Terpe
15th December 2016, 14:35
There'll be no roasted Cockerill or Turkey for us on Christmas Day this year.
I can get both. But nobody seems to enjoy traditional English Christmas fare.
My Yorkshire Puddings have been well received, but I'll not be cooking any of those either. Besides which, the type of flour is a key ingredient and I'm still
not certain which is best. Get the wrong one and the pudding will just not rise as it should.
Looks like this year it'll be our usual breakast of smoked salmon and scrambled eggs on a half-baguette. Too much trouble to find a decent brioche
Lunch will be Tuna Sashimi, baked cheese topped oysters, scallops in soy sauce and Miso and seaweed soup
Dinner will be a traditional Filipino Ham salad with large Bagiou tomatoes, lettuce, Japanese Cucumber, celery and coleslaw.
I do have some Colemans English Mustard for the ham. But which ham ?
Can anyone suggest a really good ham ?
I have an idea to buy a couple of different Hams plus a so-called Chinese Ham on the bone. Problem is that'll cost quite a lot and I doubt we could eat all that ham
over Christmas and new year.
A few weeks ago I noticed that Rustans in Cubao stocked Icelandic Cod fillets, sadly I didn't buy any and they haven't been available since.
One lesson I should've learned is to immediately buy anything I like when it becomes available and not wait. They rarely come again.
I'm still a member of S&R Shopping so might take a trip to their nearest store soon.
My home made pork-pies didn't really meet my expectation despite a number of attempts.
Bit like my home-cured bacon.
All in all, our Christmas fare won't all be typical but I'll be happy.
We found some really nice imported French red wines and we can easily get a very good selection of imported cheese, means our snacks can be yummy especially as there are some very good crackers here in Philippines.
It almost goes without saying I'll be getting some of those Quezo De Bola that are flooding the supermarkets at the moment.
I've got my eye on an imported ball of Edam.......but at considerable cost.
It's a personal opinion but I do miss the typical English Christmas both in atmosphere and in the seasonal foody delicacies. Maybe it's a case on being unable to find those childhood comforts. Foods and emotions
Let's see how this 2016 Christmas goes.
Seasonal greetings to all
I can get both. But nobody seems to enjoy traditional English Christmas fare.
My Yorkshire Puddings have been well received, but I'll not be cooking any of those either. Besides which, the type of flour is a key ingredient and I'm still
not certain which is best. Get the wrong one and the pudding will just not rise as it should.
Looks like this year it'll be our usual breakast of smoked salmon and scrambled eggs on a half-baguette. Too much trouble to find a decent brioche
Lunch will be Tuna Sashimi, baked cheese topped oysters, scallops in soy sauce and Miso and seaweed soup
Dinner will be a traditional Filipino Ham salad with large Bagiou tomatoes, lettuce, Japanese Cucumber, celery and coleslaw.
I do have some Colemans English Mustard for the ham. But which ham ?
Can anyone suggest a really good ham ?
I have an idea to buy a couple of different Hams plus a so-called Chinese Ham on the bone. Problem is that'll cost quite a lot and I doubt we could eat all that ham
over Christmas and new year.
A few weeks ago I noticed that Rustans in Cubao stocked Icelandic Cod fillets, sadly I didn't buy any and they haven't been available since.
One lesson I should've learned is to immediately buy anything I like when it becomes available and not wait. They rarely come again.
I'm still a member of S&R Shopping so might take a trip to their nearest store soon.
My home made pork-pies didn't really meet my expectation despite a number of attempts.
Bit like my home-cured bacon.
All in all, our Christmas fare won't all be typical but I'll be happy.
We found some really nice imported French red wines and we can easily get a very good selection of imported cheese, means our snacks can be yummy especially as there are some very good crackers here in Philippines.
It almost goes without saying I'll be getting some of those Quezo De Bola that are flooding the supermarkets at the moment.
I've got my eye on an imported ball of Edam.......but at considerable cost.
It's a personal opinion but I do miss the typical English Christmas both in atmosphere and in the seasonal foody delicacies. Maybe it's a case on being unable to find those childhood comforts. Foods and emotions
Let's see how this 2016 Christmas goes.
Seasonal greetings to all