ragingyoghurt

Author Archives: ragingyoghurt

3
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 1 June 2011 – 2:44 pm
Filed under around town, art, cake, lunch

apparently it is 19° today, and sunny. i should pop outside.

we did pop outside last sunday, when it was cloudy and grey, and some 4° cooler. no matter. a good section down by the yarra was festooned with big orange balloons (and all manner of installation and artwork) to celebrate the 150th birthday of the art gallery. lured by the promise of a dancing rhinoceros (and for some of us, a taco) we sauntered across the river, impressed in varying degrees by: an ancient indian carpet recreated in coloured rice and lentils; a staircase covered in ornamental stenciled mud and ash; the goddess guanyin sculpted in sand; a painting of a digger rendered in real life by a street performer; a bronzed and smiling buddha walking serenely down the avenue… and then, finally, across the road: the rhinoceros. the kid was surprisingly disappointed to find that it was only a puppet, albeit a life-sized puppet operated by two concealed humans.

nevermind. life’s great disappointments can be soothed with a cupcake. outside the arts centre, at the very edge of the sunday craft market, sophisticakes had a stall with some very compelling specimens. billowy buttercream, sugar butterflies… that sort of thing. a sea of pinks and pastels which the kid eschewed for a brown on brown cookies ‘n’ cream cupcake topped with a miniature oreo. i was sucked in by the gold-glittery new york, new york — chocolate cake with tahitian vanilla buttercream. the frosting was not great; it had a rich vanilla flavour, but it was more sugary than buttery, a little too crunchy and harsh. the cake, on the other hand, was quite amazing: all dark chocolate moistness. when it was gone, i was immediately wistful.

in lieu of more cake, we tracked down the taco truck, tucked away amid a grove of orange balloons, and ordered lunch. from a modest menu of three tacos — fish, chicken or potato, i got us a taco plate: two tacos and corn chips for $12. and then we waited, and waited, and reminded ourselves that it was fresh food, cooked to order, and then after a few more minutes of admiring the lovingly handpainted truck (sweet video on the painting of here)…

…

…

…a waxed paper box traversed the pass.

mmm… my fish taco had a freshly fried bit of fish — succulent in its crunchy batter. the red cabbage slaw was a perfect purple foil, cabaggy juices mingling with the poppyseed mayo to leave trails of vibrant violet as i made my way through it.

the kid was similarly impressed with her grilled, marinated chicken taco, and especially with its sublimely sweet and juicy corn relish.

we sat in the shadow of the truck and ate, and just a couple of bites in, a tableau of the sydney nolan footballer painting sprang to life around us. the kid ran off to play pretend footy, leaving me with a cluster of corn chips. i’m pleased to say they were all limey tang and salty crunch.

9
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 May 2011 – 1:58 pm
Filed under around town, cake, lunch

why, hello!

it’s been a lovely afternoon… and — at the time of the photograph — it isn’t yet noon.

some minutes before, i polished off the most delicious mushroom sandwich that ever crossed my plate. it was a handful of fat field mushrooms, roasted until plump and moist, tucked into a tidy ciabatta, nestled in pillows of mild goats’ curd. there was pesto, and a few sweet chestnuts, and a good thatch of rocket. i ate it slowly, relishing the luxury of the pre-lunch crush at earl canteen (yes, it is possible, if you get there at 11.30am). there was no line forming at the counter, and nobody hungrily eyeing my spot along the polished concrete slab.

so i sipped at my hot chocolate — crowned with a smattering of solid chocolate chunklets, turned another page in my magazine, and asked for a rose macaron from the tidy rows in the glass case. it arrived swiftly on an adorable little metal dish, and when i thanked the waiter, he replied like he really meant it, “my pleasure”.

but the pleasure was mine. though small, the macaron was perfectly formed, and heavy with its delicately scented buttercream filling. it doesn’t look like a lot of filling in the picture, but once i bit into it i found it had pushed its buttery, creamy way into the surface of the biscuits, oh yeshh. from my stool i eyed off the salted caramel chocolate tart, and contemplated a takeaway black sesame macaron, but i figured i should leave a reason for a revisit sooner rather than later.

(in the interest of full disclosure, i feel i must tell you that just over an hour later i was having second dessert — a well-executed eclair — at the shiny brunetti outlet at myer, to celebrate finding the almost perfect pair of boots for winter.)

all this gallivanting around the city: early lunches, second desserts, boot shopping… it reads like i’ve fashioned a life of leisure for myself in melbourne, no? the sad truth is that most days in the four months i’ve been here are spent at the computer pushing words and pictures around a page as the little oil heater by my side labours towards cultivating an electricity bill whose arrival in the mail i’m dreading. still, i’ve somehow managed to sample macarons from all corners of the city, and there were times in the last month, as i juggled projects for five different clients, where i felt useful, and alive, dammit!

all in all, it’s been pretty good. and how are you?

3
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 28 November 2010 – 9:25 am
Filed under trip

well folks, it’s come to this. i’m getting on an airplane in about 8 hours, and i’m not done packing. it sounds like a lot of time, but i have to go out and procure some boxes, into which i’ll be packing up the rest of the house when i return in some weeks. i also have to drop a few bags of stuff at vinnie’s, to avoid packing them. i have a lot of fruit in the fridge, and i’m gonna try and prepare them in handy, bite-sized airplane snacks. i need to go to the supermarket.

i feel strangely calm. this is possibly a good thing.

catch you later.

2
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 27 November 2010 – 10:24 pm
Filed under around town, cake

we find ourselves, quite regularly these days, at azuma patisserie in the belly of regent place in the city. a $2.50 takeaway cup of maccha froyo — light, milky and above all, surprisingly tangy — is just the antidote to being a little bit sticky and rumpled after walking about the muggy city. or the perfect dessert after any manner of chinatown dinner. it tastes so healthy! (although i’m sure, despite all its benefits handwritten on the chalkboard menu, it is only deceptively so.)

one evening we ate in, and put together a dessert degustation of our own. a twist of frozen yoghurt, a pair of macarons — blackcurrant and pistachio (somewhat sweeter and soggier than they needed to be), and a mini maccha ganache tart. within the sturdy tart shell, the rich and intensely green filling (in flavour as well as colour) had a pleasing — almost diabolical — bitter twinge, but i am sorry to say the kid was completely happy to eat her entire half-share.

midweek just past, we sought refuge from the summertime out on the streets, but it turned out the cafe was even more stifling. the ovens, you see, disgorging an array of chiffon cakes. the maccha latte will just have to wait, perhaps for a freakishly unseasonable cold snap come january.

instead, i picked the white peach mousse with white wine jelly from the counter display. how the jelly glistened like shards of broken glass! it was a very grown-up dessert, with a surprising depth of flavour to the delicate jelly (and quite an alcoholic punch for this non-drinker) contrasting with the considerably milder, somewhat overly aerated peach mousse. at its heart was a hidden pocket of peach gel. it was pleasing all round.

the kid was similarly pleased (perhaps more so) with her eat-in cup of yoghurt, this time a mixed swirl of plain and green tea, with a topping of milk and white chocolate flakes. it cost a dollar more for the pretty ceramic cup (slightly larger than the takeaway tub), and then a dollar on top of that for the sprinkles, but i begrudge it nothing. next time, i might have to order one for myself.

7
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 26 November 2010 – 11:28 am
Filed under around town, ice cream, kid, lunch, snacks

i’m getting that feeling now, of having to cram the sydney experience into the short time left we have in this fair city. in the last four months, for example, we have been to the maltese cafe on crown street, thrice. that’s a lot of pastizzi.

i should perhaps have introduced the kid to this hallowed bastion of crunchy little pastries a little earlier. i used to come here back in the 90s, when i laid out pop magazines up the street, and the whole artroom would break out at lunchtime and split a plate of pastizzi. good times.

it’s nice sitting here, in this slightly shabby room, with an assortment of savoury (and sweet) pastries before you. it will please you to note that the china is heavy and, crucially, mismatched.

15 years ago, the pastizzi were 30 or 40c a piece, and you could feed three hungry flying monkeys for just over $5. now, one pastizz will set you back $1.50. no matter. the decor is still mostly 15-years-ago, and besides what can you get for a dollar-fiddy these days?

on her first visit, the kid was surprised to find that the mushrooms in the chicken and mushroom pastizzi were distinctly inoffensive. by her third visit, it was her standard order.

i do like the cheese and spinach pastizzi, with its light and slightly tangy filling, and i’ve also been reacquainting myself with the stodgy delight of the pea pastizzi, stuffed with the best murky-green tinned mushy peas. all the more delicious dipped into the intense tomato sauce (remember? you used to be able to order “a bit” of sauce, or “a bowl”.)

the apple pastizzi, filled with sweet stewed apples and sprinkled in sugar, is a treat in itself, but on our outings the kid understands it is to be eaten for dessert, only after she is finished with the meaty one.

we ordered a couple of ricotta and blueberry ones the first time round, but it was rather heavier on ricotta than it need to be (and consequently, somewhat lighter on the berries).

the pastries are always hot, and if you are lucky enough to have it straight out of the oven, the friendly man behind the counter will caution you that it is especially hot. oh, delicious crunchy flaky pastry.

the last time we were there, this saturday past, the kid said, “i LOVE this place. i think that we cannot move to melbourne anymore.” i know exactly what she means. round the corner, some well-stenciled graffiti reminds me why coming to surry hills feels a little bit like home.

and the sydney experience continues. the maltese cafe is just far enough away from gelato messina that the stroll down oxford street then victoria street will make it possible to have a delightful second dessert (or y’know just dessert if you were sensible enough not to have apple pastizzi at lunchtime).

last saturday there were so many new flavours that i had to have a three-scoop cup just to feel like i wasn’t missing out. in case this ended up being the last time i got to come to messina (probably not though), i finally indulged my fond memory of the coconut-lychee gelato. it was just as wonderful as i remembered.

i had a small taste of the sprightly and refreshing pink grapefruit and aperol sorbet — “hello sailor!”, it was called — but decided that i’d have to have the peach and amaretti. oh! it was peachy, and studded with crunchy chunks of crumbled biscuits.

a scoop of rosewater and almond praline gelato in the most agreeable shade of pink rounded out the selection. the delicate hue echoed the very faint flavour of rose, which seemed overshadowed by the aggressively crunchy candied almonds.

the kid had her own yoghurt and berry cone, and nursed it by the plate glass window in the back, utterly fascinated by the freshly churned gelato coming out of the machine in the kitchen. we watched as they dispensed cherry, and then coconut, and then once the coconut was all done, the gelato man came out front to the counter and proferred a cone of it to the kid.

we ambled out then, back into the sun, towards more sydney experience (pumpkin sourdough at infinity, a modest selection of chocolatey treats at kakawa, and then a stroll through hyde park for a gander at the archibald fountain). the coconut gelato was impossibly smooth and lush.

5
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 23 November 2010 – 10:29 pm
Filed under cake

i still remember… it was 2007, and there were but a handful of members of the adriano zumbo appreciation society i’d created on a whim. “when we hit 50 members, we’ll have a cakewalk!” said zumbo. and then, nothing… nothing… and then fast forward a little, to masterchef, and queues, and the little fan club ballooning to 1200 and counting.

and then one day a couple of weeks ago, i got a message in my inbox saying how sbs were producing a 6-part (!) tv series about one adriano zumbo, and how the cakewalk was finally happening, and would i please let the fanclub know, and would i come along too?

why, yes!

we walked up to rosebud restaurant just short of 7 last night, and the queue went a block ’round the corner. but here’s the thing: having had the foresight to set up the zumbo fanclub all those years ago meant we didn’t have to queue, yay. with the tv producer’s best wishes, we crossed the road for a modest stomach lining of salmon and avocado maki, and then settled in front of the cafe windows to watch the models do their practice runs.

over and over and over again.

which only meant that once we were ushered in quite some time later, and the models finally made their parade down the runway, they moved smooth and smiley, and no-one dropped a single cake.

cake! there was a strawberry bubblegum cake, and a sweet corn cake, a pineapple cake, a milo-in-a-glass topped with a chocolate dome and straw, a mandarin tart, a lime tart, a raspberry tart, a glossy black licorice log, a caramel wheel, an eclair topped with wasabi peas… being the summer collection, there were also bikinis.

bikinis bearing macarons.

[i must say, i think the cakes would have been much more arresting had they been rendered in oversize softies by dawn tan, and sent down the runway with the models concealed inside. but y’know, that’s just me.]

the pastry chef himself strutted down the catwalk, with a tray of strawberry bubblegum macarons. i ate one, too quickly, and my teeth shriveled up inside my cheeks. (might hang out instead for the pancake and maple syrup macaron, instore.)

there were other miniatures to sample: here’s a tiny cookies ‘n’ cream sandwich. the biscuits are totally the consistency of something straight out of the ice cream freezer at your corner shop. the surprise — hidden within the creme filling in the regular size version — is a chocolate shell filled with liquid(ish) chocolate. altogether, quite agreeable.

and then suddenly it was over. oh but wait, it wasn’t! suddenly there were full-sized cakes streaming out of the kitchen, and i lucked into the raunchy raspberry tart. thanks, counterboy. ’twas just like old times.

a mound of yoghurt mousse covered in italian meringue and fresh berries. hidden within, a cone of tart raspberry jelly. now this one was every bit as luscious as i hoped it would be.

under the bright tv lights, we picked at the plump raspberries and meringue peaks for a while as we marvelled at the shiny licorice cake snared by team ooh look. but it was way past bedtime on a school night after all, and the kid (who’d somehow discovered backcombing during the long wait between samples) was suffering the effects of a steady stream of small sugary treats.

the rest of the tart made it only halfway home.

8
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 14 November 2010 – 8:52 am
Filed under cake

it was my birthday yesterday. the kid got herself out of bed and crept into my room with coriander and dumpling (stuffed cat and rabbit, respectively). happy birthday, she intoned cheerily, you’re thiiirrrty-eight.

“mmyes,” i replied. “but at least i still have all my teeth.” the kid lost her first tooth three week ago — somewhat unsettlingly, there are no signs that anything is growing back to take its place.

the kid cocked her head. “you’re not so old,” she said, reassuringly.

but the time, she goes by. my mother came to town; my cousin got married; i went to melbourne for a week to see what life could be like. i started packing up a house — 16 cartons of booksmagazinecomics and counting. packing stalled; meals consumed; mortality confronted; cancer averted, for now. my father came to town; we jetted off to hamilton island; we discovered there are places in the world where people will pay $8 for a packet of smiths crisps. i became the sort of person who sits in a restaurant while a waitress brings over a cake all aglow with candles and a sparkler (the restaurant was azuma kushiyaki where the vegetable special of the day was a ramekin of garlic cloves roasted in butter; the cake was an entire maccha chiffon cake from the patisserie next door, festooned with fresh berries and whipped cream and a biscuit plaque with my name writ on in chocolate, organised in the best — read: worst — superspy manner by my good mother) and the live jazz trio will play happy birthday while the diners in the room sing along, and it will not be as excruciating an experience as i may have thought.

and yesterday, we caught a couple of buses with large zumbo cake box on my lap, and showed up moist and wilted from heat and humidity, for morning tea at ms d‘s tidy haven in ashfield.

it is the height of civilisation to be offered a glass of iced tea upon arrival, and to have an electric fan directed at you, while in the kitchen — shimmery from the heat of the oven and the smell of cheese — a small feast is assembled. fat pickles into vintage green pyrex; mustard into sturdy china. while dispensing ham onto a platter, ms d kept a watchful eye on the gourges. it made for good eating, all salty-moist-crunchy-sour in a pleasing palette of yellow-pink-green.

there was pink cake too. the one we’d picked from the counter at adriano zumbo patisserie was a hefty spraypainted block of raspberry-lychee teacake, lavishly adorned with a single rose petal, freezedried raspberry crumbs, and what i’d assumed to be shards of meringue. later, we were to discover that it was rose-flavoured sugar, perfect for nibbling on after the cake was gone.

i haven’t had “normal” cake from zumbo before. there’ve been tarts, viennoiserie, moussey this, chibousty that, more macarons than necessary, even a flourless chocolate fondant or two in my time… but never just “cake”. here is a fine specimen: dense and moist with a sturdy crumb, and a distinct rosey flavour, and, every now and again, a surprise bit of sodden lychee. the kid abandoned her slice just short of halfway, but kept returning for the fragrant crunchy decorative sugar. it was like crack, i tells ya.

but this came late in the afternoon, when what i’d thought was maybe 3 o’clock turned out to be 5. a short time after the savoury course, lloyd had ducked downstairs to collect something, and when he returned — from the next suburb — it was with this baroque vision of a gelato cake from pasticceria papa.

behold: custom-curated scoops of lemon, raspberry and chocolate, artfully arranged on a biscuit base with an expressionist drizzle of chocolate. the icing on the cake, so to speak, was strategically placed strawberries and lemon slices, frozen, and the crowing glory of a rocher wrapped up in a curl of lemon rind. just gorgeous.

we ate quite a bit of it before it could melt away — the smooth, mildly tangy lemon sorbet was most therapeutic — and then sandwiched second helpings of rich chocolate gelato into homemade chocolate chip cookies. the makings of third helpings were packed into an esky and delivered to our doorstep, with us in tow, as the drizzle kicked in at sunset. much later, waiting for cheese and tomato toasties to brown, i learnt that the rocher was actually a sphere of mudcake rolled in chopped nuts.

so this is how it ends: an unexpected cake sneaks in at the end of a sweet birthday; the cheese on the edge of the toastie is especially caramelised and delicious; indy saves the children from the clutches of the evil mola ram; a bitter edge encroaches, from the realisation that some favourite people will soon be too far away. x

8
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 21 September 2010 – 1:09 am
Filed under cake, dinner, ice cream, misc

it is nice to see that there is order in other parts of my world. my immediate surrounds are teetering piles of papers and magazines, some destined for new homes, some headed for the great recycling bin in the sky, some — the tiniest little scraps, really — are somehow imbued with great sentimental value, and languish in the purgatory of my lounge room rug, waiting…

but the ceremonial red folding chairs were arranged just so last wednesday in the rather lovely leichhardt town hall, and the leichhardt celebrity brass band were resplendent in bright yellow, as i, amongst sixty others with interesting — if not purely long and challenging — names, became citizens of australia. yes, i have only been here since 1989, but here, as the mayor said, is where my migrant journey ends.

it was a jolly ceremony, with pop classics up front, and advance australia fair coming up the end, with friendly words, a pledge of allegiance and a gift of a baby tree in-between. the mayor, in his ceremonial, fur-lined robes, was proud to boast the live band — bugles! trombones!! — accompanying the national anthem, the made-in-australia flags which were handed out to all inductees, and the lamingtons in the back of the hall for the post-ceremonial reception.

and what lamingtons! first of all, they were huge. secondly, there were moist, with a good coating of rich chocolate and coconut. thirdly, there were enough that i managed to have three of them.

yes. the third one was actually surrendered by the kid a few bites in after she realised that she only liked the idea of having a second lamington. immediately upon handing it over, she started making eyes at the last remaining custardy fruit tart on the table. at this point, i steered her towards the door…

and on to dinner. what better way to celebrate becoming an aussie than to stuff oneself with italian food? the most mediocre of italian food, even. we were privileged to have ms d as witness to the naturalisation, and pleased to dine together at a laminate table in the balmy courtyard out the back of bar italia.

i have not been to dinner at bar italia for the longest time. some years ago, i ordered off the non-pasta dinner menu, and the size of the piece of broccoli which accompanied the meat stuck in my head for evermore.

when the food arrived, i was overwhelmed by the wonderful aroma of cake. i thought it was a nearby flat white, but once i started eating my veal marsala, it became clear that the sweet smell was coming from my plate. it was an enormous serve of soft meat in brown gravy — just as i remembered, and look at that broccoli! — but what had escaped my memory, and perhaps the dish has changed over the years, was that the sauce was so sweet that the meat seemed to be coated in caramel syrup. i thought the kid might like it, but she was quite repulsed. i expect it was the confusion of candied meat.

(but where was the problem? she likes candy, she likes meat, she likes bakkwa…)

we had a garden salad (dressed with the finest — not! — bottled dressing, ah memories of youthful folly) and a large bowl of chips (very nicely cooked, but so aggressively salted in parts that it hurt to eat them), and after it was all gone, we sought to right the wrongs (so wrong they were right, kind of) by eating copious amounts of gelati.

it’s insane how much gelati they can scoop into a flimsy plastic cup at bar italia. i was slow in naming my flavours so much of the cup was filled with an almost savoury, full-of-nutty-bits pistachio. the counter boy made up for it by piling the bounty gelato into a large cloud above the rim of the cup.

it was very moreish, unfortunately, packed with shredded coconut and a number of dark chocolate shards. unfortunate, because after the meat and veg, and salad and chips, and yes, the three lamingtons, i could eat no more.

here’s one for the album: eating my first lamington as a new australian (all the while keeping my eye on my second lamington).

11
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 6 September 2010 – 12:59 pm
Filed under breakfast, cake, shoping, snacks

it’s come to this. yes folks, i am stock-piling pop tarts.

last month, i was alerted to the woeful news that frosted pop tarts are no longer allowed into australia. pop tarts haven’t been widely available for a while, but you could always count on specialist retailers or david jones food hall for small-scale imports. no more. the gelatin used in the frosting is believed by the guys in the quarantine department to be an agent for mad cow disease, so there.

i’d had usafoods.com.au bookmarked for a while now, though i hadn’t ever placed an order. now seemed like a good time to try them out. their supply of frosted pop tarts was already running low, so in a fit of mild panic, i got a box of eight frosted blueberry pop tarts, and a box of 12 frosted s’mores pop tarts. in their newsletter (where the news of impending frosted pop tart drought was broke), usafoods had helpfully suggested that a cheaper and fresher tasting substitute was toast ’em pop ups, so i got a box of those as well.

research, you understand.

so this carton showed up in the mail room a few days ago, and the kid and i immediately leapt into action and hustled an after-school snack. here before us we have a blueberry pop tart and a strawberry pop-up. pretty much identical, in their stay-fresh foil wrappers, like hapless adventurers wrapped up in emergency blankets, no? little snacky cakes, this is where your adventure ends!

and were they the same? well, the kid kept referring to her strawberry toaster pastry as “pop tart”, so i’ll say: yes. even i couldn’t really tell the difference. side by side, the toast ’em does look more “picture perfect”, with its smooth biscuit and non-bleedy sprinkles, but essentially both are crunchy pastry envelopes filled with sticky, almost-fruit jam, adorned with a shell of hard icing. mmm… i wouldn’t normally have picked strawberry flavour, but it came in the bumper toast ’ems assortment box, alongside frosted apple and frosted brown sugar cinnamon.

it’s a damn shame one of the selection wasn’t “frosted cherry”, which is my favourite. it kills me — so unfair — that this development (regression?) occurs just as pop tarts world opens its doors in NYC. and what can you buy at pop tarts world? frosted cherry pop tart flavoured lip balm!

how’s that for a first world problem?

7
Posted by ragingyoghurt on 2 September 2010 – 10:49 pm
Filed under cake, candy, chocolate, packaging, snacks

at maruyu the other weekend, i could not resist this package of choco pies. mochi choco pies! a whole box of ’em for $2.50! maruyu sits on clarence street, a block west of the queen victoria building — possibly the best city block in all of sydney, with this two-level japanese minimart (that’s, maruyu), an affordable and unfussy french cafe, and a very interesting exhibition space within doors of each other. i’ve gotten many a bargain at maruyu. sure, a lot of it was exotic junk food just past its expiry date, but this one is still good until at least january next year.

so i opened the box, and was somewhat surprised by the size of this little packet. i mean, i assumed each one would be individually wrapped — it’s the nature of this sort of asian snack food, but i really did think that seven to a box would yield a slightly larger pie. what with the plastic wrapper within the carton, and then another cardboard tray in which the little packets of choco pies were nestled, it was a much smaller handful than what i had expected when looking at the picture on the box.

and then when i got that sachet open, all i could do was laugh at the tiny disc inside. choco pie? it looked more like an after-dinner mint.

when i first saw this on the shelf, i was drawn to the mochi part of it, and then the black sesame. that it was covered in chocolate was a bit of a bonus i suppose, but chocolate in asian confectionery is decidedly hit-or-miss. sometimes it’s floury, or grainy, or oily; sometimes it just has a peculiar wrongness. such a gamble, but in this case — chocolate-covered black sesame rice cake — it was a gamble i was willing to take. plus, y’know, two-fiddy.

this particular chocolate — a thin shell — broke with a soft crack when i bit into it, and melted smoothly away. it was not too sugary, and had a rich, dark chocolatey flavour. the soft chewy mochi, which replaced the marshmallow portion of a traditional choco pie, pleased me with its mild sweetness. the inner layer of black sesame paste delivered a nutty taste that lingered, and it was all i could do to stop myself chasing it with another serve.

so i’ll concede that these turned out to be the perfect size after all — the delicate and well-considered balance of the various flavors and textures just called to be contained in a package this petite. and i grant that the individual wrappers make you pause a while, instead of just shoveling the little cakes into your gob, one after the other, until they are all gone, because they are that delicious.

if only they’d thought to put more of ’em in the box.

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