Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2013

Five for Friday

This week Embassy Bar is re-opening as the CBD's first craft beer bar. Is this a little unbelievable to any other local Brisbane-ites? 

A cooking couple’s 100 rules of dinner. Some fun, some practical but worth a read for those of you who enjoying cooking. Also a great cooking blog, if you're in to that sort of thing. 

Some example 'rules': 
  • 18. Kitchen chairs should be red. Or at least fun.
  • 59. When cooking steak on the grill, get a nice char over hot coals and then move it to a less hot part of the grill — i.e. over indirect heat. Test for doneness by pressing down on the meat with your finger. When it’s ready, it will have the consistency of the flesh at the base of your thumb. Once it’s firm, you have overcooked it.
  • 77. If you cook dinner for someone, and that person is not super forthcoming with his or her expressions of happiness or gratitude, you must (a) fight every urge to ask them if they like it, and (b) think twice about cooking for that person again. 

Courtesy of A Dinner Love Story. 

The home made gin kit. Otherwise known as the perfect gift for any of my friends. 

Reasons my son is crying. Incredibly un-PC perhaps but after a while also very funny!

World's most colourful cities. I want to visit them all.



  Júzcar, Spain (top) and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (bottom). Images courtesy of Travel and Leisure.

Friday, 11 January 2013

Five for Friday no. 51

The Billionaire Shop. It exists.



11 new Brisbane bars to try. I've been to 3, a forth this weekend.
  • Alfred and Constance - good food and oh-so-very hip Queensland.
  • InCider Trading - my new favourite bottle shop, the bar is just a good bonus. 
  • Tipplers Tap - get there asap. Great beer, cheap and tasty food. A good place to waste Hours!

Heading to Sixes and Sevens this Saturday and looking forward to it!

Friday, 4 January 2013

New Years Eve 2012

NYE is over rated. Let's just all admit that and get on with things. I love the reason for celebrating because it is so universal and uncontroversial. I wish NYE was the best night of the year. But it just isn't.

Which is why, to mark the passing of 2012, Jane and I decided that what we really wanted to do was eat, drink and be merry in good company and that's All. For a while it was just the two of us, but as it turned out we had quite a few friends at a loss for something to do. In the end, 13 NYE orphans gathered at my apartment for an end of year feast.

 Taking up every available square inch of bench space to prepare.

 Before dinner, we made all our guests sit down to watch 'Dinner For One', a German NYE tradition.
If you haven't seen it, you're missing out on one of life's simple pleasures.

 Friends up from Melbourne. 

I've never cooked for 13 before and I was worried I'd under-catered. In fact, I had a whole extra dish that I didn't complete because it required filo pastry and I forgot to read the damn instructions (you have to take filo out of the freezer a day early and prepare it, etc. blah blah). I went a bit nuts on using recipes I've never tried before from recipes books I got for Christmas, but I think it's fun to discover new favourites. Fortunately, there was plenty of food and no complaints about the cuisine.

 Waiting for the cook.

Tucking in. It looked better than this photo, honestly. 

As always, resolutions came up in conversation. None of us had made any and were generally not keen to commit ourselves. Personally, I think resolutions work best if you have a plan for how to keep them. I have a lot of goals for 2013 but no real 'resolutions'. The best suggested resolution for the night, and which I think I might adopt was 'Get my shit together'. Simple, effective.

One project for the year I have decided to take up is based on an idea I read about that seemed appropriate for me. I had a rough 2012, not a lot of good stuff seemed to happen and it was generally very draining. So my project for 2013 is to write down in a little notebook whenever anything positive occurs and then at the end of the year I can read all the good things that happened to me and remind myself that life is great. They don't have to be big happenings. For instance, in there at the moment is a really sweet compliment someone paid me and a reminder of a glorious day I spent at the beach. Life has few big happy moment but lots of little happy moments and they are just as important to remember. 

My notebook.

 Happy New Year Everyone!


Friday, 2 November 2012

Five for Friday no. 43

Today's Five has a theme: TUMBLRs!


Fiction bucket list. No, it's not books to read before you die.  




 Thug Kitchen. Jane's new favourite tumblr.  

Research in Progress.A tumblr for my scientists friends. Of which I have almost none. 

Tumblr of a professional cartoonist and illustrator. Off-kilter Disney Princess, My Little Pony and Superhero comics. Adorable.


Images are the original artwork of Amy Mebberson.

Monday, 8 October 2012

Nutella-stuffed brown butter and sea salt cookies. Or 'what I did on Sunday'.

I had a very quiet weekend. I'm moving week after next so most of my time was taken up with collecting boxes, packing, wondering how I got so much clutter in my life.

However, on Sunday morning I use the excuse of 'emptying the fridge' to do some baking I'd been meaning to do for a long time. I made Ambitious Kitchen's Nutella-stuffed browned butter and sea salt chocolate chip cookies. Just the name of it makes your blood sugar level rise.


I didn't even use as many chips as the recipe asked for...

They were a little fidley to make. You had to let the dough mixture rest in the fridge for two hours, then make a dough pancake to wrap around the chiled nutella. As soon as the nutella started to warm up, it was almost impossible to work with.

Flattened cookies with dollops of nutella, ready to be wrapped up.


The finished cookies when they came out of the oven looked a lot better than these photos suggest. And they were delicious! Worth the time and effort. The sea salt was very necessary to cut through the sweet chocolatey goodness.  I had one and felt like I'd had my sugar-alowance for the day


Made just a little better, they would easily be the best choc chip cookies I have ever had.

Thursday, 26 July 2012

The night that was: MasterChef Australia 2012 Finale

I didn’t start out as a MasterChef fan. The whole first season in 2009 passed me by without an acknowledgement. Come 2010 however, I was sucked in by Chuck into the nightly drama of watching 24 ordinary Australians ‘battle it out for the food dream’. Two years later I am still watching every night (except Friday, who cares about Friday?) and together we two addicts made special preparations for the 2012 finale, which aired last night.

To celebrate MasterChef Night, we decided to have a fellow MasterChef fan-couple come over for dinner to watch and make loud sarcastic comments with us. We also decided to mark the occasion by cooking them a meal of MasterChef recipes from this season. I was in charge of Andy’s fish pie whereas Chuck took Kylie’s strawberry and apple crumble

We prepped the night before, which for me meant cutting up piles of vegetables. Wednesday night our friends were expected nice and early so I got into the cooking the minute I got home.

Sustainable blue swimmer crab stock - I'm so freakin' fancy-pants.

I stuck to the recipe to the letter, as one should when making something for the first time. The only deviation I dared was to include a purple carrot as well as an orange carrot in the veggie mix.

All the veggies and deliciousness softening.

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

1796 Foods


A blog review of another blog. Otherwise known as ‘Damn I wish I’d thought of that’.

Dear Jane put me on to this blog and I have a total love / hate relationship with it. It’s a really good blog that is good to read and has great pics and most importantly, a brilliant concept. I hate it because I did not think of that concept first. 
 
1796 Foods is one women’s journey through two different version of the same book; “1001 Foods To Eat Before You Die” Her aim is to eat every food or meal that is mentioned in the books. The reason there are 1796 of them and not 2002 is the deletion of duplicates. 
 
Banoffee Pie. Photo courtesy of 1796 Foods.

The photos are fun, the meals are usually interesting and reading through it makes you want to go out and have food adventures! Some of the foods are so simple – walnut oil, Waldorf salad, lemon meringue pie. Others are a little less known, such as this one:



 
"701. Porkolt Csirke
Porkolt csirke is basically what I’ve known as chicken paprikash - a Hungarian stew with chicken, peppers, tomatoes and paprika topped off with soured cream. It’s full of some of my favourite ingredients so I knew I was going to really enjoy it."
 - 1796 Foods

 Goats Butter. Photo courtesy of 1796 Foods.


Seriously, why did I not think of this? Now I'm going to go out and find goats butter.

Thursday, 8 March 2012

Drunk cooking is the best cooking

A little while ago, someone sent me a link to the first episode of My Drunk Kitchen.

Many, many youtube videos and a lot of hilarity later, I had a new favourite person.

Enjoy!


Friday, 6 January 2012

When I get my foodie on

I had a magical start to my Friday. We were having a bring-a-plate morning tea at work to say goodbye to a colleague. I hadn’t baked so I needed to buy. The patisserie below my apartment is still shut for holidays, as was the German bakery. Feeling a little pushed for time and ideas, I headed to a local Brumby’s, something I would never normally consider. Parking opposite Brumby’s I was right in front of a fruit store / delicatessen so I headed in to see if they had biscuits or something similar I could buy, in the way many fruit stores now stock a little bit of everything. To my delighted astonishment, inside was a little slice of foodie heaven. There was a full fridge devoted to fruity-smelling cheeses, an equally mouth watering exotic ham and meats selection. Homemade pies, lasagnes, cakes and biscuits. Gourmet ice-cream, sauces, preserves, oils, dips, stock. Everything my little recipe-loving, home-chef, delicacy-delighting heart could desire. There was even fruit and vegetables.

But the biggest surprise? Kangaroo, Emu and Crocodile pate. I did even know that existed! I want to try it as soon as possible.

So it got me thinking. Where are the places in Brisbane I go to when I want to get the tasty nosh? Those odd little extras you see in the best recipe books? I have a few, they’re certainly not the only places or necessarily the best but they’re some of the shops I frequent. Where do you go?


I want it ALL!

Superior Fruit and Wendy’s Kitchen

Near the corner of Bank Road and Honour Avenue, Graceville.

Pennisi Cuisine

Mediterranean Wholesalers in Balaclava Street, Wooloongabba. Brilliant for cheese, chorizo, spices and random Italian, German, Hungarian etc. products. I also go to an Indian wholesalers on the same street. Delicious quick cook breads and of courses spices.

Brewbakers

1/337 Sandgate Road Albion

Do yourself a favour, go, get some bread buy the bagels and savour the delights.

Yuen’s Marketing Trading Company

155 Wickham Street, Fortitude Valley

There are so many good places to eat, drink and shop in the Valley. Yuen’s is just my favourite of the Asian supermarkets. It has such a good range covering many countries, so if you’re looking for a particular sauce to finish off your Chinese, Indonesian or Japanese dish, you’re set.

A good butcher

I tend to go to local butchers in my area and form a bit of a relationship with the guys behind the counter. I’ve yet to meet a surly butcher, they’re always happy and chatty and so accommodating. There is a good butcher in the Kenmore Tavern shopping complex Boutique Meats – they have a good range of fancy meats and delicious extras, plus they have scrumptious pies – also Milton Fine Meats in the Baroona Road shops. Great guys, good quality meat. There are two good places in New Farm, Petersons Quality Meats cnr of James and Kent streets has great meat and a good selection of game. Same can be said for Rayners Meats at 882 Brunswick Street.

Monday, 2 January 2012

I learn to cook venison

A few weeks ago boyfriend and I were walking through the Rocklea markets doing pre-christmas shopping and on a total whim we bought ourselves a shoulder of venison from the Duck Man as a treat. I had no idea how to cook venison, so I got my foodie family onto the problem and my Dad sent me a recipe from our much loved copy of the Bayrisches (Bavarian) cookbook, thoughfuly translated. Thanks Dad!

Last night I set about cooking up a storm with our 600g shoulder of venison, kipfler potatoes and home grown beans. This was my first time ever of cooking both venison and a proper gravy to go with the meat. The result was scrumptious. So proud of myself and not a little smug.

The Bayerisches recipe, roughly translated and with notes:

1 venison shoulder

crushed juniper berries

100g speck or fatty rashers of nice bacon to cover

To bake:

80-100g butter

1 onion

Some juniper berries – not always available in supermarkets but certainly in a decent fruit shop or deli. Juniper berries are what gin is made out of and they have a delightful peppery woody flavour that goes wonderfully with most game.

1-2 bay leaves

1/2 - 3/4 l liquid (stock or something). I used beef stock


Later:

1/4 l thick sour cream

Thickening sauce:

1 desert spoon flour of 2 teaspooons cornflour

To improve:

Red wine. Slosh in a bit of whatever wine you're drinking to accompany dinner. If you're not drinking wine with your venison then we are NO LONGER FRIENDS.

1-2 desert spoons red current jelly

Grated orange peel (if desired)


If possible remove meat from bone, remove skin, rub with salt, pepper, crushed juniper berries. Put in pan on some slices of Speck, pour over hot butter, add other baking stuff (bay leaves, onion, juniper berries).

As soon as they have a good colour, pour a little baking liquid – i.e. stock - in at the side and add more liquid periodically as necessary. Baste frequently. 15 minutes before the end of the cooking time pour over the sour cream and let it brown. Baking temperature 210 – 200c in a conventional oven, 170-180c in fan forced, on lower shelf.

Cooking time depending on size. 1.5-2 hours. (!)

Take meat out of the sauce (pan) and keep warm. To prepare sauce, loosen baking residues, add liquid if necessary, bring to boil, add binding agent (flour or cornflour) put through sieve, adjust to taste with the 'taste improvers'.

Notes:

  1. I put fatty bacon rashers on top too; the idea is to keep moisture including fat flowing into the meat.

  2. Cook for about the same amount of time you'd cook beef. Bayerisches gives no idea of the size of the piece of venison but 1.5-2 hours is probably long enough to cook a whole side of a deer in your oven. Provided you can fit it in. I cooked my 600g shoulder piece for 1 hour, taking it out frequently to baste. The meat was quite well done after resting so I would say something more along the lines of 40-45minutes for a similar piece then rest.

  1. I didn't have red current jelly but I did have quince paste and that worked a treat.

  2. I skipped the sour cream part and it didn't matter.

  3. Roast potatoes in with the venison. It's the right thing to do.

  4. It's worthwhile spending some time on the sauce because it totally makes the meal.


Venison sounds scary but it is delicious and doesn't have to be that expensive. At the markets venison was going for $24/kg, which is equivalent to many cuts of pork and cheaper than either lamb chops or a decent cut of steak. Try it, its delicious and a heck of a lot easier than it sounds!



The venison hidden underneath the bacon and sitting in a pool of butter. Lucky venison.

Halfway through cooking.

Rested and carved.

The final product sans gravy. It may look kind of boring, but I'm no food photographer. The important point is that it was delicious and I'd make it again.
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