Tag Archives: pandan leaves

Today’s Simple Drink – Barley Water With Lime Or Lemon

0
Filed under Drink Recipes, Today's Simple Drink

Last night, hubby woke up at 8.30 p.m. after his short nap. From 5 p.m. to 8.30 p.m., short nap? He didn’t eat instant noodle as I suggested. Instead he finished the half bowl of cooked barley.

Today I am cooking the other half packet of the barley. It’s been hot these few days and I don’t have appetite today due to my mild headache.

It’s cooling and soothing to drink more barley water on hot days or on days when you are under the weather.

There are two ways of cooking barley: pre-soaking the barley overnight or simply cooking barley without any advanced preparation.

For my convenience, of course I opt for the latter. ;-)

Ingredients:

1 cup pearl barley
2 knotted ‘pandan leaves’
1/2 cup preserved winter melon sticks
A few lime/lemon slices
1 liter water

Instructions:

1. Rinse the pearl barley like how you normally wash your rice prior to cooking.

2. Pour the water, barley and preserved winter melon sticks into a rice cooker. Bring to boil.

3. Add in the knotted ‘pandan leaves’ and simmer for another 15 minutes.

4. Each time you pour yourself a glass of barley water, squeeze some lime/lemon juice into it. You’ll love the sweet and sour taste of barley water!

I used to dislike drinking barley water; it’s a drink that I only consumed when I was sick. Maybe it’s too ‘plain’.

Barley Water with Lime
Photo Credit for Barley Drink

But then one day, I heard a woman sitting at the next table order, ‘Barley Water with Lime’. It’s something that I hadn’t tried before, so I ordered one too. Since then, I have loved barley juice.

I think today’s dinner is going to be the cooked barley and preserved winter melon sticks. Why just drink the barley water when the high-fiber barley and winter melon sticks can speed up your bowel movement the next day?

Use Free Pandan Leaves As Air Fresheners & Bug Repellents

0
Filed under Cooking Ingredients

Wow, 3 big stalks of ‘pandan leaves’! Free ‘pandan leaves’ that I collected from the back of my flat. According to my landlord, he planted them. Huh, he planted ‘pandan leaves’ on other people’s hill slope??

Pandan – Pandanus or P. amaryllifolius – is also known as Umbrella tree, Screw pine or Screw tree.

Whenever I need ‘pandan leaves’, I just have to open the back gate and go pluck a stalk or a few stalks. Oh, I don’t pluck a few leaves, but a stalk.

Pandan Leaves In Knots
Photo Credit for Pandan Leaves

I don’t use ‘pandan leaves’ for cooking Chinese meals. I use them as natural air fresheners and bug propellers repellents. :-)

Natural Air Fresheners. I love to use ‘pandan leaves’ to make the living space filled with nice scent. Natural air fresheners are definitely healthier than chemical air fresheners, right?

This is what I do – Tie a few leaves into a knot and place it anywhere I want. Normally I have pandan knots scattered everywhere in the house, from living room to dining room to kitchen to bedrooms to even toilet!

Oh, place a few ‘pandan leaves’ in your car! The leaves’ aroma is so pleasant to smell while you get caught in the traffic jam.

Bug Propellers Repellents. Hate seeing cockroaches in your house? Use ‘pandan leaves’ to get rid of them.

Place the knots on the tables, near the shoes, in the food racks, under the sinks, next to your bed, beside your washing machine, and any place that you want to keep bugs away.

Updated at 1:41 pm: It’s supposed to be ‘repellents’ and not ‘propellers’. ;-)