1st Blogoversary & A dinner party
May 14, 2009 at 22:10 , by nix

Dessert First! Blueberry-Lemon Tartelette
Somewhere in the cesspits of my exhausted cerebrum there lies a reminder that did not sound its alarm when it was supposed to. I had forgotten to “celebrate” Delisioucity’s first year anniversary! I knew the first time I published on blogspot was a year ago in May, but somehow I assumed it was somewhere mid-month… when it’s actually early May! Nevermind that, yes. Besides, when I moved to my own dot com, I vouched to celebrate that migration instead
Nonetheless, who says you need to have a reason just to whip up some dessert? (And a whole dinner party for four!) BUT, the food needs to be eaten of course,.. so I thought it would be apt to call a couple of friends for a small din-din and a celebratory post.

We don’t often have people come around the house, other than my nephews and nieces who occassioanally come by to play the Wii and finish my baking surpluses. Dinners with family and friends, I can count. I am therefore making it a point from now on to have more dinner parties (ok, eating fest?) when I can manage it. Reason? Because hosting can be so much fun. And because it makes my day to see satisfied faces and hear the sounds of “mmmmm~ it feels yummy in my tummy!” In fact, I have a new-found source of satisfaction: the heavy, drooping eyelids of a friend, ready to roll into bed, two minutes after finishing his main course. Pure joy that was. But let me start with the dessert first (as usual)
Blueberry and Lemon Tartelettes
(adapted from Desserts, Murdoch Books Test Kitchen)375g ready-made sweet shortcrust pastry (I made my own pate sucree – mail me if you need the recipe and method)
125g caster sugar
3 eggs
3 Tbspns buttermilk
1 Tbspn lemon juice
2 tspns grated lemon zest
2.5 Tbspns custard powder
250g blueberries
Icing sugar for dustingRoll out pastry, and press into tartelette moulds. Chill in the fridge for 20 minutes, then bake blind. Remember that if you are making your own pastry, do not overhandle or knead (just roll it out); and when baking blind, ensure that you put in a layer of parchment on the pastry, held down with rice or beans. Baking blind should take about 10 minutes at 200c. Remove parchment, and reduce heat to 180C and proceed to bake for another 5 minutes just to dry out the bottom of the pastry case. I somehow did not manage to do this still, so perhaps to start with 200C may be a bit too much. As a result the custard filling seeped through the casing and you can see the dried mixture at the bottom in the picture above! Remove the cases from the oven, and make the filling.
Filling: beat eggs and sugar till fluffy and pale. Addbuttermilk, juice, zest and custard powder. Fill in just enough into the pastry cases and bake at 165C for 15 minutes or until the pastry is golden and the filling is set. Cool on a wire rack and top with blueberries. Dust the icing sugar when completely cool so you don’t get sugar melting into the tartelette, and just to ensure you get a nice snowy effect
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This is a very simple recipe that requires little planning, except if you are making your own pastry crust. The filling is made with custard powder. Since I am not a big fan of custards, the leftover tartelettes are testament to how some desserts can indeed be an acquired tase (gasp, i know). Next time, remind me to use a frangipane recipe instead.. personally this was uninteresting to my palate, but our guests enjoyed them, and that was all that mattered
Next, I’ll run you my own recipes for a chic appetizer, soup, and main course. Brace yourself for a long post and some food porn.

No, the leeks weren’t the appetizers. The pastry was. Like many things pastry, and I’ve said this before, they’re extremely easy to transform into wonderful pieces of artsy and chic food. This is provided that you make the pastry carefully (again, with cold fingers & plenty of ‘resting’) OR get them already made. The readily available puff pastries are pretty good, so don’t worry about making your own pate feuilletee, inversee or otherwise for this one. Lest you desire to stress yourself out

Mozarrella, Tomato and Capsicum with Poppy Seed Entree
(by Nikki. A @ delisioucity)2 sheets puff pastry, cut into small squares
1 egg, beaten
120g mozarella cheese
1 tomato
1/2 yellow capsicum
Poppy seeds
Black pepperLightly brush one layer of pastry with egg, and place another layer on it. Brush the top layer again, and dump a tablespoon of shreaded mozarella on it. Cut the tomato and capsicum julienne, and place on top of the cheese. Sprinkle poppy seeds on top, and pepper to taste. Bake in oven for 10 to 15 minutes at 175C, or until the pastry puffs up adequately and turns golden. Serve immediately as an entree, on a fancy schmancy platter
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Next, Creamy Pumpkin-Carrot Soup with Cumin and Cinnamon.

Now when I was calling H to invite him to the dinner, I told him what I was serving and immediately he said ‘MMmmmm! pumpkin soup!” I suppose the beauty of well-made pumpkin soup lies in the seasoning and the smoothness of the texture. I was floored when I tried Senor Pablo’s version at his abode, which is simple and healthy. This is my take on the soup that everyone loves, with the much added calories mind you
Creamy Pumpkin-Carrot Soup wih Cumin and Cinnamon
(By Nikki A. @ delisioucity)Half a medium pumpkin, cubed
2 cups water
1 carrot, cubed
1.5 cup chicken stock (use the real thing by boiling chicken with onions, garlic, ginger, cinnamon stick, cloves, cardamom, salt and pepper)
2 Tbspn cumin powder
1 Tbspn cinnamon powder
3 Tbspn Olive oil
1 cup cream
1/2 Tbspn black pepper
Salt to taste

In a medium saucepan, boil the pumpkin and carrot together in water until soft. Drain away. Heat olive oil and add cumin and cinnamon powder. Gently stir till fragrant. Add chicken stock, pumpkin and carrot. Let simmer. Add cream and seasoning and let sit on the stove on low heat until the carrots are pulpy. Cool, and use an immersion blender to smoothen the texture of the soup. Serve with croutons.
Croutons
(By Nikki A. @ delisioucity)Day-old bread of your choice (I used country grain)
3 Tbspn clarified butterCut the bread into small squares or diamonds. Heat a pan with the clarified butter and toast the bread. Make sure all of the bread is coated by gently stirring and tossing them about in the pan.

I have to admit, the soup definitely stole the night as everyone agreed that it was really good. This is one recipe I am soooo going to overuse. Husby, being the perfect gourmand, thought the soup + croutons tasted like murtabak. Geez. On the other hand, H thought it tasted authentically Moroccan, and both he and M were very happy to have second and third helpings and ate this with their main course. I need to research on this: is pumpkin soup Moroccan in origin?? Or was it the cumin. Hmm, scratching head.
Let’s finally move on to the main course! This was a Roasted Chicken with Cumin, Maple Golden Syrup and Parsley.

This dish is cooked twice. I boiled the chicken first (with the spices listed in the soup recipe before), and got a pretty good stock out of it. Then, marinate for two hours with the forthcoming concoction, and roast for an hour at 180C. The marinate nicely resonates the taste of the pumpkin soup.
Roasted Chicken Marinate
(By Nikki A. @ delisioucity)For two chickens.
1 cup olive oil
Juice from half a lemon
2 Tbspns lemon zest
A bunch of fresh parsley, chopped
2 Tbspn cumin powder
1 Tbspn cinnamon posder
3 Tbspn Lyle’s Golden Syrup, maple flavour (or simply maple syrup or replace with honey)Mix everything in and brush on the chicken. Leave for two hours in the fridge to marinate.

Make sure you include the spices from the boiling process into the roast. I also left the skin on this time so that it appears golden and he meat to cook nicely without drying too much.

Whew! What a way to “celebrate”. I wasn’t kidding when both my husby and our friend H started to look like a pair of sleepy snakes by the end of the meal. Finally, our two friends left with a favour: remember the sables that I made in the previous post? So plenty of people actually asked what the pegs were for. And no, I did not use them for kneading the dough :p Here they are, et simple too! Instead of ribbons, use tiny decorative pegs to secure your favour bags for a chic twist. I wouldv’e used a glassine paper bag but I just could not find one here other than make them myself. Ah well, perhaps next time! In the next years to come, hopefully I’ll develop more creative things to share

Category Event, dessert, patisserie, savoury / Tags: /
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by Eleanor
On May 15, 2009 at 09:46
Niikkiiiii – I spot the plate!! The dinner looks magnificent…. Congrats on the first anniversary of Delisioucity!!! May there be many more years and countless kitchen experiments to come. E…
by Amal
On May 15, 2009 at 15:24
Miss Nikki~ Hi~~ I am so loving your designs and creations..Oh oh and congratulations for winning during the foodie blog challenge.
by Pol
On May 15, 2009 at 15:40
Confirmed!!!! Buat magazine eh… I vote! just that i collect Delicious Magazine UK version. brunei version? again your photo is brilliant! can i hire you? haha
by Senor Pablo
On May 15, 2009 at 16:34
Congratulations on your blog anniversary. Many more years to come. Such a divine menu I can vouch.. Invitation hopefully knocking on my door!!!
One thing we have in common is to value add what others are doing in terms of making our own version of recipes. Salute you for that!
Like Pol said.. ..magazine material.. I can’t wait to try all of them. huhuhuhuu
by Julia @ Mélanger
On May 15, 2009 at 21:17
Ohhhh, I am loving those tarts. Very nice. About to make some blueberry ones myself. Too funny….
by nikkita
On May 16, 2009 at 02:51
1) Hi Eleanor! Yaaa.. The plate, I so sayang to use! Thank you very much for your inspirational cooking. I think Brunei is getting more and more roasted meal action from the lot of us hehe.
By the way, I’m happy to report that I have tried your roasted garlic and anchovies recipe and OMG it was good. Two things though: It was very very salty (cos I was over-zealous and added two cans of anchovies to 5 bulbs of garlic); and secondly, our whole house smelled like garlic and both husband and I were in tears and had puffy, dry and irritated eyes the whole night. LOL. (can you tell this was my first time roasting garlic?!) Oh and I went overboard eating this like a snack too.. sigh. Gave me plenty of gas, that one did. *hanging head in shame*
2) Hi Amal
Cheers for that. Do you bake? Maybe we can have a baking club hehe. I wonder which Amal you are aaaa?
3) Chef Pol: You are too kind with your compliments
I’m truly humbled, especially cos you guys know so much more and looking at the aged beef you were making, you’s so much more inspired and rajin than I am!! More educational posts like that please!
What do you want to hire me as? Hehe. Your food photos are getting porn-ish, by the way. In a very very good way.
Magazine? Oh my. That WOULD be the next step to publishing now, wouldn’t it? Let’s start with something small dulu, yes? I have to admit I have never read Delicious Magazine.. I’m so deprived. boohoo.
4) Thank you Pablo, again, your kind words humble me. The recipes are simple but flavourful: something I learn from the French. I hope we can have the time to share a meal one day
I’m so segan actually.. hehe. And thank you for reintroducing to me the beauty of the pumpkin soup! I’ll have you know that i voted for that during the showdown, and that I had two bowls of your soup
5) Julia: Congratulations again on your coming wedding
You know, maybe we share a lot in common – an infinite obsession with macarons (divas they may be); pastries.. photographing food..
I really adore your photos by the way! I just haven’t found the right place to capture the ‘light’ at my place. It doesnt help that I sort of live in a greenhouse :p
by Pol
On May 16, 2009 at 12:48
ok like this, we all keep our day job, . I just need an editor, photographer, publisher. how to start small?
Pablo: any idea hehe.
by Lisa
On May 16, 2009 at 13:58
nikki,
Congrats on your blogiversary! Mine is coming up soon too
That said, what an amazing display of food and photos. You are one talented lady!
by nikkita
On May 18, 2009 at 12:22
Chef Pol: yes that sounds like it requires plenty of commitment. I think in no time people will start taking pictures of food instead of weddings and you’ll have your creative team up and running
Hi Lisa!! Thank you
Congrats on your coming one too!
by Amal
On May 20, 2009 at 20:33
the one who helped with Dr Mona’s baby last year i think..and yes..i bake.heeee
by nikkita
On May 22, 2009 at 23:00
Amaaall!! hehe
by Qilah with QILL.
On May 27, 2009 at 18:10
usu! nyaman jua the foods..my saliva just cant stop dropping :p hehe happy 1st ani for your blog too
by Wilv
On May 29, 2009 at 11:23
Heya Nikki !!! Happy 1st blog anniversary! Can’t believe it has been a year… Btw, remember the first time when you told me about your blog…(it took place in your office)…and I was like “Whaaaatttt!!!…You are blogging??” Excuse my cynical remarks but hey, at that time I just couldn’t believe that you got this talent to set up a blog space…hahaha…so jahat of me…hahaha. To tell the truth, when I saw your blog, I was so very impressed with it… so nice. And now, it has become like ‘Super-nice’..bloody-awesome babe (nya org putih!..=) Oh, yes…thanks for inviting me to your 1st blogoversary dinner..the food was superb…and H did struggle wif his eyes that night (He has to bring his Thai friend touring Bandar again that night…so kesian..) So, when is the next dinner? Oh yeah..d bbq thingy…mmm..I’ll talk to you again bout it soon..
by nikkita
On May 29, 2009 at 12:35
Qills my dear! hehe at last!:p sorry u were drooling
by nikkita
On May 29, 2009 at 21:30
Hiya W, LOL awuu mun ku ingat muanya si H atu, gali ati ku. tapi iski jua kan melayan kawannya ahir2 atu LOL. Anyways thanks mate for the kind words
I know I owe you a banana crumble.
*hopping off to supasave for some bananas*
by Zana
On May 30, 2009 at 23:38
Nikkiiii your creations are gorgeous! Can I be one of your dinner party guests? Allows more time for catching up!
by Saadiah
On June 1, 2009 at 14:04
Hi,
I would love to know how u make shortcrust pastry . Thks. I just came by your blog thru ‘foodie challenge and i am amazed by your creativity. Hopefully to try some of your creations..cheers
by nikkita
On June 2, 2009 at 00:09
Hi Zana! Good to hear from you ^_^ Of course my dearest, InsyaAllah.
Hello Saadiah, thank you very much. I’ll post up the shortcrust pastry method soon ^_^ After you try some of the things featured here, do tell me how it went
Would love to hear from you
by Jude
On June 10, 2009 at 11:21
Congratulations on your bloggiversary. I most certainly do like such recipes that require little planning
by nikkita
On June 11, 2009 at 13:11
Thanks Jude, your recipes sure do inspire me a lot!