The Year of Living Audaciously

Former food blog, now travel blog - following my year as a Fulbright ETA in Indonesia

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Archives for November 2016

Simple, from Abroad Thanksgiving Recipes

November 30, 2016 by Mackenzie

Most of you know this blog started out as a cooking blog. Cooking is my thing. I love to browse for recipes, shop for ingredients, and spend a whole day in the kitchen. Since I’ve been in Indonesia on my two Fulbright grants, I’ve done a lot less cooking then I used to, and my blog turned from a cooking blog to a travel blog.

However, this year I’ve been much more adventuresome in the kitchen. Last weekend we hosted a Friendsgiving complete with mashed potatoes, stuffing, and pumpkin pie! I scoured the internet for simple ingredient/stovetop recipes, seeing as we don’t have a stove, and as there were all a success, I figured they might come in handy for future Fulbrighters/expats wanting to experience a Thanksgiving of their own, but with very limited resources and ingredients. Thus, here are our recipes!

Creamy, Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Recipe Type: side dish
Cuisine: Thanksgiving
Author: Mackenzie, adapted from Alton Brown
Prep time: 30 mins
Cook time: 20 mins
Total time: 50 mins
Serves: 10-12 servings
An easy, but delicious mashed potato recipe. Proportions edited from Alton Brown’s recipe – http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/creamy-garlic-mashed-potatoes-recipe.html
Ingredients
  • 10 medium russet potatoes
  • 2 tablespoons salt
  • 8 oz “cooking cream” (what we found in Indo or heavy cream/half and half if you can find it or milk if you want to be super cheap)
  • 3 gloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup butter, softened
  • 1/2 tablespoon (ish) salt
Instructions
  1. Wash, peel, and dice the potatoes. Place in a large saucepan or wok and cover with water. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat to maintain a rolling boil. Add salt. Cook for about 15-20 minutes – until the potatoes are soft and fall apart with pierced with a fork.
  2. When potatoes are almost done cooking, heat the cooking cream and garlic over medium heat until simmering. Remove from heat and set aside.
  3. Drain the potatoes, move to a large bowl, and mash them.
  4. Pour the garlic cream mixture over the potatoes and mix it all together. We then moved it to a rice cooker to keep it warm while we prepared the other food. Just before serving, stir in the softened butter and additional salt, to taste.
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Garlic cream sauce

Garlic cream sauce

The almost-finished mashed potatoes!

The almost-finished mashed potatoes!

TheĀ original recipe for this came from Alton Brown and I only modified the proportions, and took out the parmesan cheese.


Sorry, apparently I can only add one fancy looking recipe in each post – but I want them all here so I’ll have to make do.

We based our sweet potato recipe off of this recipe from Tyler Florence. We made ours more of a mashed version, but flavor-wise it was this! (We bought non-orange sweet potatoes so it turned out really ugly and gross-looking but it was delicious so… no picture šŸ˜€ )


Our no-bake pumpkin pie was more of a challenge but in the end, it turned out to be pretty simple and delicious!

First, I bought a pumpkin,Ā halved it, scooped out the goop, chopped it into big slices, and boiled the slices until soft.Ā img_3355

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It took about 20 minutes to get them soft and then I pulled them out, let them cool, and peeled off the skin. I stuck it in a tupperware to cool and came back to it later!

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I used this recipe for a no-bakeĀ crust. We couldn’t find graham crackers here so we bought a similar type of cracker and it worked out fine (we used the Indo brown Malkist crackers). I also used less sugar than the recipe called for, per the reviews. Oh, and we couldn’t find normal size round pans so we bought smaller ones and had enough for two pies! (This recipe was enough for two smaller pies)

We followed the directions exactly – crush the crackers, mix it all together, press it into a pie pan, and refrigerate for an hour before pouring in the filling. Ā And when we served it, we had no trouble getting it out of the pan or keeping it together – my initial concerns with a no-bake crust.

I used this recipe for the filling – it was delicious!! Gelatin is a no-no here (Muslim community) so I used a substitute, agar, instead. It came out of the package red and we were worried it would taste like strawberry… but it didn’t so don’t fret! Only other differences were fresh ginger and my pumpkin, but otherwise we followed it to a T. AND IT WAS SO GOOD. I WILL NEVER GO BACK TO CANNED PUMPKIN EVER AGAIN.

Cooking the pumpkin mixture

Cooking the pumpkin mixture

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Ready to chill!

After pouring the filling into the pies, we put both in the refridgerator and within an hour it seemed ready to serve but we didn’t use them for another three hours or so.


The final things we made was stuffing! We were really unsure about this one since we didn’t have an oven and were worried about finding all of the ingredients. But in the end, it turned out perfect!!

We used this recipe for a stovetop stuffing. Edits:

  • Didn’t use a crusty loaf because we couldn’t find one. Instead we used a regular loaf of whole wheat bread (from the bakery at Hypermart) and cut it the night before and left it out to dry
  • 1 regular onion (not 2)
  • Couldn’t find celery so we swapped it for two diced apples
  • 6 cloves of garlic (not 3)
  • No sage (couldn’t find it)
  • Dried thyme, rosemary, and Trader Joe’s 21 Spices Seasoning (~1 tablespoon of each? I can’t remember)

Basically, we doubled the herby goodness. We initially made it as the recipe called for but it smelled so damn good and didn’t seem like enough so we doubled it (kinda).

We made a lucky find of thyme and rosemary seasoning the night before in a random little grocery store and that was clutch. The TJ’s seasoning Kate had brought from home.

We followed the actual directions exactly and it tasted unbelievably good. I couldn’t believe I was smelling those smells and tasting that in Kendari!

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So that’s what we did! It all turned out fantastically and we were thrilled! If you want to attempt your own Thanksgiving feast, I’d recommend these recipes (and modifications!)

Filed Under: Easy, Fulbright, Thanksgiving, Year 2 Tagged With: no bake pie crust, no bake pumpkin pie, stovetop mashed potatoes, stovetop stuffing, Thanksgiving, Thanksgiving abroad, thanksgiving recipes

Thanksgiving x3

November 30, 2016 by Mackenzie

Guys. I got to celebrate Thanksgiving three times this year. And got to eat stuffing and pumpkin pie TWICE!

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As an ETA in Indonesia, Thanksgiving and its related foods are not easily found. In Jakarta and some cities with an expat community, some restaurants will serve a traditional Thanksgiving meal and if you’re ambitious enough you could probably even find the ingredients and make a whole meal yourself.

In Kendari however, it’s a different story. There are eight expats living in/around Kendari (including us three) and Western food is limited. Restaurants include two KFCs, Pizza Hut, and Papa Ron’s (pizza). Grocery stores carry a tiny selection of Western food and brands, namely pasta, tomato sauce, and mayonnaise. So when November rolled around, we didn’t expect anything Thanksgiving-related.

But that assumption was FALSE!


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The first celebration of Thanksgiving occurred on Thanksgiving Day. I taught three classes that day and then met my English club after school. I wanted to introduce them to Thanksgiving a little bit so I shared a few photos of my family at Thanksgiving from years past. They loved the pictures of me and my family, all the food, but especially to see the inside of my house šŸ™‚ I shared about Thanksgiving food and how my aunt Suzy and I usually spend two days cooking and preparing everything for the family – they were impressed! As a treat, I had made them guacamole because I had talked about it before and they wanted so badly to try it! Half of them loved it, half of them hated it! (Avocados are usually considered a fruit and served sweet here so it was a weird experience for them!)

Digging in to the guac!

Digging in to the guac!

(Mostly) Happy kiddos!

(Mostly) Happy kiddos!

We made hand turkeys of what we are thankful for – I loved watching them make it and was so happy to put them all up on the wall in what is quickly becoming my beautifully decorated classroom!

Everyone pitching in to decorate the wall!

Everyone pitching in to decorate the wall!

How cute!!

How cute!!

We also did a mannequin challenge, the viral video challenge where everyone freezes in place like a mannequin – swim teams and gymnastic teams have made some pretty impressive ones! Ours is fun too!

That evening, I met up with Kate and Shelby and we went and ate pizza together to “celebrate” Thanksgiving šŸ™‚


On Friday evening, the other expats invited us to their Thanksgiving celebration the following day. So on Saturday we followed them out to where the other expat couple lives (on the beach!) and were astounded to discover a beautifully set table on the beach and endless dishes of stuffing, mashed potatoes, turkey, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole, black olives (my favvvv), gravy, homemade rolls, pumpkin pie, apple pie, pecan pie… my jaw literally dropped.

Got off our bikes and discovered outselves here

Got off our bikes and discovered ourselves here

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We enjoyed a wonderful evening chatting with all of these new friends, watching the sun set over the mountains, and eating food we thought we would have to wait another year for…

Best looking plate I've seen in a year and a half <3

Best looking plate I’ve seen in a year and a half <3

A perfect setting

A perfect setting

Beautiful view

Beautiful view

Pies!!

Pies!!

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Then, on Sunday we hosted our own Friendsgiving! We wanted to share some of our culture with the people who have helped us and befriended us in the three months we have been here, so we invited them to a big Thanksgiving potluck last Sunday. We spent the week before looking up oven-less, simple ingredient recipes, going to different stores and markets to find the ingredients, and finally spending all day Sunday cooking up a storm!

Cooking away!

Cooking away!

We ended up with quite a spread considering our limitations. We made delicious creamy garlic mashed potatoes, a fantastic stovetop stuffing, yummy but nasty looking (not orange) sweet potatoes, garlic green beans, and even managed pumpkin pies – from scratch! I bought a pumpkin from the market, cut it into big slices and boiled them until soft, cut off the peels, and then had pumpkin to work with! Let me just say, I was quite impressed with myself šŸ™‚

 

 

Rice Cooker 1: Creamy Garlic Mashed Potatoes. Rice Cooker 2: Stovetop Stuffing. Large Bowl: Fruit Salad. Left Square Pan: Interesting-looking Sweet Potatoes. Second Pan: Garlic Green Beans. And two pumpkin pies!

 

Proud chefs!

Proud chefs!

Our friends loved the chance to visit, meet each other, and try our food. We even made little Thankfulness turkeys and went around in a circle sharing what we are thankful for. It was a great end to a fabulous Thanksgiving weekend!

The crew!

The crew!

Potluck-style - everyone brought something to share

Potluck-style – everyone brought something to share

Two of my coteachers, Ibu Asni and Ibu Erni enjoying our meal!

Two of my coteachers, Ibu Asni and Ibu Erni enjoying our meal!

Forget the 14 couches we all could have comfotably sat on... in Indo we sit on the floor :D

Forget the 14 couches we all could have comfotably sat on… in Indo we sit on the floor šŸ˜€

My ibus <3

My ibus <3

My no-bake pumpkin pies!

My no-bake pumpkin pies!

Introducing bahasa tutors to Apples to Apples

Introducing bahasa tutors to Apples to Apples

Shelby, Kate and I finished the day sprawled outĀ on Kate’s bed watching both the cartoonĀ Grinch and half the Jim Carrey Grinch, before we began to drift off into a happy, food-coma sleep.

Filed Under: Fulbright, MAN 1, Thanksgiving, Year 2 Tagged With: Indonesia, Kendari, Thanksgiving

What I Eat

November 20, 2016 by Mackenzie

I’ve now lived in Indonesia for twelve of the last fifteen months – and in all the blog posts I’ve written, I don’t think I’ve talked much about food. You might be thinking to yourself, whatĀ isĀ Indonesian food? Do you like it? Can you find any Western food?

Brief answer, Indonesian food is rice + meat, few vegetables, and usually fried. Sometimes noodles (fried). Sometimes rice + meat in a broth. Sometimes it involves peanut sauce.

Yes, I love it. It’sĀ enak sekali.

Rarely.

I’ve been taking pictures of my meals for the last few weeks in anticipation of making a post about food – so here is a photo food tour of what I eat in Indo!

Chicken Sate

Chicken Sate

Chicken sate is one of my favorite foods – it’s like a chicken kabob smothered in peanut sauce. SO. GOOD. CostĀ = Rp 30,000 = $2.23

Nasi Cap Cay

Nasi Cap Cay

Cap Cay is one of the few meals that you can get vegetables. Sometimes there is chicken in it but it is usually a big plate of vegetables in a yummy sauce with rice. This one is in a really nice cafe with fantastic AC (big, big plus). Cost = Rp 22,000 = $1.64.

Tempe Goreng

Tempe Goreng

Fried tempe is ubiquitous in Indonesia. It’s a snack, it’s a side, it’s a meal – it’s delicious. My Bahasa tutor taught me to make fried tempe last weekend and I am thrilled to have finally learned to cook something Indonesian! The sauce above is called “ketchup manis” – here, Ketchup is calledĀ saus tomatĀ and ketchup manisĀ is like a sweet soy sauce. Fried tempe dipped inĀ ketchup manisĀ is excellenttttt.

Yuni teaching me to make tempe goreng in my makeshift kitchen :)

Yuni teaching me to make tempe goreng in my makeshift kitchen šŸ™‚

Ikan Bakar

Ikan Bakar

Alright, so this is my favorite meal in all of Kendari. I try and go here once a week if I can.Ā Ikan bakarĀ is grilled fish, and as you can see on the left, they serve you the whole damn thing, head to tail. This place thinks I really like rice, so they usually bring me two plates, which I definitely can’t finish. In the bowl on the right isĀ sayur, vegetables in a yummy broth. And in the middle IS THE MOST DELICIOUS PEANUT SAUCE EVER. It has tomato chunks in it and you can mix in chilis, lime, etc. IT’S SO GOOD. I go to this restaurant for the sauce alone. To eat this, you spoon some veggies/broth over the rice, add some peanut sambal, and then dig into the fish – with you hands! Dig in, grab some meat, scoop it up (with your fingers) with some rice, veggies, peanut sauce and shovel the whole thing in your mouth. (Video to come later) So damn good. Total cost = Rp 25,000 = $1.86

Krupuk

Kerupuk

Little rice, shrimp crackers that come as a side to everything. Very light, airy and delicious (as long as they aren’t too fishy).

Soto Ayam Lamongan

Soto Ayam Lamongan

Chicken soup (with rice of course). Delicious. A staple in my diet. Cost = Rp 18,000 (including ice tea) = $1.34

Traditional Kendari food

Traditional Kendari food

This is what my counterpart served us when we went to her house for lunch one afternoon. The brown broth in the middle was a beef broth mixture, the whiter one isĀ sayur (vegetables) made with jackfruit, there is some chicken in the orange bowl, rice, and of course, sinonggi (bowl on the right of goo). See below…

You scoop it/cut it using chopsticks

You scoop it/cut it using chopsticks

Plop it in the bowl

Plop it in the bowl

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Sinonggi is bizarre because it is tasteless and shapeless. Some people describe it as liquid glue. Some describeĀ it as snot. Take your pick. You do not chew sinonggi (you couldn’t if you tried). You just literally swallow it. This is not easy to do. However, my counterpart was kind enough to cut it into little pieces for me, which made it much easier to swallow whole. In the end, I’d say I liked it – but it is weird AF.

Nasi Kuning

Nasi Kuning

Nasi kuning (yellow rice) is a common breakfast food. This was a favorite breakfast when I lived in Palangkaraya. Tisia and I would often come here. Yellow rice, noddles, and chicken in a yummy, slightly spicy sauce. Cost = Rp 15,000 = $1.11

Soto Banjar ~ Kendari style

Soto Banjar ~ Kendari style

This soup is Kendari’s version of Soto Banjar (soup from Banjarmasin). It’s pretty good and satisfies my cravings. However, I really really miss the soto banjar in Palangkaraya. Banjarmasin is only about four hours from Pky (we were evacuated there many, many times) and so there is a strong influence of the Banjar culture in Pky. Thus, the soto banjar is incredible and I literally ate it for breakfast almost every single day (the other days I ate nasi kuning, see above). Cost = Rp 15,000 = $1.11

This is real soto banjar <3 <3

This is real soto banjar

Cost = Rp 10,000 = $0.74

Nasi Goreng

Nasi Goreng

Nasi goreng is probably the most classic Indonesian dish. Fried rice, sometimes served with an egg, or chicken. Eaten for breakfast, lunch or dinner. It was Spencer’s first meal when he came to visit last year šŸ™‚ Cost = Rp 20,000 = $1.49

Weird desserts

Weird desserts

I do not like Indonesian desserts. They are spongy, squishy, sugary, and otherwise unappetizing. Unfortunately, Indonesians love to force feed me food, particularly sweets. I do everything I can to avoid it. This was a wedding where I was thrilled to have 20 women pushing plates of sugary sponge cakes at me. Not. I suggested to my ibus that we share a plate so that I could “have room to try them all.” aka could try a tiny bite and then they would finish it for me.

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Looks like confetti cake. Trust me, it’s not.

Jagung bakar

Jagung bakar

Grilled corn. Very popular in Indonesia. I would get grilled corn with Tisia all the time last year. So, so good.

From Mack’s Kitchen:Ā 

While I love Indonesian food, this year I’ve been experimenting more in my own makeshift kitchen. I have slowly accumulated a fridge, a rice cooker, a blender, a toaster, and as of last week, a small stove! Now I can make anything! So truly, what do I eat on a weekly basis?

Breakfast:

Avocado Toast

Avocado Toast

Yes, be jealous. I eat avocado toast every morning for breakfast. That or toast with peanut butter and jelly. My toaster was the best thing I’ve bought this year. Sugary cereal worked for a few weeks but I can’t handle that much sugar in the mornings. Last year I had easy access to breakfast options like soto banjar or nasi kuning, but this year there really isn’t anything near/in my school that sells it so I’m on my own. And I am totally okay with that. Cost for 3 avocados = Rp 15,000 = $1.11 –> daily avocado use = 1/2 avocado = $0.18. (<<<This is why I’m never leaving Indonesia.)

Lunch/Dinner:

Sorta kinda Burrito Bowl

Sorta kinda Burrito Bowl

I make guacamole a lot (see price of avocados above). I then decided to attempt a burrito bowl. The above was the result of attempt #1 – it was definitely satisfying although lacking some key ingredients and flavors (beans, cilantro, chipotle, peppers, chicken…). I’ve made this a number of times since (see below) and potentially just found black beans today (tbd if they are really black beans). Regardless, I make some version of this several time a week for lunch/dinner.

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Mac n cheese!

Mac n cheese!

The ultimate cultural exchange = mac n cheese. I am a rice cooker mac n cheese pro. It is incredibly easy and thanks to my 1.5lb bag of cheese powder, I enjoy this as my dinner at least 3 nights a week. Yesterday, I invited Yuni, my Bahasa tutor, over to make mac n cheese (and she taught me tempe goreng). She loved it. Job done.

So… I am cooking a lot more this year than I did last year – I eat out about half the time and the other time make a quick batch of mac n cheese or a “burrito bowl.” This week, I shall attempt mashed potatoes (it is Thanksgiving after all…)

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While some ETAs live in places with easy access to alcohol, we in Kendari do not. We have found three restaurants with beer but I can count the number of beers I’ve had here on one hand. It’s just not something I’m here for. However, as the election results turned sour on that fateful Wednesday morning (we are 13 hours ahead of DC), we opened the emergency beer. It did not make the results any easier to swallow.

(Note: I tried to write a post about the election but couldn’t find the words. Maybe later. See facebook for my immediate responseĀ ?)

Western Food

Can you find Western food in Indonesia? Yes, definitely. Can you find it in Kendari? Ummm, a few things, namely spaghetti, french fries, and pizza hut.

Passable spaghetti and delicious avocado juice

Passable spaghetti and delicious avocado juice

Cost (juice and spaghetti) = Rp 45,000 = $3.35. The sauce is really sweet so it’s not my favorite but it does the job.

PIZZA

PIZZA

This pizza is NOT found in Kendari. If you are an ETA lucky enough to live in a big city, you will probably have access to Western restaurants and may be able to find incredible pizza like this one. Meanwhile, I’ll drool from over here in Southeast Sulawesi. Cost = Rp 80,000 = $5.96.

TACOS ?

TACOS ?

Oh, what I would give for a fish taco right now! Again, this can be found in Bandung or Bali or Jakarta, but definitely not in KendariĀ ??Ā Cost = Rp 60,000 = $4.47


And that wraps up my food tour. It’s been a pleasure having you along and I hope that it made you either drool or be appreciative of all the diverse and rice-less food options you have wherever you are. So this week, eat a taco or a salad for me… savor every bite and then pay a whopping $15 and cringe while I continue to enjoy my $1-2 meals šŸ˜€

Plusses and minuses, right?

Filed Under: Fulbright, Year 2 Tagged With: eat, food, Indonesia, Kendari, nasi goreng

Meet Mackenzie

Hi! I'm Mackenzie! I'm currently a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Indonesia! I'm writing all about my year on this blog and hope you'll follow along on this journey! Read More…

Disclaimer:

Students and Indonesian Friends: Please don't take anything I say here as critical of my experience or you and your culture. Rather, through this blog I want to share my experience in your country with my friends and family in America! I may write and laugh about a lot of things that are different but none of it is bad, it's just different!

This blog is not an official Department of State website, and the views and information presented here are my own and do not represent the Fulbright Program or the Department of State.

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My Latest Reads

My Latest Reads

Between the World and Me
5 of 5 stars
Between the World and Me
by Ta-Nehisi Coates
If You Follow Me: A Novel
3 of 5 stars
If You Follow Me: A Novel
by Malena Watrous
The Goldfinch
4 of 5 stars
The Goldfinch
by Donna Tartt
Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town
4 of 5 stars
Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town
by Jon Krakauer
Station Eleven
4 of 5 stars
Station Eleven
by Emily St. John Mandel
Fight Back and Win
2 of 5 stars
Fight Back and Win
by Gloria Allred

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Mackenzie

Hi! I'm Mackenzie! I'm currently a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Indonesia! I'm writing all about my year on this blog and hope you'll follow along on this journey! Read More…

A Look Back

This blog is not an official U.S. Department of State website and the views and opinions expressed here are entirely my own, and do not represent the U.S. Department of State or the Fulbright Program.

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