Champagne Taste, Water Budget

It's tragic that life has imparted a taste way beyond my budget. Being terminally poor, finding ways to appease the palate on an almost non-existent budget has become a way of life instead of an adventure.

Herein lies the chronicles of poverty. If ye be a snob, mosey on along. But if like me, you are looking for a way to enjoy life at almost no cost or on the cheap, come along for the ride.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

The Rain in Singapore

Wow. What a downpour.


I was furiously playing computer games and totally lost track of the time. Till the thunderous pounding of a furious deluge caught my attention. Startled out of my one-handed clicking of touchpad (come on, you do it two-handed???!!), I went to the kitchen to investigate.


Lucky that I did as half the kitchen was getting water-logged. Bravely battling the stinging pinpricks of angry rain drops (more like rain shards), I closed the windows, tackled the dangling knickers and bras of my housemate tossing damply right in front of the windows, stoically rescuing them to dryer climate.


For some reason that rescue mission made me terribly hungry.


So at around 4am, I started cooking. Yeah, Antony Boudain ain't got nothing on my kookiness.



I wanted hot and soupy to warm me up. Unfortunately my fridge boasts a meager crop. I had decided recently I was going to live even more frugally and efficiently than before. Which means I will only purchase enough groceries to last for a day or so and only on the basis on the sales and promotions of the local supermarkets and shops. That way I get fresh food and less waste.



Fantastic theory. Not so fantastic at 4am when you are craving for a winter soup (hey, monsoon is the Asian winter!) to fight off the pelting cold needles of hunger.


I had:



One packet of chicken livers
One packet of shiitake mushrooms
One packet of young kailan
Two medium-sized red onion
Young ginger
Several cloves of garlic


Oh this is sad but workable. Definitely workable.


I went to work. Voila, 40 minutes later, we had a meal. 40 minutes because I spent part of that time mopping up the wet kitchen floor from the home invasion by the rain.



Firstly, let me put in the caveat that I do not cook by measurements. I throw in things by feel, taste and the good old culinary senses inherited from my gran. But I will try my best to put in guestimations for the noobs.




Rain Fighting Chicken Liver and Kailan soup

1 packet of chicken livers (about 8 was in mine)
1 packet of kailan (once washed & sorted, it was about 2- 2 1/2 cups)
7 shiitake mushrooms
2 medium-sized red onion
1 knob of young ginger (about 2.5cm/1 inch)
1 clove of garlic
2 black dates
1 tbsp gouzi/wolfberries
Oil (about 1 1/2 tbsp)
Mirin (about 1/2 tbsp)
2 chicken stock cubes (try to use the non-MSG ones)
1/2 tbsp oyster sauce
Sesame oil (I only used about 3-4 drops)
White pepper (about 10 dashes ... eh, let's see ... 2 tsp?)
Water (lots. OK, about 2.5 litres?)


1. Prep time:
- Peel, wash (helps keep you from tearing later too) and slice the red onions into thin discs
- Crush, peel and top the clove of garlic
- Peel and slice the ginger into thin discs


2. Wash the kailan well and start sectioning them by hand into large bite-sizes. For me that is about half the length of my palm. I use the stalks too and if any are a little too chunky, I slice these into slanted, 1-inch sections.


3. Wash and cut the mushrooms into quarters.



4. Clean the chicken livers. Some people may dislike the whitish-grey stuff that floats around ominously in your soup but I am OK with that. If you want to get rid of that, you may choose to pour hot boiling water on your livers and quickly discard that liquid and wash them in cool water and set aside. But I warn you that that may over-cook your livers. I hate over-cooked livers. Ptui!



Oh yeah, there's another process to get rid of the scum yet impart flavour to your livers but that's such a long process I can't be arsed to discuss it right now.


5. Heat your oil in your pot. I had some flavoured oil from the last meal I cooked (it was from frying some prawns with garlic which I saved) so I used that. That aroma was drool worthy.



6. Add the trinity of garlic, onions and ginger and saute away till the smells really get to you.



7. Add the mushrooms and saute till well combined.



8. Add the kailan and saute for about 30 seconds on high till they are bright green.



9. Add the water, add the chicken stock and stir.



10. Bring to boil, lower heat to medium and add all the other ingredients except the liver.



11. Adjust all seasonings to taste and then turn up the heat to scorching high and add the livers.



12. Stir gently so as not to traumatise your chicken livers and once soup comes to boil, turn off the heat and cover.


13. Let stand for about 5 minutes and then you can start serving. How long you do this depends on your preference for the done-ness of your chicken livers. I like mine tender and non-Goodyear tyres like.




So there we had it. A nice, hot, tasty and nourishing soup to fight off the rainy blues. I had so much left over I will be having that for at least 3 meals.


As your livers get more and more tough with each re-heating, what I do is start mashing them roughly to break them up, add rice to make a porridge of sorts to extend my buck. You can also add an egg to it to make it richer. Pasta works well too, instead of rice, to make a pasta soup of sorts.



Let's see. I reckon the cost of this meal was rather economical.


Packet of chicken livers - $1.60

Packet of kailan - $1.60
Packet of shiitake mushrooms - $2.00 (I only used 7 though and there was still 3/4 of the packet left)
Garlic, ginger & onions - $1.70 (but I only used about 1/3 of the lot)
The rest of the ingredients were on hand in the pantry or leftovers from previous meals so I am guessing that the cost would not be more than $2


So, that would be a guestimation of a cost of $6.20 for this dish. Which will divide out into about 3-4 meals for me. Which makes about $2 per meal.



Sweet.



And yes, I know that all self-respecting food bloggers must have the obligatory food porn. And no, there is none to this post. What do you expect? That I would cook, clean and then take photos at 5am on a stormy night? Yes, 5am is still night to me.



Hell no! I ate and went back to bed, replete and happy.


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