Weekend fun: Pancakes, banana pudding and more

The weekend is when I have time to try out fun food — things that I actually love to eat. In most cases, it means desserts. Sometimes it means a nice breakfast. This past weekend, it meant pancakes, banananananana pudding and carrot cake!

Blueberry Pancakes

Who needs a box mix?

Main ingredients: flour, milk, eggs, blueberries.

Special flavorings: wildflower honey from Israel, baking powder. Easy to find, but since the Chinese rarely bake, I had to pay $4.41 for the imported stuff. Which only means I’ll be baking a lot more now.

Total cost: I’d say about 20 RMB ($2.94), mostly on the blueberries and eggs, for 14 5-inch pancakes, or just enough for Colin and me. For plain pancakes, the total cost would have been about 8 kuai ($1.18).

Banana Pudding!

I miss the South!

Main ingredients: bananas, eggs, milk, sugar, vanilla wafers. I couldn’t be bothered to go to the Western food market (rain + laziness), so I subbed them with these almond shortbread cookies. They turned out to be a dark brown color, so the crumble on top of the pudding looks a bit like dog food :(

Special flavorings: vanilla extract. A 29-milliliter bottle of McCormick’s Pure Vanilla Extract is 55.50 RMB ($8.16).

Total cost: 60-65 RMB ($9) for about six servings. My special banana bowl cost 150 RMB ($22).

Carrot Cake with Orange Frosting (sorry, no picture)

Main ingredients: carrots, flour, confectioner’s sugar, orange.

Special flavorings: baking powder, ground cinnamon, ground ginger, grated nutmeg. I guess the Chinese use ground ginger because that was cheap and came in a small packet. The grated nutmeg, though, came at U.S. prices.

Total cost: About 30-35 RMB ($5) for four mini-bread loaves.

I’ve been counted to be counted!

The census people came by last night while I was making my banananana pudding (more on that later) and took a household registration survey, which is in preparation for the national census that begins in November. Unbeknownst to them, the roommate turnover rate in my apartment has been quite high lately. Three new roommates in the span of three months! (One of whom is leaving in September.)

It also turned out that I was registered incorrectly. They had the right passport/nationality information, but my name did not match it. I’m glad I never had to find out what a hassle that could have caused. Imagine if I had my passport stolen or I had to report to the police station for some reason! The household registration business is just a bit silly, but I’m glad I’m registered correctly now, even if the government knows exactly where I am.

UPDATE (Aug. 26): I didn’t get any soap! Feeling a little miffed. Don’t think I want to do the census until they give me my soap.

Last night’s dinner: Fettuccine alfredo

I got the craving for this heart-attack-waiting-to-happen as I was going through my old pictures. It’s a pretty simple recipe, requiring few ingredients and not too much work, either. I tried to make it a little healthier by adding chicken and broccoli. Alas, they were still covered in the alfredo, but what can I say? I love dairy, especially cheese.

A heart attack for this cheesy goodness will (almost) be worth it.

Main ingredients: fettuccine, cream, parmesan; chicken; broccoli.

Special flavorings: red pepper.

Total cost: a lot! About 100 RMB ($14.71) for three servings, plus extra alfredo sauce and half a box of fettuccine.

Last night’s dinner: Pork and potato pancakes

If you are what you eat, then would that make me really good? Everything I eat is really good.

A craving for potato pancakes snuck up on me earlier in the week, so we finally made some last night. What goes with potato pancakes? We ended up just getting pork, sauteing them in bite-sized pieces.

All in all, a pretty cheap meal that was made more expensive by the lack of local bulk potatoes. We ended up having to buy the pre-packaged kind.

You see, in China, they have about three different kinds of the same item, each with a different price point. Not being well-versed in Chinese, I have no idea what the differences between each kind, except that one (the cheapest) is “regular,” the more expensive (usually pre-packaged in a small tray and plastic wrap) kind is organic and the most expensive is … more organic? Needless to say, the pre-packaged produce usually looks a little nicer, but are sometimes five times the price of the regular, pick-what-you-want kind. It usually isn’t worth it. For example, I have gotten a bag of regular potatoes for less than 1 kuai (15 cents); the special potatoes I got for these pancakes — four of them — cost about 12 kuai ($1.76). In other words, this dinner could have been much cheaper.

Pork on the left, potato on the right.

Main ingredients: pork, potatoes.

Special flavorings: sour cream accompaniment.

Total cost: 25 RMB ($3.68) for two servings of pork and 12 potato pancakes.

Last night’s dinner: Orange-Curry chicken and rice

We made chicken and rice flavored with curry and orange juice for dinner last night, an easy recipe to get us back into cooking mode following a long weekend of eating out. I’ve never had it before, despite it being a pretty common dish anywhere in the world. Needless to say, I’ve never made it before, either. Cooking rice in something other than a rice cooker? Weird! But the dish was really easy to make, despite taking a relatively long time to cook. And the ingredients were easy to get. Added bonus: it’s a pretty healthy and well-rounded meal!

Chicken and rice
After I get cooking down, I'll tackle presentation.

Main ingredients: chicken, rice. Both easily and cheaply bought, since the Chinese eat both in rather large quantities. We threw in some carrots, as well.

Special flavorings: curry powder, orange juice. Ditto.

Total cost: 20-25 RMB ($3.50) for four servings. The chicken accounted for about one-third to one-half of the total.

Food I can cook in China

So I’m slowly getting back into the cooking/eating mood. My boyfriend recently moved in with me, and I’ve been having fun playing house. This has led me to try to build up a library of recipes that I can make without too much hassle. The caveat: China.

We’re not very picky eaters, but we do miss our Western dishes a lot. Also, I’ve not had much experience cooking Asian cuisine, aside from chao fan, chao mian and mostly just things that can be chao‘d (i.e., stir-fried).

Thus, the things we can make have been constrained by: Continue reading

Tasting the rainbow

About a month ago, my boyfriend brought me a special treat.

Sour Skittles with Chinese characteristics
Sour Skittles with Chinese characteristics.

Yes, Sour Skittles have made their way to China! The Chinese name for them is 彩虹 (caihong), which means “rainbow.”

I don’t know how long they’ve been here, but my boyfriend noticed them in his neighborhood store one fateful day. He says a store near his office also has them. Since then, I’ve found them in the impulse buy aisle at Wal-mart.

And so now, I’m forever buying them on impulse for 3.5 kuai (51 cents) each.

Insight into Chinese minds?

At work, we get these really awful opinion submissions. They are awful for mainly two reasons:

  1. Illogical application or interpretation of presented evidence (not to mention, questionable selection of evidence for argument)
  2. Absence of a clearly stated opinion that isn’t a generic “the government should do more to promote x” or “there should be equality in x area of society.”

Part of the problem may well be caused by differences in writing styles — it would appear that Chinese writing is not based on clear and logical flow of information and analysis — as well as things getting lost in translation.

When I probe my colleagues about what something means and how it possibly makes sense or why it’s even in the article — when it makes no reference to the original topic — they often admit that they couldn’t make sense of the author’s argument, either. So, I had this epiphany: A lot of these bizarre “opinions” and “arguments” for them are similar to lectures my father have given me! He’d start off on what I assume to be the topic, related to whatever transgression I might have made, provide anecdotal “evidence” that may or may not be true, go off on tangents here and there and include something that I think is supposed to be a metaphor. In the end, I’m thoroughly confused and, well, unconvinced.