ragingyoghurt

Category Archives: breakfast

6

you know i love a sweet breakfast, oh yes i do. but my favourite could well be mushrooms on toast. i love it so much, sometimes i even have it for lunch.

i used to get it at cafes, but more and more it seemed an exercise so fraught with disappointment: sometimes the mushrooms were too small, or sliced too thin, or not cooked enough, or there were too few of them, or any combination or permutation of the above. now i make my own, and it is better because i get them cooked the way i like, and if i’m actually lucky enough to have a cafe breakfast these days (which generally i’m not), it frees me up to have something like french toast with maple syrup and berries and bacon.

the first rule of mushrooms on toast is that there have to be a lot of mushrooms. look at these pictures; you can barely see the toast.

i use regular medium-sized white button mushrooms, sliced about 5mm thick. sometimes i’ll buy a few bigger mushrooms as well, and mix them in for variations in bite. i chop much more garlic than you might think necessary. i use olive oil and butter. i cook them a long time.

once, at a cafe, i was presented with a few tiny flakes of dry, blackened mushrooms. problem compounded upon problem: too small, too finely-sliced mushrooms, cooked on too high a heat for too short a time. mushrooms really take some time to get going. they absorb the oil, and then sit there, dry, until you begin to wonder if you should add a bit of water to help them along (no, don’t), and then finally they seize up, and relax, and all the mushroom juices ooze out into the pan, ready to christen your toast…

(your toast should be a sturdy enough receptacle for the mushrooms and their juices. i like sonoma soy and linseed sourdough, sliced thick and salty-buttered.)

you can season with just salt and pepper and it will be fine. but you could also drizzle the lot with aioli [above], or stir through some pesto in the last minutes of cooking [below]. if you are lucky, the pesto will be parsley and fetta pesto, and the heat on the cheese will give you a sticky, salty crust which you can eat — gracefully — off your cooking implement.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 30 September 2007 at 9:50 am
permalink | filed under breakfast, kitchen

0

the blackened bananas, thawing all day on a plate on the kitchen counter, seep a thin brown puddle. if you make an incision at one end of the fruit, and apply gentle pressure to the other, the squishy inside glides out whole, and comes to rest curled up like an enormous grub. it is a squeamish and giggly moment, but it is a good thing, because we are one step closer to banana bread.

i’d been hearing about deborah‘s banana bread for a few days — magic loaves that disappeared over a weekend. with little prompting, she pointed me in the direction of the recipe, and offered a tip to swap self-raising flour for the plain with leaveners.

the original recipe is for banana maple bread, but when i tiptoed around the idea of swapping kithul treacle for the maple syrup, deb gave her blessings to go forth! truly the fairy godmother of homebaking, she even voiced the idea i’d had in my head, to sprinkle it in shredded coconut.

although the recipe comes with a warning that the bread “is not super sweet because it has no sugar”, it does ask for 3/4 cup of maple syrup. so i was surprised when it actually wasn’t anywhere as sweet as your typical banana bread. the other surprising thing was that it baked more like a bread than a cake.

i mean, sure it’s called “banana bread”, but it’s normally sweet and moist, and maybe even oily. this wasn’t. my loaf rose magnificently in the pan, almost doubling its height. the first slice i ate, plain and quite recently out of the oven, i was a little disappointed by how unmoist it was, and what a mild flavour it had. but then i realised that this was actually where it was perhaps better than regular banana bread (cake), because it allowed for toppings, without the threat of overwhelming sweetness.

toppings like yoghurt and treacle and toasted coconut. i’ve had this for breakfast four days straight and i’m not sick of it yet. pity the loaf is gone.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 29 September 2007 at 9:06 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, cake, kitchen

3

breakfast!

many weeks ago — you may remember — deborah gave me a bottle of sri lankan kithul treacle, along with helpful suggestions on how best to enjoy it. somehow i never got ’round to searching out fresh curds, or cooking up milk rice, and shamefaced i tell you that even buying a tub of plain, european-style yoghurt seemed beyond me.

and now i don’t know why i waited so long, because i could have eaten this slippery treat much sooner: a runny and intensely flavoursome syrup mingling with the velvety yoghurt. you can vary the treacle-to-yoghurt ratio with each spoonful, just to see how much of the roasted chestnutty flavour you can handle (quite a lot, it turns out). although it was suggested that i might shave chocolate onto it like they do in the old country, i think a generous sprinkle of toasted coconut makes it just about perfect.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 25 September 2007 at 9:12 am
permalink | filed under breakfast

1

good morning.

it is drizzly and grey, but we have a wholesome whitebread breakfast under our belts, and are about to embark on a cupcake expedition.

– – –

vegemite and apricot jam are very nice toppings for whitebread toast, but my favourite thing to do with fresh whitebread is to have it soft, buttered, and covered in chocolate sprinkles. oh, that waxy glaze!

i love breakfast. [ via deborah ]

posted by ragingyoghurt on 22 September 2007 at 8:48 am
permalink | filed under breakfast

2

thursday night i stayed up late, working so that i wouldn’t have to friday. i had plans up my sleeve! plans that were almost scuttled friday morning, when the kid woke up a little later than usual, slightly dribbly in the nose, and announced that she was really ever so not well. it turned out (or, as i chose to see it) she was quoting “charlie and lola“, to which she has lately become addicted, and i figured (chose to) that the dribble was cosmetic, so we caught the slightly later bus and made it to playschool just as the kids were starting their morning snack.

i hightailed it to badde manors, and squeezed into the corner booth in the back. i like it here; it’s kinda rumpled, and the service is friendly-tinged surliness. i like it so much i didn’t even mind the freeform jazz dee-dee-dee-dee-dee on the stereo. even when they switched over to the tibetan chanting over a dancebeat that my yoga teacher used to play during class, it didn’t jar. well, ok, it jarred a little. when i first started coming here, over a decade ago, i didn’t realise it was vegetarian (although maybe the rumpled surliness should have been a clue?), because meat has never been the main event for me. but then i noticed that sometimes it was hard to get people to come along with.

the thing is, you would not feel like you were missing out if you ordered — as i did, yesterday — the mediterranean breakfast. when it arrived at the table, i think i may have gasped, or at least, inhaled audibly. the previously surly waitress caved in and smiled a little. “enjoy that,” she allowed.

and how can you not? four wedges of toasted turkish bread, topped with fried eggs, sprinkled with za’atar; fried haloumi; fried eggplant; pickles; olives; slices of tomato and cucumber. a veritable bazaar on a plate, and the only downside to such generosity is that if you try to work it such that you are alternating bites of everything, instead of say, eating all the lovely crunchy, salty, melty haloumi in one go, the cheese would have cooled down by the time you’re halfway through, and taken on the squeaky-between-the-teeth consistency which is less than ideal.

but it was otherwise perfect, perfect with a pot of actual, brewed chai. too many cafes serve damn chai lattes made up with too sweet flavoured syrup, but this handsome teapot is full of leaves and twigs, pours four glasses of spicy, not-too-sweet tea, and the last serve gives you a heartening gingery warmth in the back of your throat.

in a little over an hour i was well-fortified, though perhaps a little too distended in the belly, to try on a pair of $18 jeans at target up the street. i’d been looking forward to seeing the veronicas’ new fashion line, and although i liked the little chain with the dangly plastic punkrock charms hanging off a miniskirt… it was all just too red and black, and besides, everything was child-sized 7 to 14. well! just the jeans then.

things were going according to plan: i met up with an old flying monkey at the UTS gallery for the fun exhibition, + & – = X, 20 years of typo-graphics from the tokyo type directors club, before adjourning for long, long lunch at xic lo in chinatown. it’s not especially tasty here, but today at least, the summer rolls were fresh, and the “healthy drink” — barley, ginko nuts, dried longan, red dates and strips of seaweed in a sweet brown syrup, topped with a hillock of shaved ice — did a good job of pretending it wasn’t just a glass of sugar water.

and then suddenly the afternoon was mostly over, and it was time to spring the kid from playschool. i found her out back, shoeless and lightly dusted — like a cinnamon donut — with sand from the pit, and we headed back up broadway for an afternoon bun at breadtop with some good folk from a distant past. there are people with a grudging and uneasy relationship with facebook, but having orchestrated recent reunions with long-lost friends, over facebook, over baked goods no less, i cannot say that it is a bad thing.

nellie?

posted by ragingyoghurt on 1 September 2007 at 10:28 pm
permalink | filed under around town, breakfast, kid, lunch

3

i woke up this morning and the world had disappeared. from the balcony, across the water, it was whiteout. lovely.

i got to zumbo so early, the black curtain across the window was still down; the cake case was empty but for dewdrops; the pastry case was halfway being stocked; the counter was piled high in cakeboxes and crates of bread. the counterboy, seeing me give the bread the once-over, wordlessly slipped a loaf of soy-linseed into a paperbag, because i had mentioned, once, that it is my favourite.

i was distracted by the danishes. there are new ones: pear, and cherry. but for months i had forsaken the pear and macadamia scrolls, arranged, this morning, in perfect glistening rows behind the glass. they are always the ones which promise to be stickiest, and this morning i took them up on it. it was so early, i could take my time.

it was so early, the hot chocolate machine was not warmed up yet, so i must wait for another foggy morning. the macaron were not out, so i said i’d come back later for the blackcurrant one.

i walked past the newsagent with my bread and my danish, and the poster of yesterday’s news was still out front; it was so early. those herald sub-editors sure can write a pun into anything.

the toffee glaze on the pear and macadamia scroll is sweeter, and stickier, than i had imagined. it made me a little bit gleeful as i sat, drinking milky tea and watching the rowers drag themselves through the fog. i only ate half of it, because i also wanted a slice of bread and butter, and i thought it could (should) have been much pearier, although maybe all the fruit is in the other half, and my thoughts will shift accordingly tomorrow.

sometimes the sadness sits so tight in my throat.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 25 August 2007 at 10:59 pm
permalink | filed under boy, breakfast

4

so, wednesday.

two wednesdays ago, i woke up, made myself a cup of hotel tea, and considered the slab of chocolate kugelhopf i’d procured the day before at the monarch cakeshop on acland. my room wasn’t swish enough that it came with a microwave, however there was a column heater in the corner that came in damn handy for a breakfast of warm cake.

i was feeling a little antsy, because boy and kid were due in melbourne at some point in the day, and because boys like to be spontaneous, i had no idea what point that would be. so i checked out of the hotel and went to buy several truffles at koko black. i walked over to the queen victoria market, but it’s closed wednesdays. i caught a random tram and found myself at the casino. i thought maybe i’d look into the window of the prada shop for old times’ sake (god forbid i should actually set foot in a prada shop!), but the whole complex was clad in plywood scaffolding. they were still letting people in though, and it was right after i bought a cone of sweet corn pumpkin ice cream from the japanese stall in the food court, that the call came through: they were half an hour away!

and that pretty much sums up wednesday, because by the time i got the keys to our fancy serviced apartment on the edge of the city, and met kid and boy, and distributed welcome gifts of fruit bun and poppyseed danish, it was storytime, and then naptime. for me even. two days of walking around doing plenty of not much sure takes its toll.

afterwards there was a twilight stroll through gentrified laneways, and cheap chinatown noodles. and then i felt a duty to steer the proceedings in the direction of the trampoline store across the road — truly, they are everywhere — because the previous day, i had seen on the wall of the fitzroy shop, a poster with a caterpillar on it (the segments of its body were scoops of gelato) which said that people shorter than 90cm could get a free kid’s cone. (so, and, dwarves?)

and so she did. pink.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 18 July 2007 at 9:51 pm
permalink | filed under around town, breakfast, cake, ice cream, kid, trip

0

if you can sense, just based on the amount of green goop coming out of a kid’s nose, and the warbling noise at the base of her throat when she coughs, that more sickness is about to descend upon you, you might have a breakfast of soy and linseed spelt-sourdough toast, generously slathered in fresh goat curd and chesnut honey to make you feel better.

the first slice will be so wonderful that you will make another one, and then you will feel somewhat bloated for the rest of the day.

and then by early evening, you will feel the dull throb in your head, and the familiar tightness in the back of your throat that a purple strepsil can’t quite shake.

(so you will make a pot of duck and sweetcorn congee for dinner — using leftover chinatown roast duck and half a tin of sweetcorn kernals and a large hunk of ginger — to make you feel better, and then you will feel somewhat bloated for the rest of the night.)

tasty, but.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 1 June 2007 at 10:35 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, dinner, kid

7



in the midst of one of those two-hour, long-distant calls to nellicent the other night, i asked, “um, where is your sainbury’s?”. i thought that i’d made it seem an innocent question, apropos of nothing, though my index finger was making random loop-de-loops on the magazine page.

she gave it serious thought. “oh. it’s in [name of suburb], on [name of street] and –,” she paused, before the shrieking began. “i know what you want!!”

“argh!” i shrieked back, “i want it! i want it!”

“i know what you want! i have already bought it for you, in my head!”

“well,” i said, “i hope that you are not talking about cheese.”

because i surely wasn’t. a week ago, i’d read a story on anya hindmarch, in “vogue“, that mentioned a shopping bag she’d designed for sainsbury’s in the UK, in one of those everybody-wins exercises to reduce plastic bag consumption. and what a bag. before it’s even gone on sale at the supermarkets, it’s already sold out its online pre-sale allotments, and gone on to appear on ebay at forty times its original cost.

we went on to discuss the logistics of obtaining one (or two!) of these bags — which sainsbury’s branches might sell them, and if she might have to rope in one of her friends in case there was a one-per-customer limit (there is!) — and now that i’ve read a bit more about the madness, it all seems just a bit too stella-at-target.
so perhaps i won’t be getting one after all.

but what better time to spruik the raging yoghurt shopping bag? ok, so it’s not designed by anya hindmarch, is not a limited edition, will cost you more than £5, and will make me a couple of bucks too… but you can hang it over your shoulder and carry all manner of groceries in it, just like the sainsbury’s one. anyway, don’t you just need another canvas shopping bag? i myself have a selection of eight or ten hanging from my laundry door.

and while we’re on the hindmarch comparisons, look what i made saturday morning: chocolate-covered pretzels.



after breakfast (sour cherry jam on buttered rye and caraway bagel, yum) i melted down a 100g bar of lindt dark chocolate in a large bowl over a pot of simmering water. i tipped in a bag of salted pretzels, and stirred until everyone was well-coated. i fished them out with a bamboo skewer and laid them out to set on a sheet of grease-proof paper. it’s an effortless and addictive snack, i tell you, with the bittersweet chocolate (just a thin enough coat to start melting in the warmth of your fingertips), and the sharp crunch of the pretzel, and the lingering surprise of a random salt chip.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 15 April 2007 at 1:42 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, chocolate, kitchen, nellie, shoping, snacks

2



for breakfast this morning i had a cup of black tea and six (eight?) daim candies. it didn’t have to be that way; i had considered walking up the street into rozelle, to the newly-opened bagel house cafe. when i rode the bus past yesterday the doors had finally been thrown open, and there was plenty of hot, steamy action in the back. but it would have been too indulgent, no? to go out for fresh bagels when there were still three from saturday in the freezer? probably not.

this week past, i’ve eaten my way through toasted fruit bread, blueberry bagels (twice), swiss cheese and tomatoes on toast (that was tuesday, when i thought i should eat something that wasn’t just sugarbread, in preparation for the afternoon’s bloodletting), and yesterday, delicious spelt crepes stuffed with spinach and fetta, and topped with sticky fig jam, at the fair trade coffee company (i had tea).

the day before, breakfast had been the last three profiteroles from the profiterole cake. backtrack: the thursday before good friday, the last day of term, the boy’s staffroom had given him a farewell cake: a dozen or so custard-filled puffs, arranged on a large shortbread biscuit base. the whole structure was covered in chocolate and sprinkled with tiny coloured sugar flowers. oh, and foil-wrapped chocolate eggs strategically positioned in the swirly chocolate border. he got through a couple of profiteroles that night, and then friday, he left it in the fridge when he drove off into the big brown. so there i was, alone in the house with most of a profiterole cake for company. what to do?

it was easier than i thought, a profiterole here, a couple there, throughout the week, though the chocolate was compound, mixed up to have that certain oily consistency that you don’t really object to until it’s too late. you know how it is: you eat two profiteroles, and feel fine about eating the third, and that’s when it wreaks its revenge.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 13 April 2007 at 4:33 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, cake, chocolate, drawn
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