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Relic from home August 18, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Days of our lives, Eat to live.
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And it only cost 15 baht too...

Last night I saw this at BigC and straightaway reached for it. When I was still staying with my mum, our fridge was forever packed with cans of Pokka Green Tea as they were my brother’s fav drink. So when I saw them, it was like, hello old friend you’re here in Thailand too.

A bounty-ful of fruits! August 12, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Eat to live, Father Heart of God, Kitchen talk.
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This week, when I was running low on resources and down to my last 100 baht note, I prayed and asked God to provide for me financially.

Instead of getting money, fruits started pouring in! (They were actually gifts from Vincent’s “parishioners”)

And the Lord opened my eyes today to see and understand that He had heard my prayers and was giving me what I needed (and loved best too!).

The custard apples are especially rare this season!! I love Thai fruits!!

A date with Chocolate July 15, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Days of our lives, Eat to live, Father Heart of God, Youth cell.
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My youth from our EL cell group loves chocolate.

Each and every one of them declared it their favourite right from Day 1.

So it was only natural that when I met up with Beau and Bplaa that I introduce them to the chocolate shop in Khon Kaen. It’s a little shop that sells chocolates with several fillings, compound chocolate of varying strengths and chocolate fountains!

However, I found it slightly disrupting when the angmoh owner tried to make conversation with my girls on two occasions. This proved distracting when I was still trying to get to know our girls.

Our conversation centred around when I was gonna have a baby, the differences in Thai/ other Asian cultures when it comes to acknowledging your seniors and Paeng (another choc-loving cell member). I had also brought along a recipe book on chocolate cakes, which we browsed and looked over casually.

Left: Bplaa, next to the all-smiles Beau

Star #3 of our cell- Bplaa:

Bplaa is fourteen years old and studies in a Catholic school for the privileged. Unfortunately for her, her schooling has also bred an attitude of apathy and unbelief.

Bplaa comes from a well-to-do family and is its 3rd generation of Christians. Her family members are go-getters and believe firmly in improving one’s lot in life. Sadly this means that Bplaa’s values probably have little to do with being a true worshipper.

When I first arrived in Khon Kaen, I hardly saw Bplaa even though her house is literally next to the church. Turned out that Bplaa was averse to going to church and had almost no friends. Through the investment of Dten (previously a church intern), Bplaa was regularly hustled out of bed and “pushed” to come to church on Sundays and Friday prayer meetings.

Thank God too, that through the new cell group, we have seen Bplaa open up stacks and her attendance a lot less erratic. Her mother confided in me once that she was concerned about her daughter’s introversion and would like to see her more involved with church life (not sure of the extent though!).

My thanksgiving for Bplaa is that I have seen her gradually change in this short 1 year. Before she never spoke a word but only stared blankly. Now I hear her laugh, her teasing and I see her eyes sparkling merrily. Bplaa is an intelligent child; she is able to grasp truth and sincerity when presented at her level. It is our hope that this precious child will continue to know the Lord and be able to reach her true potential in Christ.

Prayer points for Bplaa:

  1. Attendance in cell- Currently Bplaa has tuition on Saturday afternoons that clash with our cell meetings. Please pray for a quick solution for this clash in timing and that Bplaa’s time would be made available for cell.
  2. For godly influences in her daily life
  3. For me that I can impart God’s love to her in all ways possible
  4. To have a firsthand revelation of God and for a closer walk with the Lord

The makings of a failed coffee barista June 29, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Culture Vulture, Eat to live, Girlfriends, Kitchen talk.
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This morning, I was very conscious of my coffee and how I made it- right from the moment I turned on the espresso machine.

This is because when I was in SG, my friend Choops bought me a coffee appreciation class as a birthday present. For someone who dreams of opening a cafe in the near future, this gift was a real God-send! Even now the thought of it continues to bring smiles to me.

From the class, I was able to gleam the finer details of what goes into a good coffee, the different ways of coffee brewing. As this was only an appreciation class, we did not get to go into the actual  barista (someone who makes coffee) training.

So today it was with full of my trainer’s rebukes and reprimands that I went about making my espresso. I was now more conscious of the things I was doing WRONG.

Such as:

1) Using a machine whose manufacturers boast of having 15 bars. This is the beginning of the most basic machines, which I reckoned would have earned me a sneer from the trainers. They most probably would ask, “Buono what?”

2) However I did warm the machine beforehand. I gave it a headstart of 1 hour- during which I had time with my Bible and God. So that’s 1 point to me for doing the warm-ups.

This next picture would however set me back a few points.

3) Firstly, I did not use coffee beans at their prime (2-10 days after roasting), nor freshly ground beans (coffee ground ahead of time loses its flavor almost immediately). Instead I used coffee powder from off the shelves bought sometime last year- its packaging already dusty and it was on special too-  which is way below the halfway mark of my coffee jar, indicating it’s been lying in the jar for sometime.

4) However the powder was made of beans meant for espresso making and they came from a local coffee manufacturer. This I am proud of-no matter what the trainers would say- because I am supporting Thai coffee with every bag of supermarket coffee powder I buy!!

5) Plus I no longer store my coffee in the fridge- apparently this is bad for the coffee- so this would help salvage some points.

6) Oops I didn’t measure out the coffee- it’s supposed to be 7-8 grams. All I know is that my stomach can’t take too much coffee, so I always deliberately under-pack my basket. I should probably switch to decaffeinated but then that would almost definitely bring on another barrage from supposed-coffee connoisseurs. Oh what a miserable coffee nerd-wannabe I am!

7) Again I am breaking another rule here. I should be tamping the coffee using a force of 15kg. In other places I’ve read that I should press down on the tamp in a direction somewhere in the southwest (?!).

In my own defense, my working arm for tamping was still aggravated (I’ve been suffering from a sore right arm/ elbow for some days). And I haven’t got a digital scale that can measure the force of my tamping. So there!

8) And here- ahah, finally- I am using a porcelain cup as prescribed for cappuccinos and Americanos. Oh but wait, I only drink lattes, which are supposed to be delivered in glass cups. There goes another point…

9) On the topic of water, this is slightly tricky. The book says I should use clean (filtered), cold and fresh water. In this country where water is bought or run from the tap using a mightily expensive filter, my household has chosen to buy our water in large drums costing us 20 baht each drum.

So while I wouldn’t exactly call it fresh, at least it’s not fresh off the tap. It could be worse- I could be using mineral water, which is an apparent no-no according to other sources!

10. Another point taken off: this is for not monitering  the extraction time of 25-30 secs. How I do it is by looking at the color of the espresso- the best part is the crema which is golden brown. When the liquid turns white, as above, it means the good stuff has stopped running.

11) Now I’m not sure how much really is 30-45ml in volume. I should really be using a tiny measuring glass for that.


12) So I’ve steamed the milk and made my latte. According to my formula, it’s one shot of espresso and the rest topped up with steamed milk. BUT according to my trainers (who learnt it from some bigshots from the original source themselves somewhere in the capital of coffee in Italy), it’s gotta be 1 shot combined with steamed milk and 0.5cm foamed milk.

And as you can see, my latte art is so not there yet so I won’t be grading myself on it

Fianl verdict? Was my homemade latte as yummy as a cup of local kopitiam kopi-si?

When I had my first sip, it tasted nutty. And almost bland, as if too watery.

Then I remembered I just had a peanut butter sandwish before the coffee-which explains the nutty flavor. As for the blandness… well, that might be because I had added insufficient coffee in the basket (I have a weak stomach remember?).

So would I have passed the test?

If I was a purist, I shudder to think the points I would have awarded to myself.

Then again I’m just a coffee nerd wannabe. Every step taken is a step gained forward. Keep brewing girl! That cuppa is going to come through one of these days!

Ways to beat the summer heat April 6, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Culture shock, Days of our lives, Eat to live, From the heart of Thailand.
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The weather has become unbearable in the last week. It’s been reaching highs of 38 deg celcius. Meaning that my walls are roasting,  the house becomes a furnace, my sweat drips off me constantly when I cook/ clean and my bed literally scalds (Vince jumped up from it after attempting to lie down).

Worse, I’ve started breaking out and my mouth has been spotting ulcers for quite a while.

Ahhhh, this is far worse than my 1st Cambodian visit- perspiration starts running after 8am! As again, this is a sure sign of Songkran (Thai new year) which falls on next Tue-Thur!

As a form of catharticism, I’ve devised a list to keep myself cool & level-headed:

  1. Wake up early to finish chores before 8am
  2. Have the fan on full-blast
  3. Escape to aircon coffee shops/ malls for relief
  4. Hoard lots of ice-cream in freezer
  5. Turn off all heat-producing electronics (lights)
  6. Adapt to local wear (meaning light, Ah-Mah looking cotton tank tops)
  7. Adhere to TCM beliefs and stay away from heaty foods such as mangoes from my garden, fried/baked foods, iced water
  8. Douse myself with cooling foods like yoghurt, coke with salt, kimchi, Chrysanthemum tea, tangerine etc
  9. Shower at least 3 times a day
  10. Sit on the floor as much as possible

May God have mercy on us here in Khon Kaen!! Send us rain and wind aplenty during the hot season!!

Food that could talk to you March 9, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Days of our lives, Eat to live.
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My 1st latte art of a smiley face

My 15 baht pork bun from 7-Eleven

Double Choc Chip muffins January 28, 2010

Posted by judegrrl in Culture shock, Eat to live, Kitchen talk.
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Yesterday I made a bunch of double choc chip muffins for my students. I know I shouldn’t do this but I like to try out new recipes on different people. This means that I never know what it’s going to taste like or how my recipients would take to it.

So I made the choc chip muffins. Unlike previous recipes I had tried before, this one didn’t require butter or the use of a mixer. In the end the muffins came out rather heavy and dry. I felt like I was going to have a sore throat just after having one! The mixture must have lacked air and all the choc chips had sunk to the bottom of the muffins.

But I couldn’t bear to dump the whole lot into the trash. So I prayed over them (both during and after the making) and then deposited the whole lot into a Ziploc bag. Now to find some suckers for my muffins!

First up was my teacher Auy who gamely ate the first one and another after that. Hmmmm, so it’s not too bad after all. Auy told me to have more confidence in myself, that the students would take anything free. However I couldn’t see it her way; as the teacher I see it as my responsibility to educate the students, to expose them to things beyond their culture and nation. And when it comes to letting them experiment with new “foods”, it had better be good or I would end up alienating them forever to all things non-Thai!

Strangely enough, the students gobbled them up. They said it was good (maybe they were being polite), that it wasn’t too sweet. Well the prayer must have worked wonders. Once again I am gobsmacked by this whole contradiction of the Thai/ non-Thai taste palate. What’s tasty to me is NOT yummy to them, and vice versa.

Anyway you can feel free to TRY out this recipe for yourself. Then test it on the people you don’t like so much (haha).

Recipe for Double Choc Chip Muffins:

2 eggs
1/2 cup oil (125ml)
1 cup milk (240ml)
1 tsp. vanilla
1 3/4 cups plain flour (240g)
1/2 cup sugar (85g)
1/4 cup cocoa (35g)
1 Tbsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips (85g)
Extra chocolate chips to sprinkle on top (if desired)

Preheat oven to 200 C and prepare muffin pan by greasing or fill with paper liners. A nonstick pan requires no greasing, although I like to just grease the bottoms. In large bowl mix well the eggs, oil, milk and vanilla. In smaller bowl mix well the flour, sugar, cocoa, baking powder, salt and chocolate chips. Combine wet and dry mixtures and fold together gently until just mixed. Spoon into prepared pan and sprinkle choc chips of top of each. Bake at 200C for 20 minutes. Remove from pan and cool on rack.
Nice sprinkled with extra chocolate chips on top of each muffin before baking.

My last Baking Adventure November 20, 2009

Posted by judegrrl in Eat to live.
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Last week I made my first banana bread ever. Can’t remember what inspired it but whatever it was, the bread turned out pretty well. Except that I had no one to share it with.

Recipe for banana bread

  • 1 cup (150g) plain flour
  • 1/2 cup (75g) self-raising flour
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 125g butter, melted, cooled
  • 2 eggs, whisked
  • 3 ripe bananas, mashed

Method

  1. Preheat oven to 180°C. Grease and line the base and side of an 11 x 21cm x 6cm deep (base) loaf pan.
  2. Combine flours, sugar and cinnamon in a large bowl. Whisk butter and eggs together. Stir in banana. Spoon into prepared pan. Smooth the surface.
  3. Bake for 45-50 mins or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Set aside in the pan for 10 mins before turning out onto a wire rack. Serve warm spread with butter.

Fighting my 1st Bout of Cold in Khon Kaen November 19, 2009

Posted by judegrrl in Days of our lives, Eat to live, Health is Wealth.
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Home-made lemon tea to fight off the blues

Somewhere between meeting my sick Thai teacher & having a short workout in the gym, I must have caught the cold bug. Upon reaching home, I was sneezing incessantly. This couldn’t be more untimely!

We were to have our 1st English class in the KKU on Thursday and were planning on a full frontal assault i.e. by all means, preach the gospel! Anyway this explains the hot lemon tea I was furiously “medicating” myself with…

Checking out a new cafe… November 5, 2009

Posted by judegrrl in Culture Vulture, Eat to live, Finding my way around, Geography.
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coffeeshop

The coffeeshop that beckons one in

coffeshop

The Little Shop of Bric-a-brac

coffeeshop

Close up of wall, shelf barang

coffeeshop

More bric-a-brac on the other side of the wall

coffeeshop

And the Husband turns to me and asks...

Note: This cute little shop is a short distance behind Fairy Plaza. Bus 17 also passes this cafe… Ask me if you want to go!

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