Friday, June 24, 2011

DIY: Making Your Own Chilled Cheesecake

It was just recently that there have been quite a number of guests and friends wanting to make their own cheesecake. So here is a simple, straight-forward, yet somewhat delightful recipe that nearly everyone is be able to prepare with some basic equipment and access to the nearby supermarket.

There's no secret to the recipes I have used for my cheesecakes since several years back, it lies within the selection and the combinations of the flavours used to make something simple, exotic. Getting to the point, here is the recipe breakdown (For a 1kg recipe):

Ingredients:
300g cream cheese (Any brand will do, though its up to your preference)
300g whipping cream (You can use non-dairy topping too, they are somewhat similar)
2 tbsp of gelatine powder
1/2 cup of water
a little vanilla extract to taste
a little sugar to taste
and other flavourings of choice (e.g.juice of a lemon, chocolate powder, milo, you name it) to taste

100g of broken biscuit crumbs (any biscuit of choice - chunkier bits will be a little crispier)
75g of melted butter (I generally discourage using margarine as its taste is inferior and also probably unhealthy)

Equipment:
2 mixing bowls
1 Mixer
1 Baking Tray with a removable base (looks like pic below)


Refrigerator
Stove
Basic utensils

Method:
1. Whip the cream cheese with solid or powdered ingredients until they form a smooth paste.
2. Dissolve gelatine powder with water over very low heat until the mixture is smooth.
2a. Prepare the biscuit base by melting butter over low heat and mixing in the biscuit crumbs. Press firmly with a spoon. If the base is too brittle, add in more melted butter.
3. Whip in the gelatine mixture with the cheesemix.
4. Beat the whipping cream in a separate bowl until firm tops are formed, then fold in (Mix manually) the whipping cream with the cheesemix till smooth.
5. Pour everything into the baking tray, then add any toppings of choice.
6. Chill for four hours to set.

And that's it! The basics are really quite simple, but from there there is so much that you can do to give add a variety of new ingredients and add-ons to make a truly exquisite dessert. Here was a little something I did for a friend sometime back (Nothing spectacular, but it will still great fun):


The best part of doing it yourself? The whole thing will cost you only around RM25!

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

D&D - Moving It Out

Recently we were lucky enough that a reporter dropped by to take a look into one of our most unique worlds within Myst - Dungeons and Dragons, an RPG-based game set in a world where fantasy and imagination rule. Let the article speak for itself (Taken from The Borneo Post):



TOTAL strangers and from vastly different backgrounds, six young local professionals get together without fail twice a week and even on public holidays.
What is it that so compels them to willingly give up their free time for, and at the same time, has the power to bind them like a brotherhood cult?
It sounds extreme, but it isn’t. The young people are merely indulging in a highly interactive and mind-stimulating game of D&D (Dungeons and Dragons).
It’s a kind of Role Playing Game (RPG) that requires a high level of imagination and creativity — a game of fantasy usually centred on medieval times where dragons, castles and knights ruled. Basically, it’s about saving the world and good conquering evil.
The players have to assume the roles of imaginary characters in a fictional setting, acting out their part according to the rules and regulations set by the Game Master (GM) who also pens the storyline.
What’s unique is that the players have a crucial role in determining the conclusion.
Their part (or rather act) is not transcribed by the GM – they themselves determine the flow of the game. It’s a more sophisticated and intellectual form of story telling that pools the players’ collaborative efforts.
RPG is played here exclusively by those who took it up while studying abroad. It’s a hit among college students and also appeals to computer game buffs.
The only people known to play the game in Kuching are a five-member group comprising Jerome Wei, Jonathan Isaac, Alvin Katek, Roy Eng, Remington Ling and Lim Kheng Sen.
Sheela Kym, who just joined the group, is the only female member.

While many readily dismiss RPG as a waste of time and childish, the group will spring to its defence in a flash.
Explained Wei: “It’s an interactive game that involves deep thinking and stimulates the mind.”
Eng put it this way: “It’s a game that requires vivid imagination. The Game Master has to come out with the storyline while each player has act out a character to fit the storyline.”
Jonathan said it’s a highly interactive game that improves one’s oral skills and also helps one to think out of the box to overcome the obstacles that crop up so often in the story.
Ling believed RPG could boost one’s confidence in public speaking as it involves a lot of conversation while Lim said it helps improve one’s command of English in which game is played.
Despite their different opinions of the game, they all agreed on one thing – it’s a form of escapism that transports them to a world of fantasies inhabited by dragons, swash-buckling heroes and villains, fair maidens and chivalrous knights.
“You need to be open-minded. Only then can you appreciate the game. Basically, you are stepping into a world of fantasy,” Jonathan pointed out.
With the crinkum and crankum of blockbusters like The Lord of the Ring and Harry Potter to fuel young minds, it’s no wonder RGP is popular among college kids.
Most members of the Kuching group have been playing the game even before their college days, either alone via computer or with others online. They met by chance and after discovering they had the same interests, decided to get to know each other better by coming together to share a common hobby.
“Previously, it was just sheets of paper and dice. Figurines were too expensive and hard to come by. Now these miniatures are more easily available,” Wei noted.

Usually, the game is played with sheets of paper and dice but when it comes to the conclusion, the table is set with figurines representing the characters in the story, complete with a huge model of a fire-spitting dragon.
Explained Eng: “Sometimes, we do set the table with models and miniatures. So we don’t have to use visualisation.”
A game lasts about four hours.
“It’s all about saving the world, good triumphing over evil. But the mission is treacherous and perilous,” he added.
Though it sounds fantastical, it’s also very pragmatic and structured, Eng said, adding that just like a real battle, tactics and strategies were necessary to defeat the enemy.
“The game is as practical as it is fantastical.”
The earliest RPG is Dungeons and Dragons created by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson. It was first published in 1974 by Tactical Studies Rules Inc (TSR). Its early success led to a proliferation of similar game systems but D&D remains dominant in its  genre.
As of 2006, about 20 million people have played the game with more than US$1 billion in book and equipment sales.