6091 comments
2357 subscribers
6237 on Twitter
Subscribe! Feed reader E-mail

Arroz caldo

Not content with figuring out that lasagna automatically makes me warm
and fuzzy, W noticed that I often snacked on the instant arroz caldo
mixes that I was thrilled to find at a nearby No Frills supermarket.
He then set about figuring out how to pronounce it (important first
step!), and how to prepare it. We ended up combining several recipes
from the Internet and throwing in *way* more garlic and ginger than
the Westernized recipes called for. We put in too much chicken meat
(will fix that next time), but the rest of it was just perfect -
glutinous rice dissolving into a chicken broth that had simmered to
perfection.

The only point of disagreement came when I sauteed the garlic
yesterday. I chopped up the garlic and threw it into the pan. W looked
at me in surprise and threw in the sliced onion as well, explaining
that he usually cooks the onion first in order to avoid burning the
garlic. I pointed out that the recipe specifically called for the
garlic to be lightly browned first. We compromised by cooking the two
separately in the same pot, and the dish wasn’t affected.

When I fried garlic again today, though, the reason for this
disagreement came to light. Aparently, Western cooking hardly ever
lets the garlic color. In fact, recipes often make a point of it. For
arroz caldo, though, you *want* crunchy golden garlic. With that kind
of clarification, we came to full agreement.

But look! Arroz caldo! Isn’t he so sweet? And now he’s looking up how
to make champorado, even though he can’t believe that chocolate rice
porridge is supposed to be a breakfast thing.

The way to someone’s heart is through their stomach… =)

Short URL: http://sachachua.com/blog/p/4618

On This Day...

  • 2013: Practice Perfect: Calling your shots — Practice Perfect is a book packed with tips for deliberate practice. One of the ideas I’ve been trying from the [...]
  • 2012: Thinking about the time/money swap — I thought that once I went into business for myself, I’d do the same kinds of money vs time vs [...]
  • 2011: Learning from my mood data — One of the unexpected benefits of switching my phone plan to something that includes unlimited international texting is that I [...]
  • 2010: In my dreams of wild success — In my dreams of wild success, I am not an executive, not a manager, not a consultant, not a seller. [...]
  • 2009: Weekly report: Week ending April 18, 2009 — From last week’s plans: Work on the next version of Transition2 Did some design and some prototyping Give a talk on making [...]
  • 2007: Geek! — W and I were talking about Post-It tape flags when he asked me if he’d shown me his Markham housing map [...]
  • 2007: Multi-modal learning — I’ve stepped up my reading in preparation for my paper, practically inhaling research papers and books. It’s easy to copy and [...]
  • 2007: Lasagna — One of the pictures I lost when I downloaded to /tmp/pictures instead of ~/tmp/pictures (boo!) was a nicely-lit picture of the [...]
  • 2007: Thesis — I showed my thesis prototype to three other researchers at the IBM Toronto Center for Advanced Studies. They all thought it [...]
  • 2007: Adventures with J: Rhyme time — J asked me if she could take the Shel Silverstein book I lent her to school tomorrow, because her teacher told [...]
  • 2007: Bruised knuckle — The middle knuckle of my right hand is a little darker than the others, and a bit sensitive to the touch. [...]
  • 2007: Lost pictures — Note to self: never ever ever ever ever store thing in /tmp ever ever ever again, as Ubuntu is smart and [...]
  • 2006: Stretch… — Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh… Much work done today, so I don’t feel guilty about blogging and catching up on my e-mail before I [...]
  • 2006: Geek — All I can say is… geek! ;) And to think Marcelle keeps trying to deny his geekiness. Attending a _blogging_ summit? [...]
  • 2006: Fruit and crab salad — I remembered having a rather nice Asian salad that included mandarin oranges, so I decided to see what mixing fruits into [...]
  • 2006: Amazing — One of the things I love about meeting other people is that they are just mind-bogglingly inspiring. And it’s not that [...]
  • 2006: Coder glut in Canada — Then again, things like Life After the Bubble Burst are worth thinking about. Must remember: it’s all about being the right [...]
  • 2006: Going dark — If I don’t post a lot between now and May 1, it’s probably because I’m either (a) cramming my reading paper, [...]
  • 2004: Scheduler progress — Ahhh. Much hacking done over the weekend. All the browsing parts of the scheduler work. I need to finish installing postgresql [...]

Get the highlights as a PDF!

Stories from my Twenties: Highlights from a Decade of Blogging

Free sample!