Skip to content

Posts tagged ‘peanut cookies’

Baker wannabe

This is perhaps quite a delayed winter post, since we’re now in the middle of spring, and have a lot more opportunities to be out and enjoy the warm, sunny weather. Nevertheless, I’ve been wanting to write on my baking adventures here so today is the day to do it 🙂

When I first arrived end November, I had a hard time adjusting to the lack of sunshine and the long darkness for most part of the day. And being cold outside, I wasn’t too keen to go out daily. So I ended up spending a lot of time in the kitchen, cooking and baking.

When it comes to baking, I’m the first to confess that it’s not a natural talent. I learned the basics of baking from my mom, who used to bake lovely butter cakes for me and my sister when we were growing up. I don’t remember when baking stopped at home but mom hasn’t baked for a long time now, and I didn’t pursue it til’ four years ago when I moved from journalism to corp communications. I had more time in the evenings after work and I ended up using the time to bake. It’s also motivated by the fact that two of my close friends, Jules and Lynn baked too, and when we sat down to enjoy the goodies on the table, it always gave me a warm feeling to know that I was enjoying their their loving baking.

So anyway, I have one or two fool-proof baking recipes that I always return to. They are my banana muffins and chocolate brownies. But given the amount of time I had in winter, I decided to be adventurous and try more diverse baking recipes.

One of my fool-proof recipes - choc banana muffin

One of my fool-proof recipes – choc banana muffin

I was also craving for some Malaysian snacks that were previously easily accessible but now almost impossible to find it here. So the only way to fulfill my cravings is to make them myself. And seriously, it ain’t as easy as they looked. I gained new respect for the aunties/uncles selling goreng pisang and all sorts of kuih-muih by the street back home! How they managed to bake such great goodies takes amazing skills!

Dec

As Christmas was fast approaching, I was inspired to bake some Christmas cookies. I found an easy shortcake recipe from Taste Australia and decided to give it a try. The first batch came out rather brown and tasted overburned, but fortunately the following two trays were just nicely baked. It’s my first time to bake own cookies for Christmas and it’s thoroughly satisfying to have them during the season. Baking won’t be fun if it’s not shared, so one jar of cookies was saved for the Christmas party with my Malaysian friends in Tampere while another jar was for our visit to Blue Eyes’ sister’s place on Christmas Eve.

Getting ready for Christmas!

Getting ready for Christmas!

Jan 2013

Come January, winter days became slightly easier as the days started to be longer. Instead of seeing the sun only at 10am, it started to shine at 9-ish and it lifted my mood quite a bit. So I baked a bit more, often beating the batter on the dining table next to the window so I could enjoy the sun. One of the things that Finns like a lot is cinnamon and its version of cinnamon roll, aka korvapuusti, is a popular snack.

Coincidentally, I too love cinnamon rolls and I urged Blue Eyes to teach me how to bake them. He found a recipe online and we started a Saturday afternoon baking. It wasn’t as difficult as I imagined it to be although the time spent was more than I expected – 30 mins waiting for the dough to rise. The results were 24 freshly baked cinnamon rolls and oh, the kitchen smelled heaven! One of my most memorable baking experiences here!

Finnish version of cinnamon rolls

Finnish version of cinnamon rolls

I love to bake when there is an occasion cos’ it means others could enjoy some goodies too. Blue Eyes had a doctor’s appointment in Tampere and I took the opportunity to bake some zesty lemon cupcakes and bring over for some friends. The nice thing about lemon is it gives a rather different taste than sweetness. And the recipe I used which incorporated sour cream gave a lightness to the cupcakes. Also, the yellow is just such a happy colour! 🙂

A happy dessert!

A happy dessert!

The following week, we had a visitor coming over and it’s just perfect timing as I’ve been wanting to try out the apple strawberry crumble cake recipe on Taste Australia. I love crumble. There’s something about butter melted with some oats over a nice cake. It’s sinful but oh, so satisfying! I consoled myself that it’s an apple strawberry cake, so technically it’s a healthy dessert 🙂

Served with a scoop of ice-cream, it was so yummy!

Served with a scoop of ice-cream, it was so yummy!

Feb 2013

This was perhaps my most difficult month in Finland so far. Partly because I was terribly homesick. While friends and family back home got busy preparing for Chinese New Year, I was stuck in winter white place without no notion of the festivity. I missed my pei pa duck, siew yoke and lou sang! So to ease the homesickness, I decided to bake some peanut cookies. It’s not my favourite CNY cookies but its recipe seemed to be the simplest. Boy, was I wrong! It took a lot of time as the toasted peanuts need to be grind and since I don’t have a grinder, I had to grind it by hand. I was dead tired after grinding some 100g of peanuts. But the cookies turned out buttery and yummy, and I was glad I managed to bake them from scratch. And yes, I felt less homesick too 🙂

Who would have thought freshly baked peanut cookies could taste so good?

Who would have thought freshly baked peanut cookies could taste so good?

March 2013

It’s Easter month and it’s a big celebration here in Finland. I did some baking in the couple of days leading up to Easter, and they were all my favourite desserts. For the first time, I made the first Malaysian snack ie. sesame balls with red bean filling. It was a strange thing to crave for, but I guess it’s also partly because the recipe on kuali was so simple. I used the pan instead of the wok, which was a mistake cos’ the balls came out a bit squared. But it tasted good and brought back some good ol’ memories of growing up in Kuala Lumpur.

Some were a bit burned but I still finished like 4 balls in just minutes.

Some were a bit burned but I still finished like 4 balls in just minutes.

Some of my Malaysian friends from Tampere were coming to visit one day and I decided to attempt Jamie Oliver’s bread and butter pudding. I love bread and butter pudding. One of my favourite dessert. Especially when the custard is buttery and sweet. As I had dark bread, I decided to pair it with chocolate. The colours might be weird if I were to do the usual bread and butter with a brown bread. Besides, if I failed, at least it’s chocolate, and no failed attempt could make choco bad.

Turned out yummy and moist, like how I like bread & butter pudding

Turned out yummy and moist, like how I like bread & butter pudding

And finally for Easter, I decided to make my second foolproof recipe ie. chocolate brownies. I must thank Lynn for showing me how to bake brownies. She bakes the most awesome chewy brownies! I haven’t gotten to her level yet, but I think mine is quite decent too. For this particular version, I included some crushed almonds into the batter to split the choc taste a bit (I didn’t want to buy walnuts cos’ they were expensive!) and top it with icing sugar after it’s out of the oven. The best way to eat brownies? With a scoop of vanilla ice-cream of course!

Quite a perfect dessert for Easter

Quite a perfect dessert for Easter

April 2013

Vivien, who is currently based in Switzerland, came for a visit. It was so much fun to have a familiar face and someone to share with, and the girls’ time was awesome! It so happens that Vivien enjoys baking too and she shared a marble cake recipe with me, which we tried it out together one Sunday afternoon. I always thought marble cake is a tough one to try but Vivien made it really simple. And I love the baking smell of the oven!

Great turn out for a first attempt!

Great turn out for a first attempt!

May 2013

Spring finally arrived. Though it’s supposedly the last month of spring, to me, it only started to feel like spring in May. The days are warmer (in the teens!) while fresh green grass are growing from the ground. Trees too started to sprout branches and I finally got to wear shorts out!

I was somehow inspired to bake my own bread after visiting my Taiwanese friend in Tampere. She shared that it’s not a difficult skill to tackle. I also remember that Jules always bakes organic bread for her kids and it felt somehow healthier to have our own bread. There’s half a pack of bread flour lying in the cabinet anyway. I tried a simple multi-grain bread recipe found on the BBC Food website and I started work. Unfortunately I left the bread a bit too long in the oven and it came out hard 🙁 Was still able to cut them into slices to try the texture. Not exactly the best tasting bread I’ve ever had but it’s an achievement that I did it. Not sure if I would try it again though.

My first time baking bread!

My first time baking bread!

And finally yesterday, I made my second Malaysian snack ie. onde-onde. Back home, this is usually a pandan-flavoured ball stuffed with gula melaka. But since I couldn’t get pandan and gula melaka in Hameenlinna’s Asian shop, I decided to skip the former and substituted the latter with muscovado sugar. I halved the ingredient portions as I’ve learned that Blue Eyes doesn’t eat a lot of desserts and I always ended up finishing them. Very bad for the waistline, and overall for health of course. I must say, my mat salleh onde-onde (my friend Vivienne called it that cos’ it’s white instead of the usual green, hehe…) tasted very close to home. I can say it won’t be my last time making this 🙂

The plate was empty within minutes :)

The plate was empty within minutes 🙂

Watch this space as one of these days I plan to blog about my cooking adventures here 🙂

CNY, what CNY?

Now before the Lunar Year celebration comes to an end – for those who didn’t know, Chinese New Year (CNY) celebration lasts for 15 days – I thought I better blog about how it was for me. On days running up to CNY, they were rather gloomy personally. Reason being, it didn’t feel like CNY at all in Finland! Obviously since there are so few Chinese here in the first place. No Chinatown even in Helsinki. And back in Malaysia, I could read from all the Facebook posts that my friends were gearing up for the new year – shopping for new clothes and CNY accessories, packing for that trip back to hometown, planning where to have reunion dinner and of course, how many lo sang they’re gonna have.

Lo sang, btw, is a popular tradition unique to Malaysians. Lo sang basically means mixing (lo in Cantonese means to mix) a dish called yue sang, which is a combination of fresh colourful vegetables like carrots, grapefruit, ginger and capsicums, and fresh raw fish ie. salmon topped with plum sauce and sesame seeds. The idea is to mix all the ingredients in a group, raising them as high as possible, signifying that the new year ahead will have many high points/peaks. While I hardly call yue sang my favourite CNY dish, the communal take of the dish has always been more meaningful to me than the dish itself.

So here I was, in Hameenlinna, with no scent of CNY at all in the air. It didn’t help that this is the second consecutive year that I didn’t celebrate CNY at home. I’m missing the food, plus the familiar faces that I usually enjoyed. What a bummer!

Nevertheless, the prospect of CNY brightened up when I received an invitation to an open house by my Malaysian friend in Tampere, who’s celebrating CNY for the first time in her 11 years living in Finland. Compared to her, I probably shouldn’t complain *wink* The open house would be on the second day of CNY ie. 11 February, which was a Monday, as that’s her ‘off day’ from running her restaurant – she owns and operates Borneo, a Malaysian ravintola (Finnish word for restaurant), in Tampere. Will blog about her and the restaurant in another post 🙂

Freshly baked peanut cookies, in odd sizes

Freshly baked peanut cookies, in odd sizes

To get myself in the CNY mood, I decided to attempt to bake peanut cookies, a common CNY snacks. In the past, I’d never imagine myself baking peanut cookies for CNY since I always buy various cookies every year. But I guess there are some changes that I might need to get used to. My friend, Ping shared the recipe with me – she actually baked her own peanut cookies this year! – and I thought it was quite simple to follow. I didn’t have plain flour* so I used baking flour instead. Unfortunately that meant the cookies dough rose during the baking and they turned out bigger than expected. Oh well, at least they tasted almost the same 🙂 Initially I thought of baking at least two trays, but after grinding the peanuts by hand (I broke the blender weeks ago and we haven’t found a replacement!) for an hour, I decided one tray was all that I had energy for.

Two days before CNY eve, I spring cleaned the flat as per usual practice at home. And for the reunion meal, we decided to have it at home with 2 simple dishes and rice. On first day of CNY, we invited two friends over for dinner. Dishes include tofu (beancurd) with minced meat, stir-fry mix veges, roasted chicken wings and fried wontons. We managed to visit the Thai-Asian shop the day before so I had some supply of wonton skins and popiah wraps. They’re considered a ‘luxury’ for me since I don’t get to visit the shop very often due to its distance from where we lived. Dinner ended with ice-cream martini with longan as dessert! So satisfying!

Partying the Msian way, with plenty of food on the table

Partying the Msian way, with plenty of food on the table

Finally on Monday, I got all ready for the open house. Blue Eyes had to remove his wisdom tooth on the same day and he came back with a swollen right cheek. Too bad, he probably couldn’t enjoy dinner much. The party was awesome cos’ most of the guests were Malaysians and we obviously were excited about celebrating CNY together in a foreign place. The theme colour of the evening was red, which is the auspicious colour of CNY, and boy, was I happy to see so much red in one night! Dishes were aplenty and familiar to the taste – thank God! We had braised duck, popiahs, sambal tumis seafood, roasted chicken, dhall, stir-fry noodles and best of all, we had yue sang thanks to the super fantastic Jo! Must say, the yue sang tasted better than a lot of ones that I’ve had at home 🙂 We ended dinner with some red bean soup and CNY cookies – besides my peanut ones, there were cornflakes and almond cookies!

All in all, not bad CNY I must say, especially considering the fact that most of the 5 million of Finnish population didn’t celebrate the Lunar New Year 🙂 So here to the year of the Snake, may we all have better health and greater success in whatever we do! Kong Hei Fatt Choy!

* one of these days I’ll blog about how the Finns categorise their flour so stay tuned 😉

seo packagespress release submissionsocial bookmarking services
hostgator promo code