Friday, September 19, 2014

BEST Singapore Chilli Crab (辣椒螃蟹) - (AFF - Singapore #2)

When one mention Singapore, who doesn't know Chilli crab? This popular seafood dish had been around since 1956. Fresh crabs stir-fried in a semi-thick. sweet, tangy, savory, tomato and chilli based sauce which will electrify your palate and satisfy your tastebuds.

Arguably one of Singapore's greatest culinary inventions. If you are a fan of seafood, this is one dish that you must try while you're in Singapore.


Don't get cheated by it's red and spicy look. Despite its name, chilli crab is NOT a very spicy dish.

The spicy and tangy sauce is made deliciously fragrant with rempah (spices) and lime or calamansi juice, while corn starch and egg ribbons are added to give the chilli crab dish the fluffy texture at the end of the cooking process. For extra oomph, order some fried mantou to scoop up the thick gravy, which will leave you hankering for more.


I adapted this recipe from Chef Master Classes on his World's BEST Singapore Chilli Crab Recipe, which he mentioned that his recipe is based on a food trip to Punggol Point, Singapore. I don't know how BEST this recipe would be. But by reading the recipe list, I think I wanna use this recipe as a reference. Also, Violet Oon is the brand ambassador of Singapore Food. So, her recipe as a guide will never go wrong I guess.

Ingredients
(Source : Chef Master Classes & Violet Oon's recipe, as a guide, with modification)
  • 2 Mud Crabs or Meat Crabs (or Roe Crabs if you wish) - about 800g each
  • 1 portion Rempah (Refer to below for recipe)
  • 6 tbsp Tomato Ketchup
  • 3 tbsp Sugar
  • ½ tsp Salt
  • 1 tsp Tau Cheo (fermented bean paste)
  • 1½ tsp Corn Flour / Tapioca Flour + 1½ tbsp Water
  • 5 tbsp Peanut Oil
  • 1 cup Water (or more)
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • some chinese parsley (garnishing)
  • some chillies (garnishing)
  • some spring onions (garnishing)
Accompaniment 
  • Mantous (馒头)  from the supermarket frozen section, thawed. 
  • Enough oil for deep-frying the Mantous (Mixture of 1 : 1 ratio of Butter + Peanut Oil)  



For the rempah (Spices)
  • 6 Shallots
  • 6 Garlic
  • 5 Red Chillies
  • 2 to 3 Bird Eye Chillies, depends on individual
  • 2 Candle Nut
  • 1 thumb sized Galangal (or replaced by Ginger if you don't have Galangal)
  • ½ Green Lime, extract the juices (or use calamansi as alternative)
  • 2 tbsp Belacan Powder (toast your own belacan if you can't find belacan powder)
To prepare the rempah : Put everything in the chopper and blitz away until fine texture is achieved.


To prepare the crab, I'd posted How to clean crabs video last month. Or, below photos shows you roughly how it is cleaned and prepared. And preparing crabs is NOT as difficult as what you imagined. Be COURAGEOUS!!!


Get everything ready before start cooking is the rule. Always remember. Cooking chilli crab is not difficult. But preparing needs time.

Cooking Method 
  1. Heat oil in a wok until very hot. Fry rempah until fragrant. 
  2. Add tau cheo, sugar, salt and tomato ketchup. Stir well. 
  3. Add in crabs, stir well. Then, add water, stir, cover until crab shells turned bright red, indicating that the crab is cooked. 
  4. Beat 2 eggs in a bowl, pour into the sauce at the side, gently mix well. Simmer for another 10 seconds, 
  5. Heat off, dish up, garnish with coriander, spring onions and chillies. Serve with hot deep fried mantous.

This recipe is good. It's a little messy, but worth it for sure. And you can always vary the recipe to your taste. You want it sweeter? Spicier? It's up to you! :)

Max and I scarfed the whole plate of crabs down with all the mantous. It tastes so good with deep fried mantous and it is also good with a bowl of hot rice!


Yummmss!!! Definitely recommended!


Do share with me if you have any better recipe :)


I am submitting this post to Asian Food Fest (Singapore) – September Month hosted by Grace Phua of Life can be Simple

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Hainanese Chicken Rice (海南鸡饭) - (AFF - Singapore #1)

In conjunction with this month's Asian Food Fest, I cooked Hainanese Chicken Rice (海南鸡饭) for weekend lunch. This dish is very well known here in Singapore and it is considered one of the national dishes. You can find Hainanese Chicken Rice almost everywhere in Singapore!


Hainanese Chicken Rice is a dish adapted from early Chinese immigrants originally from the Hainan province in southern China. It is based on a well-known Hainanese dish called Wenchang Chicken (文昌雞), due to its adoption by the Hainanese overseas Chinese population in the Nanyang area. (Source : Wikipedia)


Bite-sized pieces of blanched white chicken, fragrant rice cooked in chicken broth, delicious ground chilli and spring onion ginger oil. And some likes going with dark soy sauce, some don't. These are common way of eating Hainanese Chicken Rice in Singapore.

This dish can be simple. But to make it good, you need some patience here. Everything starts from stepping into the market and select the freshest ingredients, picking the right Kampong Chicken (or Free Range Chicken), ensuring the rice is well cooked, and to prepare the condiments well.

My mom always says, Chicken Rice is a simple dish, but this probably can categorized as Kungfu dish (功夫菜). It means the dish is using simple ingredients, but to make it good, it needs alot of attention and every details must be well taken care of.

Chicken should be cooked very lightly, pink inside the bones, not too bloody, and with a gelatinous skin. I'm still learning :)


A lot of effort goes into the preparation of this flavorful dish, with effort of slowly blanching the chicken until it is fully cooked, before immediately soaking it in cold water. This stops the cooking process and ensures that the meat remains tender, and is also why the meat is usually served at room temperature. 

Ingredients 
(Source: My mother-Mdm Chai, her source is from a Hainanese Chicken Rice Stall's owner in SG)

The Chicken
  • 1 Kampong Chicken (or Free Range Chicken), estimated 1kg
  • 5 thick slice Old Ginger, about 35g
  • 2 cloves Garlic, bruised
  • 1 sprig Spring Onion, tied into a knot
  • 2300ml Water (or more)
  • 1 tbsp Sesame Oil
Rendering Chicken Fats 
  • 150g Chicken Fats / Skins
  • 1 tbsp Peanut Oil / Cooking Oil
The Rice
  • 475g Jasmine Rice (95%)
  • 25g Glutinous Rice (5%) (Trade secret)
  • 500ml Chicken Stock
  • 1 tsp Salt
  • 8 tbsp Rendered Chicken Fats (Or you can use shallot oil as alternative)
  • 4 strands of Pandan Leaf (Screwpine Leaf), tied into 2 knots
  • 1 stalk Lemon Grass, lightly bruised
  • 4 cloves Garlic, bruised
  • 2 thumb sized Old Ginger, sliced
  • 2 tsp Planta / Margarine (Optional. I didn't use and I don't recommend) (Trade secret)
The Chilli
  • 3 cloves Garlic
  • 3 Red Chilli
  • 2 Bird Eye Chilli / Cili Padi
  • 1 thumb sized Young Ginger
  • Juice from 3 to 4 Small Calamansi
  • ½ tsp Salt, or more to taste
  • ½ tsp Sugar, or more to taste
  • ¼ tsp MSG (Optional - I didn't use)
  • 1 to 2 tbsp Chicken stock to dilute it. But I'd prefer 2 tbsp Rendered Chicken Oil
  • 1 tsp DelMonte Ketchup (Optional) (Trade secret)
Spring Onion and Ginger Oil (Optional)
  • 100g Old Ginger
  • 25g Spring Onions (or more)
  • 2 tbsp Rendered Chicken Oil
  • 1 tbsp Sesame Oil
  • ½ tsp Salt, or more to taste
  • ½ tsp Sugar, or more to taste
  • ¼ tsp Chicken Powder (Optional - I didn't use)
Dark Soy Sauce
  • 20g Rock Sugar
  • 30ml Water
  • 50ml Dark Soya Sauce
Dressing for the chicken
  • ½ thumb sized Rock Sugar (Trade secret)
  • 2 tbsp Light Soy Sauce
  • 1 tbsp Shao Xing Wine (绍兴酒), also known as Hua Tiao Wine
  • 1 tbsp Sesame Oil
Garnishing
  • Coriander
  • Sping Onions
  • Cucumber, sliced
Alot of effort goes into the preparation of this flavorful dish yea.

Method - The Chicken
  1. Wash and trim any visible fat from the chicken. Cut away the chicken feet. Stuff old ginger, garlic, spring onions into the cavity of the chicken. 
  2. Bring water to a boil. Once water is boiled, hold the chicken head (refer to photo), soak the chicken body into the boiling water. With your hand still holding the chicken head, lift the chicken up, and soak it into the boiling water again. Do this for 4 times before you release the chicken head and let the chicken soak into the water completely. By doing this, water will go into the chicken cavity completely. This is to ensure that the whole chicken is well cooked.
  3. Keep an eye on the pot. Once you see the water is boiling again, turn to very low heat for 5 mins, and then heat off. Let the chicken sit inside the hot water untouched and covered for 30mins. If your chicken is big, you might need another 5 mins or so. For this part, you have to gauge it on your own. Prepare a tub of ice-cold water, preferably with ice cubes. 
  4. Once chicken is cooked, using chopsticks, gently remove the chicken from the water and place the chicken into a tub of tap water, let the tap water running for 10mins. And then, transfer the chicken to the tub of ice-cold water.
  5. Once chicken is completely cooled, drain. Apply 1 tbsp Sesame Oil on the chicken skin. Set aside.

Method - Rendering Chicken Fats
  1. Roughly chop the chicken fats and skin. 
  2. In a small sauce pan, heat up peanut oil, and add in the chicken fats and skin. Let it cook over very low heat for 30 mins (or upto 1 hour) until the liquid fat renders away. Pour off and keep the liquid fats for later use. You may discard the crispy chicken fats.

Method - The Rice
  1. Wash the rice well, and soak it for 1.5hrs, drained.
  2. In a large saucepan over medium heat, heat up 8 tbsp rendered chicken fats. 
  3. Add the garlic, ginger, lemongrass. Fry till fragrant and golden brown. Remove from the oil. 
  4. Add one knot of pandan leaf. Fry till fragrant. Remove from the oil. 
  5. Turn off the heat. Add in Planta (Optional), drained rice. Give it a good mix, until the rice are all well coated with the flavorful oil. 
  6. Transfer the rice into rice cooker. Add in 500ml reserved chicken stock and salt. Stir well. Throw in the 2nd Pandan leaf knot. Cook the rice in a rice cooker or by your preferred method of cooking rice. 
  7. Once rice is cooked. Remove pandan leaf knot. Loosen the rice with chopsticks and give it a mix. Cover the rice, and let it sit in the rice cooker for another 10mins before serving. The texture of rice is important and it takes quite a bit of experience to get it done properly. 
Method - The Chilli
  1. Combine all chillies, ginger, garlic, sugar, salt in a food processor and blitz away.
  2. Add in calamansi juice and 1 to 2 tbsp chicken stock to dilute it. But I prefer to use 2 tbsp hot Rendered Chicken Oil instead.
  3. Add in MSG and DelMonte Ketchup. Stir well. Set aside.
Method - Spring Onion and Ginger Oil
  1. Blitz ginger into paste in a food processor. 
  2. Heat the rendered chicken oil and sesame oil in a small frying pan. 
  3. When the oil is hot enough (at it's smoking point), add in ginger paste. Fry well for 2 to 3mins. 
  4. Add in spring onion, salt, sugar, chicken powder. Give it a quick stir. Heat off. Set aside and leave to infuse. 
Method - Dark Soy Sauce
  1. In a small saucepan, boil rock sugar and water under low heat till completely melted and viscous. 
  2. Add in dark soy sauce, continue to cook till it thickens. Remove and leave it till completely cooled.
Method - Dressing for the chicken
  1. In a small saucepan, boil rock sugar, soy sauce and Shao Xing wine under low heat till completely melted and viscous. Heat off.
  2. Add in sesame oil. Stir well. Remove and set aside. 
To Serve
  1. Chop the chicken, Chinese-style. Arrange it on a plate. Pour the dressing over it. Scatter with a little coriander. 
  2. Serve with hot chicken rice, condiments, broth and garnishes.

Here's some notes that you need take into consideration. 
  1. Use a tall and slim pot to cook the water for blanching chicken. This is to ensure you use the minimum amount of water, just enough to submerge the chicken. Like that, you will have a better flavor chicken stock to cook the rice later. 
  2. Try to buy Kampong Chicken from Sheng Siong. They sell good and genuine black leg Kampong Chicken.
  3. If you think rendered chicken fats is unhealthy, you'd probably didn't know that you actually ate loads of them when you eat chicken rice at the hawker centre. Without them, you won't like your chicken rice. So, just do it. You can get chicken fats / skins from Sheng Siong super mart. Or simply ask the chicken seller at the wet-market. Sometimes they gave it away for free. 
  4. 95% Jasmine Rice + 5% Glutinous Rice is really a trade secret. Rice suppliers pre-mixed the rice ratio before they send to the chicken rice stall. 
  5. Planta / Margarine too, is another trade secret. It gives the chicken rice a nice color. However, I didn't use it because I'm cooking it for my family. I don't need them. And this also explains why the color of my chicken rice looked abit to the pale side. 
  6. It's not surprising that there's MSG in the chilli sauce. But I was amazed when my mom told me that DelMonte Ketchup is used for the chilli sauce. But well, this is for chicken rice stall to do business tho.
  7. Spring Onion and Ginger Oil is NOT AVAILABLE in every chicken rice stall in Singapore. Only bare minimum of them is still having this condiment. Some only serve ginger paste with oil. Cost is also one of the factor for them for not maintaining it. Hence, till now, there's an argument point that Spring Onion and Ginger Oil shouldn't exist in Hainanese Chicken Rice dish. Oh well. It's up to you :)
  8. Some says dark soya sauce plays an important part for Singapore Hainanese Chicken Rice. I confess, and I admit. I forgot to prepare the dark soy sauce. Too busy and too focused on the chicken and the rice. Damn it!
  9. Rock sugar makes a difference to the dressing for the chicken. If you could, please stick to rock sugar.
  10. The rest is just a matter of blending the ingredients and then adding seasonings, oil and stock. Making these sauces from scratch gives full authenticity to the recipe.

Although Hainanese Chicken Rice stalls in Singapore is selling lip-smacking delicious chicken rice. I'd tried my very best to note down every single thing my mom told me. This recipe may not produce exactly the same result as store-bought chicken rice. This might be due to the recipe that I've written above might have tweaked to adjust to my own agaration (estimation). I see a room to evolve further in years to come.There are some ingredients (eg. Planta/Margarine or MSG or DelMonte Ketchup) is an optional. Since we are cooking for our family, just do it whenever you feels comfortable. If you feel that there's no need to add them, just go without them. I'd prefer original taste.


I personally quite happy with it for now. Maybe I should find a day to try some other well known chicken rice in Singapore (eg. Chatterbox?), or until I found another inspiration for further modifications to it.

Do share with me if you have any better recipe :)


I am submitting this post to Asian Food Fest (Singapore) – September Month hosted by Grace Phua of Life can be Simple