Posts Tagged ‘rice’

And now for something completely different..  something very yummy!

I stopped at Sunny Foodmart on Gateway Blvd because I needed something quick for lunch after a walk.  I was amazed at what I saw.  I have been in Asian grocery stores before but this was so much more.

below: Obviously she is over-dressed for the hot weather that we’ve had this week! Photos are from a couple of weeks ago 😄

woman shopping in grocery store

below: Pani Puri originally from India or Pakistan, sort of like samosas but round.  Fried dough balls stuffed with good things.

Pani Puri and other Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Quite a selection!  Wasabi, soy sauces, teriyaki sauces, sukiyaki sauces, rice vinegar, oyster sauce, and many labels that I can’t read.

shelves of bottles, grocery store interior

below: More bottles, more sauces. Sesame oil, apple cider vinegar, and cooking wine too.

shelves of bottles, grocery store interior

below: Filipino spaghetti sauce – I had no idea that that was a thing!  And the packaging is bilingual English/French!

packages of filipino spaghetti sauce for sale

below: Chaat is another new word for me.  It’s another food that originated in India and has spread as street food in many south Asian countries.  In the freezer below you’ll find sausages, fish balls, Chicharon Bulaklak (pork ruffle fat), smoked herring, and dried danggit (a type of fish from the Philippines, also called rabbitfish or spinefoot fish).  In case you’re wondering what  ruffle fat is, it’s not actually fat… Chicharon Bulaklak  is made with the mesentery (or the connective tissue that joins the internal organs together).  It’s salty and crunchy apparently.  No, I haven’t tried it!

Chaat, Chicken Tikku,Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Bags of dried hawthorn, dried orange peel, dried lily bulbs, and longan berries, along with white pepper, cardamom, and aniseed.  One of bags is labelled as amomum tsao-ko which is also known as black cardamom.

dried hawthorn, dried orange peel and Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Freezers full of goodies – corn on the cob, scallion flower rolls, assorted dumplings, and golden saba bananas (short stubby bananas from the Philippines).

frozen foods in a freezer, Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: More frozen food – udon noodles, lamb rolls, lobster rolls, and bean curd.   Boxes of coconut milk are stacked on the other side of the aisle.

frozen udon noodles and other frozen foods, Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: That’s a lot of hoisin sauce!

large bottles of hoisin sauce, Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Floor to ceiling jars, bottles, and cans including cans of green jackfruit still in the box.

Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Pork pieces, feet and hocks

part of meat counter, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: Colourful veggie jars. Red peppers, sliced pickled jalapeno peppers, pickled wild cucumbers, white asparagus, peas, pickled white cabbage, and roasted eggplant.

glass jars of preserved foods, Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

below: There were a couple of aisles of bags of rice stacked in piles on the floor.  Thai jasmine rice is pictured here.

large bags of rice stacked in aisles of grocery store

below: Marjan rice from the foothills of the Himalayas (Pakistan) as well as Basmati rice.

large bags of rice stacked in aisles of grocery store

below: No grocery store would be complete without a candy section – orange, mango, peppermint and ginger chewy candies.  Lollipops.  Ricola in the original herbal formula.  And don’t miss the Super Lemon or Super Cola candies!

candy from different countries for sale, peppermints, ricola,

below: Pizza snacks (very Asian!) and shrimp chips.  Honey butter chips and sweet potato snacks.  On the bottom shelf, want want crackers – part sweet and part salty and totally yummy!

shrimp crackers and Asian foods for sale, interior of Sunny Foodmart grocery store

My apologies.  All photos were taken with my phone so the quality may be questionable especially after reducing the resolution a little before uploading them.   I hope that you still enjoyed the tour!

Dia de Muertos, Day of the Dead, is a Mexican holiday where and friends come together to pray for and remember friends and family members who have died.  It occurs at the end of October (31 Oct to 2 Nov).  Here in Toronto there was a Day of the Dead festival at Harbourfront this past weekend.

fabric hanging on a wall. There is a picture on the fabric of a woman's face painted white to look like a skull but with pink around the eys. Many orange roses surround her face

One of the traditions of Dia de Muertos is the making of ofrendas which are altars dedicated to the deceased person.  Jose Clemente Orozco was a Mexican painter (1883-1949).  He specialized in painting murals in frescoes and his work can be seen in Mexico and in the USA.

elaborate and colourful ofrenda with purple, blue and pink paper cut outs on the wall behind.
Another altar that was on display was one made by artist Alberto Cruz in honour of Pablo Picasso.

An ofrenda, or altar, in the memory of Pablo Picasso at a day of the dead festival. There is a photo of him surrounded by different objects and symbols representing his life and things that he did

The Casa Cultura Mexicana made an ofrenda to honour the Prehispanic indigenous people and warriors of Mexico.
The bottom part consisted of pictures made with coloured rice.

pictures made of coloured rice on an ofrenda dedicated to the indigenous people of Mexico

Food items such as rice, beans, and corns were an important part of the ofrenda.

a face shape made of dried beans and corn. red beans make a circle around the face, black beans make 6 rays coming out from the circle. The face is corn with bean features.

Ofrendas are decorated with sugar skulls and marigolds (or yellow and orange paper flowers) as well as candles, photos, momentos from the person’s life, and things that symbolize something about that person.  Sometimes serious, sometimes whimsical.

an ofrenda with a picture of a woman in a frame sitting on a table. One each side of her is an elaborately decorated skull. One of the skulls is wearing sunglasses and a wreath of yellow and orange flowers around the top of its head.

What would your friends and family put on an ofrenda in your memory?

objects on an ofrenda at a day of the dead celebration, decorated skulls, a small skeleton, some old photos of people, flowers, fruit,

There was also clay available if you wanted to make a small skull or other symbol for the occasion.

close up picture of a man putting details on a small clay skull with a toothpick

Two girls with day of the dead face paint on are making clay skulls. A young boy is also at the table making a skull, his mother is helping him.

A young man carefully adds tiny clay roses to a clay skull that he has made.

A small figurine made of a clay of a skeleton wearing a sombraro and playing a guitar is in the foreground, kids making clay skulls at a table are in the background.

skull painted white and then decorated with black, green, red and white

Rest in Peace.

ofrenda, altar, day of the dead celebration, woman's picture along with Virgin Mary candles and other pink cnadles, lots of orange flowers too