Hello friends. See you on Monday. I couldn’t post today, but don’t forget to be active. I send you a hug! Español aquí.
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Wouldn’t it be great if the weekend was longer than the weekdays. I sigh. Meanwhile, I’m very excited to share this week’s post for Peruvian style pork chicharrones. It can also be described as Braised and Fried Pork. However you call it, it’s a very filling breakfast we enjoy in Peru, mostly served within a bread bun and with fried slices of sweet potatoes and a sauce of onion rings bathed in lemon and salt. Español aquí.
This was the first time I made it (I made an Instagram promise). I used a pancetta pork cut and, for the video, ½ kilo of pork. Of course you can choose a leaner pork cut with less fat. I hope to try it again soon. Its very easy to make, but I didn’t label it with the “easy to make” recipes because cooking it in water took quite a long time. I can’t lie to you.
Sorry about the video quality, I hadn’t noticed the camera tilted and caught part of a furniture.. You don’t mind right? See you next time!
Ingredients
1 kg of pork, I used bacon
1 sprig of huacatay mint (optional)
Water
Salt
Preparation
Cut the meat into medium pieces.
Salt.
Cook in water up to the surface of the meat.
Add a branch of spearmint.
Let the water be consumed.
Let it fry in the fat that is released from the meat. Add oil if desired.
Serve it in a bread bun with fried sweet potato slices and onion sauce.
Serves 8 portions.
Hello friends. At 31 years old, I’m going to be… an aunt. As I shared in this week’s video recipe, my sister is going to be a mom for the first time. You don’t know how happy this makes me. At the same time, I think a lot about how I’m going to help my nephew to grow. I know that education will be his best gift. Since I have been making gifts for children, I have been choosing books. Now that I know that out of every 10 Peruvian children, only 5 understand what they read, I won’t stop. Español aquí.
That is why I wanted to take a lil bit of time to tell you about the “Aprendamos Juntos” program, which is supported by the “Fundación Custer” and their campaign “Una causa por la educación”. The campaign name has quite a cute pun in Spanish. “Aprendamos Juntos” is an initiative that provides educational therapies for children in 1st and 2nd grade, coursing in schools that are vulnerable to learning problems and are located in places such as Comas, Ventanilla, San Juan de Lurigancho, among others. Click here to read more about them. In summary, they strengthen children’s learning capabilities with psychologists, involving their teachers and their parents.
But what about the food? Here is where I tell you that these ten restaurants – which are already quite well known and respected in Lima – have pledged a percentage of their profits in May towards the program. Because I know we all love to eat good food, I hope you can keep them in your radar and join us in this good cause. I also plan to collaborate (with my humble salary) and I will be sharing pictures of the restaurants I visited through my social networks. And you, do you know where you want to go?
1. ámaZ
2. Mangos
3. Cala
5. Punta Sal
8. Charlotte
10. Costanera 700
Hi lovelies! I hope you are excellent! I turned 31 last week… But enough about myself because this post is dedicated to someone very special to me, my mom. I know I already shared a recipe for Peruvian style chili chicken last year. The difference with this one is that my camera is less shaky and that I’m only using one type of Peruvian chili, the yellow one which we also call green for some reason I don’t know. Español aquí.
In case you are wondering why I using less ingredients, I did it for two reasons. The first one is because my mom always made it this way. The second is to show you that you can still make it from places with less access to Peruvian ingredients and that way you don’t lose the habit of eating Peruvian. For me, the taste remains.
Before jumping into the recipe I want to wish all the beautiful moms who are visiting my blog a very happy Mother’s Day. I am very blessed to have had a mother who loves me very much and now I will enjoy Mother’s Day even more because my older sister is soon to become a mommy for the first time. I have a very beautiful family and so many reasons to be thankful. I hope you do too. Hugs for everyone!
Ingredients
1 chicken breast
1 red onion, minced
2 garlic cloves, minced
2 yellow Peruvian chili peppers, without seeds and veins, crushed with oil
4 slices of white bread or 1 ciabatta bread
2 tablespoons of walnuts, finely chopped
3 tablespoons of grated Parmesan cheese
1 cup of milk
Salt and pepper
Preparation
Boil the chicken in salted water.
Let the chicken cool off.
Soak the bread in the broth from the chicken.
Pull the chicken and set it aside.
Sauté onion and garlic.
Add the Peruvian chili.
Add the soaked bread.
Incorporate the chicken.
Add the Parmesan cheese, walnuts and milk.
Cook at low heat for 10 minutes.
Garnish egg slices and serve with cooked potatoes and white rice. I recommend eating only with carb.
Makes 4 servings.
This week’s lifestyle post is for keeping your wallet healthy with my first DIY. Have you thought about changing your bedroom? How about using a duvet cover as an alternative to buying a new one and saving all that space your old duvet would take up in your closet? Using a cover will bring new life to your comforter with the colors and patterns that you like. I hope you enjoy! Español aquí.
Since I know they exist, I really love them. Sadly in Peru (where I am now) there are few options for getting a cover while other countries do sell them with ease. I wrote this post after making my own comforter cover, when I didn’t have a job, but I still wanted my bedroom to look nice. Sorry about the shortage of footage, but it was just really bad. I really hope these gifs can help explain.
As I always do, before getting started I browsed through Pinterest for inspiration. I enjoy minimalist designs so I opted for a white and grey colors, which I find most elegant. One side grey, one side white. For this project I covered my own feather comforter which is in good conditions, and is beige and brown colored. I got it before I knew how geese suffer when loose their feathers. Now that I know, I recommend using a synthetic filled comforter which is easier to wash.
Comforter and bed sizes are not standard and vary between countries. To know how much cloth you need measure your duvet and add some extra centimeters to the width and length. I chose my cover to be 2.30 meters wide and long.
I purchased the cloth in Lima’s Gamarra district and I asked for it as cotton cloth for sheets. I always worry that fabric will shrink in the dryer so I asked for a high percentage of cotton. The white fabric was 100% cotton and the gray fabric was 80% cotton. The total cost of this DIY was less than US$ 25, having purchased my supplies in Peruvian Soles. This included all the materials and having it sewn because I don’t own a machine.
Material and Tools
2 pieces of fabric measuring at least 2.36 x 2.36 m wide and long each – I purchased 2.5 meters of cloth
Buttons or a zipper – I used 4 buttons of 2 cm.
Lace (for the eyelets)
Measuring tape
Pins
Needle
Thread, in the fabric color
Sewing machine – I took this to be sewn
Instructions
Place the fabric over each other, over a smooth surface.
Mark a square 2.30 meter square and a 3 cm margin surrounding it with pins
Baste the 2.30 m square to facilitate sewing.
Leave an unsewn 80 cm space to the center of one side. This is where we will insert the duvet.
Cut the excess fabric of the 3 cm margin.
Sew over the basted 2.30 m square and overlock the ends.
Fold over the fabric of the open space, and sew it separately. I sewed it by hand with an “invisible” stitch.
Sew the buttons on one side of the open space and add lace eyelets on the other side. I also sewed this by hand, folding the lace like bunny ears.
Flip the cover over and place the duvet inside.
I hope you like it!