I was given this beer caramel the other day. Beer caramel? What? THAT HAS TO BE AWESOME, I’m sure you’re thinking to yourself. It does have a subtle beer flavour while still retaining the yummy of caramel. It’s pretty good!
Posts in category Food
Chicken Soup
This week’s lunches will be Chicken Soup. I’ll share my recipe with you.
Soup Curry Caramel / スープカレーキャラメル
At work today, one of the teachers kept offering me all manner of odd foods. First, some sort of senbei (rice cracker), which I’m not generally a fan of, but which I accepted anyway, because it would be impolite to do otherwise.
Then she’s like, “Oh! Do you want caramels? I have a bunch of random leftover ones.”
“Um, yes please!” I replied. That’s more my taste, you see.
She rocks up with this. Soup curry flavoured caramel. “It’s kind of spicy! Be careful!” she warned me. It was bizarre. It was sweet, like caramel, and textured like caramel, but it had a strong curry taste as well. IT CONFUSED MY HEAD AND MY MOUTH.
The package says that it will “wake up your brain cells”. It certainly did that, but only through the power of WTF that it exercised on me.
Mushroom Barley Soup / キノコと大麦スープ
At work, they make me eat lunch, and I’m not gonna eat their lunch, so I have to bring my own, and it’s ever so troublesome, but whaddya gonna do.
I decided this week to try making some soup ahead of time, freeze it, and have enough for lunch every day. I’ve not made soup before, and I’ve not frozen soup I’ve made, soooooo this is a first!
Mushroom Barley Soup
Blend in a soup pot over high heat:
- 50ml of oil
- 15ml of butter
Add:
- 680g of mushrooms
- (I estimated, so I may have used too much, and it was consequently more shroom and less soup) (I used white button mushrooms, brown button/chestnut mushrooms, enoki, nameko and dried shiitake.) (Let the dried shiitake soak in hot tap water for 20 minutes to rehydrate. Save the water.) (You can use whatever mushrooms you like, though.)
- 120ml of chopped shallots
Cook, stirring often, until the mushrooms are wilted, about 5 minutes. Add:
- 50ml of wine
- thyme
Reduce the heat to low and cook, stirring and scraping brown bits off the bottom of the pot, for 5 minutes. Stir in:
- 1L of beef stock/consommé
- (if you’re using dried mushrooms, and you saved the water, mix your stock powder/goo/cube with the saved mushroom water for SUPER MUSHROOM BEEF BROTH WOOOO)
- 180ml of pearl barley
- (大麦 in Japanese, find it in the ‘stuff to stir in to your rice before you cook it’ section of the supermarket)
- salt and pepper, not too much
Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, cover, and simmer until the barley is tender, 45 minutes to an hour, depending on your stove, your pot, your barley, etc.
I’m not sure how it ought to be. As I mentioned, I may have over shroomed, and desoupied the soup. Alternatively, the nameko may have served to thicken the soup. Either way, it was quite thick and chunky, but that’s how I like it. Sticks to the spoon instead of my shirt.
Anyway, give it a go! It’s really quite delicious.
DISCOVER Pringles Classic Salt
My god, Pringles is turning into Kit-Kat, what with the 99999 limited editions. This limited edition is SALT. Salt flavoured Pringles? Aren’t those just NORMAL PRINGLES??
With this thought, I dove in.
It’s a light salt, like you’d expect from Pringles in North America, at least in the 80s and 90s. The salt Pringles here, I find, are often too salty. These retain the potato-y goodness that ought to be at the heart of every Pringles flavour.
… but I may just be convincing myself of that to justify this expense. ._.
Pringles Old American Circus – Funky Mustard
New, Limited Edition Pringles. It’s got a bit of a honey mustard flavour. It’s pretty delicious. Dunno what makes it OLD AMERICAN CIRCUS though. Silly Pringles.
In other news, who thinks I ought to change the name of the blog to PRINGLES AND KITKAT IN JAPAN TODAY :/










