RongHua Ching

Southeast Asia food memory, apps & books

Sharing southeast Asia food memory, apps & books. I had taken photo’s between stages of cooking and edited with Picsart smartphone app. In the spur of the moment, I shared it with Google Communities and what better compliment to receive responses from fellow foodies and ‘locals’ :-).

Fish head curry

Sometimes you just need your butt kicked to get going, the intention of planning to do isn’t going to cut it but the action does. Chinese New Year was the opening to start downloading photo’s from my smartphone or better said upload them and start pecking on my keyboard to post images with information or other random food for thought. I had created a while ago Asianfoodtrail Google+ page and never finished the details to go live, but cooking home cooked comfort food just did the trick to get inspired with a mouth full of flavour to boost things up.

Over the years I have accumulated favourite recipes clippings taken from magazines and as an avid reader, collected old and new cookery hardcover or digital books. Saved on my smartphone or Kobo e-reader, have a look here at the affiliate ad below for gift ideas and/or inspiration to cook up a storm. Please be advised the following ad is an affiliate link promotion, read the full disclaimer & disclosure in the left sidebar or here.


We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Last week I stumbled on to a fresh market with local fish stalls in Leiden, The Netherlands. As a fish, nation devouring famous raw ‘herring’ nothing special, but big codfish heads definitely are far from being called speciality.

Too bad, but lucky for us asked the fish monger for the largest pieces with one dish only in my mind. Hoping to duplicate the flavour explosion I experienced in Kota Kinabalu in Malaysia and at Muthu’s on Racecourse Road Singapore. You might have guessed the very well known “Fish head curry”. Surprised the family with this wonderful dish, a little south-east Asian feast on a Dutch winter’s dinner table. Visit Google+ Asianfoodtrail and share your favourite south-east asian comfort foods or other food memories. The gift of giving is sharing the good thing together.

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De 31 Slechtste: Whatsapp Conversaties | Slechte grappen

Source: http://www.slechtegrappen.nl/whatsapp-conversaties

Source: http://www.slechtegrappen.nl/whatsapp-conversaties

Als gezin delen wij gezamenlijk een groep Whatsapp, heel handig om berichten door te geven of snel een mini-discussie of opinie te vragen maar ook om grappen te delen. Soms is het dagen stil en dan ineens is het een bombardement van berichtjes, zoals met deze link die net werd verzonden, waar zonder een gesproken gesprek iedereen toch giert van het lachen. He wat een rust :-p als het geen tekst is zijn het plaatjes maar nu gecombineerd en inderdaad niet alle berichten zijn correcte conversaties, is het nu humor of toch niet?

Osmanthus 桂花 Gui Hua flower

One of my favourite tea’s “Gui Hua Wu Long Cha” 桂花乌龙茶 or Osmanthus Oolong tea, has a subtle beautiful floral fragrance with a soothing taste. The very first time I smelled the Osmanthus perfume was during my first trip late 70’s visiting relatives in Hangzhou, China, just around the West Lake there was a scent in the air teasing my olfactory senses and I just didn’t know what it was or where to find the source. Since it was just a whiff I tried to describe to my family members the fragrance eager and curious to learn the answer, but I forgot that the scent although particular and unusual for me was actually something they unconsciously dismissed being familiar and not registering as I did at that moment. During our stay on one of many excursions and outings with extended family, they brought us to a famous park. While strolling around my nose caught the fragrance again and I couldn’t help myself by just following the wind direction trying to get close to the source. Luckily it didn’t take long because suddenly we were caught in a blast where the air was heavenly scented with flowery perfume and I could exactly pinpoint what I was trailing and smelling, they burst out laughing and said it was Osmanthus flowers from a small tree.

Gui Hua, mu xi hua

Photo courtesy Source: TCM Traditional Chinese Medicine Wiki https://tcmwiki.com/wiki/gui-hua.

Absolutely thrilled having discovered a little treasure, I asked in my ignorance whether it was all right to get a small flowering branch to bring along with me as a remembrance. The family also out-of-town villagers in their innocence conceded seeing my enthusiasm. While the group strolled on I walked to the tree and tried to snap a twig with my bare hands, but the task wasn’t as easy as I thought it would be. The little tree had sturdy branches and protected it from being mauled and vandalised by an intruder. Without tools to break off a twig I started like a monkey zealously to get hold by twisting in a circular motion on a branch with blossoming flowers. The delicate flowers were whirling around me and that got the attention of one of the park guards afar, who initially was wondering what was going on. Didn’t take long for him to come running and shouting all kinds of orders if only I had understood him.

As an overseas born Chinese teenager visiting ancestral home for the very first time, I only spoke my parent’s dialect at the time and had no comprehension of Hangzhounese nor Mandarin at all. While I was going happy-go-lucky, the park guard was red hot of fury upon seeing the act of destruction. To make matters worse, seeing that he was carrying one of those Chinese-type of round curved scissor I was just about to hand sign borrowing to prune the tree. At the same time, he was yelling and waving his hands rapidly too, lost in communication I held up my hand stating I had no idea what he wanted to convey to me. Trying to answer in my dialect he was flying off a whole string of words of which I only understood clearly one and new I was in trouble.

Chinese spoken language carries some universal words across dialects within their regions clearly identifiable, in this case, it’s the word egg “dan” 蛋, a nutritious and versatile protein source, it carries also a negative connotation in egg-related words “bendan”  笨蛋 stands for fool; idiot, “hundan” 混蛋 bastard, “shadan” 傻蛋 blockhead, simpleton, a humorous one is “lingdan” 零蛋 a duck’s egg meaning ‘zero’. He must have said at least one or maybe all of them and more, I sure had “egg on my face”.

Osmanthus

Dried Osmanthus flowers, This golden yellowish flower has a pleasant floral aroma. Its unforgettable aromatic fragrance used in tea, food and worlds famous perfumes.

Drinking Gui Hua Wu Long Cha 桂花呜龙茶 is still redolent of my first smell of Gui Hua while visiting Hang Zhou, the capital city of Zhejiang Province, as tea leaves with flower petals combination I sampled the brew during our stay in Taiwan. Due to our stays and travel in south-east Asia and being ardent tea-drinkers, we have collected various tea leaves or have received tea box as gifts. Although standard tea bags are convenient, nothing compares to good quality tea leaves, you do not need to have a tea ceremony to enjoy a relaxing or soothing brew. More posts will follow with fragrant leaves from our home tea box, to share and enjoy its special characteristics. You might choose to put the kettle on now and read the Osmanthus Oolong tea blogpost.

guihua tangyuan

Guihua tangyuan 桂花汤圆
Photo courtesy source: http://eat.gansudaily.com.cn/

The beautiful Gui Hua image on top of this blog post is from an article featuring the health effects of Osmanthus in 养花百科(BaiKe Garden encyclopaedia). For Chinese readers click on the Chinese link as well this 白度 Baidu link for interesting Osmanthus facts and information.

World’s first Chinese Chef to earn 3 Michelin stars

World’s first Chinese Chef Chan Yan Tak, who earned 3 Michelin stars is in Hong Kong, Four Season’s Hotel Fine Dining at Cantonese restaurant “Lung King Heen (View of the Dragon).

Lung King Heen, fine dining, Four Season in Hong Kong

The restaurant is located on the 4th floor with a modern classic interior offering an absolutely spectacular view across Victoria Harbour, during the day the City’s skyline and in the evening glowing harbour lights. If you would like to plan a visit and experience the Fine dining you must make a reservation well in advance, especially if you opt for window seating.

Cantonese Restaurant Lung King Heen Harbour view

 

In 2010, the restaurant’s homemade XO sauce was listed as the ‘Best condiment’ on the Hong Kong Best Eats 2010 list compiled by CNN Travel.

Lung King Heen was added to Forbes Travel Guide‘s list of 5 stars restaurants in January 2014.

Update: Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants 2017 ranking #17

Articles &  Reviews:

  • What are these delicacies reviewers are raving about which Chef Chan Yan Tak and his team prepare and serve, have an enticing look on their Pinterest board here.
  • Foursquare fans and foodies, read raving tips use this link.
  • Japan travel enthusiast, for info and review, click at 4travel.jp here.
  • Hong Kong Tattler Dining recent review January 2014, read the full article here.

Student brengt Chinese taalvariatie in beeld | Nieuws

Student brengt Chinese taalvariatie in beeld | Nieuws | Taalwetenschappen, Geesteswetenschappen | china, dialecten, sociale media, taalvariatie, twitter, chinees, cloud computing, corpus – Kennislink.

“Natuurlijk had ik wel gelezen dat ze in elk dorpje anders praten, maar tijdens die reis merkte ik het pas echt”, vertelt Van Esch. “In de Verenigde staten bestaat er een Twittercorpus waar dialectwoorden en hun plaats van herkomst in zijn opgenomen. Toen dacht ik: dat kan ik ook!” Dat is het Leiden Weibo Corpus [1] geworden. Weibo is de Chinese variant van Twitter waar ruim 300 miljoen Chinezen een account hebben. Eencorpus [2] is een grote verzameling taalmateriaal die zo gestructureerd is dat de gebruiker er makkelijk in kan zoeken.

Weibo is de Chinese variant van Twitter waar ruim 300 miljoen Chinezen een account hebben. Trowbridge Estate

 

 

Bron: Publicatie Universiteit Leiden – www.kennislink.nl

 

Lemongrass ginger herbal tisane – My Cup 茶馆

Lemongrass & Ginger tea, a thirst quencher with nutrition and health benefits.

Lemongrass & Ginger tea, a thirst quencher with nutrition and health benefits.

While I am typing this post it is raining again as it was yesterday, although I don’t mind the cold or wetness it’s the sun and warmth I crave the most. This early morning the day started with sun rays bursting through the window, but winter chills is still holding a firm grip and the wind doesn’t help much to change the mood throughout the rest of the day. While browsing through the fridge to see what I would come up with for dinner, I saw one last stalk of Lemon grass left. I decided instead of using to cook with it I would make a soul-warming tea with ginger to warm up my body and at the same time a soothing taste comforting me by filling up the house with fragrance and taste of the tropics.

Lemon grass has tremendous health benefits and is packed with so much goodness, it aids many chronic conditions due to its anti-microbial, anti-oxidant,
anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer properties. Lemon grass as a therapeutic tea helps improving digestive tract, detoxifies, lowers cholesterol and has a purifying effect just to highlight a few remedies.

Consumption of ginger has great health benefits too, I discovered not early enough that it is a great remedy in aiding to reduce pain with menstruation cramps and relieving tremendous migraine pains as well anti-inflammatory effects. In my younger years I relied to much on painkillers and have taken larger dosages to find release and feeling comfortable again. At that time I also didn’t appreciate the taste nor the belief that Ginger would help. Well that changed 360° after my first mug of infused ginger tea, since then I have been praising the benefits and healthy nutrition of ginger and advocating to others to chop, slice, dice, mince more of ginger to eat and drink of this mighty Ginger rhizome. See Ginger root, raw nutrition facts here.

If the pure ginger flavour is too strong at first, start with a light infusion to get used to the taste  even as a flavoured water it still works its magic for you. How to make ginger infusion tea from light to strong to each taste preferences will appear shortly, but after intake you will absolutely notice difference in your body it will lift up your mood and responsiveness. The combination of Green tea, Ginger & Cinnamon tea has been proven to reduce blood sugar level after a meal, read this article on synergistic effect of green tea and spices.

To add sweetening to ginger tea with mixed herbs or spices, you may add a teaspoon of sugar cane  sugar or coconut palm sugar (both have low GI index as a better health choice) or honey.

Here are some other variation of infused Ginger Tea’s to make at home instead of pre-made bags and packages:

  • Green tea with Ginger & Cinnamon tea
  • Cinnamon with Ginger & Date tea with honey (Korean-style)
  • Lemon-honey with Ginger
  • cinnamon, cardamom & ginger tea (Indian fused style)
  • Ginger tea with Cinnamon & Anise
  • Coconut & Ginger tea or juice

I’m literally out of my ingredients and need to shop, as soon as I can I will make preparation to upload photo’s of each with recipes and instructions for you to make herbal infusion tea’s at home too.

 

2014 Year of the Green Wood Horse

Chinese zodiac – Sheng Xiao  生肖

New Year festivities traditionally start on the first day of the lunar month, when the moon is brightest (full moon in the middle of the month). The Chinese New Year brings also the start of the solar term “Beginning of Spring” period and celebrated as Spring Festival and can fall anywhere between late January and the middle of February as per Western calendar.

But it is not the Western calendar or horoscope what has my interest, on the contrary, it is the Chinese zodiac with predictions for the twelve animal signs. Chinese Astrology is based upon a twelve-year lunar cycle. Your sign is determined by the Chinese calendar year in which you were born. Each sign and those born under it, are represented by one of twelve animals.

Animals of the Zodiac and their Associations

Source: http://www.nationsonline.org – Chinese Customs –

According to Chinese Fortune-telling practice and calendar, the first day of this year Green Horse reign begins on 4th February 2014 in China’s time zone. The new astrological year starts with the first day of the first month (Tiger) and signifies the start of solar term “Start of Spring” called 立春 Lichun on the Solar calendar. An often made mistake with Chinese astrology is the misconception that the zodiac signs start on Chinese New Year day which was on 31st of January following the Lunar calendar. This is due to the fact that the Chinese Lunisolar calendar is a combination of both the Lunar and Solar calendar together, which is easy to recognise on a traditional calendar but not shown on the standardised calendars.

An ancient folk story tells about the Great Race where the Jade Emperor announced to the entire animal kingdom that there would be an amazing race. Another version tells about the legend where Buddha summons all the animals of the Universe for a race before he would depart this earth. In both stories only twelve animals came and in the order they had arrived, each of them was rewarded with a year named after them. Thus the zodiac order was determined by; the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. The characteristics and traits of these animals are said to influence the personality and fate of everything and everyone born in that year. 

Chinese zodiac, traditional paining, horse

Collection of Horse tattoos styles curated by @Cuded Design & Inspiration | Source courtesy by www.cuded.com

Another reason I like to use the Chinese zodiac is without the risk being discourteous, you can figure out a person’s age by asking for his/her Chinese animal sign. The zodiac has twelve animals in consecutive order each with a twelve-year cycle, therefore it is easy to calculate whether someone is older or younger than you by years, not date and month you do not turn into being clairvoyant ;-). It also sounds much more pleasing to mention being one or two rings (cycle) younger or older instead of 12 years younger or 24 years older.

2014 Fortune tellings & predictions

Curious to know what the Green Horse Year might have in store for us; Will it be bad for business; will conflicts resolve or will new opportunities emerge to take up the challenge. Have a peek at a few excerpts of predictions made by diverse international renowned and acclaimed Chinese Astrology, Feng Shui experts. Click on the highlighted web links for direct access to their website on more in-depth explanation and information.

The book Chinese Astrology is written by famous Shelly Wu, her horoscope columns and feature articles have appeared in numerous magazines and on Associated Press, ABC News, the BBC. According to Shelly Wu who lives in America; the Horse year will show a better economy in intense competition with continual motion of forwarding movement where even hardcore procrastinators will move ahead with plans.

Master Lynn Yap, Singapore’s Feng Shui Queen, believes the forthcoming Year of the Horse will be “very challenging” for the property, as it is predominantly a strong fire year with no “water” element. “Water” elements are very important when it comes to auspicious property investments. Since the earth will be very dry, property, which is an “earth” element, will see prices start to fall sharply in the first half of the year. 

Grandmaster Raymond Lo, a native of HongKong is one of five people alive who has earned this esteemed title as from 2013 from the International Feng Shui Association (IFSA). He is one of the most sought-after professional Feng Shui and Destiny consultants in the world, famous for the accuracy of his predictions. His view on the Year of the Horse 2014 “as the nature of the elements are not that peaceful. Yang wood symbolises a tree which is stubborn and sticking to principles, hard to compromise, and Horse is very powerful elements of fire energy bringing explosions and gun fire”. Read the full article click here.

These are just a few of the many respected Chinese astrologers & Feng Shui experts, if you have a favourite expert send me a note and I will add the name on the Feng Shui list. While the year just began, one thing is clear for better or worse it is going to rumble!

Chinese Calendar history

Chinese Calendar – Farmer’s Almanac

The official calendar used for public and business affairs today in China is the Gregorian calendar, but the civil calendar used by the Chinese is for marking traditional Chinese holidays, in astrology for choosing the most auspicious date. For example the best wedding date, career and business decisions as in opening of a building, signing contracts etc.
The Chinese calendar is often named as the “old” calendar or “nong li” (农历 the rural calendar), based on the Hsia-cheng (first formalized Chinese calendar) which follows the natural course of nature and convenient to an agrarian nation and later on referred to as the “Xia Calendar” (aka Hsia calendar).

The Xia calendar is a “Lunisolar calendar” and it takes into account the longest and shortest days, including the equinoxes where night and day are equal in length of time. A Lunisolar calendar indicates in many cultures both the moon phase, the changing sun positions and the 24 solar terms. Significant days are the Summer Solstice, Winter Solstice, and the Spring and Autumn equinoxes.

Chinese farmers initiated the 24 solar terms based on the practical needs of agriculture following the climate and natural growth of flora and fauna, and from there the practice spread to Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and Japan. This is clearly shown in the written characters for most of them almost identical identifying the solar terms. The Solar terms are markers and some reflect the change of season and others indicate the change of climate, agricultural production, human life, food and so on, thus creating the birth of traditions as in festivals and customs celebration

The 24 Solar Terms Source: http://english.peopledaily.com.cn

Beside the need to have a written agricultural calendar, the farmers also memorized each period by heart singing the song of Solar Terms.
The “Song of Solar Terms” (節氣歌; pinyin: jiéqìgē)

春雨驚春清穀天 chūn yǔ jīng chūn qīng gǔ tiān,
夏滿芒夏暑相連 xià mǎn máng xià shǔ xiāng lián,
秋處露秋寒霜降 qiū chù lù qiū hán shuāng jiàng,
冬雪雪冬小大寒 dōng xuě xuě dōng xiǎo dà hán.
每月兩節不變更 měi yuè liǎng jié bù biàn gēng,
最多相差一兩天 zùi duō xiāng chā yī liǎng tiān
上半年來六、廿一 shàng bàn nián lái liù, niàn yī
下半年是八、廿三 xià bàn nián shì bā, niàn sān

For many centuries the twenty-four hour solar terms have been precisely recorded and offer clear guidelines for successful agriculture activities all held in a book named 通胜 TongShu or TongShing (pinyin or cantonese pronounciation) or simply referred as Chinese Farmer’s almanac. The latest edited version was done during Qing dynasty, it’s central function is to calculate time together with information on the auspicious or inauspicious dates to carry daily or specific activities. Based on specific information it is often consulted as a divination guide by Feng Shui practioners and Destiny Diviners together with other fortune-telling practices.

Read more related stories and insight on festivals, events, tradition and customs in the following posts.

 

Hainan Chicken Rice – foodie chat trivia

Last weekend I went out to shop for pork belly, but the butcher shop closed earlier than I had expected. Ended up at the local Moroccan halal butcher, buying entirely different ingredients. Came home with two fresh Halal broilers to prepare Hainan Chicken Rice 海南鸡反 for dinner. A family favourite dish with loads of stories attached, where to go to sample and taste, and company who joined. Asians habitually talk about food, so everyone chimes in to share at the table with fellow travellers and foodies.

Once upon a time… of course it’s not a fairy tale, but this dish has a long history. An old saying “Whoever wants to go to China must cross the Seven Seas” opening up food chat trivia with many questions and even more answers. This Chinese dish must have accompanied Admiral Zheng He with his treasure fleet on his expeditionary voyages. Throughout south-, south-east Asia all the way till the east coast of Africa from 1405 till 1433. Diaspora of Chinese communities emerged far from home with immigrants bringing with them their skills and reminders of home in preparing comfort food.

Let’s jump forward in time, across the Pacific Ocean at the beginning of the 19th century first immigrants arrived known in American history as Chinese railroad workers. Sailing the opposite direction over the Atlantic Ocean, the first Chinese seamen arrived in The Netherlands in 1911. This time frame and distance show a glimpse of a long history; it explains how widespread early Chinese peasant cooking has caught on all continents and the adaptability of Chinese dishes to local taste.

Hainan Chicken Rice

This famous dish named after a Chinese sub-tropical island 海南岛 in the South China Sea, where a local dish prepared with the main ingredient “Wencheng Chicken” originates. Long after the first immigrants, the present dish is still named as Hainan Chicken Rice. Recognised for its simplicity, aromatic rice and the tender poached chicken it remains a favourite dish trending on top of many food lists with fans in- and outside south-east Asia. Singapore proudly lists as one of their national dishes, available at almost every street corner coffee shop called Kopitiam, food courts, hotels and even highlights on Singapore Airline menu.

If you have travelled throughout this region e.g. Taiwan, HongKong, Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia, you will recognise a resembling chicken dish. In taste and presentation slightly different as influenced by available produce and local taste. Hong Kong has it’s own cooking style and their way of preparation gained popularity as Pak Kai or BaiJi, 白鸡, also resulting in succulent meat cuts.

The Thai variation is known as Khao man kai, in Vietnam, it is called Com Ga Hai Nam. Every mouthful of Chicken & Rice are as good as the source dish, most importantly it shares the same characteristic of poached succulent chicken meat and fragrant broth.

Hainanese Chicken Rice is about simplicity

Chicken – Traditional Hainan free-range Wencheng chicken feed is with coconut and peanut shells. The adopted Singaporean national dish version is claimed prepared best with a Kampung chicken (Ayam Kampung means free-range village chickens, common in Indonesian and Malaysian). Home in The Netherlands I have prepared this dish with corn-fed free-range chicken, broilers and cut chicken parts, foremost it needs to be fresh.

In all fairness, during the week I will buy supermarket cuts or broilers, but for this dish, I will opt for a poultry butcher. To buy specialities such as Bresse Chicken from France very flavoursome and worth the cooking effort to prepare a particular dish. A rare, the only bird with an A.O.C. a national quality label of origin. Once plucked the chicken are all naked and look the same (right?), but the Bresse chickens have blue feets. A slightly cheaper option is the free range Dutch corn-fed Kemper chicken, very tender and tasty meat. You can easily recognise a corn fed chicken by its yellow-orange skin and when cooked the meat flavour differs from a battery or factory production.

BROILER: A meat chicken processed at the age of 7-12 weeks when it reaches 2 ½ to 3 ½ pounds live weight. Historically Broilers were marketed as birds ranging 1 to 2 ½ lbs.

fresh broiler chickens, Hainan Chicken Rice

Halal broilers

Cooking technique: Use the stock for poaching the chicken, with all the extracted aromas the broth can be used to cook the rice. Served as clear soup accompanying the dish or reserved liquid used for flavourings of stir-fry dishes. Click for “Chinese stock methods” on the highlighted link.

Hainan Chicken - Poaching Chicken legs

Poaching Chicken legs – Hainan Chicken

Chicken fat – Chicken fat is used to stir-fry the rice first or made into a paste with additional spice and herbs, to enhance the flavour and then add the stock with ginger, garlic (and optional adding of pandan leaves and other herbs). Use the chicken fat in making the original Singaporean style chilli dip-sauce (if I use a whole chicken I pull out the chicken fat especially to make a big batch, for taste it is worth the trouble of preparing the chilli dip).

Chicken fat

Remove chicken fat and use a rice paste or chilli paste as dipping sauce

Accompaniments – dipping sauces

By looking at the various dipping’s you can retrace the serving country;

  • Hainan the dish is accompanied with typical oyster sauce and minced garlic, along with chilli dip and finely minced ginger with a bit of green onion (shortly heated in oil to draw out flavour and sharpness without darkening).
  • Singapore a customary hot chilli paste sauce (consisting of minced peppers, lime juice with chicken fat, chicken broth, garlic & ginger), along with pounded ginger served with dark soy sauce. Recent years the Thai Sriracha sauce has become a very popular condiment, due to its close spicy sourness and garlicky taste.
  • Hongkong has lime/lemon juice added to the ginger, next to a hot chilli sauce.
  • Thailand a sauce mix made with yellow soybean paste, thick soy sauce, chilli, ginger, garlic and vinegar instead.
  • Vietnam serves the accompanying sauce mix made of salt, pepper, lime juice and fresh chilli (use of fish sauce too).

Rice – Standard cooked white rice is just what it is plain rice. The chicken rice uses a rice paste with chicken fat for intense aromatic flavour. The stock included a variety of fresh herbs; it influences a different result as in soup or cooked rice. If you add Pandan leaves it enhances the grass fragrance, combine or interchange with lemon grass and galangal (aka blue ginger, Leng Kua/Laos, Kham, etc.) for a more defined citrus aroma. Have the pandan leaves combined with coconut milk (and lemon grass) to make Nasi Lemak another fragrant and traditional rice dish.

Hainan Chicken cooked rice

Hainan Chicken Rice either cooked with rice paste or poaching stock.

Hainan Chicken Rice assembly

Hainan Chicken Rice assembly – remove herbs from the rice – cut up the chicken

Almost ready to assemble our Hainan Chicken Rice plates – Singapore style. You can easily recreate this dish, for more information click on “Chinese stock methods” or “Hainan Chicken tutorial” or recipe post.

Entering China and internet

Arriving in Guangzhou bought at the airport an Unicorn mobile Sim Card for 130¥, basically overpaid according to our local friends, as at all Airports whether its for food or services. My husband bought one at the convenience store a day later for much less with immediate Internet access. While I had to figure out how to get settings right to get on-line four days later.

Acquiring internet access is not the problem in China, but what is still being cut off social media access by not having set up VPN access at home before I left. It is a headache if your travelling, what is available and working is Whatsapp, Foursquare and Path (latter has upload hick-ups).

Keeping in touch with our home-base in The Netherlands sharing theirs and our daily adventures and musings is more than just habitual. In between using Skype to have face-to-face chats is comfort for the soul.

However trying to upload my social media posts and reading my time-lines is a growing nuisance to me, so I’ve been looking for ways to get through and have been browsing for free VPN downloads.

Reading quite a few reviews I opted for Teamviewer 5, one of the articles I liked is written by Sarah Lynn for PCmag.com, The Best VPN Clients. While browsing for Teamviewer file I ran into a newly released update for Linux Teamviewer 7, which I’m trying to download and install.

No luck Linux doesn’t recognize the file, switching over to Ubuntu Software Center to get Shrew Soft VPN Access Manager to work instead. Have to get some help and support installing this program.

Hope this search doesn’t turn as cold as the weather, in Guangzhou we were enjoying daily average 25º Celsius, but now in Yiwu it has dropped to below 10º Celsius and going down to zero degrees within the next few days.