ragingyoghurt

Category Archives: lunch

4

in the days leading up to easter, the cupcake bakery made me an offer i couldn’t refuse. from their gleaming little outpost in the myer-to-QVB walkway, rows of festive cupcakes beckoned. this one, a chocolate cupcake with tiny speckled chocolate eggs nestled in an enormous swirl of pink frosting, pretty much grabbed me by the face and told me i should take it home.

so i did, and the kid enjoyed it very much. she was kind enough to allow me a small bite of the cake, as well as one of the eggs, so i can tell you that the cake was light, and not as dry as it has been on occasion, but the egg, alas, was compound. still, it was all the fuel she needed to put the finishing touches on her hat for the school easter bonnet parade to be held the following day.

and would the rains hold? would sodden papier mache crises be diverted? yes.

and now, some days later, we find ourselves at the mercy of this fickle singaporean weather. it was hovering around 30 when we arrived a couple of night ago. yesterday it was rainy, and almost refreshing. today it’s back up to 34. there is most of a big, fat rava masala dosai under my belt — it cost all of $3 — and i’m struggling against the urge to have a big, fat afternoon nap. the battle could go either way.

next stop: old blighty.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 5 April 2010 at 6:10 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, kid, lunch, trip

9

i clicked on a random link today, and it took me to a website about school lunches, and then i clicked on a link from there, and… did you know there’s a whole genre of blogs out there devoted to documenting school lunches? fascinating!

the kid brings a packed lunch (and recess) to school each day, in her rather fetching apple print insulated lunch bag. within this are two or three smaller boxes. the biggest one always contains a sandwich: her favourite at the moment is cheese and apple, but on heavy rotation are cheese and cucumber; ham and tomato and cucumber; vegemite and cucumber. she really likes cucumber! last monday, she had bak kwa and cucumber, on infinity bakery pumpkin sourdough, but that was a special one-off. the sandwiches are almost always made on grainy wholemeal bread (is the bread helga’s? ja!), with butter, or kewpie mayo.

dessert is fruit: cubes of melon, or apple slices. sometimes grapes or berries.

recess is usually fruit too, but sometimes it might be a squeezy tube of yoghurt, or a box of raisins. did you know you can get raspberry-flavoured raisins in the supermarket? they get raisins, and then coat it in raspberry flavour. the package shows a large grape bisected at the mouth, about to eat a raspberry — amazing. occasionally, there will be a sweet biscuit in a little strawberry-print paper bag.

reading the school lunch blogs made me think about when i was at school, and wonder what we did about food safety and insulation in the tropics. and then i realised that i never did bring lunch to school. when i was in primary school in malaysia and singapore, there was a morning session and an afternoon session. the various grades were divided up, i guess to prevent overcrowding, so if you were in primary 3, you might be scheduled for morning school that year, while the whole of primary 4 would be in afternoon school.

morning school started at 7.30 — it meant waking up to darkness at 6am — and went until 12.30 or 1pm. afternoon school operated from 1 to 6pm. throughout my school career, i ate lunch at home, before school or after, depending on which session i was cursed with at the time.

i did have recess though. i still remember — not fondly — the slightly sour taste (and the slightly furry feel) of warm water or cordial that had been sitting for a few hours under my desk in a plastic water bottle.

once i came into the pocket money, i bought little tumblers of overly diluted rose syrup cordial from the drinks stall, for 10c a pop. the drinks aunty would have a raft of these scuffed plastic tumblers laid out before her on her stainless steel counter, and a pile of cold, wet coins. it was the perfect accompaniment to a soggy curry puff (bar the crimped edge — that was satisfyingly crunchy) stuffed with nothing but curried potatoes.

i’m sorry to say that i also had a predilection for the spring rolls from the fried stall. these were not your ordinary spring rolls, mind. sure, you could have had one filled with shredded vegetables, but more often than not, i ended up with the one stuffed with diced spam. or curried potatoes…

i really like curried potato!

my favourite recess snacks were the little packs of nutella with the foil tops you peeled off and the little plastic spatulas to facilitate eating, and packets of fried noodle cakes — mamee — that you ate crunchy out of the bag. sometimes i ate them together. take that, chocolate-covered potato chips!

as i progressed through high school, i started staying after class for extra curricular activities, and so had more of a chance to eat at the school canteen. it was a large open space with a roof but no walls, with several rows of long tables and benches, and a bank of independently run stalls dispensing all manner of noodles and ricey dishes (also, a drinks stall and a particularly well-stocked snacks stall — chips, puffs, biscuits, candy, nutella, pickled plums…). i usually had a plate of fried beehoon, rice vermicelli cooked extra extra stick-in-your-throat dry, with the barest of garnishings: a handful of limp beansprouts, tails still attached, and a clump of shredded omelette, all for 30c. no-one cooks beehoon as dry as that beehoon aunty at CHIJ toa payoh in the late 80s. i miss it, still.

i must say, i was slightly horrified today as i read the school lunch blogs, but my trip down memory lane is looking decidedly more like the path to ruin. it’s probably a good thing that i ate most of my lunches at home.

here are some of the more riveting school lunch blogs i found today. on the back of jamie oliver’s TED prize speech, a change is surely in the air.

- 6th graders from NY document their daily lunches
- non-judgemental roundup of school lunches form around the world
- a teacher raises awareness about school lunches, by eating them
- gaijin english teacher eats japanese school lunches
- two blogs about the state of affairs at DC school kitchens

posted by ragingyoghurt on 26 March 2010 at 11:10 pm
permalink | filed under kid, lunch

3

quick! before i disappear down another warren of werk…

the next day, i finally made it to black star pastry. i’d known about this pastry shop for almost 18 months, but never felt compelled to make the trek to newtown. clearly my devotion to grunge only extends as far as listening to 20-year-old pearl jam records and harboring a secret penchant for plaid flannel shirts. the main drag is such… a drag, but a little way down australia street this comforting little nook welcomed us with aircon and neat rows (and bounteous jumbles) of sweet and savoury treats.

the kid made her choice — “sausage roll!” — within seconds of eyeing the pie cabinet in the back before whisking herself back out onto the footpath. meanwhile, there i was, nose to glass case while she sat almost patiently outside pondering the philippe starck gnome stool. my gaze hovered between the black olive baguette stuffed with streaky serrano ham and parmesan, and the golden brown wheel of pastry by the cash register.

you will see that the pastry won, an intriguing wedge of organic weed strudel served with a slab of fresh ricotta and a dollop of plum relish. (i did not enquire about the provenance of the weeds, but i trust they were not related to the scrabbly shoots at our feet.) despite being served at room temperature, the thin pastry still delivered a compelling crunch. the dense and tangled filling, eaten alone, tasted dark green and pleasantly bitter. smeared with ricotta and the sticky sweet and tangy relish, it took on a whole range of complex and happy flavours and textures in my mouth.

by this stage, deborah and LJ had shown up, weak and exhausted from their encounter with the predatory car salespeople of parramatta road, and clearly in need of sustenance. they ended up with a lamb pie each, because deb felt that it might be something they wouldn’t want to share. quite. what showed up was a sturdy-looking puck of a pie, all puffy and golden, filled with tender shredded lamb and vegetables in a light sauce. no gummy meat adhesive here!

it was with regret that i scraped the last strand of bitter green weed from my plate; the silver lining was dessert! my mind was set on the strawberry, watermelon and rose cake, for i had been thinking about it since seeing it over at the unbearable lightness of being hungry many months ago. it was every bit as dreamy as i had imagined: layers of light, nutty dacquoise sandwiching cream and thin slices of fresh watermelon. the combination of creamy and crisp and juicy and sweet was most agreeable, though i failed to detect any discernible rose flavour. the kid began a stealthy attack on the top of the cake, poaching a strawberry, then a half blueberry, then a pistachio, then — brazenly — another strawberry; i had to fend her off with a fork.

she had ordered the vanilla pannacotta topped with a delicate lime jelly into which slices of papaya and slivers of fresh ginger had been set. alas, it proved too gingery for her, and she abandoned it a little way in. i wasn’t quite willing to do an outright trade, but sampled enough of it to report that it tasted fruity and fresh, with a definite bite from the ginger — a perfect treat for a hot afternoon, until the pannacotta liquified beneath the autumnal sun.

when the kid had eaten as much of my cake as i’d let her, she turned her attention to deb’s tarte tatin. again, the pastry was golden brown delicious, and the enormous chunks of soft, caramelised apple most divine.

i may have to rethink my aversion to newtown. perhaps it will not seem quite so out of the way if i make it the destination. black star is surely worth the buses and trains, the grit and the smoke, the draining crush of humanity.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 23 March 2010 at 2:52 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, lunch

2

the kid goes to ballet now, in pink: leotard, wrap skirt, socks, shoes, hair band, pink. her ballet bag, a hello kitty tote, is also pink. i am happy to play along, partly because i actually like pink, but mainly because the classes are on saturday mornings in haberfield.

it’s not too far away i suppose, only three suburbs and two buses with efficient, pain-free connections, but i’d never felt like we had to go, and consequently, we rarely did. now we’re there every weekend, taking full advantage of the cannoli, or the panini filled with all manner of cured meats. or both.

after class this past saturday we met cousin sharon for cannoli at pasticceria papa. that was the plan, anyway. the original idea had been to pop in for a quick cannoli, and then move on to a neighbouring suburb for dumplings or duck soup. but our table was right next to the hot food counter, and said counter had never appeared so bursting with bounty. heat-lamped, gold-tinted beauty.

we took our place at the end of the queue, and inched our way down the line. golly gee whizz, the italians here are that much surlier than the ones at a&p sulfaro half a block up the road. over the last few weeks we had become accustomed to the friendly and smiley — though slowish — service at sulfaro. at papa’s, we wavered a little under the glare of our stern countergirl, but we pretended as if our ordering food was not actually imposing upon her, and asked for sour cherry gelato, and ricotta cannoli, and a miniature custard tart topped with a strawberry, a wedge of kiwifruit, a slice of nectarine, a sliver of plum, and half a dewy little fig. at this point the thought of dumplings lingered only the shortest moment before jumping out the window, and we ordered a couple of slices of pizza for the table.

one, a quite straightforward prosciutto and rocket pizza, and the other, a monstrous beast covered in crumbled-up minced meat, spinach, whole button mushrooms roasted succulent, slices of hard boiled eggs — yolks strewn about with gay gold abandon, eggplant, capsicum and tomatoes…

you read all this stuff about pizza purists, and how toppings should be sparse and restrained, but this specimen of crazy ass overblowness is clearly proof of how the other end of the spectrum can be just as wonderful.

we ate the pizza, and then the sweets (except for the kid, who started off with the gelato), and then i cast my head towards the gelato counter with its tubs of milo gelato, and a mystery flavour that involved ribbons of caramel and broken-up cookies. and i thought that maybe, just maybe i could be bothered joining the queue again.

but nah, maybe next week.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 23 March 2010 at 12:28 am
permalink | filed under around town, lunch

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

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

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

2

i’m hoping you were not so distracted by the blood and gore of the last post that you missed the bit about the delicious salad. yes, after three weeks away in the land of the free, deborah returned to brunch at le grand café at the alliance francaise. it’s like a bermuda triangle, is it not, this little section of clarence street with bécasse and plan b on the east side, and the newish le grand café forming the third point right across the road? you pop in, and then disappear for quite some time — who knows when you will re-emerge? last year, when we lunched at bécasse, we must’ve been there for almost three hours. wednesday, at the more casual outpost (yes! you can play a game of “count the stripy skivvies”, haw haw!), we lingered for around three-and-a-half.

we arrived early, 11am, because i’d been reading around the traps that it gets busy at lunchtime! and things sell out! as it turns out, we were maybe too early: quite a few of the menu items were still being prepared. but as we cast our eyes over the neat stacks of filled baguettes, the countergirl retrieved a tray of salad bowls from the kitchen and began filling the display case.

“is that the nicoise?” i breathed, in awe. atop the leaves, the fat slices of chargrilled tuna glistened like rubies. there were segments of hard boiled egg with sunny yellow yolks. later, as i dug down into the bowl, i would find tiny olives and halved grape tomatoes. such dainty treasures, shining in their delicate dressing. it made for joyous eating, and i did not feel in the slightest that i’d missed out on anything by not ordering the frisee with lardons.

the salad nicoise had come highly recommended by the friendly french countergirl. i got the feeling though, that she would’ve been happy to recommend everything. when we joined the queue the second time, for dessert, she spoke highly of the blueberry danish, perched up high on a mountain of pain au chocolat, as well as all the steamed puddings on display. if we’d have kept pointing, she would probably have gushed over each one.

ordinarily, i expect i would’ve gone down the path of chocolate. most likely the pot au chocolat with its helmet of mixed nuts, or the wedge of flourless chocolate cake, or the slender little beam of a chocolate brownie. however, i’d worked my way through an extremely sweet hot chocolate with the salad, and i thought that any more might knock me over.

so i got the blueberry pudding, and it was light and sweet, and served warm with a quenelle of slightly sweetened whipped cream… altogether pleasant, although i think that i might have preferred double cream.

the room was quiet when we arrived, with just a group of uniformed school boys in the banquettes by the wall, drinking coffee from takeaway cups, and eating croissants — some sort of french immersion class i suppose. the lunchtime crowd swept in, in a couple of waves, and then trickled out again as we lingered over tea (gunpowder green leaf tea, with jasmin, in a large round pot, with a removable strainer, le sigh of contentment). i resisted going up to the counter for a third time — the takeaway danish doesn’t always win — but i have begun making plans for pastry-fueled morning work sessions in the coming weeks.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 19 September 2009 at 10:25 pm
permalink | filed under cake, lunch

0

an innocent email on monday morning about the possibility of lunch snowballed, and by the time saturday rolled round, there we were — deborah and i — in our best walking shoes, primed and hungry for whatever the afternoon might bring us.

well. we did have a plan.

i’d been curious to try the new sopra outpost in potts point, and that is where we began. it is much swisher than the original waterloo warehouse: banquette seating, shiny red mosaic walls, an unsubtle soundtrack that made us feel like we were in a 60s italian movie (a slapstick comedy, at that), and — the deal-breaker, were there deals to be broken — fancy, custom printed, evocatively illustrated place mats on very nice textured paper.

they had them arranged just so on the bar, but we spirited a couple over to our table top with not too much recrimination from the waiter. (very efficiently, he showed us a particularly fetching one with a big plate of pasta emblazoned with “fratelli fresh”, and then he replaced the ones we had pilfered.)

much less efficiently, we made our choices for lunch; everything sounded so delicious. and then of course, it was.

there was an antipasto platter to start — four little mounds of: mushrooms and cumin; spicy caponata with surprise crunchy almonds; arancini with aioli; simply dressed green beans.

there was a risotto ala milanese, rich with the colour and tang of saffron, with tiny nuggets of meat folded in. there was a salad of lettuce and tomatoes in salad cream. and then…

there was a roasted bit of organic pork. i’d asked the waiter what it came with, and he said, “nothing. it’s just the meat.” and he added, as an afterthought, “there is a bit of cress on top”. it was just as he said.

and it was amazing. tender, flavoursome meat, fatty where it counted, crowned with a great arc of salty, crunchy crackling. sigh. even shared between two, it was more meat than i’d normally eat in a day. maybe even two or three days.

we ate, and ate, and at some point deborah said, “this is one of the best lunches ever,” and i could not disagree.

and you might think that after a meal such as this, there would be no room for dessert. and you might be right, to a point: no dessert was had where we sat, or even down the road at yellow, but once we had roused ourselves and propelled ourselves back towards the city through darlinghurst, and made the requisite stops for a meringue duckling (croissant d’or) and loaf of walnut sourdough (infinity bakery), we could not resist the lure of the mountains of gelato at messina.

just look at that chocolate sorbet — so glossy and dark (how would you choose between that and the chocolate orange sorbet?). and what about the crisp and bracing lemon sorbet? the pear gelato was much less peary than i’d anticipated, but the fig delivered everything it promised. we sat for a while, in the cool and dark, and watched as streams of lithe girls in long dresses sashayed in for scoops of this and that. we watched a child demand vanilla.

we finished up, wistfully, and made our way one block south, to the chocolate shop.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 December 2008 at 9:58 pm
permalink | filed under around town, ice cream, lunch

9

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

!

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

breakfast tomorrow sorted.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 22 November 2008 at 9:41 pm
permalink | filed under cake, lunch
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