Showing posts with label Blood Donation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blood Donation. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 December 2016

Degustation at Barat and other Birthday Shenanigans

And so I made my 38th trip around the Sun two Fridays ago.
    
I took the day off and had a wonderfully long weekend as a result, thanks to two public holidays, Maulidur Rasul (Monday) and the Sultan of Selangor's Birthday (Tuesday).
 
    
Started off my birthday by sleeping in and having an artichoke for breakfast... at 1 p.m. Ah, I am very much the life of the party, as you can see.
 

I recently took in another rescued kitten and named her Harriet, after my hero, Harriet Tubman. Harriet is a feisty, beautiful, active little thing and fostering her is a pleasure.
 



My senior cats seem to think that fostering Harriet is a pleasure, too. My cats make each of my days a celebration.   
 
 
 
2 p.m. saw me stopping by The Honest Treat for some raw vegan cake and almond milk, just for me! You wouldn't have thought plant-based raw cakes to be so dense and rich, but they are. They were incredibly delicious and flavoursome too.
 

This is the Minty Chocolate raw cake. Not as minty as I would have liked it to be, but still delicious.


A slice of Berry Banana -- dense, smooth, fruity goodness.
 
 
Banoffee -- again, the toffee flavor isn't as distinctive as I would have liked it to be. It tastes of banana and mild chocolate. Very filling and yummy, just not very distinctive-tasting.
 
 
 
This is my favourite of the lot -- Tropical Surprise. This one really hits the spot with its fruity, tangy, zesty and sweet notes.
 
 
 

Then it was off to the National Blood Bank to keep an annual tradition alive.
   
The nurses wished me a happy birthday, which was nice! 237 of my friends wished me a happy birthday on Facebook, and I received approximately 80 private messages filled with good wishes. I feel very loved, indeed!
  
 

Portion control is out the window at the Blood Bank. This is what they are feeding us vegetarian donors these days. Pile on the fried noodles, Crane Driver! How about another ton of carbs? Thank you most kindly for your generosity, National Blood Bank, but I assure you that we are quite unlikely to die of starvation while in the middle of blood extraction.
 
 
 
And what's a birthday party without treats? I celebrated with my furry friends at the SPCA, with treats galore.
 
 
I had a simple birthday dinner that night at Pine3 Vegetarian Restaurant with Nicole, as I had to be up early the following morning to conduct the Pet Care Programme / Basic Animal Welfare Warrior Workshop at the SPCA. Nic made me a gift of these edgy typography steel posters. Aren't they delightful? Aren't they so 'me'? When your bestie knows your decor style and tastes so well, you might as well give her a free rein in creating a gallery wall in your bedroom for you.
 
 
Conducted the Pet Care Programme (PCP) at the SPCA on the day after my birthday and incorporated a basic Animal Welfare Warrior component. You may recognise this as Rafferty, the stuffed shar pei that lives in my bedroom. He's helping me teach the workshop participants how to collect evidence for an animal cruelty report now.
 
 
 


I taught the workshop participants how to pick up, handle and play with cats, apply Frontline flea spray and clean cat ears without being mauled.
 
 
And then I showed the workshop participants how to clean cat cages and litter trays and got them to help out with some cleaning at the shelter.
 
 
Then it was time for my second round of celebrations with Nic. We went to The Strand Mall for dinner out of food trucks and watched "Underworld: Blood Wars."
 
 
As it was a long weekend, my birthday festivities extended over 4 days. My good friends Angela, Rudhra, Baby Ava and Hari took me out to dinner and for a spot of ice skating. Hari's sons Goutham and Jay and nephew Dinesh joined us for the outing. They made me a gift of a new football to replace my old football, which exploded two months ago due to overinflation. We had dinner at Beyond Veggie and followed this up with shakes at Johnny Rockets.
 
 
 
Ice skating with my squad. Rudhra was pretty amazing for a first-time skater. Dinesh did pretty well too for someone who had never skated before. Jay and I spent much of our 2.5 hours on ice chasing each other down and playing tag. Poor Hari had to sit out due to an injured ankle.
 
The need for speed!
 
 
 
My good friend and mentor Lin Idrus invited me out for a birthday dinner the day after, and since both of us have long expressed the intention of trying out the degustation menu at Barat Mediterranean Vegetarian Restaurant, we took the opportunity to have a long, leisurely and wonderful dinner there on Tuesday night.


  
What I like best about Barat is its service and atmosphere, and how it makes customers feel welcome and relaxed. There is no pretension about this place. Just good food, friendly faces and exemplary service in a clean and welcoming environment. The staff are helpful, attentive and knowledgeable. Hot dishes are served hot and cold dishes are deliciously chilled. You can tell they take a lot of pride in their food and care about making your dining experience one to remember.
 
 

Towards the end of the dinner, right before serving us dessert, they even brought out a slice of birthday cake for me and sang me the birthday song. What a treat. The cake was a slice of red velvet with berry sauce and edible flowers. Barat really goes out of its way to make us feel good about dining there.
 
Dégustation Dinner at Barat Mediterranean Vegetarian Restaurant: A short review
 
 
1st course: Roasted Pumpkin Soup with ginger infusion and air-dried ginger, served with homebaked bread with apple cider vinegar and olive oil. We start off with a hot soup, and it is creamy and flavourful without being too rich. The bread has the right density and 'chew' to it. Looking forward to a vegan version soon (most dishes here are lacto-vegetarian).
 
 
 

2nd course: Salad of baby arugula, rocket, chard, sweet basil, dragon fruit, radish, dehydrated blueberries and tempura mandarin orange slices with roasted sesame dressing and blood orange press with olive oil. To others, this is the salad. To me, this is the pièce de résistance. The crunchy exterior and juicy tart interior of the tempura orange slices added a dynamic contrast to the cold crispness of the different fruits and vegetables, while the roasted sesame dressing provided a hint of umami. A definite winner, this salad. I could eat this all day, every day.
 
 
 

3rd course: Roasted Romano with pitted prune and cranberry (left), Patatas Bravas with tomato sauce (centre) and grilled sweet pepper with blue cheese and olive oil. The contrast between the savoury romano and sweet prune and cranberry made for an interesting combination, although I enjoyed it more than Lin did (she found it too sweet). The patatas bravas came with burning sprigs of rosemary and was quite mild-tasting even with the dipping sauce slathered on, so maybe it should have been named 'Patatas Dulce' instead. The sweet pepper was roasted a little too long and was a little too soft for my liking but paired very well with the blue cheese and olive oil, flavour-wise.
 
 
 

4th course: Mushroom zucchini aglio olio with grilled lemon. Easily one of the best pastas I have ever had, and it still struck me with its novel and piquant blend of flavours and textures although this was the second time I had it. The grilled lemon slice complemented the pasta and mushroom perfectly and everything about this dish is just really mellow.
 
 
 

5th course: Red endive with blackberry, blueberry, raspberry, mulberry with rose press and chia seeds (left) and golden fried tri-cheese with apricot and pineapple spiced jam (right). Again, I am trying to give up cheese and dairy products but made an exception for this special dinner. The cheese balls disappointed nothing but my conscience. You bite into the slightly crispy exterior to reveal the soft, ripe. full-flavoured cheese within. The pineapple and apricot spiced jam took away some of the cloying richness of the cheese.


The sweet berries, soaked in a fragrant rose-flavoured dressing, and served on the mildly bitter, sharp and crisp endive (if you haven't had endive before -- it tastes a lot like radicchio) was the ideal accompaniment to the savoury, viscous cheese.   
 
 
 

6th course: Basil pesto on fried aubergine and micro greens (left), sundried tomato pesto with ricotta cheese on japanese cucumber (centre) and capsicum pesto on wafer (right). Lin and I are both very partial to pesto, and this trio of pesto was quite delightful. The sweet mintiness of the basil really shone on the slice of fried aubergine, although Lin found the aubergine a little too greasy for her liking. The tomato and ricotta pesto was refreshing and delicious without actually standing out in my mind as being something truly remarkable. The capsicum pesto is zesty and full-flavoured and easily our favourite of the trio.
 
 
 

7th course: Spiced couscous with grilled asparagus, baby carrot and pomegranate dressing. Ah, the versatile couscous! Usually a little on the bland side, but fancied up with spices here at Barat. Grilled vegetables makes this wholesome dish livelier.
 
 
 

8th course: Watermelon gazpacho with a japanese cucumber stirrer and edible flowers. Lin and I decided that we will return to Barat soon just for the soups! If the roasted pumpkin soup were the warm, hearty sibling, the watermelon gazpacho is its trendy, sparkling, blinged-out sister. Refreshing, light, and flavoursome, this gazpacho simply sparkles.
 
 
 

Dessert: Poached peach with red currant, coconut ice cream and chocolate cake, served with balsamic reduction. Lin and I were too stuffed for the final pasta and jumped straight to dessert. Of course, like all women, we have special Dessert Stomachs which can hold prodigious quantities of sweets. This dessert trio made us want to stand up and applaud. The chocolate cake was in itself nice without being exceptional, but it paired very well with the balsamic reduction (I eat pretty much everything with balsamic reduction) and poached peach and red currant. The peach is still firm and warm, not squishy and soggy with syrup as with the canned variety. The smooth and fragrant coconut ice cream is light enough to stop a little short of being sinful, and is the perfect foil to the chocolate cake. I confess I licked the ice cream dish clean.
 
This meal is something that has been on my list of things to try for a long time, and I highly recommend it to everyone, vegetarian and non-vegetarians alike.
 
It has been another amazing birthday week and I am continually surprised and delighted by the friends who took time out of their busy days to make my birthday so memorable and lovely. So many things to be thankful for in this troubled world of ours.
 
 

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

National Day Week


 
When I was 18, I signed up to be a Territorial Army Reservist (Askar Wataniah Kerahan) because I felt that if there were a crisis in this country, I want to be part of the solution. When I grew older, I realised that one does not have to take up arms to defend and protect one's country. We defend and protect our country and society every day by choosing to act with integrity, responsibility, justice and moral courage. We can try to be part of the solution every day without ever having to put our lives on the line. 
(P/S: In retrospect, I would have been absolutely rubbish as a soldier anyway.)
 
I had a busy National Day week. Wednesday proved itself to be a wet, chilly and blustery one. Met up with my good friends Rudhra and Angela for an early banana leaf lunch at Usha's in PJ Old Town before heading to Section 52 to explore the back alleys and photograph street art before the thunderstorm broke.
 
 
... And then it was off to the National Blood Bank in Jalan Tun Razak for my National Day tradition of blood donation.
 
 
A short rest and some refreshments followed, and then I was off to the SPCA to help out in the Cattery, since it was too wet and cold for bathing dogs. I cleaned the cats' ears with ear mite solution, administered Frontline tick and flea prevention spray on every cat, checked each cat for injuries, overgrown/ingrown claws and other irregularities, and cleaned out the Cattery. This took several hours and since it was a wet, cold night, I went home afterwards and spent the night doing housework instead of going out for coffee and a movie as I had planned earlier.
 
The following day was a workday and just as rainy. Traffic in the evening was frightful and it took me close to two hours to get to the Homeless Assistance and Service Centre in Lorong Medan Tuanku 2, where Green Living is having our annual collaboration with Kedai Jalanan. Thankfully, our other volunteers did not have such a great distance to travel as I did, and managed to arrive in good time to assist Lin Idrus and her students with setting up the store. There were puddles everywhere, so it was a good thing the clothes were hung up on racks and there were tarps to line the ground with.
 

 
The volunteers helped me unload the remaining donations from The Stinkbug and we arranged the goods while our homeless clients queued up for dinner. We opened our store for 'business' as soon as some of the clients finished eating. We were kept happily and busily on our feet attending to clients, helping them try on clothing, putting things into reusable shopping bags (we had stacks of those donated by volunteers) and managing the crowd. Our Green Living committee members Shannon and Zhang Hui were fantastic as usual.
 
 
A group photo of the volunteers for posterity. Well done, Kedai Jalanan!
 
We finished around 10 p.m. and packed up. I loaded a rubbish bag full of dirty, stained and torn clothing for recycling into the Stinkbug to be dropped off at the recycling bins later and went out to supper with the other volunteers at the Naan restaurant nearby.
 
It has been a fulfilling week. Often, patriotism means appreciating and accepting the people of all strata of society who make up this vibrant young nation. It means putting our time and energies into improving our country and community. It means taking the time to appreciate all that is beautiful and quirky about our country and doing our best to keep it beautiful, safe and clean.
 
... And in honour of things that are beautiful and quirky, I leave you with a photodump of the street art in Section 52, Petaling Jaya, around the PJ State Cinema and Menara MBPJ.
 





 
This one is a really cool interactive one. It's an adult-sized merry-go-round made of steel and bungee cords.
 
  
Seats and tables made of reclaimed steel drums and pallets for the public's use.
 
 
Bamboo windchimes in the darkening sky.
 










 
  
 
 
 
   
I love the "suddenly something" effect of street art. I love their incongruity. I love the way they encourage interaction and participation from passersby.
 
 
 

Storm clouds gathering in the darkening sky.
 
CovertOps78, Out.