Monthly Archives: February, 2008

Nigella Lawson - Bagels from How to be a Domestic Goddess

There’s something conquering about making your own bread. For me at least, I never made bread much fearing using yeast like an OCD person fears breaking routine. Of course it helps enormously when you have a mixer with a dough hook attachment that does all of the work for you. Now I can’t stop baking things especially breads. We have so many things spilling out of our fridge, packed away in the freezer, given away to family and friends that its becoming a worrisome habit.

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess

Today is Tropfest though and I need a snack that will be filling enough to be dinner but transportable too. If there is a criticism of bagels, its that for me, they’re almost too filling for a snack or lunch but perfect as dinner fodder. And of course I have plenty of cream cheese and smoked salmon on standby.

I made three different kinds of bagels: onion, poppyseed and sesame seed which simply involved dividing the dough into three. For the onion, I finely chopped up onion and left it to prove in the final stage. For the poppyseed and sesame seed bagels all that was required was a quick sprinkle before popping them into the oven.

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess

I did find that fastening the join in the circle was a bit troublesome, after boiling them, the join would undo. But whilst affected this aesthetically it didn’t affect it functionally, as the bagel swelled and was able to contain the smoked salmon and cream cheese filling perfectly. Boxing these smoked salmon and cream cheese bagels up I felt something like a proud Jewish mother making bagels for her brood. Oy vey!

Bagels from How to be a Domestic Goddess

  • 1 kg of white flour, plus more as necessary for kneading
  • 1 tablespoon of salt
  • 7g of easy yeast or 15g of fresh yeast
  • 2 tablespoons of sugar
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, plus more for greasing
  • 500mL warm water, plus more as needed
  • 2 tablespoon of malt or sugar, for poaching the bagels
  • 2-3 baking sheets, oiled or greased
  • Sesame seeds, poppyseeds or finely diced onion optional

1. Combine the flour, salt and yeast together in a large bowl, add the sugar and the oil to the water. Make a well in the dry ingredients and add the liquid, mixing to a dough with a spatula or wooden spoon.

2. Knead the dough either by hand or with dough hook, trying to add more flour if you can, dough is better drier than wetter, the dough will be stiff and hard work, even with the dough hook it takes 10 minutes.

3. Form the dough into a ball and put it into an oiled bowl, turning once to coat all around, then cover the bowl with clingfilm and leave it to rise for 1 hour. It should be well risen, and when you poke it with your finger , the impression should remain.

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess
Proving (waiting to rise)

4. Punch the dough down and then give a good knead and divide into 3 pieces. Using your hands, roll each piece into a rope then cut each rope into 5 pieces. Roll each piece between the palms of your hands into a ball and then roll into another rope, curling to form ring. Seal the ends by overlapping.

5. Put on a large pan of water to boil, when it boils add the malt or the sugar.

6. Sit the bagels on the baking sheets cover with tea towels and leave for 20 minutes by which times they should be puffy. Preheat oven to 240C.

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess
Bagel poaching

7. When the waters boiling, start poaching, drop a couple of bagels at a time into the boiling water and boil for 1 minute turning them once, use a couple of spatulas for this.

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess
Bagel boiled and then sprinkled with poppyseeds

8. As you poach them put them back onto the oiled baking sheets, well spaced and then bake for 10-15 minutes until they’re shiny and golden brown. Mine were done within 10 minutes so do check after 10 minutes.

Makes 15 Bagels.

From How To Be A Domestic Goddess by Nigella Lawson

Bagels by Nigella Lawson from How to be a Domestic Goddess

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour

Its been literally years since I visited Chinta Ria, at least 5 years to be exact, so when Gina, Teena and I go there for a girl’s weekend lunch we’re all curious to see whether things have changed. Walking through the heavy wooden doors with the sashes of colourful cloth and a large smiling buddha with incense and pineapple offerings for the gods, it appears that little has changed. As its a glorious summer’s day, we are sitting outside amongst the little garden under large umbrellas. As with all girls’ lunches, we take a while to decide what to order as catching up seems more important and the patient waiter comes several times to see whether we’re ready to order.

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour

As its hot I feel like a salad but the menu doesn’t have any salad or cooler offerings. Fair enough, after all its Malaysian hawker food. What the menu does have are funky sounding names such as “Satchmo’s Squid”, “Blakey’s Beef”, “Ikan Melody” and “Sassy’s Duck”. We’re steered towards an entree item that always has us laughing, Parker’s Gems. And I don’t mean to offend, you do see, but Teena’s husband’s last name is Parker and we always have a giggle that we’re consuming his “gems” ;) . Along with these, we order one of the specials: Udang Merah aka Red Prawns ($28) as well as the Fried Kway Teow ($17) and the Ayam Blues ($22.50).

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour Parker’s Gems
Parker’s Gems $8.60

Its not long before our Parker’s Gems (bite sized pieces of minced chicken with potatoes, coriander, silver thread noodles and special spices, lightly battered and then snap fried) arrives. I am not sure if its my dirty mind but I recall these being rounder in shape, more testiclé like, not the square fried objects we have before us. I’m sure that Your Honour, the shape was what originally made us think of “Parker’s Gems” as something a little tawdry. In any case, we try these and are disappointed. Bizarrely, the minced chicken has a distinct fish taste, much like the asian fish paste that you can buy by the tube. Certainly not chicken like and as we’re given 4 of them, the last one is left behind as if it were radioactive.

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour Red Prawns
Udang Merah (Red Prawns) $28

Our mains come out together, the first I try is the Udang Merah aka Red Prawns (fresh prawns sauteed with red spiced sauce with chili, garlic galangal, lemongrass and tomato paste). The prawns are very fresh and butterflied (just the way I like them) and the sauce is fairly interesting although it seems to lack something. Its not bad by any means, but not something we’d be dying to order again.

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour Ayam Blues
Ayam Blues $22.50

The Ayam Blues (light battered chicken fillets wok tossed in a subtle tangy mayonnaise coating infused with lemon juice and tomato paste) is a much more successful offering. The small chicken pieces softly tender and perfectly coated with the slightly sweet mayonnaise sauce. This is a dish to order again and again and again.

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour Fried Kway Teow
Fried Kway Teow noodles $17

Lastly we try the Fried Kway Teow (wok fried rice noodles with fish cake, prawns, eggs and bean shoots, lightly spiced). Its fairly good and they’re generous with the king prawns and it has the requisite “breath of the wok” which is compulsory with good Kway Teow but its a touch underseasoned in parts. The fish cake is perfectly delicious but the noodles lack some flavour.

Temple of Love I’m not quite sure but Temple of Ayam Blues, I’ll say a definite yes to that.

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love

On the Roof Terrace of the Cockle Bay Wharf, next to the Pyrmont Footbridge entrance
201 Sussex Street Sydney
Tel +61 (02) 9264-3211
Fax +61 (02) 9264-1411
Open daily
Lunch: 12noon-2.30pm
Dinner: 6pm-11pm (except Sundays 6pm-10.30pm)
Reservations taken for lunch only
http://www.chintaria.com/

Chinta Ria, Temple of Love restaurant at Darling Harbour

Red Velvet chess cake

Red Velvet chess cake

I have no link to the South of America, however I’ve always felt an affinity for their cakes such as the Hummingbird and Red Velvet. I even loved the Red Velvet cake so much as we had it as our wedding cake. It was a really toilsome task to find as most cake makers in Sydney had never even heard of it and there was only one cakemaker that was prepared to make it for me. She even gave us a sample of it and whilst it was lovely tasting, it wasn’t quite red enough. She asked me how much redder I wanted it almost disbelievingly, until I told her that I wanted blood red. Thankfully we got our luridly lovely red velvet in the end with striking white icing.

Red Velvet chess cake-chess cutters
Patisse chess cutters

I bought the little chess cutters at the Peters of Kensington sale. I was delighted to see them reduced from $14 to $4 and when the cashier rang them up they came to a princely sum of $2. It was surely meant to be. So I set about a task of baking a red velvet cake and measuring the squares for the fondant as precisely as possible. It didn’t turn out as red as I wanted as I used colouring gel for this, perhaps its best to use liquid as I’ve certainly had a redder than red velvet cake before and the liquid versus gel was the only difference. From looking at the raw cake batter, there was certainly enough red in it.

Red Velvet chess cake

Red velvet cake

  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 60ml red food coloring or food colouring gel (I used Wilton’s Red sans flavour)
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 1/2 cups flour-sifted 2-3 times with cocoa below
  • 2 tablespoons cocoa
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 cup buttermilk
  • 1 teaspoon bi carb soda
  • 1 tablespoons vinegar

Method

1. Cream butter; beat in sugar gradually. Add eggs, one at a time; beat well after each addition. Add food colouring

2. Add salt, flour and cocoa and vanilla alternately with buttermilk, beating well after each addition. Sprinkle soda over vinegar and dissolve throughly; pour vinegar over batter. Stir until thoroughly mixed.

Red Velvet chess cake
The vividly hued red cake batter-unfortunately it didn’t stay that red!

3. Bake in a large square cake pan for 45 minutes at 175 degrees Celsius. Cool for 10 mins and then turn out onto cooling tray

Decoration:

  • 1/2 packet Ready made fondant
  • Icing sugar and cocoa
  • Brown colouring gel (or you’d do better to buy chocolate fondant)
  • smooth Jam (not lumpy fruit filled jam)

Halve fondant and add set aside one quarter of the white fondant to colour with brown colouring later. Take white fondant and roll thinly and then measure your tin. If you want to be precise, Chess boards have 64 squares so divide the dimensions into 8 and make ribbons in the correct measurements and from the ribbons, cut squares. I made a 6×6 chess board and only made

Make chess pieces using remaining 1/3 fondant in brown and white. Try and get them as 3-D as possible

Spread jam onto cake surface to adhere fondant and carefully place square and then place chess pieces on top.

Red Velvet chess cake

Green Gourmet Vegetarian Vegan restaurant St Leonards

This is our second “documented” visit to Green Gourmet made in an effort to convert my sister, a dyed in the wool carnivore into something close to a vegetarian, if only for a few hours. But they are dinner hours so these are crucial. Surprisingly she actually suggests it, I think she is almost daring the tofu and gluten to be tasty.

Its quiet as we’re early on a Saturday night, frightfully early really as the staff are eating their dinners. But with my parents there is no such thing as eating too early. My dad eats his lunch at 11am and his dinner at 5pm. So for him we’re right on time and what on earth are you rolling your eyes for?

Green Gourmet eggplant parcels
Eggplant parcel 3 pcs $4.20

We choose a range of dishes, some that we’ve tried before and some that sound intriguing such as the ” Golden slices in plum sauce Tofu pillow stuffed with taro mash deep fried served with pinenuts, bamboo and plum sauce $15.80″ and we leave room for dessert, the Crispy lotus seed crepe with ice cream and the vegan deep fried ice cream, too alluring to pass up this time.

Our entrees arrive first, they’re familiar and well loved sights with the eggplant parcel 3 pcs $4.20 and chicken drumsticks 3 pcs $4.20. The eggplant parcels are crisply fresh and hot on the outside and soft and oozing but stil with a texture as only eggplant can have. We’ve ordered two serves for the five of us and each serve is 3 pcs and its a lucky person (me!) that gets the extra remaining parcel of soft gooeyness.

Green Gourmet chicken drumsticks 3 pcs $4.20
“Chicken” drumsticks 3 pcs $4.20

The chicken drumsticks impress Blythe with their innovation with their leg bones made up of halved paddle pop sticks. Whilst its a different texture to chicken as gluten tends to be more layered it still hits the spot. We’re onto a good thing here Blythe knows.

Green Gourmet Braised fresh river noodle flat rice noodle
Braised fresh river noodle flat rice noodle with soy meat shredded snow pea, carrot and cabbage $12.80

Our mains arrive and the Braised fresh river noodle flat rice noodle with soy meat shredded snow pea, carrot and cabbage $12.80. Its just like an omnivore’s version, tasty and full of mock meat by the way of gluten. Interestingly they don’t use onion or garlic here yet the taste doesn’t appear to suffer greatly at all.

Green Gourmet Peking Not Duck
Peking not duck $11.10 5 pieces

The dish I’ve been looking forward to, as a mad duck lover is the Peking not duck $11.10 5 pieces (usually 4 pieces, we asked for an extra) resembling the Flying Nun’s habit. Whilst its probably impossible to get the “skin” as glossy and lacquered as a real duck, the result is still very good. Its flavoured with the exact same spices and comes wrapped in the same type of pancake with sauce and veges although admittedly I ate it so greedily I can’t be sure that its cucumber and shallot and a quick glance of the picture shows that it might be radish.

Green Gourmet Crispy not chicken with Shangtung sauce
Crispy not chicken with Shangtung sauce $15.80 Crispy fried wheat protein pickled vegetables, pickles, chili, coriander, vinegar and peanuts

We’re on a roll now, the next dish is probably my favourite main here, the Crispy not chicken with Shangtung sauce: Crispy fried wheat protein pickled vegetables, pickles, chili, coriander, vinegar and peanuts $15.80. Now if this is strange so be it, but I hate Shantung chicken, its too vinegary and too much for me but I have to say that I love Green Gourmet’s version of it. Its sweeter and the “chicken” is crispy fried and lacks the pungent vinegar of real Shantung Chicken.

Green Gourmet Fried Rice
Fried rice $8

The fried rice $8 is good, but I am not sure how to elaborate on fried rice except to say that it was pretty tasty and like the “real” stuff

Green Gourmet Golden slices in plum sauce
Golden slices in plum sauce Tofu pillow stuffed with taro mash deep fried served with pinenuts, bamboo and plum sauce $15.80

We’re thoroughly enjoying our dishes and out comes a new one for us, the Golden slices in plum sauce: Tofu pillow stuffed with taro mash deep fried served with pinenuts, bamboo and plum sauce $15.80. Its delectably good, the sweet plum sauce verging on a little too much but never getting to sweet and tangy. The crispy fried tofu is soft inside and juicy with sauce and the table is divided on which is the favourite, this dish or the Crispy not chicken with Shangtung sauce.

Green Gourmet black sticky rice and coconut in pandan leaf
Black sticky rice and coconut in pandan leaf $5.50

Thankfully, for once, we’ve left room for dessert. Our first choice of black sticky rice and coconut in pandan leaf $5.50 comes out. Its a touch dry and the shredded coconut on top only emphasises it and the rice is a little hard.

Green Gourmet Vegan deep fried ice cream $5.50
Vegan deep fried ice cream with caramel sauce $5.50

Our next choice, Blythe’s favourite is the vegan deep fried ice cream $5.50. Blythe is firmly against veganism (probably feeling pity at missing out more than anything) so her choice is perplexing. The icy soy ice cream though is good, very similar to “regular” ice cream and by now we are stretching to full and this huge globe of golden fried cake encased ice cream almost has us beat. Almost…

Green Gourmet Crispy lotus seed crepe with ginger lotus ice cream
Crispy lotus seed crepe with ginger lotus ice cream $5.50

As the last dessert arrives, my choice is the Crispy lotus seed crepe with ginger lotus ice cream $5.50. This is very much like the fried red bean pancake from Shanghai Night but filled with lotus. The ginger ice cream is gorgeous albeit a bit more icey than creamy, completely gingery with real ginger, not the powdered old shelf bound ground ginger that barely has a scent. This is for ginger lovers most definitely. The fried crepe goes wonderfully with it and eating the ice cream with the aforementioned abandoned black sticky rice gives it much needed moisture.

Blythe is impressed. I think she will rethink her stance on vegetarianism. Well she’s finished rethinking now but it lasted for a whole 2 hours.

Green Gourmet Vegetarian Vegan restaurant

538 Pacific Hwy, St Leonards
T: 9439 6533
F: 9439 5993
Lunch: Tues-Sat 11.30-2.30pm
Dinner: Tues-Sun 5.30-9.30pm
Friday and Saturday open until 10.30pm
Closed MondaysAlso Green Gourmet in Newtown
115-117 King St, Newtown
T/F: 9519 5330They also run Vegan’s Choice Grocery
113 King St, Newtown
T: 9519 7646

Lamington Butterfly cupcakes

Lamington Angel cupcakes

When I was very young and first saw butterfly cupcakes, I thought that they were the height of sophistication. Little did I know that with a little deft slicing action, you could easily fashion a butterfly cupcake of your own. Eating them now, there’s something so satisfying and transporting about these pretty winged cakes stuffed with cream and strawberry jam (and it must be strawberry jam) and the cushioney cool, sweet squishiness when you bit into one. The old fashioned bakeries are now giving way to more sophisticated French patisseries but I still love a jam and cream cupcake.

These cupcakes combine the very Australian cake, the Lamington, a chocolate and coconut covered vanilla cake, with the old school butterfly cupcake.

Lamington Angel cupcakes

Lamington Butterfly cupcakes

For the cupcake

  • 1/2 cup caster sugar
  • 90g butter at room temperature
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 eggs
  • 3/4 cup Self Raising flour
  • 1/4 cup cornflour
  • 2 tablespoons of buttermilk (or regular milk soured with a tiny bit of lemon juice)

Chocolate icing to dip

  • 3/4 tablespoon oil
  • 1/3 cup milk
  • 2 cups icing sugar sifted
  • 1/4 cup cocoa powder sifted

To decorate

  • 1 cup dessicated coconut
  • 1/4 cup strawberry jam
  • 1/2 cup whipped cream

1. Preheat oven to 150c fan forced or 170c non fan forced.

2. Add all ingredients into a mixing bowl and mix on low speed until combined and then a higher speed until batter becomes pale. Spoon into patty tins.

3. Bake for 20-25 minutes. Cool in tin.

4. Make chocolate icing: Combine all ingredients in a small bowl over a small saucepan of simmering water until it reaches an icing consistency. When it cools it will become a little thicker.

Lamington Angel cupcakes
Dip into dessicated coconut

Lamington Angel cupcakes from Women’s Weekly Cupcakes
Leaving to set

5. Gently take cupcake cases off from around cupcake. Using a fork, spear the bottom of the cupcakes and dip cakes in icing, drain off excess, dip cake in coconut. Put aside for icing to set (setting it makes it much easier to handle for the next step).

Lamington Angel cupcakes
Cut out top with very sharp knife

Lamington Angel cupcakes
Fill with dollop of strawberry jam and then cover with sweetened whipped cream

Lamington Angel cupcakes
Cut bases off wings so that they are as flat as possible and position wings

7. Cut out top and dollop strawberry jam and cream inside and then cut top in two to make wings and position on top of cream and jam.

Lamington Angel cupcakes

Lamington Angel cupcakes