ragingyoghurt

5

there has been too much frivolous spending of late. the innocent (haha) stroll up to the park which resulted in the popping into the sale at the fancy boutique across the road, which resulted in the procuring of several $10 pairs of trousers and shirts and a handsome wool and mohair coat that had been reduced from $187 to $20. followed by the online spree which resulted in 2 “maisy” DVDs, a “charlie and lola” DVD and a “babe” DVD. the rainbow stripey beanie. oh all right. it’s all for the child… but really, the “charlie and lola” DVD is secretly for me.

so you see, even though i have just seen some extremely cute little plates at lori joy’s new little store, i feel i must remain strong and resist… the urge… to… buy… plates.

but they would be perfect, perfect, for me and the kid. a matching set, even. look:

posted by ragingyoghurt on 4 July 2006 at 10:13 pm
permalink | filed under shoping

7

this year i got over my… well it’s not a phobia, not even distaste really, but you know that icky feeling you get from handling library books? your fingertips seem dusty or grimy or… that sensation i just can’t describe, when there’s stuff in that gap between your nail and the top of your finger, and in the webbing of your fingers. you know? the way my hands feel right now even as i’m merely typing about it.

argh!!

um. so i’ve been taking the kid to the library. sometimes to get picture books, and sometimes for organised storytime. some days i find the latest issue of a glossy magazine on the rack, with a bit less dust or grime to get in-between my fingers.

recently, i borrowed an only slightly dogeared copy of “delicious.“, from june of last year. in the first few pages, there was a half page on max brenner and his “chef’s own” recipe for hot chocolate, which pretty much amounted to: 1 tablespoon of max brenner hot chocolate mix, 1 cup of milk, marshmallows. dissolve chocolate powder into hot milk. if you want a richer drink, add more chocolate.

really.

but i got past it without too much derisive snorting, and came upon a recipe for sticky lemon pudding. in the photograph was a vintage enamel bowl on a waffle-weave tea towel. in the bowl was a spongey yellow cake with a golden brown top and a puddle of lemon curd at the bottom. for almost two weeks i thought about making this pudding. and then for almost one week after that, things kept happening to postpone the making of pudding. but reading of santos‘s lemony l.a. adventures only galvanised my intentions. yesterday afternoon, with the magazine’s due date fast approaching, i thought i should just do it.

it turned out to be one of those recipes where the end result looks exactly like the picture, except that because my pudding bowls are smaller than the prescribed size, i had two! it even tasted like its name: the cakey bit had a slightly chewy, slightly sticky mouth feel, and the tart lemon flavour (i cut down the sugar in the recipe) went all the way through the cake to the curdy bit below. YUM.

howzzat? an uppercase YUM in a lowercase blog. the recipe is from jill dupleix, and goes a little something like this.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 30 June 2006 at 11:58 pm
permalink | filed under bookshelf, cake, kitchen

2

do you eat chicken? do you watch sunrise? i do, quite a bit, and i, um, do… only sometimes, and in small amounts, honest. this morning they had a lady from the chicken board on, to set the record straight on the state of today’s poultry.

and now that i’ve googled “australian poulty association”, i see that that the board are actually called the australian chicken meat federation, and three days ago revealed in a press release that “almost 80% of australians believe that something is added to the australian chicken to make it grow artificially larger, with a staggering 66% of australians believing added hormones are a contributing factor making chickens larger”. ok.

well, i mean, that’s what i thought! have you seen the size of those chicken breasts in the supermarket deli counter? monstrous! sometimes, from my old supermarket at least, they even tasted like chickens of death. but in fact, what the chicken board woman said was that modern chickens are a different breed from the dainty specimens of the past, and comparing the two was like comparing a shetland pony with a workhorse. (and also that any antibiotics given to the birds are no longer in the meat by the time it reaches the consumer, and that organic chicken is no better for you than the other kind is.)

so. you’d believe it wouldn’t you? this chicken lady on a tv show where businesses and tourist attractions pay money to be included in the lineup?

it’s just, having read “my year of meats” (ruth ozeki) a couple of times, and sort of wanting to read “the way we eat: why our food choices matter” (peter singer) — but being sort of afraid to — and to be honest, the size of those chicken breasts is still a little disconcerting…

it’s just, the kid really likes chicken.

hormones and antibiotics aside, organic may not necessarily be better for us, but it probably is a bit better for the chickens. but then after the playground we went to the supermarket to buy a roast chicken for lunch, and the woman behind the counter asked if i wanted the regular $8.48 chicken, or the reduced-for-quick-sale $6 one.

“why’s it reduced for quick sale?” i asked.

“because it’s been out here for more than four hours,” she said, almost like a challenge.

the unspoken question, i suppose, was, how much longer than four hours had it been out here? (and also, did the chicken have a good life?)

but i took it. it fell apart in the woman’s tongs as she wrestled it into a bag. it made a tasty sandwich, on soy and linseed, with avocado, tomato and cheese for the kid, and avocado, sesame seed furikake and chili pepper sprinkles for me.

i still don’t know how i feel about the chicken debate. i want to read the book, even though i know it will make me (more) uneasy about the food i choose to eat. i mean, we can’t all be fruitarians, can we?

posted by ragingyoghurt on 30 June 2006 at 9:45 pm
permalink | filed under bookshelf, lunch, shoping, tv

2

eat more soup! this week, armed with most of a head of broccoli, half a carton of chicken stock, all of one large red rascal potato, some onion and quite a bit of garlic, i made a pot of broccoli soup so full of greeny goodness that the kid had two helpings. they were small helpings (that pink bowl is actually a 125ml measuring cup), but still. hurray for broccoli-eating babies.

that day, the boy came home from school, hungry of course, and fossicked about the fridge for a snack.

“i made broccoli soup today!”
“uh-huh.”
“broccoli soup!”
“i was looking for a snack.”
“broccoli soup!”
“hmm.” and so on…

more for me.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 30 June 2006 at 2:30 pm
permalink | filed under kitchen

6

meanwhile in the western suburbs, someone goes healthy.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 28 June 2006 at 3:26 pm
permalink | filed under around town, shoping

8

according to the internet, uludag is the highest mountain in western anatolia. its name translates as “big mountain”, and from its peaks is where the gods watched the trojan war. we didn’t make it as far (or as high) as uludag last saturday; instead we went to auburn.

i had checked the street directory before i set out that morning, and so it was with only slightly wavering conviction that i pointed helen, sue and sarah in the direction of the RT Delight factory. [nellie, it will please you no end to discover that the RT on the logo stands for Real Turkish] as it turns out, getting off the train and walking down the station stairs had confused me such that we found ourselves in the exact polar opposite location from where we were meant to be. fortunately, deb arrived not long after and saved us from…

well. there was the first lebanese bakehouse, full of baklava and biscuits and a quite fierce baker who ordered us out as soon as he saw the cameras. (he was easily placated by some of us buying biscuits. yummy sugar-dusted, lemon-iced biscuits filled with crushed pistachios or walnuts.) there was the second lebanese bakehouse, next door, where helen sensibly thought to buy real food in the form of a za’atar pizza. there was a grocery shop, and this is where deb showed up and turned us around in the right direction.

there was a vietnamese bakery, and suddenly every one else had real food too: pork banh mi with chillies, not too shabby for almost eleven on a saturday morning.

’round the other side of the station, we found ourselves finally in the turkish delight factory, which is less a hot and heaving kitchen with vats of sugary paste and rosewater being stirred by sweaty turks, than a gleaming white showroom manned by a stern woman overlooking trays of chocolate truffles in glass cases. but where? the turkish delight? it is all pre-wrapped, sealed in plastic bags, or cardboard boxes or foil packaging, or combinations thereof. ch.

the chocolate was mediocre: my chocolate indulgence truffle tasted like an uneasy union of milo and nutella, coated in a hard shell of milk chocolate, dusted with cocoa powder. the turkish delight — with almonds, and covered in milk chocolate — was no better than any other turkish delight i’ve had here, and certainly no match for those individual little cakes of the stuff dipped in thick dark or white chocolate, studded with a single pistachio or almond and retailing at nigh on $80/kilo (just over $4 a piece!). mmm… but that’s another story.

deb led the way to arzum market on rawson street, which truly was the aladdin’s cave of shiny treasures. just look at this:



– smiling strawberry jelly biscuit, from eti



– multi-coloured, sprinkled, marshmallow biscuits, also eti

[ when i was in turkey a few years ago, i bought a packet of oreo-like biscuits, called “negro”, which is one of the eti stable. i considered bringing it to my sister in new york, but i thought maybe the customs officials at JFK would be somewhat less amused. ]



– a tube of special hazelnut cocoa cream from ülker… ah ülker, we share fond memories, don’t we? i know it’s just nutella, but a tube!



– bananko! from the croatian confectioner, kras. i haven’t tried it yet (or any of the others actually), but the company website assures me that “a fluffy banana-flavored filling and rich chocolate coating make bananko a delicious treat.”



– also from kras, a somewhat familiar trapezoid-shaped milk chocolate bar with hazelnuts and honey.

– a roll of turkish cherry candy

– the beautiful bottle of turkish fizzy you see at the top of this post

– and in case you think i just blew my budget on candy, a jar of honey.



if you read deb’s account of the adventure, you will see that we were both torn between the honey with whole nuts, or this one with the intricate pattern of crushed nuts (and cumin and coconut and raisins and apricot stones). when we asked the jolly shopkeeper if he recommended the honey, he opened up a jar of his favourite — the plain one, put it down on the counter with a fresh loaf of turkish bread, and invited us to try. it tasted of flowers. mine tastes of peanuts. i think they reversed the order of the ingredients on the label, so that groundnut, which appears last after pistachio, almond, hazelnut, and walnut, is actually the predominent nut. in fact the impressive tiling you see here, it is only a couple of millimetres thick. the rest of the bottle is a sludge of indistinguishable chopped nuts. nuts. i think you got the better honey, deborah.

back on auburn road, we stopped outside mado, where we only briefly considered what flavours of ice creams to get… before we found ourselves at a handsomely appointed table in the depths of the restaurant (not quite the inner sanctum though; that was a child’s birthday party waiting to happen, with a pointy paper hat on every plate). it is warm and glowing in mado. the walls are festooned with brass treasures and leather booties and satin turbans. the booths are plush and comfortable. the waitress is patient.

if you were silly earlier and ate a whole pork roll, forcing you to choose something light off the menu because of course you have to leave room for dessert, what you will have is a bowl of hot soup. a surprisingly light and creamy red lentil soup served with a lemon wedge and chilli sprinkles and two great slabs of bread. and then as the others feast on the salad with walnuts and (allegedly) pomegranate syrup, and beans in tomato sauce, and charred lamb cubes, you will sink into the plush and comfortable seat, under the warm, golden lights, and feel sleep come upon you. only the promise of dondurma will keep you in the realm of the awake.

but just dondurma? it’s just that, on the way in, helen and i had spied platters of oozy puddings on the dessert counter. it was labelled “caramelised pudding” in the display, and “charred pudding” on the menu, but what had really attracted me was the pale, plump pudding innards, oozing from beneath the golden brown crust. there was a half-hearted dicsussion on whether or not dessert would be a takeaway affair, but then cups of turkish tea and salep milk were ordered, as well as ice cream and pudding. we were in for the long haul.

the raspberry dondurma was bright red with an intense, tart flavour. the date was mellow with datey bits all the way through. the plain white salep was extra chewy and quite comforting. but the pudding! soft, oozy pudding, with the caramelly crust, with the sprinkle of cinnamon, with a lingering aftertaste of toasted marshmallows. you could sit around eating bowls of this pudding, and then one day your belly would peek out from your waistband, looking like pale oozy pudding too.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 27 June 2006 at 8:53 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, ice cream, lunch, packaging, shoping, snacks

7

you know how it is: step out to buy a butter dish, and suddenly you have a butter dish, and two little glass tubs for storage, and a pretty pink mixing bowl, and some ocean trout for dinner.

i recently found a recipe for lemon curd sponge pudding in a magazine, and it became clear to me that i would have to acquire a pudding bowl. (you see how it is? if you have already read the previous entry, you will shake you head sadly and agree: it’s an affliction!)

but it was half price!

monday lunchtime, the bowl was sitting clean and fresh on the drying rack as my bucatini came to a boil, and before i realised what was happening, i had grabbed it and filled it with a tangle of spicy coriander pesto noodles with peas and broccoli.

ah lovely and versatile pink mixing/pudding/pasta bowl.

maeve was ambling down the street the other day in a pair of pink trousers and her black and white stripy t-shirt. she looked like a giant licorice allsort. we went to starbucks, and the girl behind the counter said, “is that your, um, sister?”

“UM… no, my, um, daughter.”

“it’s just,” she said, “you look so young… and my sister and i, we have eight years between us, so…”

“ah,” i said, “there are 32 years between us.”

and then she offered maeve a chocolate muffin sample and a baby-cino. note: starbucks balmain does baby-cini for free. me, i had noticed the scrawl on the blackboard that said, “hot white chocolate”, and instantly i had to have some, with raspberry syrup.

i had some, and it was way too sweet, and thick, and white. i mean, of course, but i was surprised. like that time in sainsburys, nellie, when we gazed up in awe at the shelf of brown-bagged gourmet chocolate chip cookies, and picked the one labelled “white chocolate and raspberry” because you said they were amazing, and we took the bag home and broke it open and ate a cookie and thought, hmmm. because it was a regular chocolate chip cookie, and standing flummoxed in the kitchen we could even see through the cellophane window in the bag that they were clearly brown chocolate chips, and how had we not made the connection, standing at the end of that aisle in sainsburys, that the “white chocolate” label did not compute with the brown chocolate within? we did not compute.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 21 June 2006 at 4:02 pm
permalink | filed under around town, chocolate, drink, kid, nellie, shoping

10

“i think you might as well switch to butter,” is one of the last things my mother said to me, before she got on the plane home last month. we were brought up on margarine, but for a few years now she’s been trying to get me onto one or another miracle yellow bread spread product.

about four years ago she announced that my preferred choice of spreadable butter-canola blend should be replaced by this tub of gloopy yellow grease that she had just bought at the supermarket. it was gloopy, i think, because its manufacture did not include the evil, death-causing process of hydrogenation. so it may have prevented your arteries from being clogged up (and in fact i think it may have been one of the cholesterol-reducing spreads), but the gloopiness was like a suspicious slick on your toast, which became a very disagreeable slick on your tongue. i just could not get that gloopy, slicky feel off my tongue, no matter how hard i scraped with my teeth. i can’t remember what it tasted of (gloop?), so the flavour was probably surprisingly un-disagreeable, but i do remember that one of the ingredients in this product was rosemary extract. perhaps it was added to counter the actual taste of the gloop, by neutralising it. my mother dutifully ate this spread on her bread for the rest of her trip, but when she left, it sat quite unloved at the back of the fridge, for months probably, before i stopped feeling bad about throwing it out.

texture is an important factor in butter or margarine or hybrid yellow spread isn’t it? you want it sort of solid, so you can scrape it on your toast, and watch it melt and sink into the surface, so you can see the texture of your bread, rendered all shiny and golden with melted butter. the gloop started off gloopy, and then had the audacity not to melt or sink; it just sat on the surface of the toast, waiting to ambush your hapless tongue. but maybe this was intentional. i read a diet tip once, where the advice was to wait until your toast became cold before you buttered it, so that the butter would not melt and sink, so that you could see how much butter you had put on, and not re-butter an already buttered spot. oh how i laughed, and then put down the magazine to never read again.

in the meantime, my mother had been happily eating her special health-giving margarines until just a few weeks ago when she discovered that her preferred product had changed its formula, and contained trans fats, just like all the other margarines on the market. “aiyah, you know,” she said, “sometimes i think i will just switch to butter. i mean, how much do you eat at one time anyway, and it tastes so nice when they give it to you at a restaurant.”

sometimes my mother astounds me with her clarity.

so last week, at the end of my tub of spreadable butter-canola blend, i bought a block of lightly salted butter at the supermarket. and so clearly, i had to also buy a butter dish. a simple task, no? i searched the kitchen departments of big city department stores, and trawled through the underground homewares emporium. “yes, butter dish!” was what the shop person would say. “right over here… er, over there… er, we seem to be out of stock.”

i went online; ebay had an eclectic selection including a tupperware set where the description of “mission brown” was included as though it were a good thing, a depression era glass specimen weighing two kilos, a crystal heirloom with a reserve price of $98 (no bids yet), and a porcelain one in the shape of a cow. and yet none of these were quite what i was after.

at one online shop, a search for “butter dish” gave me this:



which actually i would not mind having, but being a limoges legle provencal blue butter dish, it costs just under $100, not including postage.

finally i went up the street to the local kitchenware shop, where i had previously seen a glass butter tub with an embossed cow on the lid… but it had been sold. recently, even, because there was still a sad rectangle of empty space where it had previously stood. i thought i should get the one that remained, before it too disappeared: a simple, white china dish, square, with a modest little knob on the lid:



everything the limoges is not… except, um, of course, a butter dish.

as i paid for my new material possession (and this is the sad truth: having run out of things to buy, i create situations which will allow me to buy related accroutement i might otherwise not have to. switching to butter… having a kid… etc… just watch, now that i have a butter dish i’ll have to go out and buy a stick of salty, cultured french butter), it struck me that i had been mistaken. it wasn’t that people didn’t eat butter so there should be plenty of butter dishes in the shops, or even that people didn’t eat butter so there was no demand for butter dishes and no reason to keep them in stock. it was that everyone is eating butter these days, and butter dish supplies cannot keep up. i don’t mean to alarm you, but this winter, we are facing a critical butter dish shortage.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 June 2006 at 2:12 pm
permalink | filed under shoping

7



you think this is crazy? how ’bout if i told you i paid just over $5 for three bananas this morning?

because on sunday afternoon, as we stood just clear of chinatown pedestrian traffic, enjoying a post-yumcha gelato (of course), i grumbled a little about the price of bananas.

the friend up from hobart mentioned that her organic grocer was still selling them for $4.95/kilo, quite a bit below the $12/kilo all around town, even if you did expect that the standard of living in tasmania would be more affordable than in glamorous sydney. the kid and i were sharing a cup of banana and mango gelato, because since the banana supply dried up, maeve has been banana-less. well, maybe just one banana every couple of weeks, as a treat. one $1.48 banana.

but then i got to thinkin’, that that $1.48 was actually less than the $2.48 or so that i’d just handed over for the scoop of banana gelato. what crazy economic theories had i been prey to, depriving the kid of one of her eight favourite fruits? and really, have i not paid like, $4 for a fancy, but tiny, chocolate bar?

so this morning, after the library, we marched into the fruitshop, and plonked the three bananas down on the counter, and there you have it. she was already waving her arms and keening “na-naaaa. NA-NAAAA.” as we walked back in the front door.

but what of this psychedelic purple bread? on the way home on sunday, we stopped for takeaway meats in the belly of world square, and i decided that i would finally buy something at breadtop.

my relationship with breadtop has been somewhat uneasy. of course, i’d been wanting and wanting to go since i saw someone walking about town carrying a filmy bag embellished with the voluptuous chinese calligraphy that said “bun shop”. but were they affiliated with, or “paying tribute to”, the singaporean breadtalk?

[ does a cursory google; no one out there seems to know either ]

aside from the similar, somewhat meaningless asian-english names, the two brands also share the same grey-orange-white aesthetic. they both have a wide variety of meat floss-covered bun products, and green tea-red bean cakes. and as i write this now, and try to specify what my misgivings are, i have nothing beyond: well, they may be a rip-off of breadtalk. and i mean, just look at this:



sigh, beautiful. on previous wistful visits, i always thought i would get some sort of green tea bun — the green tea or taro swiss roll really requires some sort of special occasion — but then on sunday i saw the shiny little loaf on the end of the exotic bread shelf, the last of its kind: purple sticky rice loaf!

you open the bag and inhale: it smells of sweet, yeasty chinese bread. you take a bite: it is soft and sweet and has a creamy, nutty flavour from ground up sticky rice (no whole chewy rice grains in it like passionflower’s sticky rice ice cream). in fact, it would make a terrific ice cream sandwich.

omigod! i have ice cream in the freezer!

posted by ragingyoghurt on 7 June 2006 at 2:08 pm
permalink | filed under around town, kid, shoping, snacks

1

oh this rain it will continue through the morning…

it paused briefly today — blue sky! sunshine!! — to allow us to stroll boldly up the hill splashing in puddles, before laughing in our faces and raining on our heads. still, we made it to bakers delight, as directed by the kid.

“bun shop? ok. bun shop!”

and then the supermarket, where everything was on special, and where maeve sat in the pram, docile, ok, content, gnawing on her bun while i walked the aisles thinking of all the possibilities. at the checkout, an elderly european woman said to her, “oh you are very selective, picking out all the chocolate and raisins.”

but they were actually olives.

i recently learned, via tomatom.com, that raging yoghurt is one of the top 20 food blogs in australia: i scraped in at 19, woop. ed succintly summed up the blog in one word: “cakes”. so i unleash unto you, the ragingyoghurt cupcake tshirt, featuring a drawing you may recall from the other month.



posted by ragingyoghurt on 6 June 2006 at 10:59 pm
permalink | filed under around town, blog, kid
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