ragingyoghurt

Category Archives: around town

5

what!? the middle of march already? then it is probably longer ago than i’d like to admit, that i met singapore girl for an early lunch down at the rocks. it was a monday morning in late february, and the night before, i’d wondered if a slap-up meal at the newish baroque bistro would be just a bit over-the-top for a start-of-the-week appointment.

as it turned out, it wasn’t immediately so much of an issue. lunch service doesn’t kick in until noon, and after our cursory lap around the museum of contemporary art, it was just gone 11.30. what to do, what to do. as we pondered in front of the menu by the door, the helpful waitress showed us some pastries in the window which we could have for “breakfast” instead. alas, it appeared that a couple of flies had beat us to it. we sidled up to the indoor cake counter then, and concluded that we might have a drink and a snack until lunchtime.

splendid.

we were ushered back outside, where the sun was bright, and the dark steel tables had absorbed just a little too much warmth to be comfortable. but then the macarons arrived and made it all better. you may already be familiar with these plump little specimens, from la renaissance up the road. (baroque is their new, upper market venture.) according to their website:

our chefs regularly attend the atelier pierre herme school of patisserie in paris to discover the secrets to the perfect macaron.

darn tootin’. these were perfect. after the initial crack of the shell, the biscuits were moist and yielding. the rose one was filled with delicately perfumed buttercream, and the jasmin one, with its white chocolate ganache, sang clear and true of fragrant white blossoms. paired with a big bottle of local fizzy water, it made a delightful pre-lunch treat. it was only the impending lunch hour which kept me from ordering another one or three.

shortly after twelve, our waitress came back to check how we liked the macarons (uh huh!), and to ask if we would like to move inside for lunch. we had grown accustomed to the great outdoors, so we stayed. and here is what frolicked across the table a short time later: bangalow pork loin, with confit potato, onions, mushrooms, and pine jus. the meat was mostly tender, and the fatty bits not terribly off-putting but for the one mouthful which resisted being chewed and ended up at the edge of the plate. the sauce was rich, and the tumble of accompaniments (note: bonus diced tomatoes and sprigs of cress) most pleasing indeed, even for me, who doesn’t much like pine nuts. a not-too-heavy, not-too-light spring time meal for the last days of the season.

we had been unsure, reading it off the menu, how large a serve $27 would buy you in a fancy bistro on the tourist trek. i would say, perfectly respectable. i would even go as far as to say that the kitchen has finely calibrated the portion size so that you could fit in a dessert after. even after one and a half macarons (though no starter) prior.

ah, beauty on a plate. just look at the demure berries, lined up so primly. do not be fooled: they conceal a lush and seductive pastry cream. there weren’t quite a thousand layers in the pastry sheets of this mille feuilles. shame: they shattered in a most satisfying manner. after they were gone, i kept dabbing at the crumbs with my finger, trying to get every last fragment of the rich caramel flavour. the one let down was that instead of the rose petal ice cream listed in the menu, this raspberry mille feuilles came with a matching quenelle of raspberry sorbet, which melted swiftly into raspberry puddle.

it’s a bit sad, isn’t it, when unannounced substitutions occur? you might have picked a dish purely because you felt like, say, rose petal ice cream. raspberry sorbet is fine and good and all, but maybe the thought of rose petal ice cream was all it took for you to pick this dish over another. no matter. after checking with the attentive and friendly waitress, i am pleased to let you know that baroque bistro will be happy to welcome you any time for just desserts.

next time, i might come by for the passionfruit souffle, or the valrhona chocolate dome. maybe even the crepe of spiced apples. indoors, where it’s air-conditioned, and the ceilings are high, and the beams exposed, and the acrylic chairs pink, and the second-hand smoke from neighbouring tables not an issue. and never again will my mind be sullied by concerns about how fancy a monday luncheon can be…

fade out: internal monologue

fade in: jaunty french accordion music

posted by ragingyoghurt on 16 March 2010 at 3:24 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, lunch

5

summer took the stage for a last curtain call.

saturday, we traipsed across the lush green lawn of a historic house in a leafy north shore suburb, and watched chocolate suze get hitched in jolly rollicking fashion under the impossibly bright and burny sun. afterwards, there was coca cola, and orange juice, and fairy floss, and a fat, sprinkled krispy kreme doughnut — and that was just the kid. afterwards, her head didn’t quite spin around, but the sugar gave her enough of a buzz to carry around, for the rest of the afternoon, the enormous lollypop she charmed out of the bride.

it was still summery when we got back to the city, so we sat a while in our box seat above the town hall intersection, watching the finely-tuned ballet of crisscrossing pedestrians in the golden light. and because the box seats are actually three big corner windows in the children’s department at kinokuniya, we also kicked back, made ourselves comfy, and fashioned a small pile of books to pass the hour.

on one of the shelves, i found a book called “all kinds of families!“, with pictures by one of my favourite illustrators, marc boutavant. we sat and read it for a bit, this jaunty rhyme by mary ann hoberman, but when i got to the verse that went:

clams in the sea make a clammily family
lambs in the field make a lambily family
jams in their jars make a jammily family
and yams in the cupboard a yammily family

i knew that i would have to take it home with us. books are family too!

happy days to you and the mister, mrs noods! we are honoured to have been there to see the beginning of your own little family. may your fridge always be overflowing with treats.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 1 March 2010 at 11:29 am
permalink | filed under around town, bookshelf, kid

2

so yes, it was hot in melbourne, but it never got too hot for pizza. one day in january, after a short spell at luna park —

[ the kid is still too short for most of the rides, but we did qualify for the ghost train (a dud), and then the mini-roller coaster in the shape of a large green dragon (rollicking god fun for the 105cm-tall set). after which she procured for herself the largest fairy floss in the world. it was roughly half her height, and weighed enough that it eventually pulled itself off the stick. she kept calm and carried on, slipped her arm through the mass of spun sugar, and fashioned herself a fine edible bracelet. ]

— and a large amount of gelato that melted before we even made it down the street, and a good bout of digging in the sand beneath the promenade, and the merry side-stepping of washed-up jellyfish on the shore, we stumbled, somewhat sundazed, into il fornaio, which hangs off the prince hotel on ackland street. i’ve always come by at the wrong time, too late for lunch service, and this time, alas, we were once again told we could have drinks only, or anything from the display case.

fortunately, the display case still held a handful of small pizze. i picked the prosciutto. the waitress was kind enough to put it in the oven for a spell, and it was just the salty, crunchy-edged kind of mid-afternoon snack you might wish for, just in from the beach with your legs all sandy.

some days later, we took shelter at the NGV international. for a while, we pretended to look at art, though really we were more interested in standing over the impossibly sleek airconditioning vents in the floor of the gallery. and then also, lunch. the gallery kitchen beckoned, from its hiding place behind the ground floor escalators. and you will see this picture, and yawn and say, ho hum. i couldn’t help it! i am completely powerless against the lure of a prosciutto pizza, but look! this one was also decked out with fat slices of field mushrooms and a smattering of olives and fetta.

ahh… such pleasurable little discs of modestly puffy, barely charred dough, their sharp flavours uncompromised by just a scant amount of cheese. it’s a rarity around these parts i tells ya. if they had been just three bites larger, they would’ve been perfect.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 25 February 2010 at 2:46 pm
permalink | filed under around town, lunch, trip

5

what a long, terribly hot summer it’s been. our fault, i suppose, for spending most of it in sunny melbourne. on the most horrible day, we took shelter in the airconditioning of the arts centre; my plan was to see as much of the AC/DC exhibition as the kid would allow. except that we found ourselves drowning in a deluge of pink tulle. turns out it was fifteen minutes away from the lunchtime matinee of the angelina ballerina show, and hundreds of little girls in ballet dress-ups swarmed the lobby. the kid turned her large limpid eyes my way; the temperature in the street was the wrong side of 40; i handed over my credit card, and spent the next hour or so sitting in a sea of battery-operated glowsticks, watching lithe, human-sized mice dance across the stage.

but the temperature kept climbing, and at 1.40 in the wee hours of the morning, i woke up stifled. i poured myself down the hallway, and had a cold shower, and eventually got back to sleep. later we were to find out it was hovering in the lower-mid-40s all night, and when the temperature finally dropped at about 8am, it was to a refreshing 34°C.

ugh.

so we went out in search of icy treats, often. the lemon-lime and bitters sorbet at trampoline was truly delightful. a very fetching shade of palest pink which dissolved gracefully into a gentle citrusy tang on my tongue. i liked it so much i went back for more.

there was the emergency slurpee from a hole-in-the-wall 7-eleven one afternoon in the melty city, and a golden gaytime krusher at KFC one sunday when nothing else was open in shimmery rural victoria. it was a most unappetising shade of… bilge, a pale and lumpy yellow in the plastic tumbler, that tasted better than it looked, until it warmed up to room temperature.

and then, holy moley, there was the organic cinnamon donut gelato from fritz gelato at the souf melbourne markets. lush and milky with a streak of sticky red jam all the way through. behold its majestic crest sitting atop an enormous scoop of caramelised fig and roasted almond yoghurt gelato, equally lush and milky, and filled with crunchy little fun bits of seeds and nuts and burnt sugar. good times…

and then we came back to sydney, and the holidays galloped to a close, and the kid grew up and went off to school. no tears were shed from anyone involved.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 25 February 2010 at 10:50 am
permalink | filed under around town, ice cream, kid, trip

2

i don’t know how these things happen, but suddenly i’m 10 kilos heavier than what i’d like to be. hmm… ok, so i do know. i follow the cake, is what happens.

a couple of weeks ago, we followed it down hot and dusty king street, to cool and sweet-scented buppa’s bakehouse in newtown. we like cake, deborah and i, and we like american cake, and buppa promises the real thing.

that saturday morning, the air inside was tinged with sugar and by the time we reached the front of the moderate queue, i was somewhat delirious with sugarlust. there wasn’t a lot of choice on our visit — maybe three pies and three cakes — but we only needed one each after all.

turned out, we didn’t even need that. the red velvet cake was a little dry and the frosting was so painfully sweet — and gritty with sugar — that i felt my teeth wince, and my throat spasm in protest. it was near impossible to eat one without the other, and yet eating both together was not much better. in the end, with regret, we left it. i hardly ever leave frosting, but today the billowing mass left over mocked me triumphantly from the plate.

much more successful was the chocolate-peanut butter pie. i hardly ever order peanut anything, but the combination of the creamy, salty, savoury peanut butter and bittersweet chocolate was quite alluring. at the glass-fronted counter, this had seemed a plain-looking pie, a beige mass held demurely in a dark cookie crust. however, it was plated with gay abandon: chocolate syrup drizzled over the top, and then extra cookie crumbs from the pie dish strewn about. all sorts of crunchy-crispy-sticky-creamy. mmm… this is truly the sort of thing i’d be happy to eat, feet up and slumped in my sofa… until i find myself 10 kilos heavier than i’d like.

i ordered tea to go with, and on the counterperson’s recommendation, chose the $5 pot over the $2.50 cup. what came to the table was a teapot with a single teabag floating forlornly in the hot water. this is the sort of tea service that irks me, and the kind of pricing structure which makes me cranky, hrumph.

so i marched back up to the counter, and got a slice of pie to go. apple. the pie had already been cut into, and appeared to be sitting in half its depth of pie juices. i asked the man with the cake knife if it was possible to make a fruit pie and have the bottom of the crust remain crisp, because, y’know, disintegrating pie crust from a year-and-a-half ago. proudly, buppa chimed in to say that this was a sign that no unnecessary thickeners had been added to the filling; the apples were fresh, and peeled and sliced by her fair hand.

and so, it was sort of sloppy when they gently slid it into the takeaway paper box, and quite a mangled mess when i transferred it to a plate at breakfast the next morning. but the crusty edges were still crunchy, and the top flaky, and the apples, cinammon-spiced and still tart, were delicious. thinly sliced, they retained a bit of bite, some cooked a little more than others.

i can’t wait to try the cherry pie. it’s homely food, unpretentious and a little messy, and i’d probably even recommend eating it at home. the shop itself, despite its tables and chairs and sweet, sweet smell of cake-baking, is somewhat lacking in character… and may i just say again, $5 teabag.

we blinked as we headed back out into the big bright that saturday morning, dazed with sweetness and light. little did we know — well, perhaps there was an inkling — that not quite an hour later we would be fingertips deep in dhal and chutneys and thick curry sauces. there were hoppers, and a big, brown dosai, and when we finished those, a plate of parathas. at last, we were free of the sugarhigh.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 17 December 2009 at 10:29 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake

9

[ smoked ocean trout and avruga ]

no. i lie. the way to end a birthday is lunching at tetsuya’s the day after.

[ marinated crystal bay prawns with soy caramel ]

way back in march, the prospect of november birthdays prompted a flurry of emails and a flutter of stomachs, and a booking at tetsuya’s ensued. back then we laughed giddily — deborah and i — about fancy pants lunches, and stretchy pants, but as the months went by, i started to feel nervous about the prospect of sitting down and eating 13 courses of food.

[ confit of petuna tasmanian ocean trout with konbu, apple, daikon ]

i made a half-hearted attempt to train for the event, aiming to stretch my stomach to capacity, but all that happened was lots of my clothes don’t fit so good no more. truly, in the final stretch, those last weeks that galloped by, my greatest concern was that i’d have to excuse myself to vomit in the toilet halfway, hopefully not more than once.

[ seasonal green salad ]

and so, the morning of, right before i left my kid to a day of ice cream and ferry rides with her grandfather, i took us all to breakfast at le grande cafe, where i had a big serve of buttery, buttered brioche toast, and a pot of tea. did i mention the butter? in retrospect, it may have been a slight miscalculation on my part. but there was no time for recrimination; i had to catch the bus home to fossick through my wardrobe for a skirt with enough give.

[ terrine of queensland spanner crab with avocado ]

and you know what? it was fine. a cosy group of six scorpios-and-friends walked through the heavy steel gates, were greeted with big smiles and seated at a long sunlit table (diffused sunlight, through venetians) looking out onto the white pebble beach and the miniature waterfall.

[ grilled fillet of barramundi with braised baby fennel ]

the food was presented slow and steady, each a modest portion of perfectly balanced — sometimes literally — produce, so that there was enough time for tasting, and then savouring, and then shifting our bellies to find our balance. each course was formally introduced, and then we were left to enjoy the moment.

[ breast of duck with beetroot, treviso and pepperberry ]

and it was all very enjoyable, although some at the table may argue that a different word be employed for the opening gambit of a cold sweetcorn soup served with a daub of saffron ice cream; it was hardly challenging food. well, it was challenging for the kitchen, i’m sure, to send out these intricately arranged platters en masse, but for us long lunchers, the flavours were well-considered, classic pairings with no jarring, challenging ingredients and no didactic textures. (foams! soils! i’m looking at you!)

[ seared fillet of veal with wasabi butter ]

crab and avocado. prawns and brie. duck and beetroot. berries and white chocolate. bread and butter — but what bread, and what butter: tangy, chewy sourdough rolls, and pots of butter whipped with ricotta, parmesan and black truffle into ethereal yellow splendour which we could not stop eating. there were surprises, yes, like a sticky soy caramel (a regular sugar and water caramel with a dash of soy sauce — kikkoman, the waitress thought — added in at the very end) over prawns, and then later, over the cannellini beans and mascarpone that served as the “transition” between savoury and sweet. or the pink peppercorns hidden in the sharp lime curd sandwiching a chocolate macaron.

[ cannellini beans with mascarpone ]

and there were particular favourites that we wanted more of, and some that others vowed to recreate in sandwich form. though of course, it was hard to dislike anything when everything was cooked so perfectly. vegetable purees that were sublimely smooth, meat tender and juicy all the way through, seafood plump and moist, delicate tangles of exotic microherbs… and which pixie was it, whose light hands diced the pineapple into miniscule and perfect chunklets, and left it in the puddle of syrup at the bottom of the pineapple and amaretto sorbet? i would happily eat this every day.

[ pineapple and amaretto sorbet, chai bavarois ]

at one point, when it became clear that we were more than halfway through the meal, a sadness came over me, a sense of regret that the experience would soon be over. but we live in the now, dammit, and the fourteen nows that passed that afternoon were thoroughly relished.

[ summer pudding ]

we sat down and ate for just short of five hours, and i did not have to get up and go to the toilet after all (and so will just have to go by wayne’s account of the linen napkins upon which to wipe your hands).

[ lime and ginger creme brulee ]

there was much laughter, and talk of good food (Q: what is your favourite food? A: chips!), and the waiters, in their crisp, fitted white shirts and tiny gold fleur-de-lise pins, were smiley and attentive, and ready to call you “sir” even if you were a ma’am.

[ chocolate chiboust with lemon curd and coffee marshmallow ]

around five o’clock, the petit fours numbered three — a coffee and date friand, a maccha marshmallow, and a chocolate macaron — and tea was poured from cast iron pots. we talked about how full we were, and then picked off the little treats one by one.

[ petit fours ]

the sun outside was still beating down hot, but inside we were gloriously warm.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 November 2009 at 9:27 am
permalink | filed under around town, lunch

7

the official birthday celebrations kicked off the night before, with the drama of a thunderstorm beating against the plate glass windows of ocean room. two cousins, the kid and i, presided over by my good father, sat down and ate some really good sashimi, some anchovies topped with tomato sorbet, some soft-shelled crab tacos (not quite enough soft-shelled crab tacos, if you ask me), some shoe-string fries topped with a tantalising sprinkle of shichimi pepper — and here’s the thing, you think japanese, and you think delicate little bits of food, but we also had a whole wing of of a yellow fin tuna, so large that it came with a map to guide us.

there were three zones marked out, and the meat — slow roasted over 40 minutes — tasted different from each part. milder white meat up top, slightly dry, and more intensely fishy flavour, from the moist and dark underside. all even more delicious with the crushed cucumber ponzu dipping sauce.

friday morning, i marked the turning of 37 with a tall paper cup of rich hot chocolate, and a short plastic one of central baking depot‘s house granola. it’s oats and sesame seeds, and sunflower seeds, and whole hazelnuts, and dried dates, and a bunch of other stuff too i’m sure, baked golden brown, broken into crunchy chunks, and topped in plain yoghurt and tart stewed fruit.

is it healthy? i don’t know, but it was packed with enough hidden oils and sugar to keep me fortified for a terrible hour-long busride out to bondi for sculptures by the sea.

it’s true, what all those bondi locals have been grumbling about. the coastal walk slowed down to a coastal crawl, as every body stopped to look. and look. and look. even funner than seeing the sculptures was watching the hardcore joggers trying their best to run around the punters, the school kids, the old ladies, the dogs, the sculptures, and then looking irritated to find their path blocked, again. again. dear bondi locals: stop grumbling! find an alternative jogging route for a couple of weeks! do you see me spleening about the queues out of zumbo, keeping me from cake?

the funnest thing of all though, was the magical dream house on top of the hill, a life-sized cubby house completely covered by one jane gillings in an armour of found toys and plastic bottle caps.

oh how we wanted to buy it and take it home with us! instead we opted for hot chips and potato cakes down by the beach.

we had gelato then, once the spuds had settled, not by the sea, but tucked away in the cool and dark of messina. the mythical gingerbread gelato eluded me, so i made do with a triple chocolate extravaganza. chocolate fondant — rich and creamy with a hazelnutty edge; chocolate sorbet — smooth and light and intensely cocoa-y; and chocolate yoghurt — milky with a pleasant tang, my pick of the pack.

and you might think a birthday would end there, what with the kid falling asleep in the car on the way back to my dad’s hotel suite in the city and all…

but she performed that trick of bouncing out of bed about two minutes after she was tucked in, so we trekked into BBQ king and they brought us soup, all porky and ribby with a single chunk of carrot.

then they brought us a great bowl of roast duck congee, infused with delicious ducky flavour and a wonderful surprise of ginger slivers hidden deep in its heart.

and then a platter of fat, fried you tiao. the rice grains in the porridge had broken down into lush creaminess, just perfect for dipping.

now that’s how you end a birthday. lips glistening with oil, a starchy rice mass expanding slowly in your belly.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 18 November 2009 at 9:03 pm
permalink | filed under around town, art, breakfast, chocolate, dinner, ice cream

1

what a difference a half hour makes. if you aim for dinner at 6 o’clock, but become distracted beforehand in the subterranean cave of delights that is basement books, your 6.30 arrival at din tai fung will mean another 30 minute wait for a table. when we did front up at 6 a few weeks ago, we were ushered straight in.

the half hour of waiting groomed our appetites into big growling beasts, such that we had to order two baskets of xiao long bao (one serve with crab, and one without, and oh, how they both burst with sweet, porky, crabby juices) to quell their grumbles. between the four of us, we also put away a little dish of cold cucumber salad — more a miniature great wall fashioned out of thick slices of the gourd, in a chili-oily dressing; a large dish of dry-fried green beans with minced pork; a bowl of soup noodles with a moist and tender fried pork chop on the side; another bowl of soupy noodles topped with pork and picked vegetable.

we like pork, we do.

here’s the thing, the servings at din tai fung are moderate, and the food delicate, but dessert is constructed to a whole other scale. we were just short of full once the last noodle had been slurped, that last sliced of peppered pork chop dealt with. and we were bold, and ordered fresh mango over crushed ice.

and as it approached the table, other diners swiveled their heads around to stare. behold: a mountain of shaved ice (packed a little too tightly tonight; they should have served it with an ice pick) doused in mango syrup and sweetened milk. a generous globe of mango gelato perched precariously at the summit. fat slabs of mango at its base. and when it was gone — no, actually, we only made it three-quarters of the way through — we were completely stuffed.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 12 November 2009 at 1:14 pm
permalink | filed under around town, dinner, ice cream

0

we can’t get enough of cupcakes, oh no.

at the nicholson street public school halloween fair, after the painting of the $4 plaster cat, and the 20 minutes of standing in line for two rides down — screeeeaming — the giant inflatable slide (“tsunami”), we gamely crossed another four squares off our orange ticket for two adorable orange-iced cupcakes topped with ghost (me) and bat (the kid).

just over bite-sized, with the optimum cake-to-frosting ratio of 1:1, they were tasty, moist cakes with a slightly grainy buttercream. i saved my fondant ghostie for last, then watched the kid spend about 10 minutes trying to catch a numbered tugboat on a hook at the end of a very long pole for a very small prize.

the cupcakes, i believe, were from the cupcake factory, which has just opened up a little nook of a store right next to the zumbo cafe in the ugly brown mall on darling street. when i went by the other day, the glass cases were piled high with rather extravagantly decorated cupcakes. the frosting looked magnificent though the cakes themselves only came in either chocolate or vanilla. clearly, a little more research must be carried out.

halloween in sydney, 2009, is still sorta lukewarm. no trick-or-treaters darkened our doorstep this year, although making our way home from the fair, we did see a trail of gummy worms all the way down the pathway. perhaps a cunning local witch was using them to lure greedy little children to her gingerbread house.

the scariest thing we encountered was a pair of boys on the main drag, fourteen years old maybe, who weren’t so much dressed in costume as in regular black street clothes. one had a bandana obscuring the lower half of his face, and they both carried supermarket plastic bags full of… treats? it looked like they were soliciting… something… from businesses along the street.

oh no, wait. no, the scariest thing was the girl gang who swanned through the fair close to witching hour, all fifteen year old long limbs and long hair, dressed up as playboy bunnies. bloody, bloody hell, kids these days, etc, etc.

well, i am turning 37 in a week.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 5 November 2009 at 10:26 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, kid

0

it’s the morning after the night we poured ourselves through the chinatown new year night market. every year we go, and every year we say how insane it all is, and then a year passes and we forget, and we do it all again. the kid spent two hours in someone’s arms, buffeted, or on someone’s shoulders, above the crowd, so she basically did ok. the rest of us stopped when the crowd did, moved when it moved, and if we were sweaty enough at a certain point in time, we slimed past whoever was in the way.

me, i seemed to be sweatier than most, because we had thought it prudent earlier in the evening to dine on bowls of bakut teh and steamed buns; my body temperature was already up by a couple of degrees. eventually, when we tired of seeing the same exotic delicacies being peddled by every third shop (this year’s new inclusions appeared to be a range of flavoured taiwanese rice cakes, and fig jelly), we insinuated ourselves into a quiet crevice between two stalls, and replenished our sweat glands with icy cold sour plum drinks.

“will we go again next year?” i asked my mother.

“no,” she said, most decisively. “except maybe to buy mushrooms.”

right now i am fortifying myself with a mug of almond-flavoured soy milk. i had seen an ad for it on the back of a bus on the way home from the airport a week ago, and had rushed out and bought a carton the very next morning. see how effective an 8-ft high photograph of a carton of soy milk can be?

but i am particularly susceptible to soy beans this week. so far i have acquired:
• enormous rice crackers embedded with whole roasted black soy beans
• black soybean hot cocoa mix
• some sort of roasted soybean snack, which i really bought for the carton
• soft serve soymilk ice cream

the last of which i would be quite overjoyed to eat every day, but which would leave little room for the bakkwa-on-white-bread sandwiches, or the sambal prawn rolls, or the mangosteens/duku langsat/jackfruit trinity.

if only this could be my only quandry, rather than the pathological fear the kid has developed, of public toilets which flush automatically. in this city, that is the most tiresome thing of all.

– – –
this was originally posted to the ragingyoghurt facebook page,
while the blog lay dormant.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 24 January 2009 at 11:40 am
permalink | filed under around town, kid, snacks, trip
« older posts
newer posts »
  • Click

    • here
    • there
  • Categories

    • (after a) fashion
    • around town
    • art
    • at the movies
    • blog
    • bookshelf
    • boy
    • breakfast
    • cake
    • candy
    • chocolate
    • dinner
    • drawn
    • drink
    • grumble
    • ice cream
    • kid
    • kitchen
    • lunch
    • misc
    • nellie
    • packaging
    • shoping
    • snacks
    • something new
    • soundtrack
    • trip
    • tv
    • werk
  • Archives

    • August 2012
    • June 2012
    • May 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • November 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
    • May 2007
    • April 2007
    • March 2007
    • February 2007
    • January 2007
    • December 2006
    • November 2006
    • October 2006
    • September 2006
    • August 2006
    • July 2006
    • June 2006
    • May 2006
    • April 2006
    • March 2006
    • February 2006
    • January 2006
    • December 2005
    • November 2005
    • October 2005
    • September 2005
    • June 2005
    • May 2005
    • April 2005
    • March 2005
    • February 2005
    • January 2005
    • December 2004
    • November 2004
    • October 2004
    • September 2004
    • August 2004
    • July 2004
    • June 2004
    • May 2004
    • April 2004
    • March 2004
    • February 2004
    • January 2004
    • December 2003
    • November 2003
    • October 2003
    • September 2003
    • August 2003
    • July 2003
    • June 2003
    • May 2003
    • April 2003
    • March 2003
    • February 2003
    • November 2002
    • August 2002
    • March 2002
    • January 2002
    • November 2001
    • September 2001
    • September 2000
    • August 2000
    • April 2000
    • February 2000
    • January 2000
    • September 1999
    • August 1999
    • June 1999
    • February 1999
raging yoghurt blog | all content © meiying saw | theme based on corporate sandbox | powered by wordpress