

There are 2 important persons in my life who were born in the month of July. My little darling Shannea is 2 years old on the 16th and hubby's birthday is on the 21st.
Helen gave me 4 trays of fresh blue berries, more than enough to make this blueberry cheese cake. My husband always asks why I don't make a "normal" looking cake. So I must comply to his request on his birthday. I cooked the blueberry into syrup and added some gelatin to help it set on the top of baked and chilled cheese cake.
Although I'm quite happy with the look of the cake, I must practise more using chocolate to pipe wordings. It is quite tough coz I let the moist get into the melted chocolate and it became hard for piping. I discarded 1/2 packet of the white chocolate to get these result. The names are barely readable. They kinda ruin the cake, my hubby says... Also the wordings are too big. Wanted to write "Shannea 2, + Daddy" but ended up "Shannea 2 Daddy" humm...
I make the cake with "LOVE" and here I wish them "Happy Birthday".
Oh, I also have some extra cream cheese to make these beautiful blueberry cheese tart.
My mum taught me how to cook this dish many years ago and it has always been one of my most delicious dish whenever I have to cook for my guests. Super easy to prepare. Wash and season pork ribs with salt. Put ribs in corning pot or clay pot, add Black "ChinKiang" vinegar till half cover ribs, few slices of Ginger, 2 - 3pcs shallot & garlic, 1 - 2 slap of brown sugar. Bring it to boil then stew the ribs with very low fire for half an hour to 45mins till the gravy thickens and ribs become soft.
Basically, not much skill required. Patience is the key to this success. Most importantly, don't burn the gravy and make sure u turn the ribs often for the first 15 mins so the vinegar can evenly coat onto each rib so it'll taste the same and cooked at the same time.
A must-order item from your "Yam Char" menu. Usually it comes in mini "Lo Mai Gai" which they call "Chen Chu Gai". But the best one comes in the "adult" form - much bigger and very economical. Crystal Jade used to sell this during weekend but they took it off their menu about a year ago. They have also changed the "Chen Chu Gai" recipe with some dried scallop and less chicken ... so it is time to make my own...
It took me a few months to find the lotus leave in Singapore. Been to a few big wet markets (Bukit Timah, Jurong West, Bukit Badok) and all don't sell it. Pasir Panjang wholesale market mostly sell in kg (how to store and finish...). The only place to buy is Outram Park wet market @ Smith street.
Used 1KG glutinous rice to make 8pc (Big one). Bigger ones for my hubby who always complain "why so little". Some smaller ones for myself and my helper. I use chicken drumlet. Just dice it, fry with dry shrimps, dry mushroom and salted egg yolk. Season with black sauce, oyster sauce, soy sauce and corn starch to thicken.
Wrap steamed glutinous rice (for 30 mins, water every 10 min) in a boiled lotus leave plus filling. Steam for 20 min. The fragrance from the lotus leave will fill the house. I froze them in the freezer. It is always ready whenever I need a quick "Yam Char" fix.
Usually we take very light meals during weekends. I bought some Turkish bread from Cold Storage. I had some steak in the fridge and I just cut it into thin slices, and seasoned with salt, black pepper, soy sauce, garlic. Sizzled on a non stick pan for 1 - 2 minutes. Added lots of veg. and some self invented dressing (don't really remember what I used...), I recalled I used some of these: sweet sour magic sauce, miracle whip, lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, salt, sugar.
Not actually a light meal though. Certainly simple and delicious!
P.S. I'm also more familiar on how to operate my mixer and I've come to know how to do a proper stretch test and can tell when the dough is ready. The old saying "Practice makes perfect" is once again proven very right! So don't give up, guys!