Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts

Sunday, October 24, 2010

No. 44 - Eat At 50 New Eateries (57-60/50)

As always, food features prominently in all my trips away.


Went to Pancakes on the Rocks in Sydney because although I've been to Sydney plenty of times, I have never actually been to this restaurant.  The buttermilk pancakes were pretty good but that's about it.


Zest Restaurant in Port Stephens. Very good, except for the risotto. I've been disappointed 3 times in a row in various restaurants - I think I'm never ordering that dish ever again. I'm not sure if it's because I like my risotto really firm or is everyone just making congee?


New Shanghai in Chatswood. Yummy.

Bub's Famous Fish and Chips in Nelson Bay, supposedly Award Winning. The batter they used was pretty good, but the chips were very ordinary and so was everything else to be honest. The Victorian winner, Fish In A Flash wins hands down.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

No. 44 - Eat At 50 New Eateries (53-54/50)

When we found out that Eaglehawk had an award baking bakery that made a vanilla slice that was the runner up to the Tatura Vanilla Slice, we knew we had to go and try it out.

Conclusion? The Tatura Vanilla Slice is still the best vanilla slice I've ever tasted. Their Whipstick Pie however, was really quite good and well deserving of their Gold Medal. Definitely comparable to Parker Pies in Rutherglen.


Straight after that we headed to the Boardwalk, which was situated right on the lake in Bendigo. Lovely view and the food was also yummy! 



It seems like all we do every time we travel is look for food. Well, it's true.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Brasserie

A friend from Sydney came down to Melbourne to visit and we ended up going for a long lunch in The Brasserie at Crown.


I have always liked this restaurant - mainly because every time I have been there, I had always been in a good place in my life. As a result, I guess I associate that restaurant with good and happy times.

I love good and happy times.

Monday, May 17, 2010

No. 44 - Eat At 50 New Eateries (40/50)

Went to Bright for my dose of autumn last weekend. Yes, I was there just 2 weeks before that but the leaves were still green. This time I had better luck.

Stopped by Gapsted for lunch at the Gapsted Winery. Food was good and the weather was perfect. Even Milton benefited - I sneaked that lamb shank you see at the top left of the photo home for him.

After that it was onwards to Bright. Went to the playground and relived our childhood. It was just a really nice and pleasant day.


I feel the urge to return to this place every autumn if possible.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Nuance

This was by far my favourite cake out of the 4 that we did in the Savour School course. The easiest and the best tasting.



Preparing the milk chocolate spheres.



Constructing the cake.



Cake is finished off with a very light spray - giving it a frosty airbrushed finish. Beautiful.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Madagascar Magic

More fantastically detailed cakes.

This was an extremely chocolate-y cake - one 1cm slice was enough to send you to sugar heaven and not return for a good while.



Setting the cake into a 120 dollar mold. Seriously, being a home baker has way too many limitations.



Glazing the log.



Finishing touches.

Monday, March 22, 2010

For Real

So after years of baking for pleasure, I actually baked a batch of cupcakes and actually got paid actual money for them.


It is a very proud moment for me. If I had slots left in my 101 list to fill, this would have been one of them.

Therefore, I'm going to have to set up another list so that I don't forget all the things that I'm proud of for now.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Ambre

Continuing with the cakes that I made during the 2 day course I attended at Savour.



Making the chocolate decorations - I wish I had a tub full of tempered chocolate just sitting around all day at home.



Making the brownie bases and adding the caramelised banana. Topped off with coffee flavoured mousse.



Glazing the cake with caramel chocolate glaze.



Adding on the decorations on the side - white chocolate with crocodie skin print.



Finishing touches.

This cake wasn't that spectacular - someone forgot to add sugar into the coffee mousse. As a result, the cake came out very bitter. However, it still looked really good.

Friday, March 19, 2010

No. 44 - Eat At 50 New Eateries (36/50)

One of my childhood friends visited Melbourne and I had the honor of showing them around.

Brought them to my favourite haunts - Koko Black and Cacao. Can never go wrong with them.



Disregard the San Churro chai latte - that was with another friend that I met up with just to have a catch up session.

Brought them for dinner at Scusami on Southbank.



We had an amazing table - really good view. Unfortunately, the same can't be said about the food. Very mediocre - I will not dine there again.

In all, I had a really good time meeting up with friends who weren't at all connected to the dental world for once. Because yes, the vast majority of my friends now are dentists. Not that there's anything wrong with that - but sometimes it's nice to have an entire conversation that has absolutely nothing to do with teeth. Very refreshing.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

No. 44 - Eat At 50 New Eateries (34-35/50)

More food.

That's all I do when I travel - think about the next meal.



Breakfast overlooking the bay in Auckland. Yummy.



6 course degustation at French Cafe. Food was really good - one of the best meals of my life. Was particularly taken by their beetroot on caramelised onion and pastry combo.

I've very unfortunately gained back all the weight I lost during my bout of anxiety. What a shame.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Pecan Tart

For a long time I've wanted to make a pecan tart. After the fresh fig tart, I got into 'tart mode' and decided to continue in the same vein.

I really enjoyed making it. One arranges the pecans at the base of the tart and then pour the liquid in, submerging the pecans.

And then.... they float up to the surface very gently, in perfect symmetry. A joy to watch.



Loved it - although next time I'll probably put less treacle in.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Fresh Fig Tart

One of the dental assistants at work brought in a bag of figs and innocently offered me one.

I went into a ramble about how I've always wanted to make a fig tart but never had enough figs to do it. Before I knew it she gave me a whole bag of them.

Dashed home and churned this out of my kitchen before anyone could stop me.



This is the 26th new recipe out of the 50 on my 101 list.

It's very simple, really. Just a shortcrust pastry base topped with fresh figs and a drizzle of honey. 20 minutes in the oven and that was it.

It was excellent, even if I do say so myself.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Macaron Tower

I should really have waited for an occasion to build this - but decided now's a good time as ever to do it.



I love macarons. Shame they're such fiddly delicate temperamental little things.

Monday, March 1, 2010

210 seconds

After experimenting for less than half an hour the answer came to me.

To perfectly half boil an extra large egg straight out of the fridge, one should put it into simmering water for exactly 210 seconds - or 3.5 minutes.

Mystery solved.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

No. 79 - Bake Perfect Macarons

When I'm troubled in my mind, I tend to divert myself from my actual problems and invest my energy into something productive and even more distracting to keep myself occupied. Which was why I decided to devote this week to the art of baking macarons.

1 carton of egg, lots of 'Why?? WHY is this happening??" and 12 test batches later, the mission was accomplished.

I'm choosing to write a very detailed account about what to do should any of you feel the urge to waste a week of your life chasing after a perfect batch of these irresistably delicious but frustrating cookies.

The basic recipe sounds simple enough:

Ingredients
28g egg white
32g almond meal
53g icing sugar
8g caster sugar

Method
1. Whip egg white with caster sugar until it forms firm peaks.
2. Fold in almond meal and icing sugar until it forms a smooth paste.
3. Pipe into 3-5cm rounds onto non-stick baking paper and bake for approximately 12 minutes in a 150 Celcius conventional oven.

There are copious numbers of pictures of macaron disasters on the internet (all you have to do is Google "macaron disasters") because somehow along the way bad things happened and the macaron failed to well... become a macaron.

Anyway, here's how I acquired the perfect batch of macarons.

1. Place almond meal and icing sugar into a food processor and process for a few seconds. Sift mixture and discard bits of almond meal that are left in the sieve - it'll create a rough macaron surface if you keep it in.

2. Add a small pinch of cream of tartar to the egg white and beat on slow speed for the first couple of minutes before increasing to high. When egg whites are at soft peak stage, add the caster sugar in gradually and beat on high until stiff. Very stiff - won't-fall-out-of-the-bowl-when-inverted-sharp-peaks-in-egg-white-stiff.

3. If desired, add some coloring at this point as well as the almond and icing sugar mixture. Fold the mixture until mixture is glossy and when dropped the trail disappears after about 30 seconds. This is the magical phase of macaronage. Usually this is achieved by about 30 strokes of folding for a batch this small.

4. Fill piping bag with mixture and pipe out 3-5cm rounds on non-stick baking paper, staggering the rows for a more even heat distribution. Bang the tray on the counter a few times (go all out and release your pent up anger, existent or non-existent) to flatten out the peaks and bring any air bubbles to the surface.

5. Leave piped macarons on the counter for about half an hour. Rushing it straight into the oven can lead to failure. I don't know why - but that's what happened with me.

6. Which is why I only start setting up my oven after I've finished piping the macarons. I experimented with various permutations and finally discovered that the macarons should be baked on the top rack, with several layers of baking trays and silicon mats underneath it. Something to do with heat distribution. I set my oven on fan-forced at 125 Celcius. (Note: This is a trial and error process, you'd probably have to experiment with a few batches with yours to figure out the optimum set up and temperature)

7. While waiting for the oven to heat up, feel free to do the washing up and maybe a clay facial mask.

8. Once the oven is ready, pop the macarons in. Immediately decrease the heat by about 10 Celcius. Walk away and amuse yourself with something else. 6 minutes later, turn the tray 180 degrees for evenness' sake.

9. By 13 minutes, your macarons should be done. Take them out. They should look like this:



Foot at the bottom and a nice shiny smooth surface. These actually have a few bubbles - I wasn't agressive enough with my tray banging with this batch.

10. Try to detach the macarons once they're cooled. If they're stuck to the paper, don't despair. What I do is return it into the oven for a futher 1-2 minutes, which usually does the trick. I've read other blogs of people who sprinkle water onto the paper and etc but somehow I don't like the idea of water anywhere near my precious precious babies.

11. Sit and admire your beautiful beautiful macarons. Or if they were a failure, start obsessing about what went wrong.



Here's batch no. 13. Orange colored shells filled with chocolate ganache with a splash of Triple Sec.

I can finally sleep tonight. And go back to my original problem.

Notes:

1. You can double or triple this recipe very easily. This is a very small recipe because...well, when one is testing one doesn't want to toss out huge batches of failures. This recipe yields about 14 shells - or 7 macarons.

2. It will probably take a while to get the perfect conditions to produce the perfect macaron. If you are so lucky as to be successful the first try, I take my hat off to you. If you don't - persevere!

3. If the tops of your macarons brown too quickly (test batch no.3 was perfect except for this annoying problem), try lowering the temperature by maybe 10 Celcius. Yes, it took me another 8-9 batches to figure that out. Silly Dental Girl.

4. The majority of macaron recipes suggest that the egg whites be left out for 24-48 hours. I do not have it in me to be so patient! If I want to make macarons I want to make them now, not 24-48 hours later! Anyway, all my batches were done with fresh egg whites and I still got desirable results so.... but I am assuming it might be better with aged ones but I honestly couldn't be bothered.

5. Always sift your almond meal and icing sugar mixture. Really makes a difference to the smoothness of your macarons.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

More Watermelon Carving

We had purchased a watermelon for this purpose a couple of weeks ago but just never got round to carving it. However, last night we dived into it.




I know for certain that every time I carve a watermelon in the future I will always remember my Benalla days.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Macaron

I have gotten it into my system to attempt to make the perfect batch of macarons.



I have succeeded twice before in the past but have decided to bring it to a whole new level.... and managed to crash spectacularly.

First batch was way too big. Second batch was a complete disaster I honestly think they deserve to be in the bin.

This is the third batch, which is acceptable, but still not 'right'.

Looks like there's going to be a lot of egg yolks in the house for a while.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

My housemate went to the States last month and finally doled out the goodies to us.



I love Peanut Butter Cups. Not sure if it's because I can't get them here and thus the basis of its appeal or they really are amazingly awesome.

And Peanut Butter M&Ms.

Going to have to cherish this hoard.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Things That Shouldn't Be In The House

There are some extremely addictive food that I cannot resist. Which means I shouldn't leave them hanging around the house.

1. Nutrigrain.
2. Any form of potato chips.
3. Hot cross buns.
4. Double brie and fig paste.
5. Peanut butter.

Friday, January 29, 2010

No. 43 - Try 50 New Recipes (23-25/50)

Had a cooking frenzy last weekend. Did not document all my efforts - particularly annoyed that we ate our creme brulee without photographing them!!



First attempts at pavlova, lamingtons as well as pumpkin risotto. Turned out well, even if I do say so myself.
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