ragingyoghurt

Author Archives: ragingyoghurt

9
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 29 November 2008 – 9:46 pm
Filed under chocolate, drink, misc, shoping, something new

it’s beginning to look a lot like xmas! there’s a dark cherry mocha frappucino awaiting me a starbucks, but now that starbuckss are few and far-between, i made do yesterday with the festive cookies ‘n’ christmas beverage at gloria jeans.

[ it pained me to order it — i had to stop speaking halfway through and check the signboard to see that it really was called “cookies. and. christmas”. ]

but it didn’t hurt to drink it. it was mildly chocolatey, and not overly minty, and if that doesn’t seem too exciting (it wasn’t), well! the self-serve sprinkles at the condiment bar will surely do you in.

here are some other exciting things i’ve found lately:

sweet william not nuts chocolate bar
i remember being told about dairy-free sweet william chocolate a few years ago by this vegan girl i knew. because i’m not vegan, or lactose intolerant, i did not think to venture down that route.

but! a new variety i stumbled upon at banana joes last week compelled me to put one in my basket. “not nuts!” it proclaims on the wrapper, for those allergic to peanuts as well as dairy. or for those, like me, who do not care for peanuts in their chocolate. instead, it is packed full of whole roasted soy beans. hurrah! the crunchy, beany little nuggets are a treat indeed, and surprisingly, so is the chocolate: smooth and creamy (though a little too sweet), and devoid of any of that weird soy flavour you get in regular non-asian soy milk products.

how do they do it? amazing!

also…

coca cola lip balm
i really do like coca cola, but i really have to be in the mood to drink it. i have to crave it, actually, and i give in to that craving two, maybe three times a year. oh, to feel that caustic fizz work its way down my throat is a wonderful thing.

voila — coca cola lip smackers!

the bumper pack i bought had regular coke lip balm, vanilla coke lip balm, and a liquid lip gloss that rolls on via an enormous silver ball bearing. it tastes and smells just like the real thing! and i don’t have to actually drink any of that crap! i am extremely happy about this great development in lip balm – junk food cross promotion. do not think i have not considered applying it over my regular cherry lip balm for a walk down cherry coke lane.

i resisted — so far — the fanta pack, which included a stick each of orange, strawberry and grape. perhaps i could just buy a grape one; grape fanta is so hard to come by these days.

– – –

bet you didn’t know i felt so strongly about coke!

what better time to finally address that meme i got tagged with the other day. ok, fine, two weeks ago. i am very bad with memes. but two people tagged me for this one, so it must be important.

so. the rules of the game:
• link to the person who tagged you
• post the rules on the blog
• write six random things about yourself
• tag six people at the end of your post
• let each person know they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their blog
• let the tagger know when your entry is up

that is a lot of rules, so i’m only following half of them. the first half. told you i was bad with memes! also, i think you get quite a lot of random things about me in the day-to-day running of this blog — i really like broccoli, for example, and “america’s next top model” — so i’m really scraping the barrel here.

1. i really like coca cola

2. i eat floor food
sure, it depends on the food, and the floor; i won’t eat food off a wet or grimy floor, even if it’s picked up quickly. but the five-second rule is fairly elastic around here. once, at the national art gallery cafe, a fat artichoke shot out of my sandwich when i took a bite out of the other end. i waited until i had finished the whole sandwich, and then i retrieved the artichoke from under my chair where it had rolled, on carpet, and i ate it, after checking for hairs.

3. i eat expired food
i am right now eating a bag of japanese milk-tea-flavoured corn snacks, best before date: 07.02.23. they have a pleasant, sweet, milky-tea flavour, and are only slightly stale… a bit like those flushable corn-based packing peanuts (it’s true, i nibbled one the other day to see if they were the disintegratable flushable kind).

4. i remove the pegs from the clothes line while bringing in the washing
i caught the tail end of this debate in the herald’s column 8 section earlier in the week. apparently such people are deemed to have some sort of obsessive-compulsive affliction. but really, how can you put out new laundry when the lines are littered with randomly placed pegs? you’d have to hold the damp piece of clothing bunched up in one hand while you claw at the pegs to release them before clipping them back on. you’d be unable to flick out the twisted wet bundles to rid them of their wrinkles. you’d… ahem. wait ’til you find out i’ve also been known to match the colours of the pegs to the colour of the clothes. and hangers, let’s not forget hangers.

5. that guy known as “the boy” moved back in
it’s neither an overly good nor bad thing — maybe it’s both, and maybe they cancel each other out — but i thought it might be useful to note, in the interest of narrative.

6. i am horribly shy and retiring
but i’ve met some great people through this blog. come say hello if you see me in the street… unless, um, you’re a scary stalker type. then yes, just walk on by.

3
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 28 November 2008 – 4:39 pm
Filed under cake

ah, you know me so well, chocolate suze: of course macarons were procured. i picked the yoghurt and chilli first, and then the mango and jasmin, and then when the counterboy said that he’d also throw in a green apple one because he thought it was really worth trying, i didn’t argue.

and it was pretty good — an intense burst of fresh appley flavour, with chunks of fruit besides. much more appley, in fact, than the mango one was mangoey (or jasminy, for that matter). the yoghurt one was just plain weird; the yoghurt came across as a general sourness rather than a flavour, but the dried chilli flakes were fun (and left quite an afterburn).

i enjoyed the pistachio tart much more. the crisp pastry shell held a creamy-smooth pistachio paste with a very mysterious accent. cardamon, perhaps? it was offset by a thin layer of raspberry jam, tart and sticky on the biscuity base. the pistachio brittle was made for nibbling on in much greater quantities, and i was sorry when — despite my best efforts at rationing — it ran out.

i’d like to run out now and get me another, but i think that a rice pudding eclair must be next on my plate.

9
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 22 November 2008 – 9:41 pm
Filed under cake, lunch

look at ’em. like a bounty spring harvest from a garden of macaron. yes, it was full bloom at adriano zumbo patissier this afternoon, with such flavours as mango and jasmin; rose and lychee; yoghurt and chilli; pineapple and ginger; green apple; and sticky bun.

!

but i am getting ahead of myself. first: lunch.

we met deborah at circle cafe for continuing november birthday celebrations. the kid was evidently into her second month of birthday festivities, the evidence being an enormous brown paper bag of pink silicon baking paraphernalia. thanks, lady!

being forward-thinking girls, we had already planned dessert at zumbo cafe, and so… what to eat that will line the stomach and leave enough room for what i considered the main event?

a delicious toasted baguette topped with a mound of sauteed spinach and generous dollops of goat’s curd, is what. it tasted healthy yet unboring, though by halfway through my mouth was already experiencing that familiar post-spinach trauma (not so much green bits caught in my teeth, but the weird slippery-catchy feeling on my tongue and membranes). it must have actually been healthy too, because i was still hungry after i finished. on to round two!

adriano zumbo cafe chocolat was much more subdued than i’d anticipated for a saturday afternoon. perhaps the bizarre weather had kept everyone at home. we perched ourselves on the high stools at the wooden workbench, and made a half-hearted attempt to look as though we knew what we wanted. on the patient waitress’s third approach, i picked paris.

creamy rose brulee and fresh lychees topped with raspberry sorbet and a chopped-up rose macaron. accompanying this was a coconut and sago milkshake mingling in a beaker with an intense and tart strawberry puree. the waitress had said that it was quite a light dessert, and it’s true, i barely registered its presence in my gut. and in my head, what did i make of this ispahan-meets-bubble tea ensemble? all the components were quite delectable, and the pudding on its own was fine, and the milkshake unusual and clever, and it looked lovely coming towards us, all scattered with rose petals… which weren’t particularly fragrant — i don’t know if they were meant to be eaten or not; i chose not. and yet i found myself gazing fondly and longingly over at deborah’s not a hamburger. now that i’d come back for.

and then… yes, we walked over to the cake shop, and gaped in wonder at the new chocolate slabs, and pointy domes, and the great loaf of chocolate fondant festooned with shards of technicolor chocolate, and macaron halves, and glazed strawberries. and at some point i may have gasped out loud at the rice pudding eclair — wait ’til a certain rice-pudding-poopooing, eclair-purist frenchman hears about this —

but the one that came home with me was the pistachio and raspberry tart, with its tidy lid of pistachio praline, and its plump raspberry (and a hidden reservoir of raspberry coulis i’m told), and its peekaboo pistachio ganache peeping out of the pastry crust.

breakfast tomorrow sorted.

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 21 November 2008 – 8:39 pm
Filed under cake, chocolate

it’s a little sad, no? when things come to an end?

oh relax, you, my faithful four readers who come day after day, i’m not quitting the blog. not right now anyway, even though it’s too time-consuming, and exhausting, and… boring (or comment-unworthy, anyway), all terrible things to struggle with when you’re deciding whether or not to go on. and besides, it’s too hot to make that decision today.

no, i’m talking about zumbo. faster than i realised, the summer collection from adriano zumbo patissier is nearly upon us: tomorrow in fact, a rumble of foodbloggers informed me.

now, if you don’t count the pre-packaged single-serve blueberry pie that i bought myself on my birthday, i really have not had a birthday cake this year. (and if you do count it, well. it was still just a birthday pie wasn’t it?) either way, i thought yesterday was the perfect opportunity to finally get me the tanzanie before the winter cakes disappeared.

of course, now i am kicking myself, because i have left it too late to go back for seconds. here is a wonderful slab of decadent chocolate cake. if you stick a fork all the way down and break off a vertical portion, and put that in your gob, you will have a bit of creaminess here, and a bit of crunchiness there, and a rich, intensely chocolatey mouthful overall.

if you delicately pry each of the seven or so chocolatey layers apart, you will have the thinnest skin of dark chocolate ganache; milky chocolate mousse; a mysterious mass beneath that with a charred, smoky flavour; a voluptuous vanilla brulee; a crackly chocolate meringue; something i believe the menu describes as chocolate jelly, although it seemed a bit softer and fudgier; something salty! all on a base of flourless chocolate biscuit.

but no need to panic just yet: perhaps i can stretch it out another couple of days. i only managed half of it after all, while staying up too late last night watching “the shining” on tv, and even then i may have crossed my chocolate threshold.

and the cake peeking demurely round the back? you remember the cinque terre? chocolate mousse, lemon curd, raspberry cremeux, and candied olives beneath a quiff of billowing meringue? i was talking to the countergirl at the shop, innocently buying my tanzanie, when she suddenly said, “if you want that last cinque terre, i’ll give it to you.”

“i won’t say no,” i replied, calmly. if she could’ve spoken directly to my brain, she would have heard it screaming: yes! yes! yes!

oh, it was great to revisit. the kid — so unimpressed by the mango-caramel-lychee-chocolate-mint folly of last month — thought so too.

7
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 November 2008 – 3:31 pm
Filed under cake, dinner, lunch, snacks, trip

aloha! bet you didn’t even know that i was gone… but i was! it was my birthday last week, and my father shouted us a trip to hawaii. funny, my mum brought with her three fat novels and just a couple of hundred US dollars, because she thought there’d be nothing to do but sit on the beach and feel bored.

me, i did my research beforehand, and noted that there was a gap close to the hotel. what did end up being a surprise was that our hotel was a stroll away from the rodeo drive of waikiki, and a brisk walk in the other direction took us straight to macy’s.

but of course, it was all about how much american junk food i could eat in a week. my first move was to take up the two-for-a-dollar offer on pop tarts at the enormous drugstore at the local mall.

i also got myself a slice of the famous ted’s bakery chocolate haupia pie. this one i actually procured from the deli section of a supermarket in the mall (yes, yes, i spent a lot of time at the mall, eight hours in one day if you must know, and my mother and i returned to the hotel to discover that my father had already tried to notify the police); there were two kinds available — one which was merely labelled, haupia chocolate pie, and the one i ended up with, ted’s pie chocolate haupia. i asked a store employee what the difference was, and he replied that the former was made instore, and that they were trying to copy ted. so i asked him which one he liked better, and he paused, and his eyes darted, and he said, “well. the ted’s one is pretty good.” so thank you, shop boy, it was pretty good, with a rich, dark layer of chocolate pudding below, and a light, fragrant layer of coconut pudding above, and a cloud of whipped cream above that.

the kid and i split it, and a blueberry pop tart for breakfast the next morning.

we also ate a lot of japanese food, natch, the highlight of which was probably a tuna and shiso leaf inside-out maki on our last night. and then unexpectedly, i ate quite a bit of mexican food. more, anyway, than you’d think, for hawaii.

behold: the tamale platter from the foodcourt (in the mall) on our second day there. two tamales from a choice of cheese, pork and chicken, and three sides from a choice of… plenty. already wilting from the lack of fresh vegetable accompaniments to american meals, i picked pineapple salsa, macerated oranges, and spicy black beans. and three kinds of salsa. and a flowery drink called, “jamaica”. the corn chips were complimentary. i did not get through it all.

i had not had tamales before, and now i know that they are like chinese zhongzi, except made from cornmeal, and thus possibly stodgier. the cheese one was pretty good until it cooled down and congealed, and the pork one was pretty good fullstop, but i would not necessarily have them again.

on my birthday, we were away from civilisation, walking on ancient volcanos on the big island, and sustenance came from the cafeteria dining hall at the lone, appropriately named hotel on the edge of the national park — volcano house. it was not hot and burny up the volcano, as you might imagine, but cold and drizzly, and tinged with sulfurous gasses. the one hot food option was a tub of chili and rice, so i had that, and because it was my birthday, i also picked a blueberry pie from the glass cabinet. the pie was flown in from spokane, WA… it was nice and all, but i kinda wish it had been trucked up from ted’s.

as i write this, i’m realising that i didn’t actually get around to that much american junk food after all. i must have finally realised my limits, or all those lectures from my good mother about trans fats finally found a receptor in my brain, because all those encyclopedic lists of ingredients on the packaging made every second thing look a little unappealing. only every second thing though, and only a little unappealing. and anyway, you can get peanut butter cups at the newsagents at broadway shoping center here in sydney.

what you probably can’t get are these amakara mochi, fat, sticky rice cakes in a beguiling bath made primarily of soy sauce and sugar. they were definitely intriguing, and somewhat moreish, but somehow i could not give them away. not that i really wanted to; they were not the worst things i ate in hawaii.

this was. the “market fresh” sante fe salad from arby’s, in a surprisingly upmarket stripmall surrounded by lava rocks on the big island. i don’t know if it was the icy cold chicken nuggets, or the leathery kernels of corn. perhaps it was the raspberry vinaigrette the consistency of a blood bank donation (perhaps i should have gone with the default ranch dressing, the consistency of an arterial blockage). i’d already come to terms with the standard, shredded iceberg lettuce served everywhere, so it couldn’t have been that. overall it was inedible, so i didn’t. the one saving grace of this miserable lunch was the curly fries. it was my fault, i suppose: who asked me to eat at a fast food chain outlet? it’s just, i didn’t think it was possible to do such vile things to a salad.

and the best things i ate in hawaii? just outside the hotel grounds was what i’ve since discovered is a local institution, wailana coffee house and cocktail lounge. truly the diner of my dreams, with its roster of waitstaff straight out of “ghost world” and its all-day, all-you-can-eat pancake special.

i did not get to eat the triple-layer cubes of rainbow jell-o from the all-you-can-eat salad bar, nor the giant belgian waffles i’d had my eye on from our first visit. i might’ve had a sandwich or something on that early, bleary night, but then i returned the morning after for the old fashioned french toast — each massive eggy, bready slice concealed a secret pocket of guava jam.

i knew it would be futile trying to squeeze a final breakfast in before our 7am departure to the airport on the last day, so i put in a request for lunch the day before. and this is what i had: the chuck wagon. a smoked pork chop with apple sauce, two eggs (i chose googy sunny side up), two macadamia hotcakes with whipped butter (so large they came on their own plate) and all the syrup i could eat. yes, three pitchers of maple, coconut and boysenberry syrups, jest fer me.

does it not make you weep with joy? the meat — a ham steak, really — was lean and tender, singed just right. the pancakes were soft and fluffy, with crunchy edges round the sides, and chopped macadamias all the way through. i’d already tried the trio of syrups on the french toast earlier in the week, and was happy to go with just an endless stream of maple. happy!

but i still had unfinished business. from my research i knew there was a cupcake shop in the vicinity, and so after lunch, while the kid went for a last hurrah in the swimming pool with her grandpa, i steered my mum’s afternoon coffee expedition in the direction of satura cakes. look — they really do come in cups!

i didn’t actually eat anything then… well, i couldn’t — this is my mum’s konamisu cupcake, a pretty convincing alcohol-free tiramisu with creamy, chocolatey mascarpone and light sponge and locally grown coffee.

because i hoped i might be able to eat again later, i came away with the store’s signature strawberry shortcake for the kid (a light as air confection of sponge cake and whipped cream), and the red velvet cupcake for me. the rich, moist, red cake was topped with a dreamy dollop of white chocolate and mascarpone. i only wish i could’ve been more awake as i scarfed it the next morning before the cab came to whisk us away.

but look. a week in hawaii is more than enough time to eat, even if it seems like you’re eating nonstop. aside from the chuck wagon, the highlight of the trip was probably walking through the 500-year-old lava tube in the middle of the lush rainforest on the edge of the kilauea volcano crater.

because you think hawaii and you think hula, and soft, sandy beaches, and swaying palm trees (and out-of-towners with leathery skin and far less (and more colourful) clothing than they probably should be wearing), but there we were, down from the volcano, on a beach of black sand created by centuries of broken down lava rocks, surrounded by… nothing.

coolness.

i was still eating at the end, of course. i considered revisiting the pumpkin spice cream frappucino i’d had at another airport starbucks a couple days earlier, but decided that the one not unpleasantly pumpkin-flavoured beverage topped with whipped cream and a dusting of cinnamon was enough. instead, i cracked open my final container of pineapple slices. i’d probably already eaten three or four local pineapples cumulatively over the week, but i couldn’t get enough. they were so juicy you’d be sticky all down your chin, and sweet, like they’d come out of a tin. and so, there i was, in the lounge waiting for the boarding call, savouring my last three slices. they went all too quickly.

3
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 7 November 2008 – 8:37 pm
Filed under cake, chocolate, ice cream, kid

it’s old news by now of course. while i was eating my way through auburn last saturday, a select group of sydney’s finest foodbloggers descended upon zumbo cafe and ate their way through the dessert menu.

there were still only three up on the blackboard when i rocked up with singapore girl on tuesday, and just one that i was hellbent on trying.

“it’s not a hamburger.”

… is what it’s called. perhaps you say it like, “it’s nodda tooma.” plus there is a subtitle: “it’s a macaron.”

and behold: an enormous macaron-ice cream sandwich. beneath the initial crunch, the biscuits were moist and chewy, extremely chocolatey. on top were crumbs, from another darker, crumblier specimen. in between was a generous scoop of luscious dulce de leche gelato. there are plans for the ice cream to be made instore, but for now it’s shipped in from messina in darlinghurst.

and right at the bottom, was a layer of rice pudding. strange, no? but so delicious. it was sweet and cinnamony, and surprised me — pleasantly, no, joyously — with chunks of caramelised banana .

in its entirety, it was just enough to hit my chocolate threshold; perhaps if the kid hadn’t eaten quite so much of the caramel ice cream quite so quickly, it would have vanquished me.

singapore girl ordered the deconstructed miss marple. what began at the patisserie as a crepe-encased gateau, and evolved into a tart, now arrives at the table wantonly draped across a big white plate: a pair of slinky mascarpone-filled crepes, all glistening with syrup and crackling with caramelised bits, lay in a tangle with fresh strawberries and tart little orange jellies. but you see, frozen jellies. put one in the kid’s mouth and watch her eyes light up. it worked on us bigger people too.

we sat and ate slowly — well, as slowly as we could; by this time, the kid had had enough of ice cream and jellies, and had grown bored and a little belligerent — each thinking our dessert was the better one, and of course we were both right.

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 4 November 2008 – 10:39 pm
Filed under misc

i was alarmed when, at the very beginning of october, i went into a department store, and discovered that the halls had already been decked in boughs of holly, tinsel, feathers and a heavenly host of other shiny baubles. the beginning! of october! it’s madness!

but now that it is the beginning of november, i feel barely a qualm about plugging this crafty little tome that i designed for kids craft weekly.

“christmas craft” is full of ideas for such xmassy essentials as cards, ornaments, decorations, and advent calenders. you don’t even need a kid to partake of all this festive fun! after all, you can’t be on the internet all the time, can you?

well… i can. either that or it’s super mario 64.

but you: you can download this bounty of handmade goodness for 5 bucks (7.50 in australian money, pending the plummeting dollar) and relive the glory days when your fingers could do more than double-click.

2
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 4 November 2008 – 9:28 pm
Filed under dinner

when my mum comes to sydney, she goes to the opera; this time round, she went to see “la bohème” (and as an afterthought, “my fair lady” *). a few days later, she found herself eating at la bohème too.

but it’s not a place where scruffy and starving students hang out. oh no, no chance of starving here: this is where you come for big serves of central european food. my pretty, scallop-edged platter was soon filled with a festive assortment of meats (smoked ribs, a schnitzel, a portion of roast duck and two kind of sausages), and two sorts of cabbage (sweet red and sauerkraut).

this was the feast platter for one — you should see the feast platter for two! — and in fact, the feast was too big to fit on one plate. close by on another dish sat a trio of dumplings (bread, potato and speck) and a gravy boat.

the highlights for me were the cabbages, natch, and the smoked ribs, infused with such great flavour that i gnawed at the bone long after the sweet meat was gone. the speck dumpling was also infused with porky charm. the schnitzel, if you must know, was merely pedestrian. perhaps on schnitzel night (tuesday and thursday) it makes more of an effort.

also at the table were half a roasted duck and a pork knuckle that had surely been cut from the leg of a monster pig; the carving knife was still embedded when it arrived at the table. there were complimentary apps in the form of warm bread rolls and what amounted to two little dishes of duck fat.

friday night, when we were there, there was also live music, which means a lone man and his amplified violin, playing such tunes as “all by myself” and “you light up my life” over a melodramatic backing tape. he gets there at 7, and we got there at 6, and were still only halfway through our meal when he wheeled his amp in the door.

next time, dinner’s at 5.30.

* for the record, my mother recommends “my fair lady” (“richard e grant has wonderful timing and expression”) over “la bohème” (“ordinary”), cab

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 2 November 2008 – 10:46 pm
Filed under around town, lunch

it was my mum’s last day in sydney, and i asked what she would like to do. “would you like to go into the city to buy shoes?” i asked. “no,” she replied, “it is my last day, and i will do anything you like.”

so we caught a bus and a train, and not too much later, arrived in auburn just in time for lunch. the kid, having had the presence of mind to assemble a backpack of train snacks — jellybeans, raisins and dried pineapple, a previously decapitated gingerbread man (thank you, biscuit tree!), a pink lady apple (my addition) — wasn’t too hungry, but was happy to play along.

we claimed a table at sofra, and spent too long by the rotisserie deciding which shish kebabs we wanted. minced lamb? or chunks? chicken?? the salads were much easier: clean and crunchy red cabbage, a pool of creamy hommos, and tumble of fried (and charred) potato, eggplant, cauliflower and broccoli. oh, it was a pleasing feast.

and left room — just barely, after a postprandial meander through the bargain emporiums for a bout of scumbag shopping — for a good few scoops of dondurma down the road at mado. we bought turkish delights and sweet sticky cakes, and just before catching the express train back to the city, my mum bought shoes.

– – –

this morning at the airport, my grandmother, my aunt and i collectively gasped in horror, when my mother unzipped her carry-on to reveal her newly purchased, still-in-its-box electric carving knife.

“why have you put that in that bag?” asked my grandmother. at 88, she is still pretty sharp.

“ma, my suitcase was too full,” replied my mum, who on a good day is still not quite as quick. she rummaged for a pen, or something.

they repeated the exchange a couple more times before we spelled it out for my mum: y.o.u. c.a.n.t. b.r.i.n.g. k.n.i.v.e.s. o.n. t.he. p.l.a.n.e. she glanced over at the check-in counter; her suitcase had trundled down the conveyor belt not five minutes before. insert: chortle chortle guffaw.

i left my mum at the the airport with the glinting blade in my backpack, and the emasculated motor packed snug in her case. they will be reunited one day, when we are.

5
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 31 October 2008 – 4:54 pm
Filed under chocolate

it’s nice how things turn out, is all. one moment there’s a post on a blog, and the next there’s a flurry of txts, and just over an hour later, me and chocolatesuze are standing in the ugliest little courtyard in the world, way down the back of the ugliest little mall in the neighbourhood. but no matter, because the courtyard — oozing suburban backyard charm, circa 1972 — leads into a cozy wood-panelled room, with velvety cushions, and a red chandelier, and quite a bit of chocolate.

yes, adriano zumbo cafe chocolat finally opened. it was tomorrow after all. but yesterday, today. wait! come back! it is hot today, and my brain is melting.

it was hot yesterday too, though not as, so i was in no mood to try any of the hot chocolates listed on the chalkboard — cherry ripe, white and dark — and especially the one which was not — chilli. instead i had an iced tea, which came in a small carafe with bits of chopped up strawberries floating in it. the volume of the carafe exactly matched that of the handsome glass filled with ice, mint leaves and tiny slices of orange. it was all very pretty, but once the tea was poured from one vessel to another, it seemed like the energy expended could have been put towards more worthy tasks.

like eating chocolate! it was a very soft launch of the cafe, and what was on offer was mostly chocolates. i picked a couple: salted caramel mousse and vanilla caramel, and was enchanted by the effect of incredible salty salt crystals embedded in lush dark chocolate.

chocolatesuze proved her mantle by downing a hot chocolate as well as five chocolate truffles, including the unfortunately named “camel toe”, a shiny pink and appropriately moulded affair filled with a liquid red wine center. sigh. (not a happy sigh.)

the sugar only made me hungry for more, so i went back for seconds: a passionfruit caramel macaron. it was a full, moist mouthful with a burst of fruity tang. caramelicious!

two hours after we began, the smell of fried garlic and curry spices wafted into the courtyard from the indian takeaway next door, and i was reminded that i had to go home and make dinner, for dessert (spaghetti with smoked trout, green beans and asparagus, if you must know, in a parsley pesto).

the cafe’s dessert menu hadn’t really been implemented on this first day; besides the chocolate and macaron and a couple of pastries, there was only one available. we did not order it, but followed its trajectory with keen interest when it was delivered to the next table. there was a surgical steel kidney dish, you see, and an oversized syringe filled with what appeared to be the result of liposuction. but in the dish was a chocolate fondant, and in the syringe, raspberry coulis and vanilla creme anglaise, which was then administered into the pudding by the waitress. oh, if only she’d been wearing a naughty nurses uniform.

it will all be very interesting i’m sure, when it takes full flight on saturday.

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