Tag Archives: Soy Sauce

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!

First Active Blub from Melomel.

Together.PointingGood Friday to all and a Good Fermentation Friday too!  We just got our first active blub from the melomel…this is when it starts bubbling through the air lock. It is a very important milestone in childhood…oh no, I mean fermentation development (another Doctor joke)!  With experience, the Blub Blub comes in different pitches and this one is rather tinkling, melodic and rather loquacious.  Gnome says it sounds like it wants another sibling…oh no, he means another fermenting bucket for company!

Anyway, let us get give you an update on our fermentation adventures:  Firstly, we had to sadly dump the two gallons of coconut shiro miso, which we had so joyfully made up last week.  This was on account of the dreaded Bongkrek.  Last week, we read an article on Tempeh Bongkrek which is a variety of tempeh prepared with coconut.  This food has now been banned because it can get contaminated with Burkholderia gladioli which leads to the release of bongkrek acid which is lethal to humans.  Being doctors, we started thinking about this a whole lot and wondered if we had made Bongkrek Miso!  And Gnome said that it would be really embarrassing for the demise of two doctors in Belize to be attributed to coconut miso (death by coconut)!  After that comment, I decided to use the coconut miso as compost around the farm!

Gnome wants to ask a question to any microbiologist out there:  is there any risk of bongkrek with miso (made with coconut) which has already been innoculated with Aspergillus oryzae?

To make up for this unfortunate mishap, we made some shiro miso today…just with regular black beans…nothing too exotic.

Mixing Shiro Miso.
Mixing Shiro Miso.
Shiro Miso Ready in 8 Weeks!
Shiro Miso Ready in 8 Weeks!

We had a look at our bucket of soya sauce which was started in July 2014 and gave it a whizz with the paint stirrer:

Paint Stirring Soya Sauce.
Paint Stirring Soya Sauce.

We felt that the soya sauce was rather thick and paste-like in texture and therefore we made an executive decision to just use it as miso.  It tastes similar to miso, a bit more acidic and fruity but nonetheless palatable.  This solves the problem with the miso shortage until the new shiro miso is ready in June.

Toucans and Making Miso.

Gnome.at.DeskI’ve been banned from doing any real work today (using heavy machinery to clear brush) since I’ve been afflicted with horrible sinus headaches and a substantial load of snot and mucus (probably from smoking too many cigars…naughty, naughty!).  I’ve tried to cooperate with my doctor’s prescription but being an obsessive compulsive git makes this sort of thing difficult…

Anyway, the results of my “light duties” include the following:

I finally managed to take a couple of shots of one of the toucans that come every morning around 0530-0600 and hang about on our Cotton Tree (Ceiba Tree) while we have our morning hot beverage.  Check it out, I actually succeeded in taking not one but yes, two reasonable photographs!!

Toucan on the Ceiba Tree.
Toucan on the Ceiba Tree.
See, I can take photographs!!  Two in less than a minute.  Eat your heart out!!
See, I can take photographs!! Two in less than a minute. Eat your heart out!!

Getting excited about miso, koji and fermentation again.  With the help of Munchkin, we took out our three jars of experimental miso and bucket of soy sauce for a quick look-see:

This is what real (commercial) miso looks like.
This is what real (commercial) miso looks like.
This is our miso.
This is our miso.

You can see that our miso needs another six months at least before getting that smooth even texture.  Our miso was made with rice koji and the ubiquitous Belizean Red Kidney Bean.  It is still young but has a lovely floral, fruitiness that imparts a wonderful umami-ness to food.

The next jar we tried was our Chocolate miso:  Rice koji and cacao nibs.  Definitely needs another year to do its thing.  We’re hoping it will turn out like a vintage hacho miso.

Chocolate Nib Miso.
Chocolate Nib Miso.

Noni miso is the next lot.  I have to say this technically didn’t start off to be miso.  It was an attempt to use rice koji to “malt” some rice to then ferment into a rice wine/beer; I didn’t like the way it was going though so, I mixed it all up with some noni fruit and seeds instead.  Again, this would benefit from at least another year.  Great umami-ness in this one as well that marries very well with the noni-ness.  I predict that it will be a favourite.

Noni Miso.
Noni Miso.

Finally, the soy sauce…which doesn’t have any soy beans in it but rather black beans, fully fermented craboo (you can tell we are becoming Belizean), peach palm fruit and balam (and the necessary koji, of course).  Yup, you guessed, needs another year and more frequent stirring.  Came up with the idea to use a paint stirrer to really get everything agitated:

Paint stirrer to mix up the soy sauce.
Paint stirrer to mix up the soy sauce.

And here is the bucket:

Non-soy sauce after paint stirring accomplished.
Non-soy sauce after paint stirring accomplished.  You can see the orange bits of craboo and balam in it.

We really need that Mallard reaction (no ducks are to be harmed in the process, I promise!!) to start happening in order to be taken seriously as a real non-soy sauce.

Oh yes, I also wrote a post after a long hiatus from the keyboard.

Anybody out there want a photograph of what is coming out of my sinuses?!?!?Together.Munchkin.AnnoyedMunchkin not happy with that last statement.

PS:  I didn’t take the miso photographs!!  ;-P