Tuesday, February 8, 2011
formspring.me
Hunks&Babes, come on & ask me any question you like. <3 http://formspring.me/sweetlovex33
Monday, February 7, 2011
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Jun Jie 3E2
This year, the Singapore Food Festival theme is on Chinese food, and the food I got was the chicken rice. It is a simple dish that comes together with chicken and rice. It is also served with sliced cucumbers, dark soy sauce and chilli. The chilli usually includes a mixture of chilli and garlic, maximizing its flavour. The chicken used to make chicken rice are dipped into ice after cooking to produce a jelly looking skin. It is cooked by boiling the chicken in water flavoured with ingredients, garlic, ginger, pork stock and chicken stock. The oily rice is made by cooking the rice with chicken stock, garlic and ginger. These chicken and rice has got a very unique taste and fragrance.
Chicken rice cost around $3 to $4 and could be found almost anywhere.
Jeremy Eng 3E2
Fried hokkien prawn noodles is a dish of egg noodles and rice noodles in a fragrant stock, which is made from both fresh shrimp and dried prawns, as well as pork or chicken. This dish is originated from the Fujian province in China. It is garnished with prawns, bean sprouts, eggs, squid, vegetables, egg, pork ribs, lime and chili. The chili is sambal chili and the lime juice makes the dish more moist so that it will not be too dry when eaten. The lime juice also help bring in a sour taste which makes it delicious. I like to mix all the sambal chili in because i like it spicy. This dish can be bought at around $3.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Erisusanti 3N1.
The Chinese Food I am going to share about is Ban Mian. It is a Hokkien-Style egg noodle soup common in parts of China's Fujian province and also in other parts of the world such as Singapore and Malaysia although the dish itself may vary significantly. It is served in soup, usually with pieces of minced chicken or minced pork, anchovies(ikan bilis), vegetables and an egg and also commonly comes with sliced mushrooms and fish balls. On the other hand, Handmade ban mian stalls often offer alternative toppings. For example, deep fried anchovies or fresh slices of fish. Overall, the dish is very appealing and delicious as it has a variety of foods from meat to vegetables and the soup which is sweet and thick, making you slurp the noodles deliciously.
Nur Aminah 3N1.
The Chinese Food I chose to write up on is Hor Fun. It is a type of wide chinese noodle made from rice. It is enjoyed by Southeast nations such as Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore all of which have sizeable Chinese population. The noodles are white in colour, broad and somewhat slippery and the texture is elastic and abit chewy. It can also be served with vegetables, mushrooms and some meat to go along with the dish so that there would be a variety of foods to eat. Overall, the dish is really tasty as the noodles are tender and chewable and the gravy is thick and sweet but not so oily.
Aqilah 3n1
hellooooooooo!!!
aqi from 3n1 reporting on what i ate.
i ate ... minced chicken meat noodle which are the pictures above. i went to banquet, bought it and ate it. at first i was like what the so little but DO NOT underestimate, though little its very filling! it taste like normal noodle just that there was something extra to it which makes the taste unique and delicious at the same time. the chicken was boiled but only for a few minutes. the noodles were placed into hot water as soon as i ordered it and not long after, it turned soft and READY TO EAT! there was fishball too in the dish and it had a bouncy chewy feeling so it must be eaten in small bites as its prone to choking(:
there's also mushroom and it was also chewy. overall the dish has a chewy feeling altogether. though there is a little of the colour red, it is not spicy at all. just the taste of chilly but no spicy taste. i rate this dish the fullest point due to the uniqueness of taste.
GO TRY!:D hhehheh, CANTEK.
aqii.
Anjali Pun 3N1.
The Chinese Food which I am presenting is called Fried Wonton Noodle. I brought it at the nearest hawker centre in the neighbourhood and costs $3. It is a Cantonese noodle dish which is popular in HongKong, Malaysia and Singapore. It includes noodles, leafy vegetables(preferably cai-xin), barbecued pork(char siu) and bited-size dumplings or wonton. It is either served dry or in soup form with the former being more popular. If served dry, the wontons will be served in a seperate bowl of soup. Fried wontons(wontons deep-fried in oil)are sometimes served instead of those boiled in the soup. This dish has good points and bad points as well. The good point is that it is delicious and appealing. The bad point is that the noodles are quite small in portion so customers may not be satisfied. Overall, I think that this dish really is worth buying because the ingredients are tasty and are being cooked using different cooking methods.
Shalini 3N2
Hello. my name is shalini and i have chose yong tau foo as my dish as firstly it was to commerate Racial harmony day and we were required to do a project on Chinese food. i chose yong tau foo as it is my favourite food and i love to pick different ingredients .a Chinese soup dish with Hakka origins commonly found in China , Singapore , Thailand and Malaysia . Yong Tau Foo usually comes with soup and food items such as fishballs , crabsticks , bittergourds , cuttle fish , lettuce , ladies fingers as well as chillis. the food fair is a very good experience for me as i had a chance to see and try most of the chinese food.
Ang Wen Yi Glenn, 3N1
Yo people this is glenn of 3n1. The chinese food I'm doing is about laska. It was to commerate racial harmony day. I bought it in the nearest hawker centre at my house, it cost me $2.50 for one bowl of it but it was worth it as the gravy was one of the tastiest that I had tasted. Even though there are good points about this food, there are also bad points like the prawns are too soapy and the gravy is a bit too salty. Even if the laska tasted salty in every dish there are always points to improve on there are no dish that is perfect so it still had points to improve on. In the laska there are ingredients like tofu, eggs, yellow noddles and prawn. To end of if I had to give ratings for this dish I'll give it 3 and 1/2 over 5. However this dish taste nice, so I hope you would try this cause my words my not be reliable as I love eating execpt for eating vegetable so yeah this is all I have to say.
nur farah bte ali ; 3n2
fried carrot cake
fried carrot cake, also known as chai tow kueh. from the name itself is known as chinese food. this is a steamed cake of riceflour and shredded white radish - the "carrot" it's named after. diced and stir fried with garlic, salt pickled radish, and eggs. it comes in two versions, one flavoured with sweet black soy sauce ; the other left white and enchanced with extra egg and sometimes prawns. both get a sprinkle of chopped spring onion and fresh coriander leaves as a final garnish. chilli addicts typically request a dash of chilli paste to be added to the mix too.
fried carrot cake is the most commonly eaten for breakfast and supper. when done well, it has a scrumptious mix of smooth and crisp textures, salty - sweet and mellow flavours, and the smokiness that only a roaring fire can achieve. it's absolutely addictive! this picture was taken from fork and spoon.
HI, i'm SHEEREEN FROM 3N2. Last week, i went to the food festival at Clarke quay, i went on a Saturday, so as expected, it was jam packed with people. I decided to try the Yong tau foo. Yong Tau Foo is a dish which originated from Hakka, and it is commonly found in China, Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia. The dish is also available in 2 other different types such as the Teochew and Hokkien variations.. It is ubiquitous in Singapore food courts, too. Essentially the dish originated in the early 1960s in a restaurant called "Chew Kuan" as tofu stuffed with a meat paste of fish and pork, thereby earning the dish its name "Yong Tau Foo," which means "stuffed bean curd." Since then all variety of vegetables and even fried fritters have been similarly stuffed, and the name Yong Tau Foo has thus been used liberally to apply to foods prepared in this manner. However, these days, Yong tau Foo has commonly become halal in Singapore.
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Stephanie Tan Shi Ya ( 3N2 )
HEY:) My name is Stephanie Tan and my class in 3n2. In the commemoration of Racial Harmony, we participated in this project and we are required to search for Chinese food. Therefore, i bought this Fried Hokkien Prawn Noodles at the Kim Keat Food Court on the 26th July 2010. It was not my first time trying this dish because i'm a Chinese :) I do not really like fried hokkien prawn noodles a lot, however, i like the Kim Keat food court fried prawn noodles because it was not very dry neither was it too wet. It was just nice. Prawns were indeed big and fresh too! This dish will be nicer if you squeeze a little lime juice onto it and eaten together with some sambal chili. I swear it taste heavenly! This Fried Hokkien Prawn Noodles contains ingredients like Mee (yellow noodles), Chu Mee Fen, Vegetables, Bean Sprouts, Eggs, Prawns, Squid (Sotong), Lime and Chili . Chu Mee Fen is actually another type of bee-hoon. By the way, the lime and chili is not a compulsory ingredients. It is optional. Many of the residents staying at Kim Keat avenue should have tried it before and i believed they would also agree with what I've said the earlier on. It taste nice and it look attractive too! Do drop by the food court and give it a try! After eating i believe you will have nothing to say but thumbs up! :) Try it if you doubt my words ! Thanks. I think that is all about this dish :D
Siti Nurulhuda 3e2 31st July
CHEE CHEONG FUN
A rice noodle roll (also translated as steamed rice roll) is a Cantonese dish from southern China and Hong Kong, commonly served as a variety of dim sum. It is a thin roll made from a wide strip of Shahe fen (rice noodles), filled with shrimp, pork, beef, vegetables, or other ingredients. Sweet soy sauce is poured over the dish upon serving. The rice noodle is also known as chee cheong fun where chee cheong means pig intestine, and fun means noodle; this is because the noodle resembles the small intestine of a pig.
In Cantonese cuisine, rice noodle roll is most often served in dim sum. The most common types traditionally offered as part of dim sum cuisine are:
Rice noodle roll with lightly marinated shrimp
Rice noodle roll with beef -usually ground beef with heavy addition of corn starch as filler and promote tenderness
Rice noodle roll with dried shrimp
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Hanxiang 3E2
This year's Singapore food festival theme is on Chinese Dialects Food.
On the 28 July 2010, I went to a small restaurant in Chinatown which specializes in selling noodles. I bought the Hokkien prawn noodles. It is a little bit salty but it is still very delicious because of the prawn and sotong in it. It also consists of eggs and some meat. It is watery, therefore it it is very easy to chew. This cost me only $3 which I think is worth it since the amount of noodle and seafood used are quite a lot.
Hanxiang 3E2
On the 28 July 2010, I went to a small restaurant in Chinatown which specializes in selling noodles. I bought the Hokkien prawn noodles. It is a little bit salty but it is still very delicious because of the prawn and sotong in it. It also consists of eggs and some meat. It is watery, therefore it it is very easy to chew. This cost me only $3 which I think is worth it since the amount of noodle and seafood used are quite a lot.
Hanxiang 3E2
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)