Monthly Archives: October, 2007

Primavera at North Sydney

Primavera - North Sydney

North Sydney is a corporate jungle they say. But one in which you are literally spoilt for choice for lunch. If you prefer your turkish bread with a side order of Italian opera (CD, not live!) in a snug little rectangular shaped cafe, Primavera is your kind of place. My friend Lulu and I arrive at 12.45pm in an attempt to beat the 1pm lunch rush and its already a bit tight in the small room with only two tables to spare.

Primavera - North Sydney

The prices in this chic little espresso bar are very reasonable with main lunch meals reaching the heights of $13 for the fish of the day with most items hovering around $10. Breakfast is also served throughout the day which Lulu takes them up on when she sees “Mushrooms on Toast”. Having spied what I thought was a smoked salmon rocket salad I order this-its actually Turkish toast spread with cream cheese under a pile of smoked salmon, rocket, capers and pesto.

Primavera - North Sydney

Our friendly waitress takes our orders and brings us water and 15 minutes later our meals arrive. Mine is a mountain of rocket salad atop 4 large triangles of turkish toast with cream cheese. The rocket is seasoned with drizzles of pesto and blanketed with two enormous slices of smoked salmon on which there are thin slices of spanish onion, capers and ground parmesan. The mushrooms on toast are fat little garlicky monsters with a delicious aroma sitting on top of buttery Turkish toast.

Primavera - North Sydney

My smoked salmon mountain is a little difficult to eat, either one attacks the mountain with a knife and fork or you abandon the cutlery altogether and construct a sandwich using your hands. Either way, its incredibly filling and great value. A bit of aioli on it to add some moisture wouldn’t have gone astray but I’m not really complaining.

Primavera - North Sydney

The clock strikes 2pm and by now all of the office mice have disappeared.

Primavera - North Sydney

Primavera Espresso Bar

Shop 3, Little Spring St
North Sydney NSW 2060
Phone (02) 9955 2492
Monday- Friday from 7am
Saturday 8.30am-2.30pm
Closed on Sundays and Public Holidays

Primavera - North Sydney

Bluth’s Frozen bananas

Bluth’s Frozen bananas

OK I know, there seems to be a banana theme running through my blog of late. In something of a war-time like reaction, when I saw bananas at 99c a kilo I overbought tremendously purchasing 4kgs. Having made several banana smoothies and Elvis Presley Peanut Butter and banana sandwiches (there are only so many of these that my husband will eat), I found myself with still plenty left so aside from banana bread and cupcakes, I needed to branch out and find some more banana recipes.

I stuck a whole lot of them in the freezer to use in later baking ventures but as its a hot day today in Sydney I kept thinking of one of my favourite, and now defunct shows, Arrested Development where the Bluth family had a frozen banana stand. I do recall frozen bananas on a stick and a lot of melted chocolate and nuts involved. So with no further ado, I give you a very simple Frozen Banana recipe, apparently given in George Michael’s biography (which has since disappeared from the Fox website).

I promise you, although these aren’t the most photogenic of treats, verging on downright ugly, it will be loved even by the fruit phobic, especially fans of Magnum Almond ice creams!

Bluth’s Frozen bananas

Bluth’s Frozen Bananas

1. Peel bananas, cut in half, put a chopstick or popsicle stick through the banana, and freeze them.

2. The next day, or at least a few hours later, melt some chocolate in a bowl (I used a 50/50 mix of Lindt milk and dark chocolate), and cut up some nuts (I used almonds).

3. Take frozen banana out and smear melted chocolate on the banana with a knife (dipping the banana in the bowl of chocolate, whilst its fun and makes you feel like a pro, will cause the rest of the chocolate in the bowl to harden so avoid doing this) and sprinkle nuts on it (do this quickly as the chocolate will harden very quickly).

4. Wait just a minute or two for the chocolate to firm up again and enjoy.

Bluth’s Frozen bananas stand

P.S. For fans of the show, according to the Bluth sign, frozen bananas can be purchased in three sizes: small ($1.65), medium ($1.85), or large ($2.50) and the Flavors available were: “Original Frozen Banana,” “On the Go-go Banana,” “Double-dipped,” “Giddy-girly,” “George Daddy,” and “Simple Simon.”

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-queue outside

In the middle of nowhere really, sits a Japanese Ramen restaurant that if you happen to be driving past during lunchtime or dinnertime, you may find a queue of young Japanese people outside waiting for a table. We’d often wonder what was with this place as we drove past perplexed at the eager hordes standing outside. Apparently the only place in Sydney that serves real, Tokyo style ramen, Ryo’s noodles marches to the beat of its own taiko drummer. The tables are shared, you help yourself to water, they don’t take bookings, its cash only, there’s no takeaway menu to be had, yet it still works beautifully.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-interior

Tonight is our second visit and I have only one thing on my mind: Miso Bolognaise which I first read about on Grab Your Fork. It was the dish I ordered on my last visit and hoggingly kept to myself abandoning all pretense of sharing and breaking the sacred plate swapping routine with my husband. He wasn’t bothered, he was in love with the Ramen with prawn balls in a tangy pork stock soup. On the last visit, we retired to our separate corners of the table huddled protectively over our respective plate and devoured them like we hadn’t eaten in days.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Wall of fame

However tonight, we’re on better behaviour as we have guests, Miss America and Queen Viv. Its 7.45pm and already there’s a small queue outside. As they do not take bookings, we have no choice but to join them and the owner lets us know that we may have a 30 minute wait. Luckily the food gods are looking favourably upon us and they seat our table of 4 within 5 minutes. Seated at the table towards the back we have a good view of the restaurant and when I look to my left I see some autographs from various Japanese sporting celebrities (I had to ask, I would be the last to know sporting celebrities, Japanese or not) but also a familiar looking signature, that of Iron Chef Hiroyuki Sakai who has a lovely abstract signature/drawing and who visited Ryo’s on the 15th of April 2005. We discuss this with the owner who says that he often gets Chinese politicians and celebrities but he largely has no idea who they are, preferring the sportspeople (his pride and joy being the signature of a Japanese kickboxer).

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Miso Bolognaise

We ask him what’s good, and he suggests combining items number 2 (Ramen Noodles in a Soy Sauce Pork Soup $10) and 3 (Ramen Noodles in a Spicy hot Pork Soup $10) in a special order. Sounds good to me. We also order Tokyo style ramen ($9.50), Miso Bolognaise ($11), spicy deep fried chicken wings (3 for $4), rice ball with roast pork ($3.50, only 10 of these are made per day!) and, with Queen Viv’s urging of “Craaaaaab!”, the soft shell crab ($5).

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-combination 2 & 3 ramen

A scant 5 minutes later and our large steaming bowls of noodles with stiff nori sheet sails arrive to a grateful and hungry mob. We are sharing tonight and have two bowls of the Combination 2&3 ramen and we dig into the noodles, depositing long noodles into our smaller bowls with spoonfuls of the scarlet tinged soup. The thin slices of BBQ Pork floating on top are soft and delicious with a ring of fat around one edge. The soup is fantastic, earthy and rich, full of the marrow from pork bones and slightly spicy. The noodles as always, are toothsome perfection, with the absolute correct texture.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Tokyo Ramen $9.50

The Tokyo Ramen has slices of BBQ pork on top too but the stock is a soy sauce based one and its lighter and less hearty but still flavoursome. The soy sauce boiled eggs are appropriated by an appreciated Miss America and my husband who adore them. I’m too busy with my favourite dish, the Miso Bolognaise.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Miso Bolognaise

I’ve never seen this dish at any other places and it deserves a special trip just to have this. Even if you’re not a huge fan of miso soup like me, this is gorgeously rich, the miso giving it the sauce a smoky mystery and not that overpowering saltiness that miso soup verges into. Miss America loves it but feels that she couldn’t eat a lot of it as its so rich. I disagree knowing full well that I ate a whole bowl of it to myself.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Soft Shell Crab $5

Our smaller dishes arrive as we’re slurping our noodles appreciatively. The soft shell crab is a whole small soft shell crab beautifully deep fried to a crisp. As I find with all crabs, it looks slightly peeved at us and I wait until Queen Viv pulls it apart before eating it.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-Spicy deep fried chicken wings ($4)

The spicy chicken wings are good and there’s a resounding earth shattering crunch as we bite into them and a slightly spiciness. However the rest of the table seems more absorbed in the noodles to pay any attention to these.

Roast pork rice Ball

The rice ball filled with Roast pork is still one of my favourites. Nothing flash or showy, its comforting snack food with deliciously roasted pork shards and sesame seeds sctattered throughout, not just in the centre. Its hard to portion up into 4 so everyone just helps themselves to a little bit in favour of the ramen so I take the rest of this delicious rice triangle.

Leaning back, patting our stomachs contentedly we marvel that for once, we haven’t over-ordered. Then spying the 6 people waiting inside and 5 outside, we make a quick exit, stage left.

Ryo’s Noodles Crows Nest-menu

Ryo’s Noodles

125 Falcon St
Crows Nest 2065 NSW
Phone: +61 (02) 9955 0225
Thu-Tue noon-2.30pm, 5pm-9.30pm
Cash only
No Bookings

Nigella Lawson - Quadruple (or Quintuple!) Chocolate Cake

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake

Now I know that double cream and double cheese is decadent, I’ve even had triple cream and that was heavenly debauchery. The mere thought of a Quadruple Chocolate Loaf Cake seems almost wickedly lustful and wanton! I’m almost rendered speechless except to say YES YES YES!!! Let me lock my door just in case, before I proceed…

I’ve made cakes with syrup before (eg the South African Malva pudding by Art Smith on Oprah) and they are without exception, wonderfully moist. And the poking of the cake prior to dousing with syrup can only be therapeutic and if that doesn’t help with stress, the resultant cake should do the trick.

I should confess right now that I was in a rush and accidentally added the 25 grams of dark chocolate into the syrup itself instead of reserving it for the chocolate flake garnish. So instead of making a Quadruple chocolate cake, I inadvertently made a Quintuple Chocolate Cake!

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake

Needless to say, this is an extremely rich cake. A thin slice would be enough for any hardcore chocoholic. The cake itself is wonderfully moist and delicate and keeps for several days without drying out. I’d actually suggest making the chips even smaller as the chocolate sank to the bottom of the cake making the bottom third a very rich and indulgent almost solid chocolate layer. Unless of course you like living life on the edge…

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake ingredients

Nigella’s Quadruple Chocolate Loaf Cake from Feast

  • 200g plain flour
  • 1/2 tsp bicarb of soda
  • 50g cocoa
  • 275g caster sugar
  • 175g butter
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 80ml sour cream
  • 125ml boiling water
  • 175g chocolate chips (I used 100grams of Lindt 85% cocoa and 75grams of Lindt milk couverture)

For the syrup:

  • 1 tsp cocoa
  • 125ml water
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 25g dark chocolate (I used Lindt 70% cocoa)

Preheat the oven to 170C. Grease and line a loaf tin (21 x 11cm and 7.5cm deep). Put the flour, bicarb, cocoa, sugar, butter, eggs, vanilla and sour cream into a food processor, and blitz until it’s a smooth, satiny brown batter. Process again while pouring the boiling water slowly into the mixture. Turn off the processor, and stir in the chocolate chips.

(If you’re not using a food process, cream the butter and sugar, then beat in the eggs, followed by the dry ingredients, then the sour cream and vanilla, then beat in the water.)

Pour the fairly runny batter into the loaf tin, and bake for an hour. When ready, the loaf will be risen and split down the middle, and a skewer should come out fairly clean.

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake out of oven, not yet syruped

Just before the cake comes out of the oven, put the syrup ingredients of cocoa, water and sugar into a small saucepan, and boil for five minutes. What you want is a reduced liquid, a syrup.

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake with syrup

When you’ve taken the cake out of the oven, pierce all over with a skewer, and pour the syrup as evenly as possible over the cake. Let the cake become completely cold, then slip it out of its tin, removing the paper, and place it on your serving plate. Get your chocolate, and slice thin slivers off the block with a heavy knife, until you’ve got enough to cover the top of the cake. If required, spoon a little extra syrup so that the chocolate will stick to the surface.

From Feast by Nigella Lawson

P.S. If you click on the photo below, you’ll see the rich dark chocolate bottom layer. That’s not syrup, that’s delicious chocolate!

Quadruple…I mean Quintuple chocolate cake sliced

SMH Good Food and Wine Show Sydney 2007

Pink Salt cupcakes
Pink Salt’s cupcakes 2 coupons/$5 each

There’s one thing I learnt rather rapidly when we sauntered up to Hyde Park at 12.55pm only to be greeted with half of Sydney - that we should’ve arrived about 55 minutes earlier. Hyde Park is teeming with people walking in every direction and we are trying needle-in-a-haystack fashion to locate two other people who have arrived earlier. After a few frantic phone calls we locate everyone and its clear what our directive is: to purchase coupons, find food, find it fast before it runs out by somehow fighting our way through the crowds. We take a deep breath and plunge into the abyss of bodies…

Crowds

A quick physical glance of all of the stalls is completely impractical, if only moving about were that easy. So we settle with examining our map and we see that a lot of the hatted restaurants are clustered together in the northern end so we make haste to get there. There’s Quay, Guillame, Icebergs, Bather’s Pavillion, Coast, Salon Blanc and Boathouse on Blackwattle Bay. Unfortunately a lot have sold out and we grab what we can: a delectable looking strawberry tart from Quay with strawberry sabayon.

Marque toasted marshmallow
Marque’s freshly made marshmallows (toasted to order) with basil leaf, strawberry and olive 3 coupons/$7.50

One thing we learn and that’s if you see something yummy, get in the queue, if you come back 10 minutes later, they may have sold out. Sadly we learn this the hard way with the Bourke Street Bakery. A girl whizzes past me with a fabulous looking plate of savoury appetisers but she’s gone before I have the chance to ask her where its from. I also see a girl wrestling with an enormous pork chop on her fork-I learn later that its from the Womens Weekly stand which was served with apples.

Womens Weekly Pork and Apples
Womens Weekly stall-cooking apples and onions

Queues at the other stalls are impossibly long or sold out so we join what is a relatively small queue for Brasserie Bread’s Merguez sausage. The line moves quickly and we are thankful, why its 13.30pm and we need to spend our coupons before the clock strikes 2pm and we turn into pumpkins!

The Tea Room strawberry tart
The Tea Room’s strawberry mascarpone tart

I spy a delightful dainty mini sweet and cake plate and ask the older country gentleman holding it where he got it from. He grins as he knows he has the prize and tells me its from The Tea Room stall where I head to immediately. It’s one of the best buys of the day with 6 delicate and varietal petit fours and a half sandwich. Its a plate that gets me stopped by at least 6 people and I hear many whispers of “Oooh that must be the tea room plate” as I walk past.

The Tea Room-mini avocado filo tarts
The Tea Room’s Tomato Salsa Filo

Along this section I spy a sign that has me joining or trying to join the end of the queue for Becasse-trying to join as the end of the queue seems to shift by the minute and those of us who thought that we were progressing in it find that we aren’t actually part of the queue anymore! Luckily the crowds today are friendly and despite the ordered chaos there’s no-one pushy at all, most are friendly and eager to chat in and out of queues. Its worth it in the end as the smoked ocean trout in citrus tea vinaigrette looks bright and flavoursome. The dressing is dripping through the cardboard though and walking and dripping is not a good look.

Art Gallery Rabbit rillette
Art Gallery restaurant’s Rabbit Rillette, watercress and sour cherry compote 4 coupons/$10

Its 1.50pm and we have 3 coupons left over so my husband, spying a coconut panacotta with mixed berries, spends it quickly at the Verandah stand. We walk a bit further and I spy Kables luscious looking offering: Soft vanilla panacotta, caramelised banana and coffee crisp. The woman asks me if I’d like some and I say mournfully “I’ve run of coupons” and she smiles sympathetically but her lovely co-worker overhears, gives me a large smile and offers me up a full sized plate of the panacotta for free! If I wasn’t already happy at my delicious haul, I just became 200% happier. What a serendipitously lovely surprise!

Salon Blanc Oysters
Salon Blanc’s oysters 4 coupons/$10

With our bounty in hand, we join everyone else at a table where we share our haul. Unfortunately there wasn’t much in the way of vegetarian food (some fresh spring rolls were all that we on offer as the Indian food had sold out) so the vegetarians go a little hungry.

Brasserie Bread Merguez sausage
Brasserie Bread’s Organic Merguez sausage with North African tomato sauce and Tahini 3 coupons/$7.50

I bite into the Brasserie Bread with Organic Merguez sausage with North African tomato sauce and Tahini and the bread is a little tough and chewy. But to be fair, we aren’t exactly eating it soon after it was made, its a good 40 minutes since we bought it. The sausage inside it is a little unremarkable, almost like a vegetarian sausage. Its filling but its not particularly special but for 3 coupons, we aren’t really complaining.

Flying Fish prawns
Flying Fish’s Skewered prawns , 3 skewers for 4 coupons/$10

We sample D’s prawns from Flying fish next and we regret not joining this queue as it was lengthy. They’re smothered with a spicy, rich curry sauce and delicious with a good number of prawns.

Becasse Salmon
Becasse’s ocean trout in citrus tea vinaigrette with radish salad 4 coupons/$10

Next is Becasse’s ocean trout in citrus tea vinaigrette with radish salad- its the size of Tetsuya’s Petuna Ocean Trout dish at his restaurant and mouthwateringly delicious. Nothing fancy needs to be done to this perfect piece of fish, just a light slightly sweet vinaigrette, spanish onion and radish and you have a dish fit for a king. Its definitely worth the 4 coupons and leaves me wanting for more.

The Tea Room
The Tea Room’s sampler plate 3 coupons/$7.50 (some hiding under the sandwich)

Our Tea Room plate is next and there are three savoury items amongst the sweet, a finger sandwich which is a salmon, cucumber, mayo and dill on pleasingly pillow soft wholemeal bread. There’s also a spinach and feta roll which is a pouf of puff pastry and a small amount of filling and a lot of air. The filo tart with tomato salsa and avocado cream is a little light on the filling and biting into it, it seems to be a lot of cripsy filo and not quite a lot of avocado or tomato.

The Tea Room
The Tea Room’s sampler plate 3 coupons/$7.50

The sweets are attacked next in a desperate rush for sugar, the Chocolate N’gress is soft, chocolately and fresh. The orange and almond cake is good, not quite as moist as I would’ve liked and there isn’t as much orange rind as I like but its not bad. The passionfruit sable is tangy and tart with the biscuit crumbly and buttery. The Strawberry mascarpone tart is my favourite of the lot, the buttery tart shell collapsing in the mouth with the sweet slightly tart strawberries and a voluptuous heave of mascarpone.

Quay Strawberry tart with sabayon

Continuing on the strawberry theme, I try Quay’s strawberry tart with sabayon. By now the sabayon has turned into a puddled mess but the eating is not affected. Its sweet and luscious strawberries a perfect foil for the crispy thin but sturdy pastry. The sabayon gives it that subtle creaminess that strawberries lend themselves so perfectly to.

Verandah Coconut Panacotta w mixed berries
Verandah’s coconut pannacotta with mixed berries 3 coupons/$7.50

Verandah’s coconut panacotta is next, its heavy in coconut cream and deliciously moreish. Even though you know how high in fat it is, one can’t help eating more and more. Unfortunately the berries accompanying it are less than stellar with the blueberries quite inedible with a solid meaty texture…odd! I make it a point of eating berries wherever I can after hearing about the health benefits but not even the promise of glowing Perricone skin can make me eat these.

Kable’s vanilla panacotta w caramelised banana
Kable’s soft vanilla pannacotta with caramelised banana and coffee crisp 3 coupons/$10

Last but not least is Kable’s soft vanilla panacotta with caramelised banana and coffee crisp. I have very fond memories of dining at Kables many moons ago and the panacotta is a mound of rich, gooey, vanilla bean specked goodness. The bananas have a slightly floury taste to them and I find the panacotta much more interesting-delicious.

Ginormous bubble

We’re happy, we’ve spent our coupons wisely, received a freebie and although we’re not waistband stretching full, its lovely to sit in the sunny park amongst fellow foodies and drag queens and listen to the live music and watch the bubble blower blow gigantic bubbles.

SMH Good Food and Wine Show Sydney

Cost: Food and drink vouchers $2.50-$10, free entry.
Location:
Hyde Park North, Sydney
Event dates:
Saturday, 27 October

Food stalls 12-2pm, entertainment until 5pm

Finished!

Sign

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

Don’t get me wrong, I love the restaurant Shanghai Night, but my husband loves it even more than me and possibly more than most of their customers. Every time I suggest going to a new restaurant, he always pipes up with “What about Shanghai Night?” with a plaintive puppy dog eyed look. He even asked to be taken here for his birthday in favour of other, more “special occasion” restaurants.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

What is quite so loveable about this decor challenged, brightly lit busy shanghai eatery? The Dumplings of course! Luckily our friends Miss America & Queen Viv are also dumpling lovers. We are so enamoured of these little beasties that we order 4 different lots (that’s an official count of 44 dumplings in total!) plus other dishes.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

There’s a man in the left back corner of the restaurant that sits in a panelled section laboriously making the dumplings, if you watch him, he takes his time crafting each one and there is no rushing.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

The specials are printed in English and Chinese (sometimes only Chinese) on bright scarlet cardboard on each wall and a look at the well-worn laminated 10 page menu (see full menu at end of story) in front of us shows us a dizzying array of tempting dishes. There are a number of choices for vegetarians too.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

Shanghai dumplings are different from the Cantonese Yum Cha variety of dumplings. There is no smooth semi transcluent delicate skin on these. These are sturdier more robust dumplings made for the cold northern temperature. The stars of the show and the first to arrive are definitely the Mini Pork Buns or Xiǎolóngbāo ($5.80 for 8 dumplings). They’re not exactly bun like, forget visions of Char Sieu bows. They’re relatively thin skinned dumplings filled with soup and minced pork and when you bite into them, you get a squirt of hot gingery pork soup. Absolute heaven (or hell if you bite into one without waiting and scald your mouth). If you have a look at the picture you can see the sides and bottoms of the skins are slightly rose tinted and full of the deliciously gingery pork soup waiting to burst out.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

A huge plate of 18 steamed pork and mushroom dumplings arrives ($6.60). This dish would have to define “value for money”. The skin is thick, floury and firm and the pork & mushroom filling is comfortingly good and flavoursome. The mushroom flavour is subtle but if you try the other 3 flavours (pork & coriander, pork & aniseed or pork & garlic chive) the flavour is distinct. Nothing fancy here, just very tasty fill-er-up food and yes you read correctly, you get 18 of these for $6.60!

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

The pan fried pork buns with shallots ($7.80 for 10 dumplings) arrive and they’re wonderfully crispy on the bottom and cushioney soft and chewy on the top. The filling is the same as the steamed pork and mushroom dumplings. The texture is very moresish and I find myself eating more of these than the others dipping the crispy bottoms into the oyster sauce from the chinese broccoli.

Shanghai Night at Ashfield

The last dumplings are the Shanghai Shao Mai sticky rice dumplings ($6 for 8 dumplings). I am a big sticky rice fan and I also love chinese pork sausage (Lup Cheong: chopped pork, pork fat, salt, honey or sugar, soy sauce and Chinese five-spice powder) and these dumplings are aromatic and flavoursome with the lup cheong, shiitake mushroom and smoky sesame oil with absolutely perfectly cooked sticky rice. Read More

Green tea butterfly cupcakes w mascarpone frosting

Green tea butterfly cupcakes w mascarpone frosting

I admit to a minor unhealthy obsession with butterflies, they popped up on our wedding invitations and often pop up on my clothes (well the fabric print anyway). When I found a butterfly cutter in Plenty at Bondi Junction ($2.95) I grabbed it straight away. I had been looking on ebay US for some butterfly cutters but didn’t realise that Bondi Junction had what I needed.

These were from the green tea cupcakes that I made for my husband’s birthday. I simply added some green tea powder which I bought in Tokyo (this can be found in Japanese/Asian grocery stores here) to a regular vanilla buttercake recipe.

I made these for a group of friends from High School who are all now pregnant/with babies. To my horror, the morning of the afternoon tea, I googled green tea and saw that pregnant women aren’t supposed to have a lot of green tea. I brought them not wanting to arrive empty handed and the mums to be weren’t too worried as we did the calculations and figured that there was less green tea per cupcake than in a cup of green tea!

Green tea butterfly cupcakes w mascarpone frosting

Green tea cupcakes with mascarpone frosting

Green tea Buttercake

  • 90g butter softened
  • 1/2 t vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup (110g) caster sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup (150g) Self Raising flour
  • 1/2 to 1 tablespoon green tea powder (depending on how strong you like it, taste)
  • 2 tbs milk

1. Preheat oven to moderate 180degrees/160 fan forced. Line 6 hole texas or 12 hole standard muffin pan with paper cases

2. beat butter, extract, sugar, eggs, flour and milk in small bowl with electric mixer on low until ingredients are just combined. Increase speed to medium, beat until mixture has changed to a paler colour.

3. Divide mixture among cases, smooth surface

4. Bake large cakes about 25 minutes, small cakes about 20 minutes. Turn cakes onto wire rack to cool.

Mascarpone frosting

  • 60g butter softened
  • 160g mascarpone
  • 3 cups (480g) icing sugar

Beat butter and mascarpone in small bowl with electric mixer until light and fluffy, gradually beat in sifted icing sugar.

Decorate with fondant butterflies.

Green tea butterfly cupcakes w mascarpone frosting

Maya Indian Sweets, Cleveland St Redfern

I have a riddle for you: what do you do if you have a crowd of vegans/vegetarians some of whom eat like a horse, you’re in the Eastern Suburbs/Inner City of Sydney, and they want to be fed for under $15?

Answer: Take them to Maya!

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Everything on Maya Indian Sweets menu is vegetarian and a lot of it, except items with dairy, are vegan so vegetarians and vegans are really spoilt for choice here. Despite its name, Maya Sweets doesn’t just sell sweets, it also sells a range of hot dishes with dosais, thali, uttapams and tasting platters. Indeed my favourite item there and our first order for the night is the Thali “Punjabi” tasting plate, an enormous stainless steel rimmed plate with a selection of 4 curries, raita, pickles, rice, 2 roti breads and a dessert ($13.90). There are also two other Thali tasting plates to choose from. Tonight we’re in the mood for something different so its the mixed sizzler plate with a Til ka kebab, Paneer tikka, a samosa and a naan with mint yogurt ($12.90).

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

After ordering at the counter we help ourselves to water and cutlery and sit down at our table with our order number displayed. 10 minutes later our sizzling and we do mean sizzling Mixed Sizzler Plate arrives ($12.90). Its steaming hot and features large cubes of paneer (firm cottage cheese, similar in texture to tofu) in a Tikka marinade, Til ka kebab which is a sesame seed coated kebab, a medium sized potato and pea samosa on a bed of shredded red and green cabbage and onion. As for the naan with mint chutney, we only realise after we left that they didn’t include the naan but we did get a rather large plate with a lonely small bowl of mint yogurt, perhaps where the naan should have been…

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

My favourite from this plate was undoubtedly the Paneer Tikka smothered in the mint yogurt which is almost garlicky in taste. It is wonderfully firm and fragrant with spices and charr-ness from the plate, like Chicken Tikka for vegetarians. The Til ka Kebab is interesting, its flavour dominated by the sesame seeds on the outside with some fennel inside, not quite to my taste though. The Samosa is a major disappointment, having had Maya’s samosa’s before they were good but this doesn’t taste quite right, there’s a spice or flavour in there that gives it an odd, unpleasant aroma. No matter, I have plenty of paneer tikka to keep me company.

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Our Punjabi Thali tasting plate ($13.90) arrives and my hungry husband needs no encouragement to dig into it. There are four curries housed in 8cm diameter stainless steel bowls: Palak Paneer (cheese and spinach); lentil & red kidney bean; pea & mixed vegetable with ginger and okra. Alongside these are mint yogurt, dessert, onion and mint, pickles, 2 roti, 1 pappadum and a mound of rice in the centre. Now we come to the difficult bit, choosing the best curry.

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

The okra is soft, sweetish and very flavoursome, the spices and flavourings are actually reminiscent of cantonese cuisine of all things-the first thing I think of is chinese food.

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

The pea and mixed vegetable is heady with ginger and its subtly fiery, its not until you help yourself to spoon after delicious spoon that you realise that its the spiciest of the lot and you reach for something to dampen the chili.

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

The Palak Paneer, I know by name as its my favourite Indian curry, is good, with chunks of spongy paneer among creamy blended spinach-very mild and creamy.

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The lentil and red kidney bean, although not the most enticing sounding is most certainly enticingly flavoured, its rich, deep, complex flavours instantly beckon you to eat more and more my husband did of this one with much finger pointing and nodding of the head.

The rotis are not like the flaky malaysian roti, more like chapati and are particularly good when spread with the mint yogurt and lentil and red kidney bean curry.

Our dessert today is Carrot Halwa, one that my husband readily devours. Its not my favourite dessert as I don’t particularly like carrots and was hoping for Gulab Jamen which we’ve had as a dessert before. It seems a moot point though as my stomach is full to the brim.

A display of colourful Indian sweets beckons to us but clutching our satisfyingly full stomachs we manage to resist, just once!

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Maya Indian Sweets

468-472 Cleveland St
Redfern 2016 NSW
Phone: (02) 9699 8663
Open 7 days a week 10.30am-10.30pm
Cash Only

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Maya Indian Sweets - Cleveland St Redfern

Char Siu Barbecued Pork

Char Sieu Barbecued Pork

One of the main things standing between me and vegetarianism or certain religions is Pork. You see I adore BBQ pork ribs, char siu and bacon. For that reason alone, I am unable to fully commit myself to being a vegetarian preferring the dabble in it 4 nights a week or so.

I make this once a month and while the marinating process is boring for the time challenged, it produces such a lovely taste at the end that I’ve never skipped or shortened it. I would never suggest making Char Siu sauce from scratch, mainly because the bottle stuff is so good, you really don’t want to mess with perfection. I use Pork Forequarter chops as they are juicy with a nice amount of fat on them but not too much. You could certainly use the extra trim pork fillets although it won’t be as juicy as the juice comes from the fattiness of the cut.

Char Siu Barbecued Pork

Char Siu Barbecued Pork

Ingredients:

  • 1 kg of Pork Forequarter chops
  • 4 tablespoons of Lee Kum Kee Char Siu sauce
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 2 teaspoons white sugar
  • 3-4 garlic cloves chopped
  • 4 tablespoons honey

Char Sieu Barbecued Pork

In a ziplock or plastic bag, add in all of the above ingredients except for the honey and smoosh around the bag so that the pork chops are coated with the ingredients (I sometimes find it easy just to layer one chop, cover it with the sauce & seasonings and then put another on top and sauce that and keep layering). Marinate overnight.

Char Siu Barbecued Pork

About an hour before you want to start cooking, take it out of the fridge to come to room temperature. Preheat oven to 180C degrees. Place pork on rack above a tray of hot water (I use a non stick cake cooling tray). The tray of water keeps the pork moist. Cook on one side for 15 mins and then turn over and cook other side for 15 mins.

Then, increase heat to 200c. Heat honey slightly in a bowl in the microwave so that it becomes more runny and using a silicon pastry brush and covering your hand with an oven glove, baste one side of the pork and cook for 5 minutes, then turn over baste other side with honey and cook for 5 minutes.

It should be sticky and sweet and very hot so using tongs and a very sharp knife, slice thinly watching for the bone.

Serve with steamed jasmine rice and steamed broccoli

Char Siu Barbecued Pork

Manly Village Public School Markets

Manly Village Public School Markets

On a Saturday afternoon there are few other places I’d rather be than browsing through a market near Manly beach. I’d previously been to Manly’s touristy Art and Craft market just off the Corso and was not particularly impressed by the goods on offer but when my mother in law told me that the real Manly Village Public School markets are much better and quite like Kirribilli its immediately put on the calendar. I asked her about the food but as someone who is rather disinterested in food, she can’t tell me much about the selection on offer.

Sprawled across Manly Public School’s grounds, the markets are deceptively large. It consists mostly of stalls with second hand goodies, some new items, children’s clothes, furniture and assorted bric a brac. The prices are incredibly cheap for the most part. In fact I am five minutes too late to snap up a beautiful wooden antique dressing table and stool for a princely sum of $50 much to my chagrin!

Manly Village Public School Markets

But I move onto the important part: the food. The food section is in a little corner of the market and comprises of three stalls, a well packed Thai stall with long queues and eager patrons waiting to purchase noodles, satay and curry puffs. There is also a cake, ice cream and coffee stall called “Piccolo”.

Manly Village Public School Markets

Next to that is what I found was to be serendipitous surprise, a Hungarian stall featuring an item called Lángos. At first, it doesn’t look that interesting, just like deep fried bread but after trying the samples of the sugar dusted Lángos and the garlic Lángos at the front, all plans of eating from the other stalls are abandoned. They’re heavenly and choosing one is quite the dilemma.

Manly Village Public School Markets

The stall keepers are very friendly and charming and patient when it comes to my never-ending decision making. They take our order of one savoury Lángos with the works (garlic, cheese, sour cream and sauce of choice), $5 for a large, and a small cinnamon sugar small one for $3.50. There’s also homemade bitter lemonade for $1.50 a cup or $1 for a refill and homemade Panacotta and Tiramisu in a small fridge for $2.50-$3 a cup. Alas they’ve run out of cups but I would’ve tried the bitter Hungarian lemonade.

Manly Village Public School Markets

They’re cooked to order which is how deep fried food really should be. A couple of minutes later our Lángos artist is grating cheese and drizzling sour cream on ours and we’re very glad to see that they’re generous with the toppings. We ask for Sweet chili on one half so we can see how it would taste with and without it. Its hot and fresh and we’re off to find somewhere to sit and have lunch.

Manly Village Public School Markets

We sit down with our piping hot and crispy handled parcels and tear apart the soft garlic scented pastry. Unlike the chinese deep fried bread that I’ve had, the Lángos is incredibly crisp and light and in some sort of cooking miracle, there is no greasy taste whatsoever.

Manly Village Public School Markets

Its absolutely delicious, the pastry delightfully crispy and feather light and when the grated cheese, garlic, sour cream and sweet chili combines with the light crispy pastry it gives it that indulgently creamy collapsing sensation when you bite into it. My husband, not a fan of deep fried foods is instantly smitten. We don’t talk while eating it except moans of “Mmmm good, soo good”. Which half was better? The one with sweet chili or the one without? I couldn’t decide, in fact, the only thing we had decided was that we’re coming back next month to get the exact same half/half Lángos.

Manly Village Public School Markets

Next after that lost 2 minutes we try the cinnamon sugar one. Its good but the cinnamon sugar mix is a little too heavy on the cinnamon and not very sweet. I take a few bites and leave the rest for my husband. Perhaps next time we’ll try the icing sugar one which was in the sample bowl which was better.

Manly Village Public School Markets

A few purchases here and there at other vintage stalls and we’re happy little campers, full of gloriously good pastry and cheap bargains.

Manly Village Public School Markets

Lángos prices:
Sweet Lángos (cinammon sugar, honey or icing sugar) small $3.50/Large $4.50
Plain Garlic Lángos Small $3/Large $4
Lángos with the works (cheese, sour cream and sauce) $4 small/$5 large

Manly Village Public School markets

Cnr Darley Rd & Wentworth Street, Manly
Third Saturday of each month
Ph +61 (02) 9949 2351

Manly Village Public School Markets

Manly Village Public School Markets

Manly Village Public School Markets