Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Main masak masak pt2
Spare ribs in tauchew and preserved salted plum. Got this recipe from mom but she used preserved sour plum. Yes, I bought the wrong preserved plum. But it still tastes delicious (hubby can vouch for that). Plus the addition of kaffir lime leaves give this dish a distinct aroma. A good replacement for the spare ribs would be indian mackerel (ikan kembong).
Mixed veggie. Another mixed veggie combination consisting of broccoli, carrots and prawns.
Urs Truly pearly at 1:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: cooking
Fish in tom yum soup
2-4 slices spanish mackerel *ikan tenggiri*
1 Tbsp tamarind pulp paste *assam jawa*
2 tomatoes (cut into wedges)
2 stalks lemongrass *serai* (crushed and use only the white parts)
kaffir lime leaves *daun limau purut*
some bird's eye cili *cili padi* (depending on how spicy you want it)
1 Knorr tomyum cube
salt and sugar to taste
1. In a pot, mix the tamarind pulp paste with a large bowl of water and drop in the Knorr tomyum cube. Bring to a boil.
2. Add the tomatoes, lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves and cili padi, and cook over medium fire for 2-3 minutes.
3. Put in the fish and continue cooking for another 5 minutes.
4. Season with salt and sugar according to taste.
5. This sour-spicy blend of soup is ready to be served. A good dish to whet your appetite.
Urs Truly pearly at 12:50 PM 0 comments
Labels: recipe: soup
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Curried sambal chicken
~ 5 chicken drumsticks (chop into half) - marinate overnight with light soy sauce and curry powder
~ 2 heaped Tbsp sambal paste
~ 1 Tbsp coriander powder (mix with 1/2-1 glass of water)
~ 1/2-1 big onion
~ 2 tamarind slices
~ kaffir lime leaves
~ sugar and salt to taste
3. Pour in the coriander powder mix. Add in the tamarind slices. Simmer till the chicken is cooked.
4. Throw in the onions when it's almost done. Add sugar and salt according to taste.
5. Enjoy!
Urs Truly pearly at 4:39 PM 0 comments
Labels: recipe: chicken
Sunday, March 21, 2010
The decade's top twenty
The 20 best books of the decade
by Michael Prodger (published: 5:31pm GMT, 21 Jan 2010) telegraph.co.uk
Dreams from My Father by Barrack Obama
When the enterprising publisher bought this memoir, President Obama was merely Senator Obama and there were few indications of what was to come. In recounting the story of his upbringing, Obama shows that his “Yes we can” mantra was not merely an aspirational soundbite but based firmly on his own experiences as a mixed-race American. The book was a key part of his mission statement about decency and optimism and helped to win him the goodwill of much of the world. As well as defining a moment in time, it also proved that Obama can write as winningly as he talks. Would it sell as well a year into his presidency?
FOURTH ESTATE, 2001
A big book in size, theme and ambitions, The Corrections put Jonathan Franzen in the vanguard of America’s bright young novelists. A simple core – a mother’s attempts to reunite her disparate children for a family Christmas – burgeons into a story about the complexities wrought on the American dream by pharmaceuticals, sexuality and shyster capitalism. Through the Lambert family Franzen conjures up a modern Everyman with ordinary lives teetering on the edge of bathos, tragedy or triumph. Proof that the Great American Novel (see Philip Roth, above right) is still worth aiming for.
VIRAGO, 2002
A Dickensian story with a pink twist. With all the elements of a penny dreadful – orphans, double-crossing, madness and pornography – this Victorian tale could have sunk to the level of picaresque pastiche, but while much ink has been spilled on Waters’s lesbian characters it is her ability to summon up the past in palpable, brooding detail that is her most striking characteristic. This is a novel that seems easy to categorise but doesn’t fit into any obvious genre.
BLOOMSBURY, 2008
A high-end piece of true crime writing, The Suspicions encompasses far more than just the story of a murder. Mr Whicher was a celebrated Victorian detective, and the crime that got his senses twitching was the vicious and motiveless slaughter of a young child in a quiet Wiltshire village in 1860. The case itself induced both moral panic and universal fascination in the country at large. Kate Summerscale’s investigation unravels not just the details of the murder and its investigation but also the birth of the modern detective and the influence of the proceedings on writers such as Wilkie Collins and Dickens. This is documentary writing of rare quality and intelligence.
HAMISH HAMILTON, 2000
White Teeth put multiculturalism on the literary map and made it fashionable to boot. Smith’s tale of three North London families – white, Indian and mixed – didn’t just show a slice of modern life but did it with wit and panache. The book is full of big themes, too, not least race, gender and class, but the potential for hectoring is deftly avoided, the messages being more subtly conveyed through vivid characters and sharp dialogue.
JONATHAN CAPE, 2000
The first major book of the decade is a true Great American Novel. The Human Stain was the culmination of an extraordinary period of fecundity in Philip Roth’s long career. At 65, an age at which many novelists have said their piece, he started American Pastoral, the first part of a trilogy (with I Married a Communist and concluding with The Human Stain) that examines just how far the politics, social changes and political correctness of post-war America have eroded the promised land of his youth. The books – and in particular this last volume – powered by Roth’s autograph mixture of rage, sex and moral indignation, amount to one of the great achievements of American letters.
The Human Stain is narrated by Nathan Zuckerman, Roth’s alter ego, and deals with both racial and sexual politics and how they lay low Coleman Silk, a professor of classics at a Massachusetts college. First a piece of casual slang leads to him being forced from his job and then he starts an affair with one of the college janitors nearly 40 years his junior. And at the centre of the book is a plot twist that turns everything on its head.
The film version of The Human Stain, starring Anthony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman, is not to be recommended. The book cannot be recommended highly enough.
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
JONATHAN CAPE, 2003
The True History of the Kelly Gang by Peter Carey
FABER, 2001
This was Peter Carey’s second Man Booker winner (his first was Oscar and Lucinda in 1988) and is a retelling of one of Australia’s great foundation myths. The story takes the form of a journal written by Ned Kelly to his as-yet-unborn daughter, and describes the hard scrabble outback life and frequent conflicts with authority that turned him from a mere larrikin of Irish stock into the Robin Hood of the Antipodes. The novel’s power comes from its unromanticised portrayal of Australia and the plausibly rough and flawed figure of Kelly himself. Most notable though is Carey’s employment of a distinctive vernacular prose style (based on the one surviving letter written by Kelly himself) that uses only rudimentary grammar and no commas. While it makes the book a frequently uncomfortable story to read, it does gives it a memorable and appropriate grittiness.
Atonement by Ian McEwan
JOHNATHAN CAPE, 2001
The book that catapulted Ian McEwan out of his high-literary sphere to a new level of general acclaim. A seemingly straightforward tale of cross-class love and blundering miscomprehension in pre- and wartime Britain turns out to be not a piece of engaging and immaculate pastiche but a story about writing. It is a trick that could undermine the novel but McEwan’s brilliance with set-pieces – a sweltering country-house summer, carnage at Dunkirk, an hermetic love affair – wrap the reader so tightly in the story that the tricksiness comes as revelation rather than irritation, and the fact that McEwan has proved to be a manipulator of the highest order is forgiven. He may have won the Booker with Amsterdam but this is a better book by far.
No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
PICADOR, 2005
The Laconic McCarthy, the icon of Southern gothic, is frequently likened to William Faulkner and hailed as one of the great contemporary American novelists. Public recognition, however, did not arrive until the early 1990s with All the Pretty Horses. No Country for Old Men (the title comes from Yeats’s Sailing to Byzantium) keeps the Western setting of his early books but the story is set in the modern age. The plot involves a drugs deal gone wrong, a man who finds a case full of dollars, a hitman and a sheriff, and mixes violence with pared down descriptions of the sun-blasted American-Mexican border. At heart a simple thriller, the menace is made tangible through the person of the icily deranged hitman, Anton Chigurh.
Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss
PROFILE, 2003
A book about commas and semicolons made perhaps the most unlikely best-seller of the decade. With this manual of grammar, Lynne Truss, formerly a droll journalist, emerged as the champion of proper punctuation and thus gladdened the hearts of the millions who bemoan the slackness apparent in contemporary English usage and the negative effects of email and text-speak. Their reason for gratitude was two-fold: through its anecdotes and gentle humour it laid out the case for punctuation, but it also saved purists from the charge of pedantry.
Life of Pi by Yann Martel
CANONGATE, 2002
The previously unknown Canadian’s whimsical yarn was the unexpected Man Booker winner in 2002. The story of a young boy shipwrecked on a lifeboat for 227 days with only animals – in particular a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker – for company, combined elements of fairy tale, fable and allegory. While the imagination on display is unarguable what it all adds up to is less clear – and for many beside the point. Allegations of plagiarism from a Brazilian novelist did little to dampen the book’s popular success.
BANTAM PRESS, 2006
The book that turned Prof Dawkins from respected genetic biologist into the God-worrier in chief. His contention that creation has nothing to do with God and everything to do with evolution has made him the rallying point and spokesman for atheists who can be as noisy in their proselytism as their religious opponents. “There’s probably no God,” he curiously claims, but this book definitely made militant atheism a pressing public topic.
Untold Stories by Alan Bennett
FABER, 2005
LITTLE, BROWN, 2000
Gladwell is the corkscrew-haired Canadian who has forged a new genre out of studying the little-regarded consequences of various sociological phenomena, from teen smoking to fads for certain types of footwear. The tipping point of his title is the “levels at which the momentum for change becomes unstoppable” and the book itself is an examination of what establishes those levels. This left-field thinking has made Gladwell the Edward de Bono de nos jours, though some might argue that the granting of a $1.5 million advance was the book’s own tipping point for success.
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
DOUBLEDAY, 2003
Bill Bryson used to be the cuddly American whose love of Britain endeared us both to him and to our own country. This book used that popularity to striking effect. The perfect primer for an increasing non-specialist age, it explains in layman’s terms some of the big subjects and personalities of science. Bryson has been admirably candid about his motivation: he knew little about science himself and his teachers had failed to excite him in the subject. His broad-sweep survey, taking in everything from the Big Bang to evolution and from Isaac Newton to earthquakes, is a noble attempt to fill a black hole in the school curriculum.
HAMISH HAMILTON, 2001
The son of a committed Nazi, Sebald moved to England in 1970. His life was cut short by his death in a car crash aged 57, but by then he had already established a new and deeply personal style of writing that is concerned largely with the theme of memory and in particular his struggle to understand the history of Germany and the Second World War. His favoured format was a mixture of fiction and fact interspersed with evocative photography. The career of Jacques Austerlitz, the eponymous hero, encompasses many elements of Sebald’s own history, and his travels tell not just the story of the Holocaust but of the lost world of old Europe.
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
FABER, 2005
The novel that should have won the Man Booker Prize in 2005, Never Let Me Go is nominally a science-fiction story. It describes the childhoods of a group of young people cloned, although they are not fully aware of it, to provide donor organs. A writer who shuns the overblown, Ishiguro’s gradual building up of the full import of their fate is hauntingly done. A masterpiece of incremental detail that becomes poignant as well as horrific, the novel includes elements of both boarding-school stories and superior sci-fi such as John Wyndham’s The Midwich Cuckoos. Ishiguro’s habitual feeling for ill-defined menace is used here to powerful effect.
BLOOMSBURY, 2007
The Kite Runner has sold some 12 million copies, and Hosseini’s follow-up is another lush and unashamedly emotive tale of hardship and the Taliban. This story of two Afghan women, Mariam and Laila, has been hailed as an insight into the reality of Afghanistan. The plot itself is an old-fashioned heartstring-plucker and the writing is often hackneyed but the context gives the novel the appearance of capturing historical reality.
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
Susie Salmon is a most unusual narrator – she has been raped, murdered, dismembered and is now in heaven looking down on the family she left behind and the man who killed her. Perhaps the reason for the novel’s success is that it is not a tale of retribution but rather an unusual coming-of-age story. Susie may be dead but she continues to grow up, using the living as the markers in her own development. Some critics, however, refused to be beguiled, criticising Susie’s God-free heaven. Alice Sebold based the story on elements from her own past – she was raped as a university student.
Urs Truly pearly at 5:07 PM 0 comments
Labels: books
Saturday, March 20, 2010
St Paddy?
*with reference from wiki
Urs Truly pearly at 12:41 AM 0 comments
Labels: general
Friday, March 19, 2010
Main masak-masak
Six-treasure fried rice. The 'treasures' are prawns, duck liver lap cheong, raisins, baby corns, carrots and snow peas. I would say this is my best fried rice yet.. SELF-PRAISE!!
Urs Truly pearly at 3:38 PM 0 comments
Labels: cooking
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Must read novels?
100. The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkein (ehem, only the first book!)
99. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
98. The Home and the World by Rabindranath Tagore
97. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
96. One Thousand and One Nights Anon
95. The Sorrows of Young Werther by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
94. Midnight’s Children by Salman Rushdie (and not Satanic Verses?)
93. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John le Carré
92. Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
91. The Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki
90. Under the Net by Iris Murdoch
89. The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing
88. Eugene Onegin by Alexander Pushkin
87. On the Road by Jack Kerouac
86. Old Goriot by Honoré de Balzac
85. The Red and the Black by Stendhal
84. The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
83. Germinal by Emile Zola
82. The Stranger by Albert Camus
81. The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
80. Oscar and Lucinda by Peter Carey
79. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
78. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
77. Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
76. The Trial by Franz Kafka
75. Cider with Rosie by Laurie Lee
74. Waiting for the Mahatma by RK Narayan
73. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Remarque
72. Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant by Anne Tyler
71. The Dream of the Red Chamber by Cao Xueqin
70. The Leopard by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
69. If On a Winter’s Night a Traveller by Italo Calvino
68. Crash by JG Ballard
67. A Bend in the River by VS Naipaul
66. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
65. Dr Zhivago by Boris Pasternak
64. The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz
63. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
62. Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift
61. My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk
60. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez
59. London Fields by Martin Amis
58. The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño
57. The Glass Bead Game by Herman Hesse
56. The Tin Drum by Günter Grass
55. Austerlitz by WG Sebald
54. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
53. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
52. The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
51. Underworld by Don DeLillo
50. Beloved by Toni Morrison
49. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
48. Go Tell It On the Mountain by James Baldwin
47. The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
46. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
45. The Voyeur by Alain Robbe-Grillet
44. Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre
43. The Rabbit books by John Updike
42. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
41. The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle
40. The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton
39. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
38. The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald
37. The Warden by Anthony Trollope
36. Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
35. Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis
34. The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
33. Clarissa by Samuel Richardson
32. A Dance to the Music of Time by Anthony Powell
31. Suite Francaise by Irène Némirovsky
30. Atonement by Ian McEwan
29. Life: a User’s Manual by Georges Perec
28. Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
27. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
26. Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell
25. The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
24. Ulysses by James Joyce
23. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
22. A Passage to India by EM Forster
21. 1984 by George Orwell
20. Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne
19. The War of the Worlds by HG Wells
18. Scoop by Evelyn Waugh
17. Tess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
16. Brighton Rock by Graham Greene
15. The Code of the Woosters by PG Wodehouse
14. Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
13. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
12. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
11. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
10. Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
9. Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
8. Disgrace by JM Coetzee
7. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
6. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust
5. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
4. The Portrait of a Lady by Henry James
3. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
2. Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
1. Middlemarch by George Eliot
Urs Truly pearly at 1:53 PM 0 comments
Labels: books
Monday, March 15, 2010
My book wishlist
I am a fan of Mary Roach. Love the way she writes - witty, peppered with a mild sarcasm. I already have two of her books 'Stiff: the curious lives of human cadavers' (bought it from Times @BSC) and 'Spook: science tackles the afterlife' (from a bookstore in Spore). So the following two books will complete my Mary Roach collection.
Urs Truly pearly at 5:18 PM 0 comments
Labels: books
Fraser, Antonia
Urs Truly pearly at 12:24 AM 0 comments
Labels: books
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Alice in Wonderland
Oh wow! I just love her illustrations, and am now a fan. But hubby being the dear hubby that he is, had to be a wet blanket, "You really want to get that? AIW should be read with its original illustrations (by
Sir John Tenniel). You want Annabel to read that?! Gothic pictures only give out negative energy. Blahblahblah."When the hardcover opens...
Finally after much pondering, I settled for a 'safe' version, one with hubby's new favourite illustrator, and one that I can pass on to Annabel later. And at the same time still thinking of the version that I (still) want...
Urs Truly pearly at 10:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: books
Friday, March 12, 2010
Our drama queen
Urs Truly pearly at 10:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: Annabel
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Hello blog
Urs Truly pearly at 4:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: general