Monthly Archives: August, 2010

Behind The Scenes of Cafe Sydney, Circular Quay

cafe sydney

There is the “normal” way that one usually visits a restaurant. That is, to make a dinner booking for say 7:30pm or 8pm, arrive and sit down and have a meal. I think it’s safe to say that normal is not a word I hear to describe myself and when Cafe Sydney asked me if Christie and I would like to have a Behind The Scenes view of the Cafe Sydney where we’d get to explore every nook and cranny of the restaurant and the kitchen we instantly said yes.

It had been years and years since I last visited there. I used to go there for corporate lunches and would always order the tandoori salmon (this was way B.B. aka Before Blog ) . One time I dined in the private dining room for a friend’s birthday and had some of the most enormous prawns I’ve ever laid eyes on.

cafe sydney

The view

cafe sydney

More view

Christie and I front up at Cafe Sydney at 4:45pm. We’re doing an evening shift starting with the staff meal. Around us some staff are busy setting up while others eat their staff meals. Jan the Operations Director whose idea this was, greets us and gives us a tour of the premises. We have free reign to go anywhere at any time. The restaurant all looks very familiar and I am instantly transported to my advertising days and I wonder whether the tandoori salmon dish still features on the menu (it does but in a different version!).

“How many people do we have tonight?” Jan asks.

“240″ answers the front of house staff as we learn out of a possible 300 diners.

cafe sydney

Christie and I are amazed. It’s a Tuesday night and restaurants usually are much quieter at the beginning of the week but they are operating at 80% capacity on this cold, Wintry Tuesday night. As it is a chilly evening the outdoor terrace area is reduced so that diners don’t feel the chill too much. There are outdoor heaters as well as  but nothing can distract us from the view. Ah that view. The Harbour Bridge on the left and East Circular Quay on the right with the Opera House peeking out from behind it.

cafe sydney

The bar

cafe sydney

Staff eating their staff meals

cafe sydney

Staff meal: Penne bolognese

cafe sydney

Staff meal: rocket and cucumber salad

Back to the staff meal. I’ve always been interested in staff meals ever since I got my copy of the Buon Ricordo cookbook where there is a section on the staff meals. Tonight it’s a penne pasta bake with a meat sauce and cheese as well as a vegetarian option which is baked polenta. There is a large rocket salad with pear as well. Each night has a different type of meal but the same staff meal is served for lunch and dinner that day. Monday nights are curry night as the Tandoori chef Ram cooks.

cafe sydney

Ram the tandoori chef

cafe sydney

Kitchen preparation sheet

Jan is handed a kitchen preparation sheet. On it are the number of diners (pax), special requests (like birthdays) and there is also a number for “amuses”. Each evening Cafe Sydney holds a table for 2 and a table for 4 (a “2 top” and a “4 top” in restaurant speak) for each of the 5 star hotel concierges in the area. These are held until around 7:30pm and each table is also given an amuse bouche with “compliments of the hotel” . There is no percentage of the meal or fee for this for either party and twice a year they host the concierges for dinner. Their clientele is mostly corporate and repeat customers and they can get up to 50 walk ins an evening and they usually try and accommodate them as best as possible. Seating is done on a first come first served basis and your seat depends on the date that you booked.  Seating arrangements are done at 3pm each day.

cafe sydney

Staff meeting

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PodFood, Petting a Cheetah and The Poacher’s Trail, Canberra

“I think you should take this” Mr NQN says to me handing me his heavy duty black windbreaker. Forget the fact that he wears an XL and I wear a small, I gratefully take it along for I have been briefed that Canberra’s winds are fierce and frosty. It has been about a year since I visited the nation’s capital and I was very much looking forward to seeing and eating some of the best that Canberra had to offer over the space of two days. There was even hot air ballooning in the itinerary (but sadly strong winds put those plans to rest) but I would be more than content with exploring the capital not through up in the air navigation but on the ground eating.

Gaynor, Katrina and I land and are met by Donna from Australian Capital Tourism. We’re headed off to lunch at PodFood in nearby Pialligo. We walk through a plant nursery and make our way to the glass panelled building. PodFood is a restaurant open for breakfast or lunch as well as holding cooking classes.

Bread with olive oil

I survey the menu hungrily. I usually order something different from everyone else in the interests of being able to blog about more. However we seem to have reached a consensus here and everyone wants the same entree. The reason? It’s truffle season here in Canberra and local truffle features on the prawn dish here. The bread it must be said is delicious and spongey soft.

Pean seared local prawns with a rich parsnip mousse, wilted spinach and shaved local truffle $20

There is a generous serve of prawns in this dish at about six or seven  prawns. They’re served with some wilted spinach and a parsnip mousse which is more like a parsnip and cheese souffle which is a slightly sweet aspect to it. It is topped with a single truffle shaving. The combination of the ingredients works very well with the pungent truffles. And yes one shaving was all we really needed.

Chicken and leek pie

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Win 1 of 10 Double Passes To The Kids Are All Right!

Happy Saturday to you Dear Readers! And what do I have for you today? I have some movie tickets! The Kids Are All Right is a new movie due out on September 2nd, 2010. I haven’t seen it yet but according to my friends at Hopscotch films it is a “sexy comedy of errors about a very modern family. The Allgoods are a close family experiencing life’s typical ups and downs: 18-year old daughter Joni (Wasikowska) is heading off to Stanford University and starting to distance herself from her parents; 14-year-old Laser is hanging out with a deadbeat friend who constantly leads him into trouble. The only difference is that this family has two mums. Jules (Julianne Moore) and Nic (Bening) have been together for years, deeply in love, and had both children through artificial insemination.

This loving but strained home life is thrown into comic disarray when the kids track down their biological donor-Dad, Paul (Ruffalo), and invite him home for dinner. Paul is a bachelor whose sudden longing for a family introduces an interesting sexual dynamic to the not-quite-ordinary equation of the Allgoods. At first Joni is so happy to have a cool, handsome dad like Paul. But soon enough she comes to realise that Paul is fun loving but lacks self-control and when he starts sleeping with one of her mums chaos reigns”.

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Food Tasting Speed Dating Style in Tamworth!

Once upon a time there was a girl who visited a country town called Tamworth. Tamworth was where one of her best buddies came from and all she knew was how friendly folk were (well if her friend was any indication of the calibre of people). One day she was offered the chance to visit her friend’s hometown. And the mission? To meet local producers and taste their produce in a 5 minute session speed dating style.

Photo by Gordon Hammond from the www.australianregionalfoodguide.com.au

After a 1 hour flight to Tamworth we settle into our digs for the evening, the Powerhouse (what The Second Wife called the “fanciest digs in town”). We make our way into the function room where there are 17 producers that have set up shop. Each one has a display and will give us a rundown of their products and a sample. With me are buyers from RockpoolTwo ProvidoresFlying Fish, Australia on a Plate, Bird Cow Fish and Danks Street Depot amongst others as well as media such as Good Living and Australian Regional Food Guide.

After the introductions and speeches we are each assigned a producer’s table number. We are to speak to each producer for 5 minutes and then move into another. Everyone looks at each other and nods “Speed dating, food tasting style” we say to each other. And the whistle goes off!

Jac Wagyu

tamworth producers tour

I’m assigned Jac Wagyu for my first stop and it’s excellent timing as they carry out a whole prime rib. It’s a family business (as we learn a lot are here) and a fourth generation farming family where they raise grass fed wagyu with a 1-2 and 3-4 marbling score. I prefer grass fed beef for the flavour and the fact that it is better for the environment to produce it (rather than feeding cattle on grain) but it is near to impossible to find grass fed wagyu. They raise 500 plus cattle a year which makes for approximately 1,000,000 kgs of meat. All of their cattle are free range and they use natural base fertilisers (worm waste) which reduces their environmental impact on their property where they farm wheat, lamb sheep and beef Angus on their 2,300 hectare property.

I try a slice of the prime rib. It melts in my mouth. They cut me another slice and I eat that even though it’s about 10am, it’s that buttery soft. They also sell Wagyu burgers with the lesser cuts of Wagyu as their current clientele opt for the prime cuts.

Daily Ritual

tamworth producers tour

*tinkle tinkle* the bell goes and I’m off to my next stop. Daily Ritual is an Armidale based producer that makes gourmet coffee, tea, drinking chocolate and chocolate coated coffee beans. They produce a High altitude blend which is a South American bean grown at over 2000 feet which is popular particularly with students for it’s high caffeine content. Their Signaure blend has also won Bronze in the 2010 Easter Show.

The Super Strawberry

tamworth producers tour

tamworth producers tour

“Oooh tiny scones” I say taking my bag and camera and promptly losing my folder along the way to The Super Strawberry which is a family run business established since 1972 and based in Glen Innes. It’s not Strawberry season at the moment so Cecily offers me a taste of tiny scones with strawberry jam and cream. Prices for her jam are very reasonable at $5.75 for a jar and she gives me two pots to take home with me. There is also a sample of a Dalkeith Mustard Pickle which is made using Guyra tomatoes and they are just divine with cheese on crackers. The shop in Glen Innes also sells strawberries and cream, fresh strawberry milkshakes made with real strawberries as well as scones with tea or coffee.

Bellata Gold

tamworth producers tour

Bellata Gold’s story is an interesting one. Originally farmer Doug Cush sold his durum wheat to Italy. The North West area of NSW is known for it’s golden durum wheat (called the “golden durum triangle”) and it is popular with Italian pasta makers. Soon they started producing pasta of their own using the same type of durum wheat that they were selling to Italy. Technically only 100% durum wheat based pasta can be called pasta (as opposed to 00 flour pasta).

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Old Fashioned Banana Pudding

banana pudding recipe

I’ve always had one job in mind for myself should I exhaust all of the options at my immediate disposal (which are quite frankly just two jobs: advertising and blogging). I am, I must confess, completely obsessed by packaging of things. That obsession sparked off a spending spree a few years ago of buying perfume and makeup and when I last counted I had spent $10,000 on makeup and didn’t even realise it.

Like a child I didn’t care about what was inside it but I cared about the packaging. I admired thick paper, embossing, the thickness of the plastic sleeve, gilt edging and thoughtful details. My friends would often say “Why don’t you go work for a cosmetics company?” and I’d laugh while secretly wondering what sort of job spec that would be. “Admirer of packaging?” or “Box aficionado?”. Like a collector I saved all of my favourite boxes and it was only when we moved that I realised that I had a problem. When I realised how much I had amassed, I sold most of it on ebay (completely unused and hey I still had the original boxes). Unless you work in a circus or on stage, there is only so much makeup you can use. The job of box aficionado never did eventuate.

banana pudding recipe

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