Tag Archives: soup

Wonton Soup (Filipino Pancit Molo)

What could be better than a hearty soup on a winter night? Pancit Molo is a wonton soup popular in the Philippines, not to be confused with other types of pancit, a term meaning noodles in Filipino. It merges Chinese wontons with the Spanish love for garlic and the addition of milk at the end.  This was a soup often made in my home when I was growing up that I learned to make on my own when I moved away. Now I get to share it with you!
I enjoy making this soup with homemade pork wontons that I mix with vegetables and the perfect crunch provided by water chestnuts. I enjoy how the wonton wrapper soaks up the broth and almost falls apart like in this photo below.
For bit of history, Pancit Molo is a dumpling/wonton soup whose etymology is derived from the seaport in the town of Molo, Philippines. Chinese merchants introduced wonton soup to that area, and locals began calling it Pancit Molo, perhaps for a lack of a term for wontons or siomai (shumai), or their wrappers which only resembled noodles (pancit) at that time. That explains the popular misnomer.
And now for how to make Pancit Molo:
We begin with some key ingredients, namely ground pork, water chestnuts, scallions, celery, cabbage, garlic, and wonton wrapper. You may find water chestnuts and wonton wrappers in good grocery stores, if not Asian markets.
I chop all the other vegetables finely using a food processor, except for the water chestnuts, celery and half of the carrots.  Here the water chestnuts are chopped in quarter inch cubes.
As is the celery.
I cube two stalks of the carrots to include in the broth, but finely chop the rest to mix 
with the wonton filling.
Here they all are in the bowl. Half of the scallions, half of the carrots, celery, water chestnuts, 
garlic, onions and red cabbage. 
I enjoy using colorful vegetables for the flavor and appearance of the wontons.
Add a beaten egg into the mix.
Season and mix very, very well. I like to test the mixture by microwaving a dollop of it in a small bowl for thirty seconds so I am assured of its flavor before making the wontons. 
HOW TO WRAP WONTONS
Spoon a teaspoonful of the mixture onto a wonton wrapper. 
Place fingers on edges of the wrapper like so. 
Join the corners together. 
Press the edges together to form a seal. Depending on the wonton wrapper, water may be needed to seal them together. I have made this with several kinds of store-bought wrappers and have never had the need to seal the edges with water. They seem to just stick to the filling when cooked.
Arrange wontons in a plate and set aside.
In a hot pot, saute garlic until brown and add onions until clear. 
Saute celery and then add chicken broth, stock or bouillon and water.
Add carrot cubes and simmer for 10 minutes until boiling. 
Add wontons one by one, preferably spaced out so they don’t stick together.
Allow wontons to cook on low-medium heat for twenty minutes until they float to the surface.
When cooked, wontons will float to the top and wrapper will soak up the broth.
Add evaporated milk and 1 teaspoon sesame oil to the pot before serving, mixing gently.
A perfect soup for a perfect evening, topped with chopped scallions and fried garlic.
I love the crunch provided by the water chestnuts and the colors of the vegetables inside the wontons.
Enjoy!
Pancit Molo
1 package wonton wrapper
1 pound ground pork
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 head garlic, finely chopped
3 medium carrots, finely chopped
2 small carrots, cut into 1/4 inch cubes
4 stalks celery, cut into 1/4 inch cubes
1/4 red cabbage, finely chopped
1 can water chestnuts, cut into 1/4 inch cubes
1 egg, beaten
3 stalks scallion, finely chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground pepper
2 teaspoons sesame oil
6 cups chicken broth (or 6 cups water and one chicken bouillon)
1/4 cup evaporated millk
Filling: Mix together pork, onion (set aside 1 tablespoon for the broth), garlic (set aside 1 tablespoon for the broth), finely chopped carrots, 2/3 of the celery (set aside the rest for the broth), cabbage, scallions and egg. Mix well and season with salt and pepper. Test the mixture’s taste by microwaving a dollop of it for 30 seconds. 
When seasoned to taste, mix in 1 teaspoon sesame oil and wrap the wontons using the directions above. 
Broth: In hot pot, saute garlic, onions and celery. Add broth and carrots and simmer for 15 minutes. Add wontons one by one, evenly spaced so as to avoid sticking. Simmer on low-medium heat for another 20 minutes. Add 1/4 cup evaporated milk and 1 teaspoon sesame oil. Mix gently before serving.  Serve topped with chopped scallions and fried garlic, when available. Mangia!

Chickpea Tahini Soup

 
I’ve had a jar of tahini and a can of chickpeas for the longest time, hoping I’d have enough initiative to make some hummus. Fortunately I never did, or else I’m sure I would eat it all. I love the flavors of olive oil, sesame and beans, especially with a dash of cumin and some heat. 
 I wanted a recipe to finally evict my pantry squatters, and now I get to share it with you! 
Wash the chickpeas in water and drain.
Begin, as always, with garlic and oil in a hot pot and saute until brown. 
Add all the chickpeas except for one cup (set aside) and season with some spices.
Cumin and cayenne are your friends! Add one teaspoon cumin and a few dashes of cayenne for heat.
Add water, about 6 cups, and one vegetable boullion, plus the juice of one lemon. 
Stir and simmer covered for ten minutes.
 
Stir the tahini well. In most cases the solids will be stuck to the bottom of the jar. 
Scoop out about half a cup and add to the pot. 
Using a stick blender, liquefy the pot’s contents. Stir and season with cumin and salt.  
Simmer covered for ten minutes.
 Add the remaining chickpeas and some chopped kale. Cook until kale is soft. 
Serve hot with a dash of paprika and top with chopped parsley.  
Hearty and great with some pita or flatbread. Enjoy!
(For this meal I served this soup with a Quick and Simple Chicken Curry and an Awesome Kale Salad)

Homemade Miso Soup

There is nothing more fragrant than fresh miso soup that doesn’t come from a powder, 
mix,or contain any other ingredients or MSG.
I picked up this baby at the Food Coop.

As these: Maitake mushrooms on the left, bunapi mushrooms on the right.
Bring a pot of water to a boil along with the mushrooms.

Take two tablespoons of miso (depending on the amount of water).
Mix in the miso until dissolved, simmer for five minutes, and then serve.
For this meal I served it with brussels sprouts and garlic and bistek Filipino pork chops.

Arroz Caldo Dinner, New Year’s Day

Arroz caldo is a Filipino rice porridge in a chicken base, a popular dish to celebrate the New Year 
because the expansion of the rice when cooked symbolizes growth and prosperity.

Chop up some garlic, onions and ginger.

An uncle once said, “The secret to making good arroz caldo is to wash the chicken very, very well.”
It really makes a difference.

Washed chicken pieces.
Saute garlic, ginger and onions until garlic is brown and onions are clear.

Add chicken and coat with oil.

Add rice.
The chef says that the secret is to coat the rice with all the sauteed chicken goodness.
Add broth and simmer on low heat for two hours, skimming the top every so often.
Chop up some scallions for topping.

Key toppings include scallions, fried garlic, lemon juice.

For the occasion we opened a 2003 Cakebread Cab we’ve had since a Napa trip in 2006.

For appetizers we had rye crackers, truffle honey and Hungarian duck liver pate.

Drizzle some good stuff.

I love these hand-carved glasses.

Ladle on the arroz.

Nothing compares to this.

Aling Rosing’s Chicken Arroz Caldo

1/2 head garlic, chopped
1 yellow onion, chopped
1 medium sized ginger, sliced into strips
10 chicken pieces, washed and dried
2 cup white jasmine rice
2 chicken bouillons
bottled fried garlic
scallions, chopped
lemon slices
fish sauce
In a 10 liter stock pot, saute ginger, garlic and onion until onion is clear. Add chicken pieces and coat with oil for about five minutes. Add rice and coat with oil. This is a very important step that allows the rice to take in the flavors of the chicken and oil. Allow to cook for five minutes, stirring to prevent sticking to the pot. Add bouillons and water up to three-fourths the pot’s height (7.5 liter mark). Simmer on low heat while mixing often to prevent sticking. Do not allow to boil over. Cook for about two hours until rice is broken. This version results in a soupy kind of arroz caldo, so add more rice if you want it coarse and thick like a risotto. Top with scallions, fried garlic and lemon juice. This recipe is huge (serves eight), so adjust portions accordingly for a smaller pot.
Enjoy!

Butternut Squash Soup

A simple and tasty soup to make for when you’ve kept the butternut squash from the Food Coop for a while and it’s cold outside. I’ve tasted a lot of things in restaurant winter squash soups and have been toying around with adding some herbs like nutmeg or other vegetables like celery, but squashes are so sweet and tasty that it’s hard to go wrong relying on their own flavor.

Cut and remove seeds from one butternut squash.
Coat with olive oil and bake in a glass dish for an hour at 375C.
(You can make this ahead and store it covered in the refrigerator until you’re ready to make soup.)

Peel the squash pieces with a knife.

Cut cooked squash into squares.

Saute some garlic in oil until brown.

Add the squash and mix it up.

Add about 2 cups of water and crush the squash with a ladle.

Add one vegetable bouillon (or replace all water with vegetable broth).

Blend using a stick blender.
If you don’t have one, cool the mixture and use a regular blender, then return to pot.

Puree as needed and add two more cups of water depending on desired consistency.
Simmer covered for about 10 minutes, mixing occassionally.

Serve hot in a bowl. Top with chives or scallions before serving.
Mangia!
Posted by Picasa
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...