Tag Archives: Pork

Serosi Chinese Style!

Together.Eating.Fire.Pot

Of course, another food post from The Munchkin.  Well, when you live on a farm and you grow your own food, it seems like the next logical step is the cook the wonderful harvests.  This is bitter gourd or bitter melon and is known as serosi in Belize.  It is renowned for its distinctive bitter taste.

Fresh Serosi.
Fresh Serosi.

The variety that is found here in Belize resembles the “Indian” variety.  The Chinese type tends to be larger and smoother looking.  Serosi is used also in traditional  medicine in many cultures to lower blood sugar and to treat infections (particularly parasitic infections eg. worms).  A tea from the leaves can also be consumed for its therapeutic value.

This recipe is Serosi Chinese Style and it is a family recipe.  My Mum cooks this on special occasions…Bitter Gourd Stuffed with Minced Pork.

Stuffed Serosi Pork.
Stuffed Serosi Pork.

Thank-you Mum for teaching me to cook.  I really appreciate the fact that we can eat healthy home-cooked meals everyday.  It’s all about the love and passion that you put into it!!

Cooking With Malabar Spinach.

Munchkin.More.Eating

Malabar spinach (Basella alba) grows really well in Belize especially in wet places.  Our patch is growing prolifically:

Malabar Spinach.
Malabar Spinach.

It is eaten as a leafy green; can be eaten uncooked in a salad or cooked lightly.  This is a mucilaginous type of green which should not be over-cooked.  When cooked with care (ie. very short cooking times of about 1 to 2 minutes) it adds taste, freshness and a soft crunch to a dish.

This is a recipe with pork, pumpkin and malabar spinach.

Pork, Pumpkin and Malabar Spinach.
Pork, Pumpkin and Malabar Spinach.

Served with Guatemalan imported linguini…but used in a noodle context since we are doing Chinese cuisine today:

Guatemalan liguini.
Guatemalan liguini.

Pork, Pumpkin and Malabar Spinach with Noodles:

Pork, Pumpkin and Malabar Spinach.
Pork, Pumpkin and Malabar Spinach.

Enjoy…I know I did!!

Dak Now In Ring-Pull!

Jumping.MunchkinGone are the days of that little key thing that you use to open up a rectangular tin of flayed meat.  Dak has come into the 21st Century with a new-look, convenient ring-pull!  How do you eat your Dak??

New Look Dak.
New Look Dak.

We eat Dak.  In fact Chinese people eat this type of preserved food…just check out Asian cuisine Blogs…there are usually quite a few recipes devoted to this ingredient.

As a quick meal, I like to steam the Dak on a bed of white rice:

Steaming Dak on Rice.
Steaming Dak on Rice.

We eat this with a large side of steamed green vegetables; right now it is pumpkin!

Steaming.Young.PumpkinI still think that this is better for you than buying junk food.

Sausage with Exotic Fruits and Bamboo Shoots.

Munchkin.Another.Eating.ShotHello Everyone!!  We are getting such wonderful harvests on our farm, we feel blessed everyday.  We are still chomping through the jackfruit and we now it is bamboo shoot season, so I have made a dish with all these goodies.

Sausage with Exotic Fruits and Fresh Bamboo Shoots.
Sausage with Exotic Fruits and Fresh Bamboo Shoots.

This recipe incorporates pork sausage, fresh pineapple, ripe jackfruit and fresh bamboo shoots.

Fresh juicy pineapples of Belize:

Fresh Pineapple.
Fresh Pineapple.

Our own harvested jackfruit:

Jackfruit Arils.
Jackfruit Arils.

Our fresh bamboo shoots from the farm:

Bamboo Shoot.

Check out the full recipe for Sausage with Exotic Fruits and Fresh Bamboo Shoots in Belize Wild Recipes.  Yum…what a treat!!

Shepherd’s Pork and Mango Pie (a la Munchkin).

Together.Eating.Fire.PotI told Gnome that I had a new recipe called “Shepherd’s Pork and Mango Pie.”

Shepherd's Pie.
Shepherd’s Pie.

Gnome: Is there any “Shepherd’s Pie” to this meal?

(Gnome is referring to the well-known dish of baked minced beef topped with mashed potato).

Munchkin: Yes, the mashed potato on top.

Gnome: Well, there you go.  One can not go against the word of a Munchkin!  Shepherd’s Pie, it is…a la Munchkin!

(Gnome distinctly dislikes using French terms…I think he was being facetious, if you ask me).

Munchkin.Funny.Look.Yet.AnotherSo, here we go:  This dish is made with minced (ground) pork (instead of beef) and mango (instead of the tomatoes in Shepherd’s Pie) and shiitake mushrooms (instead of button mushrooms).  This gives it a sweet, tangy exotic taste.  It is baked and topped with mashed potato with coconut cream (instead of butter).

The authentic part of the recipe is the potato!

I used these little wild mangoes for this recipe; as they say here in Belize they are Sweet Sweet Sweet!

Little Wild Mangoes.
Little Wild Mangoes.

A bit like Shepherd’s Pie, don’t you think?

Glazed Cashew Fruit and Ham with Basmati Rice.

Munchkin.More.EatingWe have discovered the wonders of cooked cashew fruit because they absorb flavours really well and they have the texture of chicken breast.  Cashew fruit can be eaten raw but tends to have tannins in them which stops you from eating too much of them.  Cooking this fruit in sugar helps to off-set the tannin taste.

Cashew Fruit.
Cashew Fruit.

We had some left over roast ham so I came up with this recipe: Glazed Cashew Fruit and Ham with Basmati Rice.

Cashew Fruit Ham with Basmati Rice.
Cashew Fruit Ham with Basmati Rice.

After eating this, we both agreed that the cashew fruit was worth eating.  In previous years, we have just let this fruit drop to the ground and rot…what a waste!  The only problem is that there seems to be a health community of pacas (gibnuts) feasting on the fruit as soon as they drop to the ground.  This means that we have to get up at the crack of dawn to collect the fruit before all the critters (including doggie) get them!!

How Do You Eat Your Dak?

Together.EatingThe last few days, early morning rains have wreaked havoc on the plans of mice and men (and Gnome and Munchkin).  So, what can mere mortals do under these circumstances when they are thwarted by the elements?

Munchkin rummaged around in the kitchen and came up with something tasty.

Dak Chopped Ham.
Dak “Chopped Ham.” Literally in Greek.

We ate Dak.

Dak is the Belize version of the familiar tinned chopped ham that you see on all supermarket shelves. I have no social qualms about broadcasting the fact that I eat this preserved flayed pork meat on occasion, as I grew up in a Chinese household where this food was seen as a legitimate food item.  We used to steam it with rice and eat it with fresh green vegetables.  Gnome, on the other hand, tells me that many other cultures do not deem this as a proper food.  It is a food that might lurk in the back of somebody’s cupboard but most certainly, the harbouring of such an item should never be professed.  It is eaten alone…in hushed tones with the lights dimmed down.  Ooooh…sounds like fun…a secret society of underground Dak eaters!

Nobody is willing to openly admit that they eat Dak but those cases stacked in the back of Chinese supermarkets that we all see must be going into somebody’s belly!  There are times of the year when there is not a single tin to be found on the shelf and everyone is hanging out for the Dak shipment.

So, today we ate Dak chopped ham cooked in onions, tomatoes and Italian herbs with cassava hash browns.  Munch away quietly with dimmed lights:

Dak, Tomatoes and Cassava Hash-Browns.
Dak, Tomatoes and Cassava Hash-Browns.

We also had a nice dipping sauce which is so easy to make:

Munchkin’s Dango Dip:

2 tbsp honey

1 tsp soya sauce

Mix well and use as a dip.

You may have already surmised from the name “Dak” that this is Danish in origin.  There is also a Chinese version available in Belize called Zwan; the label is written only in Chinese and to be honest, I am a bit wary of it!  The name Zwan does not somehow hit the spot and cause me to salivate with hunger.  This one definitely has to be hidden in the dark depths of the kitchen cupboard away from prying eyes!

A few years back, I tasted some Belizean food which incorporated this chopped ham.  I was at a hospital medical meeting and we were given a buffet of sandwiches for lunch.  All the sandwiches were one variety…they were white slices of bread with a filling of margarine and a whiff of pig.  At the time, I didn’t say anything and just politely ate the food with no questions asked.  The Belizeans were chomping happily away while the Nigerian medical staff had very dubious looks on their faces.  Sometime afterwards, I enquired into the nature of these sandwiches whilst I was in the company of well-seasoned ex-pats (they had been around for about 20 years) and they explained that these were called “ham sandwiches” or even “Dak sandwiches.”  The filling is made by pulverising the piece of chopped ham into a paste.  Margarine is then spread on white soft bread and on top of this, a smear of Dak paste.  Therefore, one tin of Dak (200g or 1/2lb) can go a long way and can economically feed a whole party of hungry people.  Talk about Homeopathic Ham!

So there you go.  How do you eat your Dak?  Don’t be shy…we can form a secret society for eaters of forbidden Dak!

Pork and Cassava Hotpot (Not Lancashire).

Together.EatingToday, it has been raining all day non-stop.  It is a cool 28 C (or 82 F) so I am still continuing along the theme of hotpots.  If you haven’t read the last post, Gnome had asked me to cook a Lancashire Hotpot for him.  Those people who are not familiar with this dish, it is a meal made with lamb (sometimes beef), onions and carrots with a layer of sliced potatoes on top.  This traditional stew is cooked slowly in the oven at a low heat to make the meat and vegetables tender and succulent.

Well, anyway, the running joke is that I keep on intending to cook a Lancashire Hotpot but instead of using the traditional ingredients, I substitute alternatives so that the resulting dish isn’t really Lancashire.

So, the Pork and Cassava Hotpot was another attempt at being Lancashire…honestly!!  This time, there are carrots included and I had to use pork because I could not find beef or lamb!  Also, I can’t bring myself to buy potatoes when I have a huge plethora of exotic roots on the farm.  The cassava does make a lovely hotpot; it is warming and comforting and is great for these cooler spells in Belize.

Pork and Cassava Hotpot.
Pork and Cassava Hotpot.

I have to admit though, that I am a bit of a rebel cook at heart and I love to tweek and change recipes.  Only once in my life, I actually made a serious whole-hearted attempt to follow a recipe to the letter.  This was for Duck a l’orange and it took three days to prepare…it was excellent!  It was solely tempted to change it to Duck a le pampelmousse but made a deliberate effort to follow instructions!

Have a good day everyone…may we all revel in being rebel cooks!

Belizean Shepherd’s Hotpot (Not Lancashire).

Together.EatingThis is an actual conversation which took place between Munchkin and Gnome which typically exemplifies the many talks that they have together.

Gnome:  I fancy a nice Lancashire Hotpot!

Munchkin:  Okay, Darling, I will make it for you.

Gnome:  Ooooh, is it going to have lamb in it?

Munchkin:  No.

Gnome:  Ooooh, are there going to be carrots and potatoes, then?

Munchkin:  No.

Gnome:  What are you putting in it, my dear?

Munchkin:  Pork.

Gnome:  In what way is that a Lancashire Hotpot?

Munchkin:  It’s slow-cooked in the oven like a Lancashire Hotpot.  Mmmm…maybe it isn’t a Lancacshire Hotpot…it’s more like a Shepherd’s Pie.

Gnome:  Ooooh, so its going to have mashed potatoes?

Munchkin:  No.  Mashed taro.

Gnome:  In what way is that a Shepherd’s Pie, my dear?

Munchkin:  Mmmm…maybe it isn’t a Shepherd’s Pie.  I have a great idea…let’s call it Belizean Shepherd’s Hotpot!

Gnome:  But Dearest, I asked for a Lancashire Hotpot!

Gnome.at.Lunch.TableAnd so this recipe was borne from this loving banter.  It is slow cooked like a hotpot in the oven and it has mashed taro (like mashed potatoes) so you could say that it was a very distant cousin, thrice removed, from the Lancashire Hotpot and Shepherd’s Pie.  Or, you could argue that there is absolutely no relation to these dishes at all!  Nonetheless, it makes a hearty, tasty meal and Gnome did indeed enjoy it, even although it wasn’t what he had asked for!

Baked Meat and Onions in Casserole Dish.
Baked Meat and Onions in Casserole Dish.

It kinda looks like a purple Shepherd’s Pie from this picture:

Belizean Shepherd Hotpot.
Belizean Shepherd Hotpot.

Check out the hybridised recipe: Belizean Shepherd’s Hotpot in Belize Wild Recipes!

Friday Lunch.

Munchkin.Eating.Bun

As promised, this is a picture of lunch.  I cooked the Paddy Straw Mushrooms with Spicy Pork Ginger Cakes.  This was served with Chaya Fritters and Grapefruit.

Spicy Pork Ginger Cakes with Paddy Straw Mushrooms. Served with Chaya Fritters and Grapefruit.
Spicy Pork Ginger Cakes with Paddy Straw Mushrooms. Served with Chaya Fritters and Grapefruit.

Chaya (Cnidoscolus aconitifolius) is also called Tree Spinach and is a great source of vitamins and minerals.  It is easy to grow and does not require much maintenance.  It tastes great too…like a spinach!

Ok, Laterz…