile the flour in a very large mixing bowl and make a well in the center of it.  Pour half the water into the well, then add your yeast, sugar and salt and stir them in with a fork, grabbing just a bit of flour from around the well and mixing it in.



Continue to bring the flour into the center until you get a very thick batter then add the remaining water.



Continue to mix until it's quick thick again, then you can start using your hands, gathering up all the flour and working it into the dough. Flour your hands and pat and push the dough together with all the remaining flour.


On a clean surface, knead the dough for four or five minutes, turning it and folding it over and slapping it around until you have a lovely elastic dough.


Flour the top of your dough. Put it back in the bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and allow it to proof in a warm, moist, draught-free place until doubled in size, about half an hour.   I put mine outside, in the shade but with our hot Dubai temperature, it rose like crazy, which is always my favorite part of making bread.  It’s fun to see science in action.

Before the first rising.

After the rising - it grew and grew and grew!




Line your baking pan with a little non-stick spray or oil and a bit of parchment paper cut to roughly the size of the bottom of the pan.  If you have a non-stick pan, you might skip this step.


When the dough has risen sufficiently, punch it down and roll it out into a large rectangle (about 17x13in or 44x33cm) using a light sprinkling of flour to keep it from sticking to your counter top and the rolling pin.




Spread it liberally, right to the edges, with about two-thirds of your pizza sauce.


Slice the fresh mozzarella thinly and scatter the pieces on the sauce.  Place bits of pepperoni between the mozzarella, if using.




Roll the dough up into a tube, taking care not to squeeze the sauce out the sides.  (Edit: If you are baking for small children or to make snacks, roll it up the other direction and cut 16 small rolls, instead of eight large.)



Use a serrated bread knife to slice the tube into rolls and place in your prepared pan.  Leave a little space between them so they have room for the next rising.



Top each roll with the remainder of the sauce and then sprinkle on the grated mozzarella.  Top each with a tiny pinch of dried oregano, if desired.



Cover the pan with cling film again and allow to rise for another 30 minutes.  Halfway through the rising time, preheat the oven to 350°F or 180°C.


Bake in your preheated oven at oven for 20 minutes, until golden and scrumptious-looking.

Food Lust People Love: Imagine a soft dough, shaped like cinnamon rolls, but savory, baked up with pizza sauce and mozzarella. Madam Wong's Pizza rolls are delicious and portable. Perfect in a lunchbox!

Enjoy!

Eat straight out of the oven.

Food Lust People Love: Imagine a soft dough, shaped like cinnamon rolls, but savory, baked up with pizza sauce and mozzarella. Madam Wong's Pizza rolls are delicious and portable. Perfect in a lunchbox!
Or package up for lunch on the go.




If you are looking for some great ideas to make lunchboxes tasty and interesting, and who isn’t, have a look at these inspiring ideas from my fellow #SundaySupper bloggers, hosted today by the lovely Liz of That Skinny Chick Can Bake:

Munchies, Salads and Sides
Sweet Treats

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Pimm's No.1 Cup - Guest post for Hungry Couple

 

Happy Wednesday, lovely people!  Today I am mixing cocktails in New York City.  Okay, not actually, but virtually.  The funny and talented Anita from Hungry Couple NYC is off to Maine on holiday this week with her husband and furry sous chef and I am guest posting over at her place.  Anita is known throughout the blogosphere for making fabulous cocktails.  In fact, she has an entire section of her blog devoted to fancy and delicious libations.  So when I agreed to write a guest post, I knew a pretty drink would be most appropriate.  I’ve made a British classic, the Pimm’s No. 1 Cup, as taught to me 25 years ago by our dear friend, David Sutton - sailing boat captain, raconteur, gentleman, engineer and all-around good guy, despite being English.  Or perhaps because he's English.  On this blog, when you hear me speak of sailing in Abu Dhabi or you see photos of sailboats, you can bet that David is involved.  Much to our delight.


Head on over to Hungry Couple to see how you, too, can enjoy this delightful beverage.  I’m mixing one up for you right now!