Category Archives: South Australia

Sticky Rice Cooking School & The Stirling Hotel, Adelaide Hills, South Australia

My room, No. 3 at The Stirling Hotel

“Hi honey, I am at The Stirling Hotel in room # 3 but I don’t know if I can speak to you tonight as I’m going to a cooking school and after that I’m going to have a bath. They have a TV in the bathroom and a huge tub I can fill with bubbles and you know how much I like that. So you won’t hear from me tonight.

Love,

Lorraine

xxx”

So I wrote Mr NQN by way of explanation why I wouldn’t be speaking to him that evening. It has long been my dream to have a bathroom at home with a television in it-sadly it doesn’t look like it will happen in our current apartment so I am determined to enjoy the huge bath at The Stirling Hotel in the Adelaide Hills.

The Stirling Hotel is part of a pub and I have to admit I’m nervous as I am not much of a pub girl. I should have probably entered through the left hand side which is the beautifully decorated restaurant. I needn’t have worried. We go upstairs and through the private entry door to see a separate area for the five hotel rooms. On the way to the room they show us the guest pantry which is where you can make tea or coffee (although there are tea and coffee making facilities in the room).

You know that bit where they open the door and you feel like you’re home, except you’re not home, but in a room that you would have as your home if you had a designer?  Well this was it. There a fireplace (easy one button, gas), a comfortable king bed, lovely furnishings and a bathroom that is as big as a bedroom with a massive tub with said television. There are also Molton Brown toiletries and it is outfitted using designer furnishings and fittings (Kartell, Rogerseller etc). OK the wifi is a little slow which is probably the only minus but the mini bar is well stocked and very reasonably priced, the bathrobes are beautifully plush and the most genius part of all is the light switches. Light switches you may say? I haven’t taken leave of my senses honestly! These light switches are labelled and illuminated. There’s no ambiguity as to what switch goes for what and if I press one the bedside or room lights simply fade in or fade out. Light switches are the bane of most hotels rooms and I have wasted precious sleeping time trying to figure out which switch does what.

Genius! No more fumbling with strange switches! Could every hotel in the world install these pleeeease?

I settle in and wrestle a bit with their slow and fading in and out internet connection before I realise I am to go to the Sticky Rice cooking school. The taxi that has been ordered hasn’t arrived and I am about 10 minutes late in leaving because of that. When I go to the restaurant downstairs to check on it (there isn’t a lobby, that is one difference although staff in both the pub and the restaurant are happy to help), the man there calls and leaves a message with them to let them know that I am running late and then offers to drive me there myself. The Adelaide Hills people are nice! :)

The taxi driver arrives just at that second and we take the short drive to the Sticky Rice cooking school. Said to be one of the top three things to do  in the Adelaide Hills, despite the name, it offers cooking classes in all sorts of cuisine from Asian, Spanish and tonight’s Moorish Moroccan class. Owner Claire is there to greet everyone along with Bif who is our facilitator and Katrina Ryan, a chef from The Spirit House in Brisbane. Katrina was Neil Perry’s Head Chef at Rockpool and former personal chef to Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise (when they were together obviously ;) ). The classes are so popular many are booked out and Claire says that she wanted to make sure that she had chefs that were a) great chefs and b) could communicate well with students.

Chef Katrina Ryan

There are two large groups and some groups of friends as well as people that have been given vouchers to the classes by friends or family for mother’s or father’s day. Claire starts off by introducing us to Katrina and we are handed out the recipes and menu for this evening.

We take a place around the large table where we all have a chopping board, knife and chux in front of us. Katrina starts off by showing us some basic skills with the knife. There are a total of seven dishes tonight.

Katrina starts off by explaining all of the food that she has started preparing this afternoon. Whole ducks have been roasted using a salt and cinnamon rub and saffron is being infused as we speak-she tells us that saffron is best infused for 24 hours to allow for the colour and flavour to develop fully.

She explains some of the ingredients including the differences between eschallots and onions and the two chilli sizes. And did you know that the hottest part of the chilli is actually the white membrane that the seeds are attached to? I had heard that it was the seeds but apparently not! She then shows us some basic skills with the knife including, crucially, how to dice an onion and how to segment an orange (a task I am terrible at!).

Cut off the top and base

Cut strips off the side

Click here to read the full story

A Food Tour of The Scenic Adelaide Hills, South Australia

John in his Daimler

I love tour guides that do bespoke tours. There’s nothing like seeing an area with a person that is local enough to know all of the “real” places and being shown just what you want to see, and not what other tourists want to see or worse still, what your guide thinks you want to see but don’t. And there’s nothing like going on a driving holidays. Except errm of course I don’t drive so having a guide drive you is the next best thing. This morning, after a not long enough sleep, I meet my guide John Baldwin from Barossa Daimler Tours for a four day chauffeured tour to the Adelaide Hills and the Barossa Valley. Voted #2 in “Australia’s Top 20 Tours” by Australian Traveller Magazine it was only pipped by an Arnhem Land tour.

The good thing about Adelaide is that the scenic and green hills area is only a mere 15-20 minutes away by car so within the space of a very short ride, you’re suddenly in greenery. Our first stop today lovelies is the town of Hahndorf! It was originally settled by Dirk Hahn who was wealthy and wanted to give the Prussian Lutheran community village (dorf means village).

And did you know that Australia, as a convict land, only had one non convict state? That is South Australia and they were the first to have a female high court judge, to give women and Aboriginals the right to vote, legalise homosexuality and the first to decriminalise marijuana! ;)

Harris Smokehouse

adelaide hills food tour

Richard Harris and his two sons

adelaide hills food tour

Our first stop is food related (well of course, you didn’t think I’d start going on about anything else did you?). We stop at one of the most famous businesses in the area, Harris Smokehouse. The business is a fourth generation owned family business that originated in England. Richard Harris’s grandfather started a business smoking fish and his father, he and now his son Adam, owns the business. There are also businesses back in England run by other family members.

adelaide hills food tour

Over the years you may have seen their product on the supermarket shelves under the labels Springs Smoked Salmon. They supplied to Coles and Woolworth nationally and were known for top quality smoked salmon. Their smoked salmon was always fresh and never frozen. They used Tasmanian salmon and produced on average about 30 tonnes a week (even getting up to 70 tonnes one Christmas). Since then, they have sold the Springs business and after waiting the necessary time, they started another. I guess the smoke is always in the blood!

adelaide hills food tour

The top three shelves have the supermarket grade smoked salmon with the brown pieces trimmed off, the fourth and fifth layers are for the food trade

Here instead of employing 120 people, there are six of them inducing Richard, his two sons and two other staff members. They concentrate on the premium market and smoke items such as abalone, salmon, trout, prawns, kingfish as well as the English favourites of cod, haddock and mackerel. They only use fresh, top grade Tasmanian salmon and they trim all of the brown pieces off so that all you get is the lushest coral smoked salmon. There are also tastings offered for customers of their smoked salmon and smoked mackerel dips (fabulous!) as well as the other fish available. Prices are reasonable here and they do an overnight freight service through their website which costs $18 for delivery.

adelaide hills food tour

Moisture being removed by salt

We go through the back and see how the smoking is done. They start off deboning the fish which is finished off with a machine doing all of the painstaking deboning of the pin bones. This removes 85% of the bones and they do the remaining bones by hand. The smoked salmon then has all of the moisture removed by a coating of salt where it will sit for about 6-8 hours before hitting the smoker. The more you dry the fish, the less profit you make as the final product is sold on weight. Fish can also be brined using a brine injector which has little needles of brine that pierce the flesh below the skin.

adelaide hills food tour

They do two types of smoking here: cold smoke and hot smoke. Cold smoke which is done at 22C is the way we normally see smoked salmon and this is the bright coral salmon on the right. Hot smoked salmon is done at a 65C core temperature for 30 minutes and is cooked all the way through. However hot smoked salmon also start off being cold smoked. How long it is smoked depends of course on the size of the fish. The smoking is all done using oak chips which is the traditional method in the UK. The total time depends on the size of the fish but a typical rainbow trout can take up to three days to produce from beginning to end whereas a salmon may take five days. Smoking the fish without the skin produces a strong smoked effect.

adelaide hills food tour

adelaide hills food tour

Trout being cold smoked

adelaide hills food tour

Trout being hot smoked

adelaide hills food tour

The brine injection machine with needles

Richard tells us that the best time to eat salmon is from August to February and that in March the salmon that you will see will be leaner. They buy the salmon on the colour and oil level and the thickness of the belly. In March salmon will start to live off their body weight so their belly isn’t as full. Ahh the life  of a salmon!

adelaide hills food tour

adelaide hills food tour

Hahndorf Hill Winery

Our next stop is at the “Choco Vino experience” at the Hahndorf Winery. Here instead of combining wine and cheese which is a common pairing, they decided to pair chocolate and wine. After doing a lot of research into chocolate and pairing the chocolate with the best wine they decided to stock chocolates from five overseas brands: Amadei, Francois Pralus, Michel Cluizel, Dolfin and Valrhona as well as Haighs, a South Australian company.

adelaide hills food tour

Customers can choose from a range of menus and we are starting with the “Discovery” which matches 2 wines with 3 squares of chocolate. There is also a palate refresher with Tasmania’s Cape grim water which was rated as the purest water in the world (it’s that Great Southern Ocean water John says).

adelaide hills food tour

There are three types of cacao beans: criollo, forastero and trinitario. The criollo is the rarest and most expensive and the Amadei Chuao is primarily made from this. The forestero is a high yield cacao bean that really responds to the care taken whilst the trinitario is a hybrid of the two from Trinidad.

adelaide hills food tour

We start with a wooden box (I’m a sucker for presentation) and in the box there is a roasted cacao beans. For cacao beans to be used they must be fermented in a mucilage, dried out, usually in the sun and then roasted until they get to this state. We try a roasted cacao bean and it is nutty and quite palatable with a slightly bitterness.

adelaide hills food tour

There are also apple slices and a square of Haighs 32% Milk chocolate which is a blend of forestero beans from Ghana and trinitario beans. I then try the Valrhona 40% from France which is a Jivara milk made from forastero beans from Ecuador.

adelaide hills food tour

We then try two wines matched with three chocolates. There is the Amadei Chuao matched with the HHW Chardonnay 2008 and there is also the Pralus (pronounced pra-loo) matched with the HHW Shiraz 2004. I adore the Amadei Chuao as it’s a dark 70% chocolate without a hint of bitterness. It’s purely smooth and gorgeous. To be honest I didn’t know about the matching of these wines with the chocolates as I didn’t find that they went that well together and I preferred them separately but I guess wine and chocolate matching can be subjective and who is ever going to complain when eating good quality chocolate? ;)

adelaide hills food tour

Click here to read the full story

Celsius, Adelaide, South Australia

celsius restaurant adelaide

I don’t usually make it a habit of writing about restaurants that have only been open for a few weeks. They’re usually finding their feet and finding their style and things often change as they settle in. But when Anna from the South Australian Tourism Commission suggested Celsius on fashionably funky Gouger Street in Adelaide and I was told that the chef Ayhan Erkoc was ex Noma (yes the top restaurant in the world according to the Michelin guide) as well as The Manse, Marque and Pier, well some rules are just made to be bent ever so slightly.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Inside is quite stunning indeed. On the right hand side are little alcoves where tables for two sit down. On the left there are soft velvet booths and they are yellow glowing lit from within marble tables and the bar is given the same treatment. It’s sleek looking but warm at the same time. Service is friendly but a little unsure on some details – this might be the newness of the place being only two weeks old.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Rye Bread with whipped parsley and regular butter

The rye bread is fresh, soft and the quennelles of parsley and regular butter are light and melt easily.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Bubbled Pork crackling, yogurt fennel pollen $6.50

At first I was all fine with having an entree, main and dessert. Until duh duh duh dum… I saw the bubbled pork crackling on the menu! It comes out looking like a sculpture. The pork crackling is earth shatteringly crisp and we find ourselves simultaneously trying to eat it without causing too much of a ruckus and without spilling dehydrated yogurt all over ourselves (bring a bib! ;) ). There is some fennel pollen deep fried within the crackling and then a tangy, salty dehydrated yogurt on top that is pure umami.

celsius restaurant adelaide

celsius restaurant adelaide

“Vegetable patch” snails, herbs, soil, flowers, raw and pickled vegetables $18

OK I ordered this more for the curiosity value. I knew it would be pretty as Anna had mentioned that the chef liked using nasturtiums and flowers in the dish. It comes out on a tile and looks just like a pretty garden. The snails are lightly battered and deep fried and there is an assortment of baby vegetables including orange and purple heirloom carrots, flowers, carrot tops, paper thin carrot slices, radish and cherry tomato. Some of the carrot was pickled which I  preferred (I’m nonplussed about raw carrots) and whilst this was pretty and creative, I think this would have been appreciated by Mr NQN who loves his raw vegetables more than me.

celsius restaurant adelaide

celsius restaurant adelaide

Cured and smoked bonito, kohlrabi, dill, cream, fennel, potato $20

I preferred Anna’s dish which was cured and lightly smoked bonito fish, kohlrabi strips, dill sprigs, fennel strips and crunchy potato that was like delicious potato crisps on top of the delicious bonito.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Caramelised lamb sweet breads, seaweed, radish, beetroot $19

Chef Ayhan Erkoc was kind enough to send us out an extra entree, the lamb sweetbreads served with a strand of beetroot puree coated seaweed and half a radish and some golden beetroot. I do love sweetbreads and they’re soft, tender and squishy with the earthy beetroot seaweed.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Barossa Valley chicken, boudin noir, yolk, milk skin, walnut $28.90

Our mains come out shortly after and I decided on the local chicken, from the Barossa Valley. It is paired with a boudin noir (black or blood sausage), a yolk, milk skin and walnut powder.Milk skin you ask? Yes this was why I ordered it. I’ve always had a secret fetish for the skin on top of milk.  The combination of the chicken, yolk, milk skin and boudin noir is lovely but I find that I only need a bit of the boudin noir or it may overwhelm the chicken. Instead I eat the rest of the boudin noir with the creamed corn which I enjoy immensely.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Salt Bush lamb, lentils, black garlic, carrots, turnips $31

Anna’s salt bush lamb is divine. There are loin pieces which are perfectly done and edged on one side with fat and then there is a brisket piece which has an interesting texture, quite dry and soft with an almost dessicated quality. And the black garlic which is such a costly and interesting ingredient, smeared on the side of the plate is the finishing touch giving it an intriguing smokey and sweet flavour.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Creamed corn $8

I love corn and this creamy lovely sweet corn is eagerly and quickly devoured by yours truly. Don’t judge me.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Chocolate mousse, honey comb, peanut praline, banana $16

This reminded me of some of the dishes at Attica. It is chocolate mousse in tiny morsels which are firmer, almost like a ganache, honeycomb shards, peanut praline with pieces of soft banana. On top is a banana ice cream which tastes like pure, smooth, sugar banana. I really enjoy the textures and flavours to this dessert.

celsius restaurant adelaide

Star anise custard, caramelised pineappple, pain d’epice, rum sorbet $14

The star anise custard comes out as a squat squirt of fragrant custard with some dark caramelised pineapple which is sweet and delicious, some gingerbread crumbs and a rum sorbet.

In this case, I’m very happy I “broke the rules”! ;)

NQN travelled to and explored South Australia as a guest of Tourism South Australia.

Celsius Restaurant & Bar

95 Gouger St, Adelaide, South Australia
Tel: +61 (08) 8231 6023

celsius restaurant adelaide

Adelaide Central Markets, South Australia

adelaide central markets

“Hmmm that’s four pairs of shoes for five days away… that sounds about right.” I say out loud, more to myself than anyone else. Mr NQN looks at me. “You know I’m not coming so you’ll have to carry those” he warns. The poor dear can’t come with me so I am flying solo and luggage is the bane of my existence when I travel and this issue with my luggage rears its ugly head when I travel solo. I put a pair of boots away reluctantly and try to carry my bag. It will do.

adelaide central markets

A few hours later I find myself in Adelaide, for the very first time. The driver takes me to the Crown Plaza Adelaide where I check in. The porter deposits my bags by the reception desk and I am given my key. When I start to reach for my bag (admittedly grizzling about the extra pairs of shoes) a voice shouts out “Madam! Madam!” and rushes over. “You shouldn’t have to do that” he says and takes my bags. I couldn’t agree more :P

adelaide central markets

The room is modern and nicely furnished although there is an odd smell coming from the bathroom. I call reception and they send housekeeping up to spray it with lots of air freshener as there is a bit of a drainage problem in some of the rooms.

I’m running late (of course, I got lost) to meet with Mark Gleeson, a former chef and restaurant owner who now owns a stall at the Adelaide Central Markets and conduct’s chef’s tours of the markets. Formerly from Sydney he has lived in Adelaide for the past 20 years. The Adelaide Central Markets themselves have run for 140 years and the grounds are actually owned by the people of Adelaide with the caretakers being the council. It is also the most visited destination in South Australia and sees 1 million people through its doors a month. There are 80 stalls in total.

adelaide central markets

We start off with the camera loving and flirtatious barista at Zedz where they have a new menu every day. They source ingredients from around the market and design the menu according to what is best on the day.

adelaide central markets

What I didn’t realise was that there was such a large Asian population in Adelaide. Of course this may be because the Adelaide Central Markets are alongside Chinatown too but there is also a large student population of 40,000 students. There is a Korean/Japanese stall run by Sun Mi who is an ex Olympic volleyball champion. And why is the Taxi Driver’s Bibimbap named that? Because it is easy for them to eat it in the taxi! :)

adelaide central markets

adelaide central markets

We walk past the Seven Hills deli-Seven Hills is an area in the Clare Valley. It started off as a Polish deli but now has food from all over Europe including a tongue wurst and capsicum pariser as well as quark cheese and kefir.

adelaide central markets

Mark Gleeson

Mark picks up a tomato from the Green Side stand. The owner is also a grower and his fruit and vegetable look real-not those identical specimens you see at the supermarket but what you might find at a farmer’s market.

adelaide central markets

adelaide central markets

Click here to read the full story