Joe can cook! Season 2 Episode 6: The most sinful of Carbonara you will eat

We have been cooking quite diligently but more often than not it either involves cooking something so simple i.e. like pan frying some chicken and opening up a bottle of pre-made sauce or use one of the recipes I have shared before. Basically nothing to share on this blog. However there has been one dish that I have been experimenting with and I think I have finally gotten it to a level that is worth sharing; the humble looking carbonara.


Now I don't know about you but once upon a time, I thought carbonara was that pasta dish with creamy cheese and bacon sauce. It was probably only in recent years that I had what the Italians would call a carbonara, a version without cream. Wait a second, if there is no cream in there, where does the creaminess come from?

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The creaminess is all in the egg yolks and good pecorino. If you can't get pecorino, you can settle for parmesan.

So my take on the carbonara (serves 2).

Step 1: Boil water and cook your pasta according to how you want it; al dente preferable.
Step 2: Mix in a bowl, around 50 grams of grated pecorino or parmesan, 2 egg yolks and 1 whole egg, a tablespoon or two of cream (if you like your carbonara to have a bit of sauce). Whisk till its combined.
Step 3: Pan fry some pancetta or bacon if you like with some garlic. Make sure you pan fry them till most of the oil has extracted from the bacon.
Step 4: Take the pan of bacon and garlic off the heat. Put pasta in and then the mixture you created in Step 2. Mix well. If you find that your mixture is too little! vs. the pasta you put in, use the boiling water from the pasta accordingly.
Step 5: Plate up and put more grated cheese on top if you wish.

If you like, you can add mushrooms to it but that wouldn't be original.

I am running out of ideas on what to cook and share on this blog. Any suggestions?


Lot 18 UK

Lot 18 UK

Only had the extra-fast broadband connection for a week before it broke hence no blog post over the last week or so, no Sunday Wine Shot, nor updates on the other sites I maintain.

It has been a busy few days though with articles published across various sites Via Michelin published a piece on Visiting Raimat, Codorniu and others while CorkBin gave space for a look at a rather odd Australian wine label whose symbolism and meanings were totally lost on me (go read all about Battle Island). In addition Regular Wino ran an interview on me under his Wino of the Week slot.

The end of the week saw a little trip up to that London to meet the team behind Lot18. This is a new-to-UK internet wine shop offering tiny parcels of really interesting wine. This end of the operation follows successful launches in the US and France. Their offerings might not be the cheapest wines around but are temptingly interesting. Quantities are minute compared to your usual wine merchant; 40 bottles here or just a few cases there worth subscribing for offerings of older vintages and, as they explained, hopefully bottles of seldom seen wine from the USA.

Very kindly three wines were poured to entertain us visitors a ripe Pegasus Bay Pinot Noir, 2008, New Zealand, a deep and brooding super-Tuscan Veneroso Tenuta di Ghizzano 2005, (fully mature and delicious drinking now) and a wonderful aged and oaky South African Sauvignon. Depending upon when the internet connection is resumed (and thus when people finally read this) all th! ree wine s should be available from the Lot 18 website at around the 19 mark.

Veneroso Tenuta di Ghizzano 2005
Reyncke Sauvignon Blanc
Pegasus Bay Pinot Noir 2008

Spittoon.biz - A UK Wine Blog - We Spit... So You Can Swallow



Jose Barroso

Spain, Part VII: Scarcely an hour's train ride from Madrid, the hilltop town of Toledo is well-respected for its handcrafted marzipan products.

These sweet treats are sold on nearly every corner of Toledo's narrow, winding streets (prepare to get lost here _ everybody does!).

The basic ingredients in these are straightforward: almond paste, sugar and honey.

Sweet stuff, with a somewhat medicinal flavor that might be an acquired taste.

Cookies and pastries are available too _ lots of them!

Fear not: Long fingernails, but clean fingers (really!).





Fabrica de Mazapan Jose Barroso,
Toledo, Spain.

Reliving Qianmen Street

South of Tiananmen Square finds the old Qianmen Gate or Zhengyangmen, guarded by the grey archery tower called Jianlou. It has been converted into a museum now. I entered the gate to escape the freezing December wind, which had already numbed my hands and ears at the square earlier. The warmth inside the gate was such a relief. I'd planned to stay there for as long as I could and so, took time to observe the exhibits displayed at every corner in the museum. On the highest level, a centerpiece depicted the livelihood of the street across the jianlou known as Qianmen Street. For centuries, this street has been a popular choice for the well-heeled to have their photos taken or shop for high quality goods like silk shirts and shoes. Here stood a few legendary restaurants (or lao ji hao) as well, which are still very much in business today. Two of them are Quanjude, a Beijing roast duck restaurant, and Duyichu, specializing in shaomais or steamed dumplings.

Visiting Quanjude is an obligation, applicable to both local and foreign visitors. It is, afterall, one of the oldest and most famous roast duck restaurants in Beijing. I've even seen their vacuum-packed roast duck sold in supermarkets! Quanjude uses the gua lu method of roasting, where the marinated, air-dried ducks are hung and roasted in the oven. Personally, the best part about Quanjude is that they cater for single diners, by offering individual set meals. Although the portions of Beijing duck served are usually small, with the bare meat usually disposed off, I still can't imagine having the skin of a whole duck to myself. The set meal was perfectly sized, complete with warm duck soup served in a styrofoam cup. Unlike the Beijing duck that I'd tried b! ack home , the skin was, though skillfully carved, less moist. Another difference was the thicker flour wrap and paler, in the absence of egg. The condiments included a bundle of scallion and sweet, dense dark sauce.

Duyichu has been making shaomais for almost five centuries now. This steamed dumpling is not my favourite dim sum and honestly, I was here just to have a taste of history. Id ordered the minced lamb shaomai, as recommended by The Lonely Planet guide. The dumplings, fitted nicely in the bamboo steamer, looked very different from the shaomais that Id eaten all my life. The usual thin, yellow skin wrap was replaced with a much thicker plain white flour skin, edges skillfully nipped to resemble a blooming flower. It was aesthetically pleasing. The filling was a coarse chop of meat and there was no topping of tobiko or dyed sago. If I were to draw a comparison between the shaomai of the imperial days (well, Duyichus version, at least) and now, Id say that this dim sum has been refined through the years. Personally, I prefer the dumplings of today.

Qianmen Street has reopened a few years ago, after being given a facelift by the authority. Today, it is a major tourist attraction in Beijing. The lao ji haos now share the street with modern cafes and boutiques. Commercialization has returned to the street. I had a good time strolling the busy street, imagining how indifferent this old Peking street would be, back in the 15th century.