Sunday, 5 April 2020

QFD: Week 3. "In which we take a suitcase to the supermarket..."

Essentials such as food shopping only, they said. Try to limit shopping trips to once per week. There was a debate over whether more than one member of a household should go to the shops. But with two of us, we thought, we could stock up on a month's worth of food and not have to leave the house until May! Hence the suitcase...

The Royal Mile, deserted
AAA....
The shopping trip itself was a slightly hair-raising experience, since at this point very few people were taking seriously the lockdown and especially the social distancing measures. We returned both physically worn out by hauling half our bodyweight in shopping across cobbled streets, and psychologically exhausted from playing Pac-Man up and down the supermarket aisles. Next time, grocery delivery!





Having survived this harrowing venture out of doors, the next day (I have no memory of what we ate after coming home from shopping...) merited some comfort cooking: specifically, a Thai Panang curry with fried tofu and pineapple -- spicy, sweet, rich and full of vegetables -- and a fresh crunchy salad with chilli, lime and garlic dressing. Plus the only rice we'd been able to buy at the Chinese supermarket was Thai sticky, so this fit the bill.




Leftover sticky rice became cheesy rice cakes with nuoc cham sauce and salad for lunch the following day; and as local businesses shut their doors and turned to the online market, home delivery G&T started to become A Thing...

Weekend lockdown breakfasts also quickly became established as a thing: when you're spending every day at home, it's nice to have something to mark out the weekend. 

I really like spring onion pancakes but almost never order them in restaurants, because there's usually something more exciting I want to eat instead. Knowing in theory how to make them was one thing, but it took lockdown to give me the time and inspiration actually to try. Fortunately they were very easy! (Understanding a bit of the science behind hot-water vs cold-water dough and the limits of lamination was useful as well.)
I was also interested to try out this version of Kung Pao Chicken from NoRecipes.com. Verdict: tasty, but the dark soy was a touch overpowering. One to keep experimenting with!

And finally, because there's nothing like a good plate of leftovers: kung pao fried rice with salad and that classic SE Asian street food bonus topping of a fried egg!

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