If you want to buy C Coconut Water, check out their website https://ccoconutwater.com/ to buy online and for the list of Stockists.
20 September 2012 Ibyang Sanchez 2 Comments Category: Food, Things I Love
If you want to buy C Coconut Water, check out their website https://ccoconutwater.com/ to buy online and for the list of Stockists.
19 September 2012 Ibyang Sanchez 2 Comments Category: Charmed Life of a Mrs, Cherished Memories, Food, The Married Life
I’ve got lots of foodie adventures that needs to be written (as always) and an article deadline this week so for now, let me share a collage of how we celebrated the birthday of the man behind this blog, Chris, simply called “the Husband”.
There is a pattern as to how we celebrate our birthdays. It usually includes not going to work (we make a long weekend out of it), delicious food, great company, shopping and travel. This year, we had a quiet celebration in Sydney which started on Friday.
We headed out to Cabramatta, Sydney’s Vietnam-town on Friday morning, had our first taste of Vietnamese coffee (it was wonderful!), explored the streets and shopped at the markets. Before we left, we had lunch at one Pho Viet. In the evening, we brought Chinese food to my aunt’s place and had dinner with relatives.
Went out early on Sunday to have breakfast at IKEA. We bought a few storage solution items because my project this Spring is to make our home more efficient by having organised cabinets.
17 September 2012 Ibyang Sanchez 0 Comments Category: Food
The Pinaig Na Mais or Corn Coffee is made by AdvoCafe, a unique coffee shop which sells organic products such as coffee, tea and corn coffee.
Like rice coffee, corn coffee is a healthy drink that does not contain caffeine. It comes from ground, roasted corn and is high in fibre, helps in managing diabetes, prevents cardiovascular disease, lowers hypertension, reduces cholesterol level, minimizes risk of colon cancer, and prevents neural-tube defects in infants. {source}
A good alternative to drinking caffeinated drinks. The texture is grainy so I use a french press to make it smoother.
AdvoCafe
Ground Floor, Ramon Magsaysay Commercial Complex
Dr. F. Quintos Street
Malate, Metro Manila
Email: myadvocacy@advocafe.com
Phone: +632 708-2366
Open on Monday to Saturday from 6am-11pm
13 September 2012 Ibyang Sanchez 3 Comments Category: Food, Recipes
The Husband has grown tired of eating Tinola. That’s kind of sad because I love Tinola. I still cook it once in a while because I can’t help but crave for it, however, I had to think of way for the Husband to love Tinola again.
So yesterday, I went to the newly-opened Daiso in Chinatown (will blog about it soon, promise!) and picked up a few Japanese ingredients that will help me combine my Husband’s love for Miso Soup and my love for Tinola. My first experiment at cuisine fusion, I call this my Japanese Tinola recipe.
What you need to prepare:
1 tbsp Canola Oil (or any cooking oil of your choice)
1 tbsp Ginger, chopped
1 medium-sized Onion, chopped
3 cloves of Garlic, chopped
1/2 kilo Chicken Wings
2 tbsp Fish Sauce
1 pack of Bonito soup stock, dissolved in four cups of water
1 tbsp Shiro Miso
2 pcs Sayote (Chayote/Choko), peeled and sliced
Starch Noodles (no measurement, I only grabbed a handful, enough for the soup I made, add more if you want your soup more “noodly”)
Salt and Pepper, to taste
Additional water if you want your dish to have more sou
What you need to do:
Tips:
12 September 2012 Ibyang Sanchez 4 Comments Category: Charmed Life of a Mrs, Food, Great Finds for the Home, The Married Life
We’ve been using our 10-cup rice cooker for years and I felt that we needed something smaller and just use the big one only when we have guests or parties at home. Other than save space, a small rice cooker will also help save electricity consumption. I’ve had this idea at the back of my mind but I never really went to appliance stores and have a look at what’s out there. A month ago, I noticed an attractive rice cooker in one of the KDramas that the Husband and I were watching. It was red, square-shaped and it talks! It looked like a small robot. I searched the net (googled “Korean rice cooker”) and there I found the same kind of rice cookers. It turned out that such rice cookers are used in Japan and Korea. It came in different brands, functions and prices. The more features the rice cooker has, the more expensive it is.
The better term for this kind of rice cooker would be a (1) Smart Rice Cooker or (2) Fuzzy-logic Rice Cooker. I only call it my Korean Rice Cooker only because I saw it being used in a KDrama.
How different is a Fuzzy-logic Rice Cooker from the basic rice cooker?
Fuzzy-logic rice cookers have computer chips that direct their ability to make proper adjustments to cooking time and temperature. Unlike basic rice cookers, which complete tasks in a single-minded, mechanical manner, the process behind the fuzzy-logic rice cookers needs a bit more explanation. The fuzzy sets theory, first proposed by UC Berkeley professor Lotfi Zadeh in 1965, laid the groundwork for fuzzy logic, which he also put forward in 1973. Fuzzy sets theory has to do with mathematical sets, or groups of items known as elements. In most mathematical sets, an element either belongs to the set or it doesn’t. For example, a sparrow would belong to a set of birds, but a bat wouldn’t. In fuzzy logic, though, elements can belong to sets in varying degrees. So since a bat has wings, it might belong to a set of birds — but only to a certain extent. Fuzzy logic is basically a way to program machines so they look at the world in a more human way, with degrees of truth. Instead of cold, hard parameters and strict data sets, fuzzy logic assumes a more practical approach. Using numbers, it incorporates non-definitive words like “slightly” or “almost” into its decision-making processes. As a result, the use of fuzzy logic in rice cookers helps to ensure properly cooked rice because it gives the appliances the ability to make judgment calls similar to those a person might make, albeit typically better than those a hungry, impatient person might make. (source)
Some functions of the Fuzzy-logic rice cookers: cook white rice, brown rice, sticky rice, sushi rice, pasta, soups, stews, bake cakes etc.
I thought that such rice cookers doesn’t exist here in Australia so I just daydreamed about it. The Korean brands we saw online were really expensive ranging from AUD$200-AUD$400 so I dodged the idea because I don’t want to spend that much just for a rice cooker.
Then one weekend, we passed by the rice cooker section of Myer and found a Panasonic Fuzzy-logic rice cooker priced at AUD$130.00. I was elated to see it but decided to think about it. Two weeks after, I was reminded that we have unused points that we need to redeem. When I looked at the kitchen appliances section of the redemption website, I saw the Panasonic Fuzzy-logic rice cooker we want!!! I was very happy! Imagine, we’ll have the rice cooker we want without paying a cent. Such a great blessing! In less than two weeks, my Korean rice cooker arrived.