Monthly Archives: July, 2011

Hominy Bakery, Katoomba

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Are you one of those people that can eat and walk with food? I am to a certain extent and ice cream is one that always gets eaten while walking but for the most part I like standing still or sitting down and eating. I like concentrating of my food. Fixating on my food. Dissecting my food. Yes I often look deep in concentration when eating. So when Mr NQN and I made a quick trip to Katoomba  and we see that the rain is falling on the tables outside and there is nowhere inside the bakery to eat we make a quick decision. Eat on the bench, outside. With everyone staring at us taking photos of the food.

hominy-bakery-katoomba

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Hours earlier, as we knew that we wouldn’t make it there until late afternoon we rang ahead to reserve some of their famous potato bread. Hominy is an organic bakery and the potato sourdough is legendary. Legendary enough so that when I call and tell them that we’re driving from Sydney and would they pleeeease reserve a loaf of each she answers that it isn’t a problem, as if we weren’t the first to do it. In fact when we get there we see that we aren’t with several reserved wrapped bread loaves.

hominy-bakery-katoomba

We’re ravenous with hunger so we pick and pick and pick and then when she has rung up the total I add in an Easter bun for good measure. There are whole cakes for around $14-$15 as well as slices and pastries for around the $3.80-$4 mark. We go outside and unwrap our bounty. It’s cold and busy and all I can think of are the hot pies we have in our hands.

hominy-bakery-katoomba

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Chunky beef pie $5.70

We unfurl our first packet given clues by the hot package and the meaty aroma. The chunky beef pie has a flaky pastry top and a shortcrust base and the pastry although not what I would call buttery is actually lovely and crispy. Perhaps they use another type of fat, I’ve had similar results with lard but I’m just guessing. The point is that the pastry is lovely and crunchy, the crunch mainly from the top. The filling is tender beef chunks with an aromatic star anise aroma to it. Mr NQN who doesn’t particularly care for pies (too much pastry he grumbles) suddenly takes an interest in my pie and claims 50% of it. This 50/50 marriage rule certainly puts a crimp in my pastry lifestyle. Humph. I give him my last quarter of it.

hominy-bakery-katoomba

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Brown rice pie $5.70

“Shall I get another pie?” I ask him. “No” he answered. “Alright then, get one” he then adds after a moment’s consideration. No matter I was on my way to get one of the vegetarian ones, a rather intriguing brown rice pie filled with carrot, mushroom with a soy and ginger sauce and that same lovely pastry. Now I’ve never seen a pie like this so I was interested to see what it was like. It’s very unusual but good. It’s too unusual for Mr NQN who thinks it’s too unexpected for a pie filling but I actually really like that about it and the sweet carrot and ginger lifts the filling’s flavour.

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Mushroom pastie $3.30

The golden glazed mushroom pasties were filled with large chunks of freshly picked local mushrooms. Mr NQN likes this but I’d personally prefer some more filling and a warm pastry whereas these were baked earlier and didn’t have the warmth to them that the pies did. And here I am shivering on a bench in the cold weather clutching to baked goods for warmth…

hominy-bakery-katoomba

Custard tarts with paradise pears $5.20 for 2

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The Mad Mock Apple Pie Made From Ritz Crackers. Yes, Really!

ritz apple pie recipe

Mr NQN and I were sitting down and having dinner with my parents when he casually mentioned that he was thinking of doing the half marathon.

We all stared at him and put our cutlery down.

Swallowing hard we all asked in unison “Why?”

If there was any doubt I was their child it was all too apparent in the matters of all things sporty and expending energy. Mr NQN tried to explain to us how it was a physical challenge and that it would be an achievement to run a half marathon.

“But you might get hurt” my mother said.

“You might get run over” my father said.

“You might have to actually run” I said.

ritz apple pie recipe

Fast forward to a few weeks later when I decided to make a Ritz cracker apple pie. I thought it was Queen Viv that had told me about it but turns out it wasn’t (edited to add it was @TudorGrrrl on twitter). Well, whoever it was said that they had tried one and apparently it’s quite a famous recipe. It is when the filling, an entirely apple-less concoction somehow goes from looking like crushed Ritz crackers to soft apple pie filling.

“Why are you making a mock apple pie out of Ritz crackers when we have apples in the fridge?” Mr NQN asked me

“Because I like making weird stuff and because I can” I answered (for evidence see Exhibit 1: Bacon Jam).

I was of course intrigued by this recipe. By the mere fact that somehow, slightly savoury Ritz crackers somehow morphed into an apple filling with the addition of a sugar syrup. Surely this was as close to culinary sea monkeys as you could get. And my thoughts immediately turned to who on earth discovered this in the first place and how. The many comments from people that had tried the recipe attested to the fact that somehow under that pie carapace, something happens and the crackers turn into an apple filling. Many loved the fact that it meant that they didn’t have to peel and core apples anymore.

ritz apple pie recipe

It goes from this filling…

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A Kids Afternoon Tea at The Sir Stamford

sir stamford kids high tea

“So Lorraine, how has life been? Busy? ” Five year old Laura says to me earnestly, holding a wine glass full of water with both hands around the bowl to steady it. She looks at me her legs crossed wearing a pearl patterned knitted dress and diamanté bow in her hair. She along with her sisters Olivia and Eloise and their mum Liss are joining me at the Sir Stamford’s kids afternoon tea. When I was offered the chance to try the kid’s afternoon tea, I instantly thought of these three adorable sisters (who are very polite and well behaved too). In fact, rumour has it that they’ve been talking about nothing else but this ever since they found out. The kid’s tea is $32 per child and the traditional adult’s tea is $44 per adult.

sir stamford kids high tea

Laura in a most appropriate afternoon tea dress

“This place is fancy!!” Eloise says giggling. “Yesss” Olivia says grinning widely looking around, eyes wide like saucers taking it all in. We sit down at our table and the girls are given a wine glass of ice water which they carefully negotiate towards their mouths (no spillage-well done!) and wait for their food. I adjust the gerberas that they’ve handed me, each one a different colour.

sir stamford kids high tea

“How long till the food comes?”
“How many seconds?”
“Is it 17 seconds?”

The questions come from each girl as they prepare the food. What to a hungry child is eternity is in fact about 10 minutes in wait.

sir stamford kids high tea

The Kid’s High Tea stand

I remember my childhood by the food that I ate. When I was six years old I visited Singapore where I tried sarsaparilla for the first time. I remember the first time I ate oysters and spat them out and the first time I ate a cream and jam sponge cake and requested it every year afterwards for my birthday. So as this is the girls first high tea I am aware of how exciting it must be. When the two three tier stands arrive, one for adults and one for the children, there is much excitement, much like a spaceship landing on the table.

sir stamford kids high tea

The favourite layer-forget sandwiches, the sweets are where it is at! From front: Chocolate & Coconut Crackle, Fairy Cupcake with Strawberry & Sprinkles and Banana & Berry Split

sir stamford kids high tea

Eloise as big sister makes fast work of the chocolate and coconut crackle

sir stamford kids high tea

Laura loves her cupcake

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Granville Island, Thomas Haas, Go Fish, Herons Restaurant & The Rooftop Honey Bee Hives, Vancouver, Canada

thomas haas vancouver

thomas haas vancouver

I’m not a naturally early riser. Let me sleep in and I’ll get up around 9 or 10am. Getting up for pastry however is never a problem. Judy from The Fairmont had mentioned the two magic words “double baked croissant” and suddenly I was setting my alarm early for a visit to Vancouver’s Thomas Haas a chocolatier and purveyor of wickedly good croissants. I love a good almond croissant and to me it’s not an almond croissant unless it is baked twice. First to bake the croissant itself after which it is dipped in a sugar syrup, filled with almond frangipane paste, covered in flaked almonds and then baked again to a crunchy goodness. Done well, it can induce a bliss like state of total time and space freeze. Done badly, it’s a waste of calories.

thomas haas vancouver

Double baked almond croissant

And I’m holding a double baked croissant in my hot little hand. Before I take a bite I first offer some to Mr NQN who is quite frankly a non pastry lover. He likes juicy things like fruit and pastry is too dry for him. But then I watch him take a bite . And then another. Hmm I’m thinking this might be good. I take a bite and the I can hear the crunchiness in my ears. The sugar syrup and flakey, buttery pastry lulls me into a state of bliss. A car could have crashed into the shop and I would not have known.

Thomas himself is in the corner being interviewed by a local newspaper. The pastries are baked every morning at this location and Thomas’s food philosophy is one which he strictly adheres to. Control over quality and sourcing the best ingredients from anywhere in the world (so really the opposite of the local movement). His vanilla beans are from Tahiti, his chocolate is from Belgium and he buys limes from Brazil.

thomas haas vancouver

We also try the macarons with my favourite being the caramel and the coffee which has a whole coffee bean in the centre.

thomas haas vancouver

London Fog tea $3.75

I take a sip of my London Fog tea. It’s an Earl Grey tea that has been made with frothed milk and has a shot of vanilla. Oh my, can I set up camp here? And I haven’t even gotten to the chocolates yet. I order a few chocolates to take with me which are the exotic, merlot and caramel fleur de sel which is made with smoked salt and the green cardamom. The individual chocolates are $1.10 each. But with no time and no stomach space we go for a bit more of an adventure around Vancouver. We’re off next to Granville Island!

thomas haas vancouver

granville island, vancouver, canada

granville island, vancouver, canada

granville island, vancouver, canada

Just 20 minutes outside of downtown Vancouver, Granville Island has a great market that tourists and locals flock to. We arrived at Granville Market on time but spent the first 30 minutes wandering around trying to find our Edible BC guide. We walked around and it was only when we spotted someone in a chef’s uniform that we realised that our guide was already giving a tour so we quickly joined it. And just in time too as they were handing out blueberry sourdough bread samples. The Granville market are busy this Thursday morning as a cruise ship has just docked and people are busy shopping and sampling.

granville island, vancouver, canada

Golden and regular beetroot

granville island, vancouver, canada

Precious garlic!

granville island, vancouver, canada

Blueberries galore!

We see huge stalks of fresh garlic that was literally picked out f the ground yesterday. Our guide Rohan is one of the chefs at Gotham restaurant in Vancouver and he is proud to show off the local produce and range. One of our fellow tour participants asks him about morels and he explains that they are great here but expensive at $20 a pound ($40) a kilo. He explains that morels are best after a forest fire as they need nitrous and phosphorous to feed them. A few years ago there was a huge forest fire that wiped out one twentieth of British Columbia and the following year they had incredible quality morels.

granville island, vancouver, canada

granville island, vancouver, canada

We enter La Baguette which is owned by French proprietors. It is operational 24 hours 7 days a week as they supply many of the restaurant trade with bread. We try some of their pain au chocolat and I spy macarons in vivid colours for $2. They also offer picnic baskets for $9.95 a person so people can sit on the boardwalk and enjoy their food.

granville island, vancouver, canada

granville island, vancouver, canada

granville island, vancouver, canada

We see an heirloom tomato specialist who grows 21 varieties of heirlooms in their South Langley farm. These tomatoes are grown in soil, not hydroponically and they originally grew about 30 varieties but whittled it own to their current range of 21.

granville island, vancouver, canada

Guess what is under that cover?

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Win 1 of 10 Double Passes to The Organic Expo & Green Show!

organic expo and green show

Last year I attended the Organic Expo & Green Show more out of curiosity than anything else. I didn’t intend to blog it at all but when I got there there were so many delicious deals and interesting stands that I ended up taking out my camera and doing a story on it. Well it is on again this year on the weekend of the 6th and 7th of August from 10am-5pm at Hall 3, Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre, Darling Harbour!

This year chef Kylie Kwong will be there to take you from paddock to plate with her cooking demonstrations and gardening gurus Costa Georgiadis and Jerry Coleby-Williams will also be there. Beauty Chef Carla Oates will show you how to make your own skincare products at home using the ingredients from your fridge. There are all sorts of organic foods and wines as well as beauty products and I hear there will be baby farmyard animals and fashion and homewares too.

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