Saturday, July 7, 2012

Beginnings

Back in New Zealand after 6+ years abroad.  New city, new job.  As yet, no household.  It is all waiting for a boat.  What to do?  Cooking is hard without my kitchen (I will get a bigger one yet, don't you worry).  I don't really know which places are good in Hamilton, and the internet is terribly lacking in this regard.  Menumania, menus.co.nz, and eatout.co.nz  all seem... incomplete.  Perhaps I can help.  It will not happen all at once, but over time, we will see.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Changes

I have moved back to New Zealand, taken up a new job, and am busy trying to adjust to it all.  I anticipate doing a lot less cooking for the short term future, and I have noticed a lack of good restaurant reviews local to Hamilton, where I have just started work.  This combination suggests a new plan to me.  I will start a new blog, one with restaurant/product reviews as well as the occasional recipe.  Details to come.  This will remain, but not be updated after the aforementioned details.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Dinner? For me? Too kind!

Red curry with tofu and fish-cakes, courtesy of Mel.  Thanks!  (It was really good)

Sunday, March 25, 2012

That time of year...

Hot Cross Buns!


People don't spice hot cross buns enough.  These have ginger/cloves/nutmeg/cinnamon/allspice/pepper, about a teaspoon each.  Also rye flour, because why not?

4 cups flour (I used 2 cups white, 1.5 cups rye, 1/2 cup rice)
4 tsp yeast
All those spices
1/4 cup sugar
1.5 cups mixed fruit (currants/sultanas/mixed peel/whatever else you like... I would have added coconut if I had it)

1 cup milk
40gm butter
1 egg

Mix dry stuff including fruit together.  Melt butter in milk, add to dry, mix a little, add egg.  Knead 10 minutes.  Leave it to rise for an hour, hour+half. Shape into 12 buns on a baking paper lined tray.  Rise for half an hour.  Bake at 190c for 20 minutes.

If you want crosses, make them with flour and water in a thick paste, and spread them on just before cooking the buns.  If you want delicious, make a sugar syrup by boiling 1/4 cup sugar with a little water, and brush it on the cooked buns.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Dessert: Pierre Roelofs at Rosamond, Feb 2.

A dessert degustation, 4 courses, the best of the last 3 months, apparently.  I was convinced, it was all amazing.

A golden syrup dumpling shot. Open ended glass tube, heat the jelly end in hot water for a couple seconds, then suck it out.

Prunes, brown rice, meringue, passionfruit and hazelnut.

Raspberry foam, mandarin granita, blueberry, sago, pound cake, puffed millet.

Vanilla and caramel, apple, brie and pinenut.

Highly, highly recommended.  They run them every Thursday, 7-11.  Of course, getting in is tricky.  There was a line at the door at 7 sharp, and by the time I finished (just after 8), people were on a waiting list for 10pm.  Some people in line when they opened the doors didn't get seats. So, you know, be there early, or turn up at 7, name on list, and go grab a drink or some food somewhere... no shortage of choices around Smith St these days.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Pumpkin Pie

Easy. Delicious.  Worth doing.

Also, a thanksgiving treat.  Thank you America for holidays revolving around food.


Of course, people often make pumpkin pie with canned pumpkin, because they are insane.  Use butternut pumpkin.

Ingredients:

Half a medium sized butternut pumpkin.
 1 can evaporated milk
1 egg + 1 yolk
1/2 cup white sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ginger (ground)
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp cloves (ground)
1/2 tsp allspice

(for all spices, adjust as per preference.  I tend to use more ginger and nutmeg than stated above)

1 1/2 cups flour
100 gm butter (v. cold, grated)
2 Tbsp white sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
Splash of water/milk/buttermilk (whatever you have.  Alternatively, use an egg yolk)

To make dough, mix flour/cinnamon/sugar.  Add cold grated butter, and combine until mixture is breadcrumby.  Add a dash of your liquid of choice (a single egg yolk will probably be about perfect, alternatively start with 1-2 Tbsp of liquid, and add more if necessary).  Bring dough together.  it should form a smooth ball.  Set in fridge to cool before rolling out.


 Filling goes like this:  De-seed and peel the pumpkin.  Chop in inch sized chunks, boil until soft.  Allow to cool a little.  Mash/process the pumpkin, with the sugar, spices.  Place in pan with evaporated milk, heat until boiling, simmer for 3-5 minutes, take off heat.  When cooled slightly, mix through egg + yolk.

Shape cold pastry into a pie dish.You can blind bake the pastry if you want, but it isn't needed.  Add filling, cook at 180c (fan oven) until filling is firm (about 50-55 minutes).

Eat. Yoghurt works with it.
Went to a beer tasting at Blackhearts and Sparrows yesterday.  Cavalier Brewery in West Brunswick had some samples going, as seen below.  I was impressed by their Weizen, as most Australian brewers don't really seem to understand what a Weizan is meant to be.  They also sold me by saying that they wanted more esters in the next batch.


Saturday, October 8, 2011

Taste Photos

Guess who was too busy eating things to take photos?  Me!

2 things that escaped...  A pork and fennel slider, and pistachio panna cotta with caramel salted popcorn.



Phone Photos!

One of the biggest problems I have with having a smartphone is that I use it to take photographs, which then sit on the phone, not uploaded, and not thought about, for months on end.  And I use it instead of my camera, which just makes things worse...






Pikelets with cinnamon poached apple, honey roasted mixed nuts and maple syrup, drizzled with Greek yogurt.

Peated strong beer, awesome name, awesome label, delicious (if intense) taste.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Daring Cooks September: Consommé

Peta, of the blog Peta Eats, was our lovely hostess for the Daring Cook’s September 2011 challenge, “Stock to Soup to Consommé”. We were taught the meaning between the three dishes, how to make a crystal clear Consommé if we so chose to do so, and encouraged to share our own delicious soup recipes!

I decided that simplicity would be key for this challenge, and so I made a shiitake/bonito stock, spiced up with white peppercorns, then turned it into a lovely consommé served with pumpkin and snow peas.

The stock base is made by taking an onion, diced, half a dozen dried shiitake mushrooms, 2 bay leaves, a tablespoon of soy sauce, and some bonito flakes (I used 2 heaped tablespoons, but I like the fishy flavour).  Add to 1.5 liters of water and simmer for a couple hours.  You might want to add further flavour, i have a japanese mixed spice I use.

When the flavours have sufficiently infused, strain the solids from the soup base and leave aside to cool for 10 minutes or so.  While it cools, separate 2 eggs, and whisk the whites to soft peaks. You do this because I follow the 'egg raft' method of consommé preparation.  Fold the whites into the cooled soup, and simmer very gently for about 35-40 minutes.  As it simmers, scrape a hole in the centre of the egg raft so you can watch the stock clearing as the particles attach to the raft.  When the stock is clear (use a soup spoon to look at it if it is hard to see while it is in the pan), take the whole off the heat and rest again for 10 minutes.

Now, you need to remove the consommé from under the raft, without breaking the raft and releasing the bits back into the mix.  You will need to use a ladle or similar, and to take your time.  You cannot strain it, the raft will collapse.  You might be able to pour off from underneath the raft, but this is delicate, and seems to release some bits and pieces, no matter how carefully you try, so I would recommend ladling.



Upon successfully extracting the consommé, discard the raft.  pour consommé over lightly steamed snow peas and pumpkin, serve with something in character with your soup.  In this case, it was shredded cabbage and Japanese mayonnaise, and sushi rice with shredded dried salmon and smoked tofu.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Chocolate-Caramel pudding!

So, who knew that if you boil a can of sweetened condensed milk for a couple of hours, it turns into delicious, delicious caramel?  I did, and I do it semi-regularly.  it is good.

Once you have said delicious, delicious caramel, you can put it in the bottom of a 1 1/2 cup ramekin, and add a chocolate pudding base on top (melt butter with chocolate, mix sugar/cream/flour/eggs together, add the two together, layer over caramel).  Bake the resulting awesome, and you get a choc-caramel pudding.  Yum!  (Hint: add cream for bonus goodness)

Monday, August 1, 2011

Outpost: No

St Ali's Outpost, in South Yarra, should be good.  The coffee is nice, the food is good, but... The service would be bad for Canberra.  For Melbourne, it was almost enough to make me wonder if this is a new variation on hipster cafe snobbery.  Be obnoxious enough to your customers that they stand up and walk out before you actually have to give them their meals.

I kid, but only a little.  The atrocious service seemed to be incompetent rather than malicious.  Terribly disappointing, as I wanted to like the place.