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KennethT

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  1. These are good answers, all. I appreciate it. Out of curiosity though, can repeated refrying it extend the shelf life in the refrigerator indefinitely?
  2. Thanks - I totally forgot about this, but I do it with other things. It also reminded me that I need to make more soto ayam (Indonesian chicken soup) spice paste - it's a pain to make so I make a big batch and freeze just like this. Every time I want to make soup, I break off what I need - about 2 tablespoons worth. So this would actually be perfect for the sambal as well.
  3. I've thought of this, but sometimes, I only want a tea spoon or two, so that would be a LOT of individually frozen portions!!! Especially if i was to make a few different sambal.
  4. Typically, they're not. Standard sambals blend or crush in a mortar until it is a thick paste and the paste is fried, often with water added. So there will be some oil floating on top, but other than that is quite liquidy.
  5. I've been thinking about making a few Indonesian sambals to keep in the refrigerator. Most sambals are a combination of shallots, chillis, shrimp paste, garlic, etc. fried in oil. The salt content is not that high, and there is usually no real acid component. So after cooking, I'd assume the shelf life in the refrigerator is about a week - similar to other cooked foods. My question is if I could extend the shelf life by refrying it every 5 days or so. Would recooking kill the spoilage bacteria and keep it from going bad?
  6. A lot of the kerupuk I saw in Indonesia have a pretty high shrimp content (for the kerupuk udang) - almost 50%! I have some here that are just flour, shrimp, shallots and salt.
  7. KennethT

    Lunch 2024

    I'm a fan of pears sauteed in butter with a lot of black pepper.
  8. KennethT

    Lunch 2024

    I don't know about healthy - usually the rice for chicken rice (all over SE Asia) is first tossed in chicken fat prior to cooking in chicken stock. But certainly tasty!
  9. fascinating - I had no idea that buckwheat wasn't related to wheat. I'm actually violently allergic to buckwheat and didn't realize that it was used at all in China. I know it is used quite a bit in Japan.
  10. Interesting. I've never heard of chicken breeds varying by location in SE Asia. Usually, they just discuss "kampung" or village chicken - meaning one that just roams around and eats whatever it wants versus a standard chicken. The kampung chicken is notably tougher and scrawnier but prized for its flavor. On a side note, I was buying feet in Chinatown a few weeks ago to make stock and I noticed that some of the feet were a bluish black - looked just like the photo above but didn't realize that they came from a specific breed. I've never seen the whole chicken with the blue feet here, other than the unbelievably expensive poulet de Bresse, imported from France. Next time I'm in that meat market, I've got to do a more in depth look at their whole chickens.
  11. I can get both older stewing chicken and silkies at my usual meat market in Chinatown, but elsewhere, forget it!
  12. Thanks so much! I've only seen an octopus once - on our last trip, there was one hiding at the bottom of a giant barrel sponge. If you're ever cooking a meal while on vacation, you can use an unripe papaya to make papaya salad. It's also pretty good snack with a dip made from salt/chilli/a little sugar. Not like a green mango, but pretty good.
  13. Thanks for sharing!!! I always love your trips. Do you think you could post some of your underwater photos? Also I think the tree next to your deck was a papaya tree, not a mango tree. Mangoes come from the branches of the tree, not off the trunk like a papaya does.
  14. When you take underwater photos, do you use lighting of any kind? I had wanted to get a light for when we go diving - the last time, a bunch of divers with us had lights and it really makes a big difference. You might not need it though since you're on the surface snorkeling. I'm surprised the resort doesn't do something about the flies. We eat outside at all of teh resorts in SE Asia and haven't had an issue with flies. I imagine that the resorts spray for them when there's no one around and they also have these bug coils that make a smell the bugs don't like - although I find it very pleasant. The bug coil is lit and sits in a pretty container, and tucked underneath the table.
  15. KennethT

    Dinner 2024

    Certainly no shortage of beta carotene tonight!
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