Showing posts with label white. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Fried Peanut Butter Jelly Pinchy Pies – One Chefs White Trash is Anothers White Treasure

I was doing some research on shrimp toast for an upcoming video, and I became obsessed with the thought of frying things on white bread, which led to being obsessed with the thought of frying things in white bread. These fried peanut butter and jelly pinchy pies are the result.

The technique was ridiculously easy, but naming these delicious discs was another thing altogether. They arent cakes, donuts, or fritters; so I was sort of stumped on what to call them. I decided to make up something completely new (or at least Google says so), and the pinchy pie was born.

As I mention in the video, the possibilities are endless as far as stuffings go, so I can see this really catching on. I think Im actually going to trademark the name, and maybe hit the state fair tour. These would totally fly out of any Ferris wheel-adjacent food stand.

Regarding the title: While frying stuffed Wonder Bread is about as stereotypically "white trash" as it gets, I dont like or condone the use of that term. I only used it here because I couldnt think of anything as clever. Enjoy!



View the complete recipe

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Saturday, March 8, 2014

Lady in Red and Black and White

{Dress: ManRepeller, Blazer: Zara, Jewelry: Arden B., Express, Shades: Thierry Lasry, Shoes: Sam Edelman}
photos by Monique Dolbin

Welcome back, to pictures of me wearing cute outfits! Todays installment has two exciting components.
First of all, I get to blogger-model my amazing red Man Repeller dress. Literally, this dress was designed by Leandra Medine, of Man Repeller fame. Sadly for all of you, the dress was only available for a limited time, but just so you know, the proceeds went to charity and the fabric is a divine silk. Jealous??

To be honest, I dont see whats repellent about it: its red, its got dainty straps, and it shows some leg. Im pretty sure those are all surefire ways to propel men your way. I decided it needed a little help in the form a black and white tuxedo jacket and heels with spikes on em. Now thats how you keep the boys away.
The second component to this post is to unveil the special offer from the amazing photographer who snapped these shots of me looking super glam for CupcakesOMG! readers (read: you too can look amazing in your own pictures!).
 
As I mentioned earlier this week, Monique is a fantastic photographer who recently launched her professional photography business. As part of this launch and new partnership with CupcakesOMG!, shes put together a super cool offer for folks looking for anything from great Facebook or LinkedIn pictures, gifts for family (or other strangers who want pictures of you--thats your business to be weird), headshots, or just something for you to look at when youre feeling blue and say, "damn, I look good." 

Monique will be holding 30-minute mini-sessions at a set location in the DC and NoVA area for CupcakesOMG! readers!!! (dates TBD). You can select from four options:
  • $45 for 2 images
  • $75 for 4
  • $110 for 6
  • $150 for all
Thats it! The price includes the sitting fee and the images. Availability is limited, so if youd like to reserve a spot, reach out soon via Moniques website. Of course, if youd like a longer session with multiple looks, you can always reach out to Monique for more inquiries.

Ive gotten several questions over the last few days regarding my make up, and yes, I did do it myself. And yes, I agree--it does look great. So for an even extra exciting offer, I will be available for make-up applications for another $25. 

I mean, really, who DOESNT want pictures of themselves walking and smiling and holding their designer coffee-drink in the big city???
I mean, really???
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Wednesday, February 26, 2014

BRIDGET WHITE KUMAR FEATURE IN THE LUCKNOW TRIBUNE 17TH JULY 2013

Her Most yummy mummy! 17 Jul 2013
The Lucknow Tribune Team















Bridget White-Kumar was born and brought up in a well known Anglo-Indian family in Kolar Gold Fields, a small mining town in the erstwhile Mysore State now known as Karnataka in South India.Kolar Gold Fields or K.GF as everyone knows, had a large and predominant British and Anglo-Indian population. Her life too was influenced to a great extent by British colonial culture.
In her own words Bridget tells The Lucknow Tribune that her food habits are typical Anglo-Indian.Breakfast was normally a bowl of oats porridge, toast with butter, jam and eggs. Sundays saw sausages, bacon or ham on the breakfast table. Lunch was a typical Anglo-Indian meal and consisted of steamed rice, beef curry with vegetables, pepper water or dhal curry, and a vegetable foogath or side dish. Dinner was always bread or dinner rolls with a dry meat dish. It was an unwritten rule that no one ate rice for dinner. We normally had either beef or mutton every day, fish invariably on Wednesdays and Fridays and Pork or Chicken or Fowl on Sundays.
My mum was en exceptional cook and even the most ordinary dishes cooked by her tasted delicious. She was very versatile and imaginative when it came to cooking. She would improvise and turn out the most delicious curries and side dishes with whatever ingredients were on hand. Every dish she prepared was delicious even if it was just basic rice and meat curry that was cooked every day. Mummy had a procedure for everything. The onions had to be thinly sliced and the green chillies and coriander leaves chopped finely. Even the tomatoes for the curry were scalded first and the skin removed, then chopped into bits and strained through a sieve so that only the pulp was used and the seeds and skin thrown away!
While everyday lunch was considered simple, lunch on Saturdays and Sundays was special. Saturday lunch was invariably yellow coconut rice, mince ball curry or bad word curry as the word ‘ball’ was considered rude or a slang and was served with Devil Chutney. My mind still recalls and relishes the taste of the mince ball curry and coconut rice that my mum prepared on Saturdays for us. On Saturdays we had only half-day school so we were home by 12.30 pm, ravenously hungry and assailed by the delicious aroma of coconut rice and the tasty mince ball curry even before we reached our gate.The mince for the ball curry, had to be just right, so the meat either beef or mutton was brought home fresh from the butcher shop. It was cut into pieces, washed and then minced at home and formed into even sized balls. Then it was dropped into the boiling curry, simmered till the mince balls were cooked and the gravy reached the right consistency.
The yellow coconut rice was always prepared with freshly squeezed coconut milk, a few whole spices, bay leaf and butter. This delightful rice preparation formed the perfect mild subtle base of our Saturday Special Anglo-Indian Meal.
As a child I would always try and help my mum to chop vegetables and onions, mince the meat or help her stir the delicious curries that she cooked for us. I would be the first person to help my mum churn the batter and cut the fruit for the Christmas cakes and puddings and help to roll out and form the Kul Kuls and other delicacies at Christmas time.In a way, my mum greatly influenced my passion for cooking and encouraged me to do things myself. My favourite past time was to cut out recipes from old magazines and paste them in my scrap book. My hobby was to try out the old recipes from my mum’s handwritten recipe books.
Some of the old colonial dishes with their quaint names such as the Railway Meat Curry, Meat Glassey, Devil Curry and the Dak Bungalow Roast had at special fascination for me and I was keen to keep these dishes alive.Hundred of yearsAnglo-Indian cuisine evolved over many hundred years as a result of reinventing and reinterpreting the quintessentially western cuisine by assimilating and amalgamating ingredients and cooking techniques from all over the Indian sub-continent. Thus a completely new contemporary cuisine came into existence making it truly “Anglo” and “Indian” in nature, which was neither too bland nor too spicy, but with a distinct flavour of its own. It became a direct reflection of the multi-cultural and hybrid heritage of the new colonial population.
However over a period of time, Anglo-Indian cooking became more Indian than British and more regional based. Local ingredients and flavours of a particular region were incorporated in the dishes while the basic ingredients remained the same through out the country. Coconut based curries were popular in Anglo-Indian dishes in the south while mustard oil and fresh water fish were popular ingredients in Anglo-Indian dishes of Calcutta and West Bengal.A strong Muslim or Mughalai influence seeped into Anglo-Indian dishes cooked in Lucknow and parts of North of India.It is the extremely unusual blend of tastes that makes this cuisine so unique. Many of the dishes have rhyming alliterative names like Doldol, kalkal, Ding- Ding and Posthole. The very nomenclature of the dishes is unique and original, and synonymous only to the Anglo-Indian community. It is a true reflection of both worlds where the Indian oriented curry is given as much importance as the English roasts and bakes.
Gourmets delight!
However, Im sad to say that due to the influence of various factors, colonial Anglo-Indian cuisine, which is a gourmets delight, is slowly getting extinct. In these days of fast food and instant mixes, many people do not find the time to cook even a simple meal everyday leave alone the old traditional dishes of our forefathers. Many of the old traditional colonial dishes are not prepared in Anglo-Indian homes these days as the recipes for many of them have died with the older generation who cooked with intuition and memory rather than from a written recipe.
In a world fast turning into a Global Village, with many Anglo-Indians migrating out of India and the younger generation not showing interest in traditional food, I felt it had become imperative for me to preserve for posterity those very authentic tastes and flavours and record for future generations the unique heritage of the pioneers of this cuisine.
With this in mind I have published six recipe books exclusively on Anglo-Indian cuisine.This personal collection of recipes is compiled with the intention of reviving the old tastes of the colonial era, and thereby preserving the old Anglo-Indian flavours and tastes.This is my small way of helping to preserve the culinary culture and heritage of the Anglo-Indian Community.Moreover these old traditional recipes are not found in any other typical Indian cookery book, except for those books published by me which are .
Anglo-Indian Cuisine - A Legacy of Flavours from the Past
A Collection of Anglo-Indian Roasts, Casseroles and Bakes
Vegetarian Delicacies
Anglo-Indian Delicacies
The Anglo-Indian Festive Hamper.
The Anglo-Indian Snack Box
For more information about our delicious Anglo-Indian food, and more about my Anglo-Indian Recipe Books at:
http://anglo-indianfood.
http://anglo-indiarecipes.
- See more at: http://www.thelucknowtribune.org/news.php?cat=913#sthash.e7IBBa7p.dpuf
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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

White Makhni Karahi

White Makhni Karahi


Ingredients:
  • Chicken ½ kg
  • Yogurt 1 cup
  • Butter 50 gm
  • Onion paste 1 cup
  • Oil ½ cup
  • Black pepper (crushed)1 tsp
  • Salt 1 tsp
  • All spice powder ½ tsp
  • Cumin seed (crushed) 2 tsp
  • Ginger garlic paste 2 tsp
  • Lemon juice 2 tbsp
  • Green chili paste 4 tbsp
Method:
  • First fry ½ kg chicken in ½ cup of oil and take it out once fried. Add in onion paste in the oil along with 2 tsp ginger garlic paste, 1 tsp salt, 2 tsp crushed cumin seeds, 1 tsp crushed black pepper, 1 cup yogurt and ½ tsp all spice powder. Cook it. Then add in fried chicken and ½ cup cream. Cook it on a low flame for 10 minutes the add 50 gm butter and simmer. In the end add in 2 tbsp lemon juice and serve.
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Thursday, January 23, 2014

BRIDGET WHITE KUMAR AUTHOR AND FOOD CONSULTANT

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Sunday, January 19, 2014

Dairy free vegan white frosting recipe


If you want to frost/ice a cake without using any dairy produce then look no further than Chefs fabulous white frosting recipe.

This is a cake frosting recipe that you will be making again and again for dairy free baking.

It is so very creamy and delicious that you will be licking every creamy smudge of the frosting from the plate.

Chefs vegan frosting recipe is very easy to prepare and looks fantastic spread onto any cake or baked goods.






Ingredients for vegan frosting recipe
10oz Powdered sugar
2 Tbsp Cold water (15ml spoonfuls)
1 Tbsp Vanilla essence
1 Tbsp Agave syrup (golden or corn syrup will work)
1 Tbsp Dairy free margarine


How to make a dairy free cake frosting


Sieve the powdered sugar into a mixing bowl .

Add all other ingredients.

Mix very well adding half a tablespoon at a time until it becomes a thick and creamy paste.



If the mixture is too dry add a little water, if the mixture is too wet add a little sieved powdered sugar.

Always make sure that when more water is added that very little amounts are used at a time or else the frosting will not spread well or set.



Spread Chefs tasty dairy free and vegan frosting onto a cooled cake or other baked foods.



Ready to spread the vegan frosting.



Spreading dairy free frosting onto a cake.



Look at the finished product - a beautiful vegan cake topped with a tasty creamy white dairy free vegan frosting.




Want to see a full step-by-step recipe for the cake pictured above?

Egg free vanilla cake recipe

Also try Chefs other vegan white frosting recipe



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