ragingyoghurt

Author Archives: ragingyoghurt

1
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 29 October 2008 – 9:37 pm
Filed under cake

he’s been keeping ’em guessing, has zumbo. adriano zumbo cafe chocolat was originally scheduled to open on 11 october, then 18 october, and then 21 october, and then… well i wasn’t actually keeping track — really! — but it seemed like it was on the verge of finally opening two days from now. no, now. no, now!

so, tomorrow, apparently. when i popped by the space last friday, a smiley girl was polishing the the glass-topped counter to beyond shiny, and it all smelt like varnish and cleaning products. hanging above the counter were three enormous liquorice humbugs masquerading as ceiling lamps. tops.

back at the main store, i ticked a couple more cakes off the list: the one named “you name it…” had mango mascarpone creme topped with lychee jelly surrounded by caramel mousse punctuated with pieces of minty chocolate. huh.

the kid, initially excited by the thought of mango cake, ate the threads of white chocolate off the top, and then quickly lost interest when she encountered the moussey layer. “is it too alcoholic?” i asked. “is it too wanky?” chimed another voice at the table.

well, it wasn’t alcoholic. and no, not wanky either, although i did prefer the components eaten separately rather than all together (and the fresh, fruity bits over the others).

which totally wasn’t the case with the tuk tuk nothing. two rounds of coconut dacquoise sandwiching coconut pandan mousse and caramelised exotic fruit compote. “what are the fruit?” i’d asked the counterboy earlier, but he couldn’t tell. turns out it was pineapple, and mango i think, sticky sweet and delicious. the edges of this big wheel were encased in white chocolate and toasted coconut, and the mouthful of crack and crunch and crumbly and creamy was blissful indeed.

we came to these cakes after a big meatfest dinner up the street, which meant half a tuk tuk nothing left over for another day. it suited me just fine; i would eat this again and again.

although i suppose the next cake i get had better be the tanzanie — five forms of chocolate (and a vanilla brulee) in one slice.

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 27 October 2008 – 11:22 pm
Filed under around town, art, cake, lunch

somehow, my mother being in town led to me immersed elbow deep in hot, soapy water on a hot, soupy morning, handwashing three days worth of dishes retrieved from my cockroach den of a dishwasher, covered in bits of eviscerated cockroaches. thanks, mum!

let us think back to happier times — last monday, say — when we sat in the shady courtyard of la renaissance patisserie at the rocks, eating a brie baguette and drinking perrier with peach syrup. afterwards i bought a handful of macaron to go:

one each of chocolate, chocolate-passionfruit, jasmin, and two of rose because i knew i wouldn’t want to share.

they were all five plonked unceremoniously into a paper bag, and after a sweltering afternoon walk through the botanic gardens, they were not quite the fine, plump specimens they had been, sitting pretty in their plastic display cases back at the cafe. the fresh cream filling of the rose ones had surely come within millimetres of turning into butter.

but look! even with the beating they’d taken, they are still plump, their shells still crisp. the biscuits are moist and chewy on the inside, and the fillings generous. the rose macaron, despite losing half its height in transit, was delicate and wonderful — i always prefer a cream filling rather than a flavoured white chocolate ganache — and heady with perfume.

the chocolate one was impossibly rich and dark. the chocolate-passionfruit one was tangy and intensely fruity up front, before relaxing into a smooth and comforting milk chocolatey finish.

the jasmin one was… somewhat disappointing. it had a familiar clean and airy taste, but i imagine it could’ve had THIS MUCH more jasmin flavour. engh. three out of four ain’t bad.

in fact, they were great!

– – –

we also battled the gale force coastal winds at sculpture by the sea.

– – –

and — thursday afternoon, with the kid safely ensconced in playschool — we dallied with hot chillis at spice i am. moving between the brutal som tum — you can’t see the chillis in this green papaya salad, but they are there, oh yes, alongside crunchy dried prawns and many roasted peanuts, and green beans, cherry tomatoes and a wedge of raw cabbage (unwashed, my mother pointed out) — and the unrelenting kaeng som pla, a watery curry of fried river fish and watercress, it was like dousing our tongues in fire water. hot, sour, fire, water.

sweet respite came only from a tall glass of iced tea which tasted of candy.

you would not think it, but this particular meal from this particular restaurant, is perhaps the one that i pine for most often, in those long months between finding a suitable dining companion on a day that the kid is otherwise occupied. sigh.

5
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 23 October 2008 – 10:25 pm
Filed under cake, ice cream, kid, lunch

holy crap, but the kid turned four last saturday.

just look at her, eating cake like a pro. that very morning, as we were on our way to the supermarket to pick up picnic supplies, she volunteered from the back seat of the car, “i want a sponge cake, with strawberry cream, and chocolate, and sprinkles.”

“uh huh,” i said. at least she had given up on the chocolate cake covered in jelly snakes that her cousin had had last year.

we swung by bakers delight for a loaf of pane di casa (for the record, casa broadway is at least 73 times better than casa balmain) and a loaf of olive pane di casa — where big chunks of kalamata olives are worked through the dough, and pulverised olive puree must surely be part of the dough, because the bread, she is purple.

we did a lap around harris farm, picking out such treats as a bunch of radishes, a couple of red onions, a tub of coriander hommous and a tub of parsley pesto, a jar of cornichons, a block of fetta, two avocadoes, and a kilo of smoked salmon for the bargain price of $26.

and then with a little covert manouvering, i was able to collect the enormous pink cakebox and slide it onto my lap while she was being clipped into her seat. at some point, she asked, “what’s that pink thing?” but wasn’t actually interested in the answer.

in the minutes before the guests were due, i halved baby roma tomatoes, and sliced red onions, and dressed them in a basic vinaigrette; i cubed the fetta and anointed it in olive oil and crushed garlic; i sliced radishes. there: a salad platter to go. the kid’s dad drove it all to the park. the family arrived, bearing gifts and chips and bread and salami and a big tub of toum.

an unabashed display of eating ensued. the kid and her cousin downed the tops of four supermarket cupcakes before running off to the playground, but the rest of us made tartine after tartine. this one was my favourite i think:

white bread topped with a dollop of the pungent garlic dip and a smear of the parsley pesto and a couple slices of smoked salmon. mmm… stinky…

at the end, there wasn’t much of anything left. my cousin’s dog, peanut, discovered he really liked fetta.

we adjourned to the house for tea and cake, and the kid was not too disappointed with the pink, sprinkly hello kitty rainbow ice cream cake. there was even a layer of sponge at the bottom.

the best part about an ice cream cake — just under $40 from wendy’s. do it. you know you want to — is that even with two kids, and two aunts, and two cousins, and a gran, and a great gran, and a mum and a dad, there will still be enough for two post-birthday breakfasts for two girls who like ice cream, and cake.

4
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 October 2008 – 11:30 pm
Filed under around town, cake, lunch

childfree days are precious ’round these parts, so errands are carefully scheduled and executed with military precision (that is, the precision of an army of flying monkeys).

for example: last friday morning, in the three hours after peeling the kid off my arm at playschool — “hold my hand,” she cried to me as miss sarah carried her off to the playground, “very tightly.” — i bought a package of large envelopes from kmart, then hustled over to my accountant in surry hills to deliver a year’s worth of receipts and bank statements stuffed into one of these envelopes; i just made the train to the blood bank, where i deposited 470ml of my finest red; afterwards, there was exactly enough time to try (and fail) to find a refill of shichimi togarashi at the japanese minimart on clarence street, before crossing the street to bécasse.

the last of which, i suppose, wasn’t really an errand at all. hurrah!

deborah and i were doing lunch as part of good food month, and there was a lot of lunching going on when we arrived. it was close to 2, but most tables were still occupied. we were led up the stairs at the back of the main dining room, to a table right at the very back corner of the mezzanine. it’s a very strange space, is becasse: a beige (gold, if you’re being kind) curtain runs the entire length of the restaurant, for acoustic reasons i guess; there is interesting feature lighting down front, but up where we were, it was recessed downlights and vents galore in the low, white ceiling; the wall alongside our table was white too, with a disconcertingly drippy sort of stain beneath the airconditioning vent; the carpet was beige. it all lent an air of function-room-in-an-office-building to the proceedings.

fortunately, instead of annoying paper salesmen, there were efficient waiters gliding across the floor, and it wasn’t long before one of them brought a small platter of amuse bouche to our table. small bites served in chinese soup spoons usually irk me, but the fleeting and delicious mouthful of shaved fennel and smoked trout more than made up for it.

we’d been presented with the special let’s do lunch menu, and it contained a number of extras with which to supplement the $35 main course price tag. we eschewed the two entrees (a scallop risotto and a wagyu beef salad), made a note of the dessert (a praline parfait for $15 — regular desserts are around $20), and boldly asked for a serve of bread. “one each?” asked the waiter.

alright then.

we were each served two adorable little rolls — poppyseed and sourdough — and a wonderful and aromatic rosemary… um, vine, with a block of olive oil emulsion. which was a cold mass that held its shape until it hit your tongue and liquified into a rich, fruity taste. pretty good for $5.

the main course of slow roast provencal lamb with spring vegetables, olive and herb vinaigrette arrived. oh! so pink and tender! so casually adorned with broad beans. so buttery and herbalicious the quenelle of potato. and, most importantly, so appropriate a size as to allow ample room for dessert.

the room had mostly emptied by the time we’d finished eating our meat, and our waiter had grown ever more personable. we hesitated only the briefest moment when he asked about dessert, and he read the situation correctly, and offered to bring us the regular dessert menu because it was “more exciting”.

and this is how we ended up with a surprise pre-dessert course: a tiny, delicate panna cotta with wine-poached pears, wearing a fine, tasty biscuit at a jaunty angle.

pre-dessert!

oh yes, we did chortle at our good fortune, and were somehow still overcome with wonder when dessert proper was brought to the table.

my chocolate and caramel cadeau was just as the waiter had described — a dome of chocolate mousse with a caramel heart, encased in chocolate, and then more chocolate “to make it shiny” — only better. just look how it shines! the mousse was icy cold and dense, almost solid really, and a burst of intense chocolatiness. the milk sorbet was perfect respite.

deb’s strawberry trifle with cinnamon donuts was an impossibly pretty dish. all the key ingredients were there: sponge cake at the very bottom, vanilla-flecked custard, a pure and genius layer of strawberry jelly over the lot that served as a bright canvas for the donut artistry. they were chewy delight, still hot from the fryer, with the cinnamon flavour echoed in the cinnamon ice cream.

by the time we were done, our $35 booking had just about doubled. my wallet was empty, but my heart and stomach were joyously full.

4
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 17 October 2008 – 10:32 pm
Filed under cake, chocolate

the mythical raspberry and lychee macaron has thus far eluded me at adriano zumbo patissier. however, when i went by the other day, there was another new flavour to herald the occasion of good food month.

[ i don’t know about you, but i actually do try to avoid bad food during the other eleven months of the year. ]

it was a plump and moist coconut macaron, and although it was told to me, i don’t recall what the green stuff was. it did have a somewhat lemongrassy taste though, which i guess makes sense?

because it was there, i also could not say no to a rice pudding macaron, and because it was an enormous beast, i had to ask the countergirl about the big brown one lurking in the corner of the display cabinet, somewhere between the macarons and the truffles.

“it’s chocolate macaron biscuits,” she said, “and in between there is chocolate marshmallow and chocolate hazelnut cream.” plus, you will notice, it is dusted in cocoa and the edges are rimmed in chocolate.

i brought it home, this chocolate monster, and made it friends with the other chocolate monster that lives inside of me. much happiness ensued.

1
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 16 October 2008 – 10:44 pm
Filed under bookshelf, kitchen, lunch

i have returned home from an evening that began with the final preschool parents’ committee meeting for the year, and ended with several rounds on the sushi train. in between i bought — for twenty bucks in the sale racks of gleebooks — a heavy tome with a simple typographic cover, called, “vegetable love“.

it contains no pictures, and 750 recipes. o how i love vegetables!

why, this very afternoon i made a matching set of tartines, topped with a couple wedges of laughing cow and a bunch of asparagus and some green capsicum, grilled and seasoned. a selection of green vegetables makes me so happy. sometimes i can get five or six in a meal, but today, just two was enough to put a smile on my face.

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 16 October 2008 – 9:17 pm
Filed under around town, chocolate, lunch

the best part is that it was a spur-of-the-moment decision. i had just come from the medicare office with a $65 refund still warm and glowing in my wallet. it was lunchtime, and after i exhausted the list in my head of cheap and acceptable city eateries where i might find sustenance, it struck me that i could (should!) take myself to the lindt cafe while the kid was off bonding with her grandmother somewhere in the hills district, being plied with crayons and sketchbooks and fairy wings, and forcefed pink cupcakes.

it was all in the name of comprehensive research of course, but after the travesty of the guylian cafe “chocolate” milkshake, i thought i should give the one at lindt a go.

it was extremely busy, but the friendly waitress was happy to answer such questions as, “between the iced chocolate and the chocolate milkshake, which is milkier?” and, “and which is chocolatier?”. no, her bright smile never once faltered, as she replied that the milkshake is milkier, and that they were both chocolatey and decadent, and the main difference between the two was that the iced chocolate contained ice.

and it was just as a chocolate milkshake should be. a $7 chocolate milkshake even! rich, dark chocolatey flavour. just thick enough that your cheeks let you know you were making an effort sucking. served in a tall, weighty glass. topped with a mound of dark and white chocolate shavings.

bliss! and nicely tempered by a perfectly toasted (and corrugated) schiacciata filled with delicate slices of roast lamb, grilled eggplant, baby spinach and ricotta.

2
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 13 October 2008 – 7:54 pm
Filed under candy, kitchen, snacks

i found a small packet of white rabbit candies the other day, not just the plain ones, but special edition red bean white rabbits. these i had bought while i was in singapore back in february. yes, i really am getting better at not hoarding food — by which i mean, actually eating what i buy rather than not buying excessive amounts of (usually) junk food in stellar packaging — but sometimes i do chance upon a box of treats in a most unexpected location in my house. at the very bottom of my bookshelf, for example, or the highest, most out-of-reach kitchen cupboard.

so. i’d acquired these months and months ago, way before the chinese melamine-in-milk scandal, and the melamine-in-white rabbit scandal specifically, and i spent quite a bit of time thinking about whether or not i should eat them. even if they did contain melamine, how much toxicity could there be in a handful of candies? the verdict is still out as of this moment (your counsel would be appreciated, dear reader), but here is something i did decide to eat a couple of weeks ago as i lay dying on the red couch: pearl sago.

i think, at the time, my argument was, well, it couldn’t possibly do any more harm. i was already zombie, and besides, how reassuring is a packet emblazoned with… well, i think it says, “lupenion luality”, which in a parallel universe untainted by melamine in milk, might possibly pass for “superior quality”. maybe.

but i’d received a tip from a reliable source championing the restorative powers of a bowl of freshly cooked sago. so i retrieved the packet from the back of the pantry, and boiled (and boiled and boiled) a cup of these colourful little spheres, and after straining them from their supernaturally gooey residue, i stirred in a couple spoons of coconut milk and a swirl of kithul treacle. twas pretty good, and not in the last bit poisonous. i lived to tell the tale after all.

now, about those white rabbits…

0
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 11 October 2008 – 9:40 pm
Filed under lunch

so, even though you have to spend the morning at kinko’s, and the afternoon at the ear, nose and throat specialist to see whassup with your freakishly large tonsils (three months and counting), there is no reason why you cannot have a spur-of-the-moment lunch date with a handily located friend. you just have to remember to pack your toothbrush, toothpaste, and some dental floss for after.

we met on the sunny corner of broadway and abercrombie, not the best place to meet at the best of times, but these days it’s at least worthy of curious gawking now that the old brewery has been torn down. just look at all that sky!

[ i happened to walk by the day they began — a crane with a large pincer at the end of its arm was grabbing hold of the walls and ripping chunks off it. such violence and destruction. a crowd of people stood and stared. ]

cafe giulia is a heaving mass at lunchtime, every booth filled; every table, counter stool, comfy chair, window seat… taken. the number of people in the queue to order at the counter is only surpassed by the number of plates of food on the counter waiting to be delivered. but the long queue gives you just enough time to confront the even lengthier menu. it was deb‘s first visit, and my second, and i think we may have changed our minds about four times each before we finally made it to the cash register.

despite missing out on the waffles with brown sugar yoghurt last time, and my ensuing vow to go sweet on my subsequent visit, the word that popped out of my mouth was, “panzanella”. i like bread and i like salad, but i don’t think i’ve ever been compelled to order bread salad after my one soggy, oily encounter at an outdoor food fair a decade ago. what made this version particularly alluring was that it was panzanella with prawns.

!

which i suppose is neither figuratively nor literally kosher, but the thought of grilled prawns and cool tomatoes on a hot day was so enticing. and when it arrived, this riotous tumble of colour held aloft, i was not disappointed. in fact, i believe i may have said out loud, “i am so happy!”.

but, so. the tomatoes were succulent, though not bursting with flavour; perhaps it’s still too early into tomato season. the prawns were perfectly cooked — plump and juicy, and a little charred around the edges. there were just enough of them, until i got to the end and wanted one more. the croutons were crunchy, and the shards of parmesan plentiful. but something was missing… i think it may have been the fruity flavour of olive oil. and salt. this, from me, who doesn’t like salty food. still, it was an enjoyable meal, perched up at the front counter, overlooking the rakish barista with the rockin’ collection of fine tattoos.

“it feels just like new york,” sighed deborah wistfully. i think she rather enjoyed her corn fritters with bacon too.

2
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 9 October 2008 – 11:02 pm
Filed under cake

speaking of adriano zumbo (hem)…

well. you might have noticed i went the last three months without posting a single cake photo. that’s not to say none were eaten. it’s just, the combination of feeling poor, and fat, and sick all at once really scuttled any ambition to eat my way through the entire collection. and besides, you don’t really need me to tell you about them — everyone blogs about zumbo these days, including belle, who recently posted an enviable summary of her dalliances. onya!

but so. cakes were eaten, and these are them.

the first one that caught my fancy was the petit st honore. a cakey biscuit (or biscuity cake) base topped with mad swirls of tonka bean creme chantilly, adorned with sliced strawberries and four miniature profiteroles. each one was glazed in perfect, cracklicious toffee, and filled with a divine passionfruit pastry cream.

i wikipediad tonka beans, and discovered that eaten in substantial amounts, they can be quite toxic. however, safely contained within this masterful structure, it tasted clean and curious, like ozone cream.

i deepened my infatuation with caramel with the dulce de leche eclair, a neat little package of chewy choux wearing a stripe of sticky caramel. the filling of caramel pastry cream was just wonderful — rich and creamy with an undercurrent of burnt sugar. i wolfed this one down — it was small, and i was hungry — and immediately wished i had another.

and then there was a day in the time of sickness when i felt like cake, but thought it had to be a gentle and comforting cake for the infirm. i went against the recommendations of the counterboy that day; i think he was nudging me towards the giant pink macaron filled with cherries and chocolate and coconut.

i picked the open sesame, with its delicate secret layers of yoghurt mousse and honey-date cremeux. and the slightly soggy sesame brittle that it wore as its armour.

it was very yoghurty, which i enjoyed, but in the end the texture just seemed too homogenised, and the flavour somewhat bland. of course, that was a time in which i couldn’t actually taste anything, so don’t take my word for it. it could have been a very cultured party in my mouth if i hadn’t been quite so ill.

it was a great many weeks after i first saw it in the case that i finally conquered cinque terre. the luscious ribbon of baked meringue had always called to me, like the hypnotic rattle of a sidewinder meandering through the dessert sands. i ate the layers together, and then separately, and then all together again, and couldn’t decide which way i preferred. there are cakey bits and moussey bits. creamy lemony bits and brittle chocolatey bits. raspberry bits. there are candied olives! this is a great cake. g r e a t.

the one i had most recently — o-live life — i had on a sweltering day. by the time i got it home, the olive oil mousse, though still holding its shape, was almost liquid in texture. at this temperature, the fruity olive oil was quite commanding, a big, round flavour that filled my mouth and then vanished down my throat slippery quick. the tart raspberries sequestered within were a cunning — and perfect — foil. the rice pudding creme? well, you know how i feel about rice pudding. i must warn you though: the berries only go round halfway.

and thassit. a modest roundup by all accounts, to which i may only add one or two more before the end of the run. there is one i have had my eye on from the beginning: the tanzanie, whose components are flourless chocolate biscuit, chocolate jelly, chocolate ganache, vanilla brulee, chocolate mousse and chocolate meringue. it is crowned with a magnificent wave of dark chocolate. i don’t know how i have not had it yet. but soon, my pet, soon.

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