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Saturday, September 21, 2013

Coffee Tree at Mall of Indonesia

Here I am working on my blog while sipping a nice and hot cafe latte and munching some snacks at Coffee Tree. Undeniably, Coffee Tree is my new favourite hang out place for a good cup of coffee and friendly ambiance. Not only serves finished products, Coffee Tree also provides the raw ingredients and even their flavoured syrup. 

This is my second time going here and I think I will keep going in the future. I deliberately writing about this cafe here, so I will be able to find new inspiration about this place. The place is cozy and it makes you feel comfortable to stay for a long time. I simply order a cup of the original cafe latte, and write about the first experience of me stepping on Coffee Tree. 

My first ever ordered was Kahlua Mocha, the marriage of chocolate and coffee with Kahlua. The chocolate and coffee themselves are handmade, so it's nothing similar would be found outside. Kahlua is actually a mexican coffee that contains sugar too. However, the taste surprisingly was not as sweet as I thought. There was still strong bitterness at the end and matching my preference. 
Kahlua Mocha
There are two size option for each beverage, and mine was the regular. Overall the price is reasonable like any other regular coffee shop, but this cafe offers something different that others. Hence, I would say it's worth the price.

Coffee Tree
Kompleks Mall of Indonesia,
Kelapa Gading Square
Blok C #38 A-B
North Jakarta
Monday - Sunday 
10.30 - 22.30


Monday, September 16, 2013

Sushi Joobu at Kelapa Gading

My sister always loves and craves for sushi, as for me, it's supposed to be only an occasional satisfying food. Well for me Nasi Padang (Indonesian popular dish) is the most satisfying food ever. 

So, get back to sushi, that's the star of this post. For this time, I chose to go to Sushi Joobu at Kelapa Gading, which was the first time for me. Basically, the sushi served there is fusion type with mayo or cheese as the condiment. However, I am kind of hybrid preference, so too much creamy cheesy mayo-ish will make me sick fast too. 

The place is a two-story building, which is quite small with an open kitchen at the first floor, so we could see how the dishes freshly made. For the ordering, we could choose all you can eat or ala carte. They divide the all you can eat type into three choices, based on the unagi availability, so the most expensive one provides unagi in the menu. I chose to eat ala carte as there were only 3 of us which I am sure could not devour too many dishes. 
Appetizer

As seen on the menu, dishes are similar to Poke Sushi, my favorite sushi restaurant. Wakame salad, salmon salad, salmon skin etc. I ordered salmon salad, wakame salad, crab salad and dynamite. Surprisingly, the taste of all the dishes were also similar to Poke Sushi's version. However, the wakame might be able to get more salt as the sweetness rather a bit overpowered the saltiness, so for me it's not well balanced for my palate. But, it's nice enough for me. The salmon was fresh, it's not fishy and the mayo dressing complemented the salmon very well. 
Assorted Sushi
My next order was sushi. Crispy salmon sushi, dragon roll and salmon skin roll. Unfortunately, the rice was not sticky enough to hold the firmness of sushi. It easily broke apart when I was dipping it completely in soy sauce. I was kind of disappointed. Taste wise, they also did not wow me, but the dragon roll is good. It got crispy texture and of course, the star on top, unagi. On the other hand, they can still improve their rice stickiness.


Assorted Tempura
Another disappointed dish, the tempura. The batter not crispy, rather it's mushy especially the eggplant and the onion ring. I think they overcooked the vegetables. On the other hand, the sweet potato was firm and the prawns were cooked to perfection. But still, the batter pulled down the level of tempura. I was craving for nicely seasoned and crunchy tempura but it didn't meet my expectation.

Overall, based on my ordered, the food was okay but I especially like their appetizer more than my others order. Their service was good and fast. Price wise, it's reasonable for that portion, but I hope they can improve their quality.

Sushi Joobu
Jl. Kelapa Gading Boulevard
Blok WD2 No. 19
North Jakarta 
021-4508551
www.sushijoobu.co.id

Monday - Saturday
11.30 - 22.00
Sunday
10.30 - 22.00


Saturday, September 7, 2013

Malaysian Curry Puff (Karipap)

There will be some pro and contra of me cooking. But yea, let me tell you folks, I actually can cook. For the first post of my cooking time, I am presenting Malaysian Spiral Curry Puff (Karipap Pusing). This dish is meant something special for me, as I have ever stayed in Singapore for 2 years to pursue an undergraduate degree. Okay, when I decided to try to make curry puff from scratch, I admit I was so missing the place that so-called my second home. 

I started google-ing the recipe and I found one in an Australia-based blog, msihua.com which I am following in my instagram. I can say this is the best recipe I could find after long searching and I would love to make other batches again and again in the future.

My dough is resting
Basically, I should make 2 kind of dough to make it "pusing" and flaky. Like all the pastry dough would be made of, it should contain lots of butter and need some resting. However, for this recipe, it only needs a once-and-thirty-minute rest while most of pastry dough require more rest and fridge store.

This is why it's called "pusing"
After resting, it's time to roll the dough couple times, as for this recipe, 4 times will do. It indeed really needs extra strength to flatten the dough and I was really tired and my dough not as thin as it's supposed to be. I might want to roll it in a noodle maker machine to produce thinner and nicer dough next time.
My owned creative filling
As for the filling, it's your creativity talks. My version, I added carrots for the veggies and ground beef for the protein. Hence, a complete macro-nutrient inside a curry puff. What a healthy snacks!

Sorry, I am a messy cook
Malaysian curry puff is supposed to be deep fried, but I was trying to bake it with egg wash for a healthier version. The result? I like this version, still crispy and nice. What I didn't satisafy was the shape, it didn't look nice, I couldn't make the seal like the curry puff expert, but practice makes perfect, right? 
Deep fried vs baked
Ah, please don't judge my karipaps by their look. I know it's ugly, but I can assure you that it had a nice flavour. The filling was nicely seasoned and not overwhelmed. The pastry was crispy but I admit it's not thin enough. Me and my family agree, the deep fried version was nicer. Deep frying somehow had thinner texture and of course it's more crispy. Yum!

Closer look of the filling
You can be as creative as possible for the filling. It's your freedom! But here's the original recipe.

Ingredients :

Water Dough

300g Plain Flour
1/2 tsp Salt
125ml (or 1/2 cup) Lukewarm Water
1 small beaten egg
1 tsbp of oil (I used rice bran oil, but any oil will do)

Grease dough

150g plain flour
75g cold butter

Filling

1 large onion (finely chopped)
2 cloves of garlic (finely chopped)
2 tbsp of good curry powder
3 large potatoes (cut into small cubes)
100g of chicken breast (diced)
250ml (or 1 cup) water

As I mention before the filling is about creativity, I substituted and added some ingredients.



How it works :
When the original recipe starts with cooking the curry puff filling, I started with making the dough first. While the dough was resting, I starts making the filling. But either way should work I guess.

Water dough
Combine the ingredients and knead with your fingers until the dough becomes soft, pliable and non-sticky.
Divide and roll the dough into two equal balls. Cover and set aside to rest for at least 30 minutes.

Grease Dough
Cube the butter and cut into the flour with two knives and a fork until it resembles crumbly coarse sand. Knead by hand until it turns shiny and smooth (dough-like consistency). As the butter is cold, it takes a while to combine with the flour and I was sweating, so it's good for working out substitute. At the end, divide and roll into two equal balls.

While the dough is resting, I started making the filling.

Saute the onion and garlic in a wok (or a pan) over medium heat. Add the potatoes and stir fry until it softens. Add in chicken and curry powder.

Ensure that everything is coated in the curry powder before adding the water. Add the water slowly (little by little) and allow the curry to simmer (as for my version, I added ground beef and carrots,  I used less potatoes). If you like intense flavour as me, you could add more curry powder until reach your liking. Once the potatoes have soften and the curry forms a dry curry mixture, set aside and let cool.

Forming the curry puffs
Enclose one ball of greased dough into the water dough. The water dough is very pliable so this will be easy to do.

On a lightly floured surface roll the combine dough into a thin oval shape with a rolling pin (which I kind of failed to do T.T). Roll it up and with one end facing you, roll the dough out again into a thin layer.

Roll the dough up again before slicing into 1 cm disc. Depending on the width of each slice, the number of curry puffs made will differ (larger width, bigger curry puff).

Flatten each disc (spirals will be visible at this stage) with care as the dough can easily split into layers.

Place a tablespoon (or two) of the curry puff filling into the center of the flatten disc and fold over. Seal the edges of the dough together by pinching and folding the flour to form a rope (I only managed to form one perfect rope shape). You could use a curry puff mould to make it easier.

To cook, simply deep-fry in hot oil until golden brown. As my baked version, heat oven to around 170 C and egg washed the puff then bake for about 15 minutes or until golden brown.

Adapted from Msihua
She also adapted the recipe from Samantha Tan

It turned out nice and flaky, will do better next time with a perfect shaping and layers consistency.

Ps. My little sister loved it so much! She ate all the leftover filling. I shared some with my friend and her family, they also liked it! I was a happy happy cook.

Keep in mind there will be other parts of cooking time to post. Please wait for it! 

You can follow Msihua and Samantha Tan blogs as they share many delicious recipes, food reviews and traveling experience.