Monthly Archives: May, 2010

Meet My Suburb: A Marrickville, St Peters and Dulwich Hill Food Shopping Tour

marrickville food shopping tour

Paesanella Cheese products

Let me show you some of my secrets” Queen Viv said to me one day. I’m sure my Dearest Readers have heard all about my friend Queen Viv. She’s my fairy godmother and very good friend and as fairy godmothers are wont to do, they love to spread a little fairy dust by sharing their secrets. In Queen Viv’s case it’s unlocking the secrets of where she lives. One afternoon she showed me around the light industrial areas of Marrickville, St Peters and Dulwich Hill.

marrickville food shopping tour

Eumundi Smokehouse goodies

It seems that the Inner West is home to some fantastic hidden gems in the form of food factory shops that are also open to the public. Smart residents know all about these places and over the course of a couple of days Queen Viv helps me stock my fridge and pantry with all sorts of fantastic goodies. These places are best approached by bike or car but not impossible to walk between. However bring a chill bag (or several) and some ice packs because you are likely to want to buy!

Paesanella Cheese

marrickville food shopping tour

I don’t need to let Italian cheese lovers know about paesanella cheese. Their cheeses, especially the bocconcini and ricotta are legendary and I’d venture to say that their ricotta is the best commercially made ricotta here. This ricotta is so popular that come any Sunday morning, the lines snake out the door with Italian nonnas bringing their own pots and buckets to nab their stash of still warm freshly made ricottta for Sunday lunch.

marrickville food shopping tour

Fresh ricotta

Their fresh ricotta is the only pure milk  ricotta produced commercially. Other ricottas are made using whey and the by product of other cheese making but what makes this ricotta so good is the fact that it is made from pure milk. The General Manager Tony shows us around. Apparently 10 litres of milk are needed to produce 1 kg of cheese and even at $6.90 a kilo it’s a steal. He gives us a taste from the basket and it’s just as I remembered it – incredibly light, creamy and soft and utterly full of milk flavour. He tells us the way to find out if your ricotta is made from milk or from by products is to check the label. If it features ingredients like Xantham gum, starches, gluten or a chemical cocktail, you are actually paying for less milk in your ricotta and more filling.

marrickville food shopping tour

Paesanella Cheese was started in 1962 by Umberto Somma who came from a 300 year old cheese making family in Naples, Italy (in the buffalo mozzarella region). Since then they have been supplying Neopolitan style fresh cheeses to lucky Sydney siders. During his time making cheese, Umberto’s family asked him to stop making it because his health was deteriorating with emphysema and years later he died while making cheese.

marrickville food shopping tour

Umberto Somma

Speaking to Tony, their philosophy is against that of the the supermarket chains. It’s about making these cheese fresh daily without any additives which means that they are all short shelf life products. This presents issues for supermarkets that want a long shelf life and as a result it is only found at good delis. They’re not willing to change the product in order to supply to supermarkets so manufacture remains at manageable levels.

marrickville food shopping tour

Smoked mozzarella $7.40

Grace, who is behind the counter singing, comes out and shows us the smoked mozzarella which she says is good for stuffing zucchini, in lasagne and pretty much anywhere where regular mozzarella can be used. Looking around the room there are walls of awards and a deli cabinet full of smallgoods, enormous olives and cheeses. Then there’s two fridges with a mixture of imported cheeses and their own cheeses that are made on the premises plus the red white and green Paesanella sticker. They come in 250g, 500gram and 1 kg buckets.

marrickville food shopping tour

Tony shows us the Burrata cheese which is one of their new best sellers. It’s a bocconcini and mozzarella shell filled with cream and mozzarella curd and sounds absolutely divine. It’s ideal for an antipasto dish and can be eaten simply. Just remove it from the pack, drizzle it with extra virgin olive oil, oregano or basil and then serve it with some crusty pane di casa bread. Their mascarpone is a rested mascarpone so that all of the acids seep out making it smoother and creamier. They supply their cheese through Simon Johnson to restaurants such as Pilu and Buon Ricordo. And I can’t wait to dig into my 1kg bucket of ricotta when I get home and have it on toast for dinner. Tony gives me some samples of cherry bocconcini, smoked mozzarella, mascarpone, buffalo mozzarella, mozzarella and the delicious sounding Burrata which I plan on using on some special dishes – if I don’t eat it all first!

Eumundi Smokehouse

marrickville food shopping tour

They thought I was a drug dealer or something” Dave Kasmaroski (or Kaz as he’s known) says to Queen Viv and I laughing. The blacked out windows, the 3am sausage making and smoke rooms and the fact that they’re only open on Saturdays from 8am-2pm may have given locals that impression. Until of course they try one of his sausages or smoked meats and they’re transported into a place where sausages are organic and made without any fillers at all (yes they’re all gluten free) and without adding any water. Just pure meat and spices. This morning I’m standing outside the closed up shop and I’ve just called him on his mobile. Moments later a smiling face greets me and I’m let in by a member of his staff. They’re mostly female and very friendly and sweet. We smell that smoke aroma immediately and I recall my last visit here a few moons ago when I bought some of their smoked sausages for a European relative in law who swooned over them. Since then I’ve picked them up at markets all over Sydney as their shop is only open on Saturday from 8am-2pm.

marrickville food shopping tour

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Martin Bosley’s Yacht Club Restaurant, Wellington, New Zealand

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, menu

Mr NQN and I were a touch tired and our feet sore from strolling around Wellington and seeing all that it had to offer so we were grateful when we realised that our place to dine that evening was metres a couple of hundred metres away from our hotel in Oriental Bay. It was the very high end Martin Bosley’s at the Yacht Club on the water which is known for innovative cuisine with an emphasis on seafood.

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, view

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, aperitif

Apertif: “Tracer”

Boats bob up and down in the water outside. We start with a complimentary aperitif. The waitress named it after one of the yachts  outside called “Tracer” that had come in while she was making it. It’s gin, creme de cassis and lime as well as other goodies. it’s absolutely delicious. We make a mental note to order aperitifs.

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, amuse  bouche

Amuse Bouche

Our amuse bouche is a seared prawn with a peanut sauce which is a cream sauce that is peanutty but not quite satayish due to the creaminess. The prawns are an ideal texture and it whets our appetite very nicely thankyou very much.

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, raw plate

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, raw plate

The trio of tartars $30

The trio of tartars is prettily plated with 3 cubes of raw fish tartars and the corresponding flavours working their way vertically down the plate. With the tarakihi there is a chilled crab bisque, saffron milk wafer and a red capsicum gelee. With the Queensland spanner crab there is wasabi sherbert and pork crackling and with the tuna there is trough clam, soubise (a bechamel sauce with strained onions) and Earl Grey tea powder (the item that persuaded me to order it). They all work wonderfully and even what could have been strong (wasabi sherbert) or strange (earl grey powder) it’s well balanced works well with the tartares and lifts it.

martin bosley's at yacht club, wellington, new zealand, clams

Diamond Shell clams 200grams $12

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Win 1 of 20 Preview Passes to see Mother & Child!

This past Thursday I took Mr NQN to see a preview screening of Mother & Child. I deliberately hadn’t told him the name of the movie, he tends to beg off when he hears that it may be a chick flick and when I told him the name “Mother and Child” a look of abject horror crossed his face. He was envisaging a theatre crowd like that at a Sex And the City screening full of girls tissues ready for a weepy chick flick. And didn’t I feel smug when he ended up loving it! ;)

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Exploring Hutt Valley, Wellington, New Zealand

wellington, new zealand

Our driver’s sign. Poor guy must have been so disappointed to see that he was picking me up and not the Nigella haha!

After our lovely stay at Otahuna Lodge our driver drove us to Christchurch airport where we boarded a plane to Wellington. Here streets have cute names like Bunny Street and houses are perched perilously high on the edge of cliffs and require cable cars to access them. The main shopping street is called Cuba Street which we will later visit.

wellington, new zealand, ohtel

We check into Ohtel, a boutique hotel with very cute and quirky touches. The room has a distinct Scandinavian/New Zealand feel to it with details such as a little notepad in a case with a small pen, a doorless bathroom (instead is a double layer curtain although this does mean that you have to be comfortable with your room mate bodily functions and can avoid walking into the glass at one end which we almost do several times), designer teas, thongs or flip flops for guests instead of slippers, vintage style furniture, nice organic toiletries and free wifi. It’s as if a designer boutique mated with a hotel. The lobby is like a cafe, in fact it is a cafe too and the whole hotel has 10 rooms in total.

wellington, new zealand, ohtel

The bathroom with the curtain door!

We’re picked up by David from Hutt Valley Tourism who is taking us to lunch at La Bella Italia, one of the Hutt Valley’s and Wellington’s most famous restaurants. The restaurant is located in Petone, a short drive from Wellington city centre. Petone literally means Belly Button as it’s about the centre point of New Zealand We drive past an artesian spring in the centre of town where a resident is filling up large bottles with the water that flows freely for everyone and is known as “Petone water”.

wellington, new zealand, hutt valley, la bella italia, antonio  cacace

Antonio Cacace

wellington, new zealand, hutt valley, la bella italia

We meet Antonio Cacace who is originally from Sorrento in Italy. His restaurant is set in a warehouse space as it also serves as a shop and deli. The son of a Michelin chef, he imports the food directly himself from Italy. He tells us of when his father was asked to change his tablecloths and flatware in order to appease the Michelin judges but he refused to do so.

wellington, new zealand, hutt valley, la bella italia

He seats us at “Antonio’s table” in the corner of the store which affords us a bird’s eye view of the whole space. Aged only four when he first began serving at his father’s restaurant he had to carry the plates on top of his head as he couldn’t reach and over the next 20 years his father taught him the business. Interestingly, his grandfather had thoughts of opening up an Italian restaurant in Wellington many years ago so he feels that he is fulfilling his ancestor’s footsteps.

wellington, new zealand, hutt valley, la bella italia, pinnochio

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Rose Croquembouche – Daring Bakers May 2010

rose croquembouche recipe

I awoke with a start. The clock read 3:03am. What on earth was I doing awake at this time? I had awoken with the realisation that the Daring Bakers challenge was due the day after tomorrow and having missed a couple, I didn’t want to let this one slip away too. At this early hour I could hear that the rain was already steadily pattering down and after doing a quick calculation I realised that I had all of tomorrow to make my creations so I went back to sleep hoping that the rain would stop.

rose croquembouche recipe

When I woke the next morning at 9am I didn’t even have to open the curtains to know that it was still raining. “It will stop” I said to myself and kept saying it throughout the morning. A by product of this rain was a grey sky and I knew that come 11am if I didn’t get into it I could forget any chance of making and photographing my croquembouche. I rushed about in the kitchen and started making the pastry and the custard in the hope that the rain would let up to no avail.

rose croquembouche recipe

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