
I religiously start the work day with 
Sultana Bran and low fat milk - for a person that is so totally unpredictable when it comes to eating this is an anomaly. In our house there is no routine for when or what we eat. Dishes are created from cuisines from around the globe, eating out happens at the drop of a hat and meal times vary enormously. But back to breakfast, taken after 10am if at all possible! The Sultana Bran is the closest I get to incorporating a healthy component to my food regime and its substance helps to keep me going until I get a break at lunch time. On non working days breakfast can be sour-dough with home-made jam, eggs from my sisters rural living chooks, poached seasonal fruit, pancakes..... stop me ... the list is never ending - I love breakfast! 

Having just spend weeks not going to work (yay!) and in countries where  neither Sultana Bran nor sour dough was an option, I've added a couple more  favourites to my breakfast list. Our time in India was in the north so  breakfast often consisted of 
Paratha (stuffed roti) made from  wholemeal flour (atta) and filled with my choice of grated or shredded  winter vegetables - potatoes, cauliflower, radish, spinach and sometimes paneer - usually some green chilli and spices. At home these were cooked  on a 
tava (concave griddle) with just a little ghee, at the paratha walla in  Delhi lots of ghee was used and on the roadside in the tandoor. No two exactly the same but always deliciously earthy and wafting wheaty aroma's even before one bites in to the chewy rounds served with fresh curd and a little pickle.

In Malaysia 
Nasi Lemak became my Sultana  bran -  not such a healthy choice though, let me explain, nasi means  rice,  lemak means fat - FAT RICE, the fat comes from the delicious  coconut  milk that the rice is soaked in before being steamed with fragrant  pandan  leaf. Wrapped in a banana leaf, the rice comes with a spicy  chilli sambal (a good one really  wakes up the taste buds!), a boiled  egg, crunchy peanuts, sliced cucumber and fried dried anchovies (
ikan bilis), curry is often served with the lunch/dinner version.
Not surprisingly I'm not really looking forward to returning to my  sultana bran regime, but then who would after nearly 4 months of  fabulous breakfasts!  Today we had corn pancakes with crispy bacon and  eggs AND chilli sauce!  
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| Breakfast version | 
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| Lunch/dinner version   | 
 
 
Mmmm..Nasi Lemak, sounds like you had a great food trip overseas. Growing up, we used to rotate all these savoury breakfast items mostly on Sundays as it's such an indulgence; we rotate around nasi lemak, roti chanai (paratha) with fish curry and dhal, lo ma kai (glutinous rice with chicken wrapped in lotus leaf), char siew (BBQ Pork) dry wonton noodles, prawn noodles, curry laksas or yum cha session - all for breakkie/brunch. But now, I'm also very happy with my poached and scrambled eggs on sourdough..mmmm..the love of food! ain't it great? :)
ReplyDeleteI worked my way through your list Mei Sze (and more!!!) while in Penang and KL.
ReplyDeleteIndulgence - I know my raison d'etre shouldn't be "Too much of a good thing can be wonderful!"
— Mae West
Cheers Rumbaba