Sunday, May 31, 2015
All's Quiet on the Blogging Front - Eating around Melbourne
So, it's been a while since my last post, but it's been with good reason! My husband surprised me with a holiday to Melbourne for an anniversary present and so instead of cooking (and photographing, and blogging), I've been eating food. So. Much. Food.
When he told me we were going to Melbourne, he asked if I could do a bit of research and find a few restaurants we should go to. Mission, accepted! We've both been to Melbourne once before, and absolutely loved it - but didn't really know the go-to places for good eats. I put a shout-out on my Instagram, I asked Rob Broadfield when I met him at The Trustee Food Review lunch, I checked on Yelp, I found a few Melbourne blogs and re-read my Gourmet Traveller reviews.
Whilst taking on lots of advice and ideas, our main food plan came down to the Top 100 restaurants list that was being compiled by the Australian Financial Review. It started off with a list of 500 restaurants Australia-wide, that chefs and restaurateurs then voted on to get the best 100 restaurants in Australia.
When we left Perth, only the top 500 were released so we started eating our way around Melbourne, whilst we also indulged in 2 of our other shared passions - putt-putt and pinball. (We held our own Melbourne Pinball Tournament - more details on that in the future!!). The Top 100 list was released mid-holiday so we started re-focussing our last few days of eating on the winners. By the time we got home, we'd eaten at 11 of the Top 100 restaurants in Melbourne. Not bad for a 13 day trip, hey?
I'll go into more depth on some of the incredible dishes and highlight restaurants we ate at over the coming weeks, but I just thought I'd check in and say hi! And I'll also get back to cooking and blogging my own dishes!
Have you been to Melbourne? What is your must-eat at restaurant?
Monday, May 4, 2015
Showing Your Working - Healthy Espresso Jelly Sandwich Breakfast Cookie
Sometimes I feel like presenting my cooking or recipes to people is like a Maths test. Not in the sense where x butter + y flour + z eggs and sugar = cake kinda way and people question my x, y and z’s. But in the sense that a question I get asked most frequently is – how did you come up with that? I’ve said that people refer to my cooking as quirky, rather than conventional and I feel like my little recipe pre-amble is my chance to “show my working”. So I try to present where my thinking starts, winds and ends up at the finished dish. I think a little background shows that it’s not quirky for quirky’s sake, there’s a lot of thought going into the flavour combinations, the textural elements, the overall nutritional content and purpose of the dish. So, on that note, this is my maths for what is a pretty novel, healthy and absolutely delicious breakfast. Something delicious enough to be a dessert, but healthy enough to start your day with, guilt free.
In order to beat the traffic, I get to work early and eat my breakfast at my desk while I check through my emails. It’s usually some form of oats with cultured dairy (yoghurt or buttermilk), fruit and nuts & seeds. Carrot Cake Bircher muesli is a firm favourite, but requires a bit more prep than I can usually be bothered with, so that’s more a once every few months deal. My most regular staple is cold-brewed coffee overnight oats. Caffeine + whole grain awesomeness in one bowl. Soak it overnight, then add some fruit (usually bananas, prunes or berries) crunchy nuts and/or seeds before eating. It is so good and portable….but you’re left with dishes. That’s absolutely fine at work, where there’s a kitchen to do the dishes. But I needed a no-dishes portable breakfast. Something still full of healthy whole grains, the fruit and nuts and….the coffee. All in one. Enter the breakfast espresso jelly cookie.
I decided to stick with the elements of my coffee oats and layered based on wanting different textures. So we have two different ‘cookies’, the bottom is a chewy oat and banana cookie – making up the oat and fruit content of my breakfast. The middle is coffee jelly. This idea came from using excess sangria jelly in my granola to delicious effect. And the top is a nuts and seed granola ‘cookie’ to emulate the nutty crunch of my topping on my oats. I threw in some chocolate because…well, why not? My palate is decided not ‘sweet’, especially in the morning, so feel free to customize by adding ¼ cup of sugar to the espresso jelly (I have my long blacks without sugar normally). The honey in the cookies is more than sufficient for me.
And, if you don’t need the portability, serve with honey whipped ricotta or yoghurt. (Or ice cream!!)
Healthy Espresso Jelly Breakfast Sandwich Cookies
(Makes 12 formed cookies)Espresso Jelly
6tbsp ground coffee beans
500mL freshly boiled water5 tsp powdered gelatin
Lightly spray a lamington tin with cooking spray. Put the coffee beans into a plunger and pour over the boiled water. Leave for 5 minutes, then plunge and pour into a bowl. Sprinkle the gelatin over the top of the coffee and whisk in until dissolved. Pour into the lamington tin and put in the fridge to set for at least 4 hours.
When set, cut into rounds with an egg ring. Chop the excess bits up and serve them with normal oats.
When set, cut into rounds with an egg ring. Chop the excess bits up and serve them with normal oats.
Banana Oat Cookies
3 small very ripe bananas
1 ½ tsp cinnamon1 tsp ginger
2 tbsp honey
2 tbsp chia seeds
½ cup water
2/3 cup shredded coconut
1 2/3 cup rolled oats
Preheat oven to 165C
In a small bowl, mix the chia seeds and water and set aside to form a gel.
In a large bowl, mash the bananas until smooth, then mix in the spices and honey. Add the chia seed mix, stirring to combine evenly. Then add the oats and stir to coat.
Line a baking tray and lightly grease an egg ring.Place a few tablespoonsful of mixture into the ring and press in tightly with the back of a spoon. Gently lift off the ring, and form the rest of the cookies.
Bake for 10 minutes, or until starting to turn golden on top. Remove, gently flip over the biscuits and bake for a further 10 minutes, until that side is also golden. Cool for 10 minutes on the trays, then on racks.
In a small bowl, mix the chia seeds and water and set aside to form a gel.
In a large bowl, mash the bananas until smooth, then mix in the spices and honey. Add the chia seed mix, stirring to combine evenly. Then add the oats and stir to coat.
Line a baking tray and lightly grease an egg ring.Place a few tablespoonsful of mixture into the ring and press in tightly with the back of a spoon. Gently lift off the ring, and form the rest of the cookies.
Bake for 10 minutes, or until starting to turn golden on top. Remove, gently flip over the biscuits and bake for a further 10 minutes, until that side is also golden. Cool for 10 minutes on the trays, then on racks.
Chocolate Nut Brittle Biscuits
1 ½ tbsp. cacao powder
3 tbsp cacao nibs1/3 cup pistachios, roughly chopped
1/3 cup walnuts, roughly chopped
1 cup pumpkin seeds
2/3 cup almonds, roughly chopped
1 tbsp vanilla extract
¼ tsp sea salt
1/8 tsp pepper
3 tbsp honey
3 tbsp olive oil
Heat the oven to 165C
Mix the nuts, seeds and cacao nibs together in a bowl. In a separate bowl, mix the oil, cacao powder, pepper, salt, vanilla, honey and oil. Make sure it is well combined. Pour the nut mix into the wet mix and stir to thoroughly coat everything.
Line a tray with baking paper, and lightly grease an egg ring. Place a few tablespoons of mixture into the ring and press it in tightly, pressing down with the back of a spoon. Gently remove the ring, and repeat for the rest of the mixture.
Bake for 15 minutes, or until caramelised and 'solid'. The mixture will spread a little, but still retain the basic round shape. Cool on the trays. Trim the edges to neaten your sandwiches.
Layer one oat cookie, espresso jelly then a nut brittle cookie on top. If you assemble, wrap and store in the fridge. They will last a few days. The cookies will last up to a week separate at room temperature in air tight containers. Store the jelly in the fridge.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Pizza Party - Pulse flour pizza with Ras el Hanout Mango Ricotta
Sometimes you
need pizza. There’s no way around it. And it has to be real pizza. A real dough
base, not just the usual cheat method of using a Lebanese loaf and spreading on
your toppings. And then you need a beer and to sit outside in the fresh air and
sunshine with your pizza and your husband and reflect on how good life can be.
That despite being bone tired from a long and hard crabbing session that was
mostly fruitless (although eating the crab hot out of the pot that night with
fresh bread and butter still made it feel worthwhile), an afternoon of good
food, good weather and good conversation is all it takes to get over the
exhaustion.
This is a
pretty simple dough that was made a bit more exciting (not to mention
good-for-you) through the addition of two types of pulse flour. I had a little
bit of lentil flour left over from my Secret Cake Club baking, and added some
chick pea flour to total half the flour. You could use all chick pea flour
seeing as that is pretty easy to get, but making your own lentil flour is
pretty easy if you’ve got a coffee grinder. In which case, you could also use
all lentil flour. As with my baking experimenting gone awry, the addition of a
little arrowroot powder ensures the dough binds properly. The molasses in place
of the normal sugar adds a smokey sweetness to the nuttiness that the beans
bring. Leave it to proof for half an hour while you make the sauce and chop
some veges and it’s a pretty quick way of getting a real pizza base in your
life.
This makes two
just-bigger-than single serve pizzas, by themselves enough for around 3 serves.
Or 4 serves if you have a side salad. The toppings are fairly easy to change in
and out of the sweet and spicy cream cheese sauce. Mine were what were to hand.
Although the sauce and lentil base is flavoursome enough that the toppings play
textural counterpoint as much as anything. Fresh greens on top are one of my
favourite things to do with pizza, you could probably get away with just that.
Pulse Flour Pizza Base
½ cup lentil
flour
½ cup chick
pea flour (or one cup of chickpea flour)
1 tbsp
arrowroot powder
1 cup plain
flour
2 tsp yeast
1 tsp molasses
½ teaspoon
salt
2 tbsp olive
oil
2 tsp cornmeal
Ras el Hanout
Mango Ricotta Sauce
150g smooth
ricotta
1 mango
2 tsp ras el
hanout
2 cloves
garlic
2 tsp tamarind puree
Toppings
¼ roast
chicken, meat shredded
¼ zucchini
sliced into thin rings
½ red
capsicum, sliced into thin strips
Snow pea shoots
Mix the flours
together in a large bowl with the salt and yeast. Make a well in the centre and
add the olive oil, warm water and molasses. Stir the liquids together first,
then slowly bring in the flour until it becomes a shaggy mess. Knead for around
5 minutes until it forms a smooth ball. Pop in an oiled bowl and cover loosely
with plastic wrap and set aside to double in size.
Meanwhile,
mince the garlic, dice the mango and mix all of the sauce ingredients together
until well combine. Slice your toppings as desired. Heat your BBQ or oven to
160C
Punch down the
dough to remove some of the air, then divide the dough into two. Roll the each
ball of dough out to around 2cm thickness. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of cornmeal on
two baking trays and lay the pizza bases on top. Cover with toppings and bake
in the oven, or on a lidded BBQ for 15 minutes or until base is golden at the
edges and the cheese mixture is browning.
Monday, April 20, 2015
Dining With the Skamp - Public House Argentinian Lamb Feast - Eat Drink Perth
My brother has
been trying to convince me to go to Public House for ages. He works around the
corner from it, so hits it frequently for lunch and after work drinks. Based on
his recommendation, I added it swiftly to the “To-Visit” list (which is
ever-growing), but not working in the city means I don’t go into the city that
frequently. I tend to be more of a fringe dweller, hitting Mt. Lawley or
Northbridge, rather than Perth proper. When the South American Lamb Feast came
up as part of EatDrinkPerth, it was too good of an opportunity to pass up!
Talking to the
chef (and backed up by my brother), most of the dishes that we ate on this
event were similar, if not the same as what is regularly served on the menu at
Public House. This was their first event like this (although the plan is to
make it more regular), so they decided to make it easier on themselves by
keeping with the basic foods they already serve. All paired with Spanish and
South American wines.
We started
with Cava and Ceviche. The fish lovely and fresh and delightfully limey. It was
served drier than a lot of ceviches are, which made it the perfect canapé
presentation. Cava is my go-to bubbly, I find it much easier to drink and
full-bodied than a lot of sparklings – not to mention a cheaper option compared
to Champagnes! The fruit/sweet/dryness is balanced and refreshing.
We were then
seated, long-table style and presented with the first wine and some guacamole
and house-made corn chips. Both were fabulous. My brother enjoys this guac,
despite really not liking avocado. But it’s perfectly seasoned and also with a
nice limey/chilli kick which flavoured it enough for him. The chips were some
of the best I’ve had. The perfect crunch, with a slight oiliness to them from
the frying. Not enough to grease your fingers, just enough to flavour the
tortilla.
All dishes
were presented family-style – with share platters placed down for folks to dig
in. A bit difficult when sharing with strangers, as you have to politely
negotiate your “share” – but sharing food is the best way to start friendships,
so it isn’t long before you are chatting with the folks around you. Entrees
were Smoked Lamb Sausage with Burnt Lime, Brazilian Espresso and Treacle Lamb
Ribs and Lamb, Mushroom and Truffle Empanada. I think the stand-out dish here
was the Lamb Ribs, partly because of presentation – a paint brush for adding
extra sauce! But also because the rich sauce was so moreish. The coffee and
treacle was a perfect match, with the treacle providing a mildly sweet
counterpoint to the bitter richness of the coffee. It was sticky and dark,
rather than sweet like a lot of BBQ style rib sauces. Definitely different! The
Sausage was flavoursome and not overwhelmingly oily, which puts me off of a lot
of sausages. The burnt lime cutting through the smoked meat perfectly. The lamb
and mushroom empanada simple, but well-balanced. The filling rich, the pastry
flaky and buttery.
The timing of
the main meats and side dishes was a little off. The Spit Roast Lamb Shoulder
came out and we divvied it up. When that was gone, the Chimmi Lamb Back Strap
with Beetroot and Goat’s Curd came out, as well as all 3 sides together (Baby
Cos, Crispy Onion, Horse Radish,, Tomato, Palm Heart and Smoked Mozarella,
Local Greens, Pisco Raisins, Brazil nut). By this point we were stuffed to the
brim…and then the Charred Lamb Rack & Onion Textures came out. At the end
of the whole meal, we were asked for feedback, again mentioning this was the
first time they were trying something like this, and I mentioned this, so
hopefully it was just them finding their function feet. The food was again, all
delicious. The meats were perfectly cooked. Flavoursome and rich the way good
lamb should be. Simply, but well seasoned to allow the meat to shine, but also
using South American flavours. Smoke was present in all the flavours, and the
smoked mozzarella, tomato and palm heart salad stood out to me as the best
side. The sweet, rich and fresh elements were all present and played well
together. As my husband pointed out to me, this smoked mozzarella also went
well with the Chimmi Lamb Back Strap – more so than the softer flavoured Goat’s
Curd it came with, and it ramped up the earthiness of the beets as well. Three
reds were presented during this extended course, two of them Malbecs of
entirely different styles. Both with the trademark body of a Malbec that paired
brilliantly with the South American BBQ flavours. Sadly, I was so distracted by
the eating that I forgot to take photos. But it was also beautifully presented.
We were
thankfully given a mini-break to finish our reds and rest a little before the
dessert wine and desserts were brought out. There is always room for dessert –
but the rest of the servings were incredibly generous, and tasty enough for you
to not want to be stingy on your serves. The dessert wine was a hugely floral
Moscatel, that paired particularly well with the lime and lemon curd dark
chocolate tart. The citrus and flowers was delicious. This was my favourite
dessert. The dulce de leche parfait was also spot on, sweet and creamy. The
brownie was fairly dry and definitely needed the apricot compote that it came
with.
All in all, it was a very good meal. The staff were lovely and attentive, and despite finding their footing a little, it was an ultimately well executed long table dinner. We enjoyed it so much, we stayed on for a coffee to finish off the night. It’s a shame that this end of the city is so quiet on Saturday nights, as at the end of the meal, we were the only ones left in the restaurant
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Fancy Brunch Canapes - Enoki Tacos with Orange Hollandaise
Most weekends, I try to do something a little different for breakfast. Oats is a work day food, so the weekend needs to be a bit more playful! That'll mean different things, depending on time, how much I need to do grocery shopping, how much I'm feeling the night before...that sort of thing. I woke up on Saturday hungry - but not knowing what I feel like. Lance is generally unhelpful when you ask him what he wants for meals. "Whatever you feel like making", is a fairly common response. I was at a loss for ideas, so I looked in the fridge for inspiration.
5 egg yolks that needed using fairly soon. Half a packet of enoki mushrooms. Half a packet of tortillas. Bam! Inspired. I would whip up a Hollandaise sauce, adding orange from the few ripe ones recently fallen from our tree. I'd sautee up the mushrooms with a few fresh herbs. And I'd make tacos. For fun and presentation, I cut mini tortillas out of the larger sized ones before toasting a little of the stale out of them. Like this, they make a wonderful canape. Elegant and simple. But you can be lazy and have normal sized tacos if that's more your speed. Or you can make your own smaller sized ones to start with.
Either way, start to finish, this takes around 10 minutes to make, and is a bloody delicious way to start the day, if I do say so myself. (Lance said so too, if that sways you!)
And if you are serving this for brunch, a glass of bubbles to drink with it certainly wouldn't go astray!
Orange Hollandaise Sauce
5 egg yolks1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tsp Tabasco sauce
1/2 cup fresh squeezed orange juice
zest from 1 orange
6 tablespoons softened butter
Set up a double-boiler with a small saucepan with a few inches of water, and a glass bowl for the top that won't touch the water. Bring the water to a simmer while you whisk together the egg yolks until lightened in colour and thickened, about 2 minutes. Whisk in the salt, Tabasco sauce, orange zest and orange juice until well combined.
Place the glass bowl over the simmering water and whisk. The eggs will lighten and thicken to a custard like consistency. One tablespoon at a time, whisk in the butter, allowing it to fully incorporate before adding the next one.
Take off the heat, taste for seasoning - adding extra salt or Tabasco as required. Cover and set aside.
Enoki Mushroom Tacos
1/2 packet of Enoki mushroomssmall handful snow pea shoots
small handful of basil leaves
bunch of coriander, finely choppeed
1 spring onion, finely sliced
to serve
5 tortillas
Orange Hollandaise Sauce
smoked paprika for dusting
Heat a non-stick frypan to medium heat. Chop the bottom off of the enoki mushrooms and discard. Separate the clumps a little. If making mini-tacos, cut the enoki in half. Add the mushrooms and spring onion. Stir frequently witha wooden spoon, breaking the mushrooms apart more as you go.
When the mushrooms are wilted and browning slightly, add the basil leaves, coriander and snow pea shoots. Stir well to combine and take off the heat.
Serve the mushroom mix on a tortilla with a generous dollop of orange hollandaise sauce and dust with smoked paprika.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Going Green - Chimichurri, Pumpkin Seed and Greek Yoghurt Dressing
The first time I made this was the end of February. This time of
year is when my desire for outrightly healthy meals kicks in. From my birthday
in November, through all of the parties of Christmas and New Year (and NYEEEE)
and our dating anniversary and Lance’s birthday and every other excuse under
the sun we can think of to indulge in decadent meals and lots of booze means we
get to mid February and both Lance and I think – hey, remember when we used to
keep it simple and just have grilled meat and salad for dinner. Without wine.
Or a beer. Or snacks. Back when our portion sizes were reasonable? Maybe we
should do that again for a while. The fact that this thought might have
occurred after a long weekend which involved a 9 course wine-matched degustation that we added a 10th dish and 10th wine to because there
was an extra dish we just had to have is surely a coincidence. Not to mention
the daily ice creams (or two). And cheese platters. And wine.
Tuesday night’s
dinner was a grilled steak and this salad, with a wonderful dressing drizzled
over everything. An abundance of bright herby chimichurri flavours all blended
up with toasted pumpkin seeds and Greek Yoghurt, drizzled over tart mango,
crunchy shoots and peas and juicy Lebanese cucumbers. It feels decadent whilst
being totally healthy. Blackening the garlic in the pan first softens the
garlicky punch and adds a lovely roasted flavour to the whole situation.
The dressing
makes much more than you require, but it’ll do meals for around 3 days if
refrigerated. As well as being a dressing, it’s also a delicious sauce on baked
potatoes, or stirred through quinoa or your favourite grain.
Chimichurri, Pumpkin Seed and Greek Yoghurt Dressing
½ cup pumpkin
seeds
4 cloves
garlic2 bunches coriander (about 2 cups roughly chopped)
Bunch parsley (about 2 cups roughly chopped)
Salt and pepper
7 big gloops of Greek Yoghurt (around 200g)
¼ cup water (for thinning)
2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
Green Mango Salad
1 underripe
mango (you want it to be sliceably firm, and a tart)Handful bean shoots
Handful snow peas, topped and tailed, then thinly sliced
1 cucumber, peeled into ribbons – seed middle discarded
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