PREVIOUSLY, you have feast your eyes on my lovely garden! I hope it has inspired you to do more. If I can do it, so can you ... and I think you'll be more brave on the manure than me ... so go ahead, get down and dirty!
Hey! I know you are laughing. But we've got to start somewhere, haven't we? I started with that garden. It is a slow and painful start, but when I get to point B, you will see how sweet it is the fruit of my labour ...
Now I'd like to share with you some of the spices that I constantly used in my kitchen. We have seen them in thousand of other places before, so take this as my way of welcoming you into my house. It is warm and full of the smell of the seductive aroma of the exotic spices ... ummm no, I think that would be my bedroom. Let's go to the kitchen ...
I like to keep them labelled. Others who are not familiar with the spices, especially the Asian spices, might confused curry leaves for bay leaves. Or fennel seed and cumin seed. Also, when I shop in the supermarket, I like to get the required products that are sold in glass jars, so I can recycle the jars for, well, my spices storage jars. Plus, I am allergic to plastic ...
The four ladies of spice: Cardamon, Cinnamon, Cloves and Star Anise. They can always be found in my kitchen shelves. Others that I should include in here are seeds or grounded cumin, fennel, coriander, to name a few. I do have them, and so should you.
Fresh or dried, I can't live without chilli. This one was bought in an Asian supermarket in Central Market in the city. They are quite hot, better then the Sambal Oelek, so this is good to have in the kitchen. Think about having stir-fried chicken with ginger and garlic, with one or two, or more dried chillies!
Black pepper. When I was growing up in the village, at school holidays I would sometime take up work harvesting black pepper in my uncle's farm. We also made white pepper and I always keep both in my kitchen. The white ones makes a simple vegetable clear soup nicer. Much nicer!
I knew dried assam slices from coming from the village. I can guarantee that not many know what this is, or what is the original fruit look like. One day I will go back into the jungle and take a picture of the fruit and share it here. Maybe they farm this assam these days, but to get them from the jungle would be so much fun. And you can actually eat the ripe fruit, almost sweet and look like mangosteen.