Saturday, 29 November 2014

saudi traditional food

Kabsa  is a family of mixed rice dishes that are served mostly in Jordan and Saudi Arabia — where it is commonly regarded as a national dish in Saudi Arabia. Kabsa, though, is believed to be indigenous to Yemen. In places like Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Iraq and Kuwait the dish is popularly known as machbūs , but is served mostly in the same way.
These dishes are mainly made from a mixture of spices, rice (usually long-grain, mostly basmati), meat and vegetables. There are many kinds of kabsa and each kind has a uniqueness about it. Pre-mixed kabsa spices are now available under several brand names. These reduce preparation time but may have a flavor distinct from traditional kabsa. The spices used in kabsa are largely responsible for its taste; these are generally black pepper, cloves, cardamom, saffron, cinnamon, black lime, bay leaves and nutmeg.[1] The main ingredient that accompanies the spices is the meat, such as chicken, goat, lamb, camel, or sometimes beef, fish, and shrimp. In chicken machbūs, a whole chicken is used. The spices, rice and meat may be augmented with almonds, pine nuts, onions and sultanas.[2] The dish can be garnished with ḥashū  and served hot with daqqūs  — home-made tomato sauce.
Meat for kabsa can be cooked in various ways. A popular way of preparing meat is called mandi. This is an ancient technique, whereby meat is barbecued in a deep hole in the ground that is covered while the meat cooks. Another way of preparing and serving meat for kabsa is mathbi, where seasoned meat is grilled on flat stones that are placed on top of burning embers. A third technique, madghūt, involves cooking the meat in a Pressure cooker.
Ghadeer Alshihri

 

Chinese Traditional Food --- Dumplings (Jiaozi)

Dumplings (Jiaozi)


As we know, there are lots of Chinese Traditional Foods. In this post is about one of the Chinese Traditional Food--Jiaozi, which is dumpling. With a long history of more than 1,800 years, dumplings are a traditional food widely popular in North China.
The jiaozi is a common Chinese dumpling that generally consists of minced meat and finely chopped vegetables wrapped into a piece of dough skin. The skin can be either thin and elastic or thicker. Popular meat fillings include ground pork, ground beef, ground chicken, shrimp, and even fish. Popular mixtures include pork with Chinese cabbage, pork with garlic chives, pork and shrimp with vegetables, pork with spring onion, garlic chives with scrambled eggs. Filling mixtures vary depending on personal tastes and region. Jiaozi are usually boiled or steamed and continues to be a traditional dish eaten on Chinese New Year's Eve, the evening before Chinese New Year, and special family reunions. Extended family members may gather together to make dumplings, and it is also eaten for farewell to family members or friends. In Northern China, dumplings are commonly eaten with a dipping sauce made of vinegar and chili oil or paste, and occasionally with some soy sauce added in.

Steamed

If dumplings are laid flatly on a pan, first steamed with a lid on and with a thin layer of water, then fried in oil after the water has been evaporated, they are called guotie (sometimes called "potstickers"), as the Maillard reaction occurring on the bottom of the dumplings makes the skin crispy and brown. The same dumplings are called jiaozi if they are just steamed.

Fried



Emma Cai

Reference:
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlNp7xsfnAY8eYiAllpPTUS2Ty-NZX77WVu1RUA3FYKLYnavtCDRx62uOJnaAcUgG6XwB-wjqa1DDR78aDzl0JGt1zJpIL7maKaKJn4ZxwFJ0lRIIpm5AvCT5yzsC7s9aVdf2OnWelXf0/s1600/BL9.jpg
http://www.seriouseats.com/images/2013/02/20110406-chinese-appetizers-dumplings-ask-the-food-lab.jpg
http://www.chinesenewyears.info/img/dumplings.jpg

Vietnamese Traditional Food


Traditional Vietnamese Food
30/11/2014
Trfood


The topic that we going to discuss here is traditional food and this post specifically is about vietnamese traditional food. Plain rice ( com trang ) is at the center of the Vietnamese diet. Steamed rice is part of almost every meal. The Vietnamese prefer long-grain white rice, as opposed to the short-grain rice more common in Chinese cooking. Rice is also transformed into other common ingredients such as rice wine, rice vinegar, rice noodles, and rice paper wrappers for spring rolls.
Rice is also used to make noodles. There are four main types of rice noodles used in Vietnamese cooking. Banh pho are the wide white noodles used in the quintessential Vietnamese soup, pho Bun noodles (also called rice vermicelli) look like long white strings when cooked. Banh hoi are a thinner version of bun noodles. In addition, there are dried glass, or cellophane, noodles (mien or bun tao ) made from mung bean starch.
Just as essential to Vietnamese cuisine as rice and noodles is nuoc mam , a salty fish sauce that is used in most Vietnamese recipes (just as salt is used in most Western dishes). Nuoc mam is produced in factories along the coast of Vietnam. Anchovies and salt are layered in wooden barrels and then allowed to ferment for about six months. The light-colored, first-drained sauce is the most desirable. It is also the most expensive and reserved primarily for table use. Less expensive nuoc mam is used in cooking. When shopping for nuoc mam , one should look for the words ca com on the label, which indicates the highest quality.

The most popular condiment is nuoc cham (dipping sauce), which is as common in Vietnam as ketchup is in North America. Saucers filled with nuoc cham are present at practically every meal, and diners dip everything from spring rolls to meatballs into it. The recipe that follows can be adjusted to suit individual tastes by using more or less red pepper and nuoc mam. Nuoc cham is quite simple to make and will keep in the refridgerator for up to 30 days. A few spoonfuls over a bowl of plain rice can be considered an authentic Vietnamesepeasant meal.


Reference : https://www.google.com.au/search?q=vietnamese+traditional+food&espv=2&biw=1920&bih=979&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=eueAVMeJHabQmwWByIGIAQ&ved=0CDUQsAQ 

Victor Tran 

Friday, 21 November 2014

Welcome to TrFood.


Our blog is all about traditional food.We will be sharing our insights about delicacies from our cultures. Our group consists of: 

- Emma 
- Ghadeer 
- Victor 
- Kevin 
- Anthony

Enjoy!