Felt Like Cake
October 28, 2009 at 4:46 pm | In Baking, Family, Kitchen | 1 CommentI’ve been craving for cakes for some time, so when I expressed the desire to make one, the kids took to it like kids to candies. No occasion, just felt like cake. I had intended to decorate a layered cake myself, but after the cake was done cooling, the girls asked if they could decorate a cake too. Feeling too lazy to bake more cakes, I just told them to decorate the cakes I baked.
So there it was, two cake layers, one for each girl. A blank canvas, ready to be splotched with frosting colored as they wished.
And these were what they came up with, mashaallah!
S’s looked like a round table gently draped with a tablecloth. I love how she made her design. She claimed that she saw that kind of design in some books.
N, focused her decorating more on a thoughtful level. To be honest, I was pleasantly surprised when I saw her finished cake. Each of the flowers was for each of us, and she had practically dedicated the cake as a thank you to hubby and me. Mashaallah. I suppose that is her strength; thoughtfulness. Subhanallah, may I never forget that. Ameen.
Blue Ribbons for All!
October 2, 2009 at 8:38 pm | In 4-H, Baking, Community, Family, Homeschooling, Kitchen, New Mexico, Projects, Sewing, State Fair | 4 CommentsOur schooling got put on hold (well, depends on what you define schooling as though) the past few days because we were busy whipping up baked goods for the state fair. As we had decided weeks ago, the kids were to do their practice baking individually before Eid, and then the actual baking for the fair days before the fair. Though S decided to make Dixie Pixies for the fair instead, because making the Meringue Bubbles turned out to be more work than she had bargained for.
On Monday, we went to the fairgrounds and submitted the kids’ 4-H projects for the non-livestock exhibits. I had hubby drive us there because I wasn’t familiar with the road and it involved going on the interstate (and I hate highways) so that come Wednesday, I could drive by myself. We saw a lot of great youth entries, mashaallah!
That same Monday, S made her Dixie Pixie dough and refrigerated it, while N made her butterscotch brownies. We had gone out that Monday morning though, so there was only like a few hours for both girls to bake their stuff. When I came down from my much needed nap, N was pouring her brownie batter into the pan lined with waxed paper hanging over the sides. I told her to scrape all the batter off and replace the waxed paper with aluminum foil, which H claimed to be ‘finished’. This boy searches with his mouth rather than his eyes. But by the time she was done doing that, there was no time left for her to bake it in the oven before we had to go to the fairgrounds to submit the 4H project items, so I told her to refrigerate it and bake it when we come home. That she did, and alhamdulillah that turned out ok. Otherwise, she’d have to bake it again the next day.
Tuesday, H started making his cookies after Fajr, and so did I, with my Pandan Chiffon and Cordon Rose Banana Cake. S also baked her Dixie Pixies. I was completely exhausted that day, as I not only baked one of each type of cake, but two; one for us and one for the fair. At first i decided not to bake the second banana cake becuase I was too tired, but if I didn’t I’d have to bake it the next day, right after Fajr. I thought of the hassle that would produce, as we had planned to leave for the fair around 8:30 a.m. So I ended up baking both banana cakes that day. Alhamdulillah I did.
We had spent Monday morning shopping around for a container for my Chiffon. That brought us to a cake store I came upon on google; Create a Cake. It offers cake decorating classes too. I emailed some moms in town about this in case they are interested for their girls, and a fellow homeschooling family expressed interest. Sv. called the store and told me that the class is a 4 week series, for $35 but the decorating tools are $25 and the book is $5. That would mean about $60 per child. Just yesterday, I called Hobby Lobby and found out that their cake decorating classes, by Wilton are cheaper, so I signed the girls up along with their friend My. As for S, she also attended the Off the Wall two part quilting session, pretty last minute yesterday, along with her friend My.
I was fasting that Monday and I just decided to use a foil pizza pan and wrap the chiffon in plastic wrap instead of driving around town to continue looking for cake containers that are tall enough to accomodate a Chiffon. So on Tuesday, that’s what I did, and oh boy, how ugly it looked. But since the fair will not return the containers we put our baked goods in, it makes good sense (at least to me) to send in such an economical solution.
While I was folding the egg whites into my egg yolk batter for the Chiffon, S stood by and asked questions. So I showed her the folding technique that is meant to minimize air loss in the batter, for Chiffons depend on the air whipped into the egg whites to rise, and if you mess that up, you will not get a Chiffon. It is also important to have the egg whites pure from any yolks, for if there are, it won’t beat up to stiff or soft peaks. Chemistry lesson right there. I wish some chemistry experiments in high school involved baking. That would have been scrumptious!
By evening, we were all done. Then N had to exercise some clumsiness. While trying to move the containers in which they had nicely arranged their cookies, she managed, yes, she managed to drop both hers and H’s. Result: H’s Pecan Shortbread Melts broke in unsalvageable crumbs! H at the time was at soccer practice. I was not too happy either, because I knew how hard H had worked on that, which included chopping the pecans very finely. Let’s just say I was very very very frustrated at N’s lack of care (not just in this, but almost any other time) in doing things (anything except her drawing).
When H came home, of course he wasn’t very happy either. But he got over it pretty quickly and decided to put some pieces that are broken (not whole, but missing some parts) to replace the completely destructed ones. He didn’t want to make another batch. To be honest, I wouldn’t have wanted to either. So, for sure, we though he was not going to win a blue or any ribbon for that one. What a shame…Qadr Allah.
Wednesday arrived, and we followed our planned schedule. We also brought along My, S’ homeschool friend. We had partly packed our backpack Tuesday night, so Wednesday morning was not that hectic alhamdulillah. The drive to the fair was alhamdulillah fine and dandy, despite my abhorrence for highways.
“Make sure you read your duas, kids!” was my reminder everytime we go out, but that day, it was especially emphasized.
Hubby had also recently bought S a cellphone, which is only to be used for calling him in cases of emergencies or urgent needs. So I felt a little better having that with us, because I don’t have one, and don’t really wish to have one.
H, N and I walked to the Special Events Building to submit our baked goods, and we left S, My and sleeping Baby Z in the van, parked on the Carnival grounds. It was not till later that I realized I had parked in the wrong area! I thought I was following the man’s instructions, and with puzzlement wondered why the heaven he’d tell me to park on the carnival grounds. Apparently, I was supposed to drive further up front and then turn right to a parking lot for the Special Events building. So H, N, and I had to walk quite some ways with baked goods in our arms to the Special Events building.
Subhanallah, there were a lot of entries! A table was loaded with decorated cakes by youth, by high schoolers actually, and they were just amazing! Mashaallah!
As I signed the kids’ baked goods up, the lady in charge asked,
“Your husband works for the extension?”
“Yes,” I said as I continued to fill in the forms. She probably recognized it from the kids’ last names.
“I’m G. I work with him, he’s our extension person.”
And it turned out that most of the people in charge of the Baked Goods section are the extension people working with hubby.
We spent the morning browsing the fairgrounds. Our first stop was the Super Scientific Circus show. I love it because tricks were performed but he also explained the scientific reasons behind it. He also showed us how to make a boomerang from a pizza box.
Our next stop was the petting zoo. Baby Z was kissed repeatedly by a very friendly Llama. He was not too happy about it.
Our plan was to roam the fairgrounds until the judges were finished judging the baked goods, at 1 pm. Since I had TQ class at 3:30 pm that afternoon, I had to leave the latest by 2 pm anyway. We ate our snacks, whom S had prepared the night before; amsll ziploc bags of banana cake and Chiffon, Baby Z’s pancakes and bananas, and of course our water canteens.
We went to the Veteran’s Building, where they had the exhibits. Lo and behold, subhanallah, S and N’s picture frame were awarded ribbons!
S got a blue ribbon and N got a red ribbon(second place). H didn’t get anything.
I felt pretty bad about it because I know how hard he worked on that cloth banner.
We went to the 4H building too and saw some great items done under 4H projects by the 4Hers. More ideas for the kids. I love those exhibits as they also gave me and the kids ideas of what to enter in the next year’s state fair, as well as what to make for their science and history projects. In fact, I took N and walked with her along the exhibits, showing her some displays or projects to give her some ideas for her Science and History projects, which she was having some trouble with.
That day, I also learned a lot about wool spinning and weaving. RIght outside the 4H building was a booth and sheep pen. Two ladies were spinning yarn, and they beckoned us to come so we did. I ended up learning a whole lot about the whole process of weaving, spinning.
- First, the sheep is sheared
- Then she’d hand pick the dirt, grass from the freshly sheared wool
- She would wash them on a special screen submerged in a big tub of water, but has to be careful not to aggravate them too much or they will turn into felt
- Then she’d dry them on that screen
- It’s then carded so the fibers all run in the same direction (we stopped by a booth of the Farm and Heritage Museum and the kids actually tried carding some wool with the combs. It was NOT easy!)
- The dry wool would then be spun into yarn on the spinning wheel. It would take her about 1-2 hours to fill the bobbin
- The yarn can then be woven into a shawl
She told me about a competition called Sheep to Shawl where they would work as a team. The sheep would be sheared and they would skip the washing and drying stages and jump straight to the spinning stage and then weaving. According to these ladies, it takes 5 people to hand pick the dirt from the freshly sheared wool, and 5 spinners to keep up with one weaver. I can only imagine how the competition goes. It must be nerve wrecking but amazing to watch! Maybe something like Iron Chef.
These ladies also told us about wool’s itch factor. it depends on the wool itself, but sometimes, if the wool was processed commercially, where acid is used to clean and dissolve the dirt as opposed to the dirt being handpicked, the resulting sweater then becomes itchy. That was a precious information that was very interesting to me. I love that visit to that booth!
We stopped by some NMSU’s Science exhibit buildings too where the kids got themselves some astronomy posters and brochures. Then we went back to the exhibit building to wait for the baked goods to be done judged and put on display. When 1 pm arrived and no one from the Special Events building seem to be entering the Veteran’s building, I sent H to peek inside the Special Events building to see if they were done judging. He came back and told me there were only a few people there and they seemed to be done judging. I couldn’t afford to wait any longer since we had to leave soon, so I went with H to the building. We appraoched the adult baked goods table first, and to my surprise, I saw a blue sticker on my Chiffon.
I then looked for my banana cake and subhanallah, another blue sticker!
As we approached the youth baked goods area, a lady hailed me,
“Hello!”
It was another of hubby’s colleague whom I had met and been introeduced to when we first moved here. I had actually talked to her over the phone before we moved. Hubs had referred me to her to ask questons about housing in this town. She was very helpful mashaallah. She apparently has been to Jordan a lot of times and is quite familiar with Muslims and Islam. May Allah guide her. Ameen.
Well, it turned out that she and another of hubby’s colleague, whom H said we had run across in Albertson’s a few days ago (and said to hub that she thought he has 6 children – me included as one of his kids. Don’t know whether to take that as a compliment or insult, but I think I’ll take it as the former) were just done judging the baked goods for the youth. So we looked for the kids’ baked goods. Again, subhanallah, it seemed to be blue ribbon days for all of us! Alhamdulillah! H’s broken Pecan Shortbread Melts got a blue sticker!
N’s brownies got a blue (well, they had put yellow because they had run outof blue stickers) sticker!
And so did S’ Dixie Pixies!
H’s Double Chunk Choc Chip cookies got a red sticker! It was a multiple win!
And to think the kids had been reluctant to enter any baked goods in the fair when I suggested it. I had to coax them.
“Just enter. You guys bake a lot anyway. Why don’t you just enter. You never know, you might win.”
Alhamdulillah they did!
And to also think that I was quite iffy about entering anything either! Alhamdulillah I did end up making the Chiffon and Banana Cake. It was a Blur Ribbon day.
The only downside to all of this was that they were only going to put the baked goods on display later on that day, which meant that we were not going to see them displayed because we had to leave early. So I snapped pictures before we left. No blue ribbons. I guess blue and yellow stickers would just have to do!
We also didn’t get to hop on any rides in the Carnival because they won’t open till 5 pm that day. I emailed hubby, suggesting that he might want to go with the kids later on that day, and take pictures of the baked goods on display and so the kids could attend the carnival too, but at the mention that he’d have to pay for the tickets again, he said no. I figured as much, so unfortunately, the kids didn’t get to ride on any of the carnival rides. Alhamdulilllah either way.
Well, alhamdulillah for everything. I guess, we will continue to ‘dabble’ with the state fairs from now on. 12 years in the US and I never once bothered about state fairs. Interesting how 4H led us to it, and for our first involvement, it was a pretty good turn out! Walhamdulilah, wallahu akbar!
Eid Cookie-ing Begins…
September 16, 2009 at 2:00 pm | In Baking, Eid, Kitchen, New Mexico, Ramadan, Siblings, State Fair | Leave a CommentS made her Meringue Bubbles yesterday. This week, the kids are to practice baking what they’re going to enter in the fair for Baked Goods. S’ baking day was yesterday, and today it’s H’s. As I type, he’s hard at work making Pecan Shortbread Melts. Tomorrow is N’s turn. A two-in-one solution for a mom who is not making Eid cookies this year. Alhamdulillah. Practice and experience for them AND Eid cookies!
For S, she practically made the Meringue Bubbles on her own yesterday, only asking me for clarification (since she followed the recipe written in my handwriting years ago on one of my 4×6 recipe index cards, and I do rewrite recipes in my own notetaking style) for cutting out the cookie dough part and piping the meringue. I had suggested this cookie for her to make. I have made it for Eid cookies in the past, but those were the years when we had no digital camera and I wasn’t really into taking photos of my baked goods, well, at least not as much as I am now. So unfortunately I don’t have any photos of these cookies to show her. So what I conjure in my head as I told her of this cookie is completely different from what she created yesterday. They still looked pretty good, but it could be better.
“So do you want to make this for the fair, you think?” I asked her yesterday as she was finishing up.
“It’s hard,” she said.
“Ok, you can try something else then.”
As for H, today, I showed him to finely chop pecans with a knife on the chopping board. One skill learned. The rest of the recipe, he’s following with ease by himself alhamdulillah.
I guess, all this while, they have helped each other when baking, most of the time that when it comes time to do it individually, they’re a little lost. That’s one reason why I assigned this week for their individual baking practice, because the fair requires that it be an individual entry. Like yesterday, S had to separated the eggs. Usually, they help each other with it. But she has to do it on her own if she is to bake meringues, or anything that requires egg whites only for the fair. N I think has never baked anything on her own. So tomorrow we’ll see how she does.
All in all, this is great baking experience for them all. Alhamdulillah for these opportunities. Alhamdulillah.
Luscious Sticky Buns
September 7, 2009 at 9:48 pm | In Baking, Books, Family, Kids, Kitchen, Ramadan | Leave a Comment
Courtesy of H. He made these Sticky Buns fron the same book they got the Challah recipe from. S helped too, she helped invert them.
By then I was too busy snapping pictures to actually be of any help to them. H was pretty excited by the whole thing. I can understand why. It looked fantabulous! So I’ll let the pictures do the talking.

Sticky buns rising after being rolled out, spread with butter, sugar, and cinnamon filling, and rolled and sliced.

Sticky buns baking in the oven. Alhamdulillah for the oven light and window. We never had this before so this is a luxury, walhamdulillah!
Challah & Fruit Salad
September 7, 2009 at 9:13 pm | In Baking, Family, Kids, Kitchen | 2 Comments
The kids were on a dessert-making craze for iftar at one time that for days on end we had leftovers of these desserts sitting in the fridge that I had to tell them,
“Don’t make anymore, because we can’t eat all of them.”
So they are on a hiatus now. We truly eat much much less in Ramadan, especially this year because we only eat during suhoor and iftaar. We don’t eat after isha.
There was a time too when the kids kept piling junk food on their iftaar plates such that they were full by the time it was time for real food. So, I suggested they make fruit salad, and it truly was a delightful fruit salad, made by N. It’s her specialty.
A
s for the Challah, H and S made it, following the recipe from one of the kids cookbook they had checked out from the library. This Challah requires them (well, it’s an option I guess) to pile the braided challah, of decreasing size on top of each other, creating three layers. They did this (yes they did braid the challah themselves) but when it rose, the layers slid, but it still looked amazing when done, mashaallah.
We no longer buy bread because S claims then to taste bad and remarked,
“The homemade bread tastes better.”
It all came about after her lunch at Mr’s house where Mr’s mom, Sy served homemade bread. Well, since I don’t quite have the time to make homemade bread, I told S to make them herself and I simply gave her recipes to follow, and follow them she did. We had fresh bread a few times before Ramadan alhamdulilllah.
Everytime I pass the bread aisle at the grocery store now, I think of what S said, and I have to say, I agree. Well, nevertheless, we’ll see how long this will last; this homemade bread endeavor.
Ramadan Meringues
August 27, 2009 at 4:22 pm | In Baking, Kids, Kitchen, Ramadan | 2 Comments
Alhamdulillah for Ramadan shortcuts that really cut down cooking time for me. I do think about making some things though, but with Quran reading and Ramadan activities, I don’t have much time left to make anything other than our basic Iftar meal which simply consists of rice, one meat dish and one vegetable dish.
The kids however, now that they are pretty independent in terms of baking and are now quite adept at following recipes, mashaallah, are making their own Ramadan treats for the family. Yesterday it was Meringues.
I went out with Baby Z and H for Baby Z’s hearing appointment, and when I came back, S and N had already cleaned up. The meringues were baking nicely in the oven. Mashaallah! (If only they would do the main iftar too!)
Today, H asked me if they can make Challah. Right now, he is in the kitchen measuring out the ingredients for it. They had checked out a kid cookbook from the library and this recipe for Challah is from that book. Yesterday, I found my cookbooks (some of them) scattered on the living room floor as they scoured them to look for what to make. S is outside tending to their laundry (Thursday is the girls’ laundry day) and N, I just reprimanded because she had left her Ramadan activity halfway and went on to another activity, thus leaving the mess in the sunroom. I think I did a poor job in training the kids to only move to the next activity after they clean up the current one. Alhamdulillah, Baby Z now is learning to do that, though not as consistently as I want.
So, the KitchenAid is whirring right now. I guess I’ll look forward to eating some homemade Challah tonight inshaallah!
Watering Fruits … and Vegetables
July 6, 2009 at 11:33 pm | In Family, Kitchen | 4 CommentsThere are a lot of things that should be synonymous with summer, some of which include ice cream, swimming pools, smoothies, air conditioning and watermelon. And watermelon is what we had a lot of recently alhamdulillah. In Malaysia, I’ve always been a fan of Air Tembikai, and I juiced up some watermelon chunks recently to make some Air Tembikai, much to S’ aversion. Only H shares my Malaysian tastebud. When I made Air Timun (Cucumber juice), he was the only one who took to it with as much vigor as I did. With the watermelon juice, it’s the same.
To snap the photos, I decided to do it outside. H accompanied me, commenting on the position and what not. As for the watermelon, we had to leave some cut pieces unjuiced. In fact, while S was cutting up the watermelon, she made sure she cut a few good amount and told me specifically,
“Don’t make that into juice.”
Alhamdulilah later on, hubby bought more watermelons, now sitting languidly in our foyer by the front door.
Now, if only I can eat the yellow ones…ahhhh…
Murtabak and Rainbows
July 6, 2009 at 11:30 pm | In Desert life, Family, Kitchen, New Mexico | 3 CommentsI would have never even thought of attempting to make this food item years ago. Too complicated. But after trying making roti canai, I have been entertaining the thought of attempting to make Murtabak, a food item that I love to eat with the vinegar/onion dip. I didn’t make the dip though, because as it was, I was already too exhausted from making the sheets for all the murtabak and roti telur we made.
Last Friday was a holiday preceding the 4th of July. I planned for this Murtabak weekend days before, because it required some planning, seeing as how we were also going out. On Saturday we went to El Paso Outlets to get the girls some new needed shoes and soe zabiha chicken and meat because we were running low on them. We also managed to run to the Farmer’s market early in the morn to get some Japanese eggplants. We had also thawed the goat that hubby had bought (or was gifted actually) from Albuquerque. So there was a lot of work to do after we got back from El Paso. Hubby did the goat before he went to play soccer. I made the murtabak filling (ground beef), two different recipes of roti canai dough and continued hubby’s unfinished goat cutting. I was wiped out by night time.
The next morning, as soon as Baby Z woke up, we went to Young Park for our tennis Sunday, and even strolled in the park at the pond, watching ducks. It was a really nice park. Kids can fish at the pond too. I tried on S’ rollerblades and realized that months of no rollerblading has made me very wobbly and screamy on it. I need more practice.
When we got home, I showered and set out to make the murtabak. It took two grueling hours to be done with all the dough balls I had submerged in oil from the night before. H was in charge of the frying. While I pressed, thinned, stretched, and gingerly wrapped each heap of ground beef filling with the roti canai sheet, H fried the murtabaks. As soon as he took one out of the pan, he’d call out to me and I would go to the kitchen with a wrapped murtabak held gingerly in my two palms, dripping oil on the floor along the way. It was messy work, but the murtabak were turning out so nicely (I hadn’t vouched on them turning out so nicely since I didn’t really think I could do it) that the exhaustion was worth it.
I used my mother’s roti canai dough recipe, but for some reason the dough balls were tough and gritty. I must have mixed it wrong the other night. The other recipe I used though, the one that I used in my first attempt to make roti canai, worked out beautifully. It was such a pleasure to stretch it.
That was our lunch, and for Baby Z, it was white rice, and the goat I had cooked the night before. We only had less than half an hour after all that work to get ready to go the masjid because the girls had Arabic class in which they have to submit their homework of writing a short essay of ‘What I do every morning’. Reminded me of ‘inshaa”‘ in secondary school.
The rest of Sunday was sent inside the house while it poured outside. I welcome thunder and rain here. Can’t believe how happy the sound of thunder makes me feel, subhanallah. It really cool things down.
As the girls were in their room, hubby napping upstairs, and I lounged on the couch in between trying to nap and also working on the kids Ramadan activities, I heard H suddenly dash to his sisters’ room saying,
“Come! Come! Look at this. It’s so cool! Meet me in the backyard!”
I have to say it peaked my curiosity and even though I was trying to have some shut eye, I got up and fed my curiosity.
A beautiful full rainbow adorned the blue sky. It was still slightly drizzling, and the sun was descending, getting ready to set in a few hours. It was magnificent, subhaanallah. H, Baby Z, and I stood in the backyard, in the drizzle, looking at it and taking pictures. There was also a second faint rainbow, a double rainbow. Just breathtaking…Allahu Akbar!
It would have been nice if that was how our Sunday ended, but unfortunately we had been lounging to much that afternoon that by maghrib, the kitchen hadn’t yet been cleaned as it usually is, so cleaning took place between Maghrib and Isha with a grumpy mom leading the way. But in all, it was a great weekend, alhamdulillah, one of murtabak and rainbows.
Pizza to Calzones to Roti Canai
June 23, 2009 at 11:17 pm | In Family, Kids, Kitchen, New Mexico, Ramadan | 3 CommentsWell, so much for kids making pizza. I decided to start preparing for Ramadan. I don’t know it didn’t occur to me before, when I have been struggling with the problem of cooking every week, due to my classes. Since the Taleem classes run through dinner time, it has been quite difficult for me, as dinner is quite hectic time. On top of that, Tuesdays, we go to El Paso before Maghrib, so hubby likes me to get the kids ready, dinner done, dishes done before we go, and even though it sounds very straightforward, it is quite something to do.
So I usually cook on Tuesdays enough to last till Thursday’s dinner. I have to say it makes it a little easier, but there were times when we run out of food and I find myself cooking on one of those class days and then rushing to set myself up for class while making sure everything is cleaned up.
So I decided to make Cheesyum, and freeze it, kind of like a frozen dinner. I have done this before, but what I did was to bake it and then cut it into serving pieces, wrap them individually, and freeze them. This time, I didn’t prebake them, but rather, froze them with the cheese scattered on top. My plan is, when it’s time to eat it, we’d pop it in the oven and voila! It’d be fresh. Inshaallah.
I ended up making three trays of it, and in the end, I had some left over pasta and ground beef. Just a few days ago, the kids and I watched Food Network’s Sandra Lee making calzones from leftover spaghetti meatballs. I thought I’d give it a try with that leftover pasta ground beef, and so I told the kids to make the pizza dough while I hunt around for roti canai recipes. And so they did.
I told them to double the recipe, and they did. To be honest, I have never realy read Tammy’s Pizza recipe before. Each time the kids made it, it always turned out great, so I never bothered. This time though, the dough was tough, and I could see yeast granules clearly. Some were even on Baby Z’s head !*chuckle* I figured it must have been because I told them to double it, so I told them to make it again, not doubled. They did. It was the same thing.
S was almost in tears when I did a post mortem on the pizza dough, and was on the verge of telling her to make it one more time. Bad mother. bad mother. I still don;t know why it didn’t turn out okay because the kids followed the recipe to the letter. So I proceeded to make my own pizza dough recipe, one from Joy of Cooking. And so we made calzones, using the pasta ground beef as the filling. I made quite a few, in front of the kids, and two kids who came over for Quran lesson. The calzones don’t look too perfect, but, then again, I have always had problems with making such things as karipap. it was no surprise.
We managed to freeze about 18 calzones last night. This morning, we still had some leftover filling, so I made another batch of pizza dough (Joy’s recipe) and while I had ago at the balls of dough for my roti canai, S made the calzones. H peeled the carrots and potatoes for carrot milk juice and french fries. N watched Baby Z. We had fun. Mostly because my attempt at making roti canai was quite successful alhamdulillah. I managed to make roti telur. The first time it was really thick. The second time, it was too thin strip like, but the third time’s a charm alhamdulillah.
H became the roti canai flipper, as I was still stretching and pulling the thin dough of roti canai on the table (which by the way we had elongated by adding the extra leaf, upon S’s insistence). H multi tasked in the kitchen, flipping the roti canai, making the carrot milk juice under my intermittent orders, and called me each time it was time to put a roti canai in the pan. It was a very productive morning alhamdulillah. I also managed to blend ayam panggang rica rica spice and freeze one jar of it and use the remaining on two small whole chickens for lunch and dinners all through Thursday. While we were doing all this, the chickens were baking in the oven. Alhamdulilah Baby Z fell asleep. By the time he woke up, we were pretty much done.
Next up, inshaalah, frozen pizza. The kids kept laughing at me when I suggested this with enthusiasm. In my mind, I was thinking of cook-free days, but there they were, making fun of my excitement. At any rate, we had run out of cheese, and because our broken van is still in the shop, we’re not going anywhere until hubby comes back and gets it back.
And in the freezer they go! For ‘lazy/hectic cooking days’, inshaallah.
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