Tuesday, November 4, 2014
STIR FRIED CHAR SIEW AND VEGETABLES
Here it is with tatsoi, baby bok choy, beans sprouts and green chilli.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
RED CURRY OF PRAWN AND PUMPKIN
Tonight, the red curry paste got a run.
RED CURRY OF PRAWN AND PUMPKIN
Monday, October 20, 2014
PEARL PERCH WITH HERB SAUCE AND SALAD OF FARRO, BEET LEAVES, BEANS AND BASIL
There are some people who reckon it's the best eating fish in the sea. The fisherman at the weekly markets is one of these people.
So here it is with a fresh herb sauce on a bed of farro grains, baby beetroot leaves, beans and basil.
PEARL PERCH WITH HERB SAUCE AND SALAD OF FARRO, BEET LEAVES, BEANS AND BASIL
WARM POTATO SALAD WITH SMOKED OCEAN TROUT AND QUARK
So here's organic Dutch cream potatoes with Tasmanian smoked ocean trout, organic quark, Sicilian extra virgin olive oil, lemon juice and fried shallots.
WARM POTATO SALAD WITH SMOKED OCEAN TROUT AND QUARK
Friday, October 10, 2014
ROASTED BERKSHIRE PORK BELLY WITH FRESH HERB SAUCE
A very simple herb sauce of basil, baby kale and parsley, garlic, organic cider vinegar.
ROASTED BERKSHIRE PORK BELLY WITH FRESH HERB SAUCE
Thursday, October 9, 2014
YELLOW FIN TUNA WITH CHIPOTLE SALSA, BLACK BEANS AND MICROHERBS
We don't always think of seafood when we think of Mexican food. However, with 3000 miles of coastline, fish is an important part of the local diet. Here's seared yellow fin tuna rubbed with salt and Yucatecan oregano on a salad of black beans and goat fetta (which is close to the flavour of a popular Mexican cheese) - with a chipotle salsa and microherbs.
YELLOW FIN TUNA WITH CHIPOTLE SALSA, BLACK BEANS AND MICROHERBS
BARBEQUED RUMP CAP WITH FRIED POLENTA AND PUY LENTILS
Lentils are French peasant food. Polenta is northern Italian peasant food.
There was a microherb salad off camera. To include it in the photo would have compromised the brutal lowliness of the other ingredients. So too the roast garlic aïoli (although this too might pass for peasant food).
BARBEQUED RUMP CAP WITH FRIED POLENTA AND PUY LENTILS
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
PRAWN PIZZA
I got that urge the other night. Here's a really simple one with prawns and Spanish onion.
PRAWN PIZZA
Monday, October 6, 2014
STIR FRIED CHICKEN WITH LOMBOK AND BOK CHOY
The positive of this is that the flavour of each ingredient is clear, pure, untainted. The negative is that if each flavour - and the combination of flavours - isn't right when raw, it won't be when cooked.
STIR FRIED CHICKEN WITH LOMBOK AND BOK CHOY
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
WHITING FILLETS WITH SALSA VERDE AND DUTCH CREAM POTATO WEDGES
I am also a big believer in balance. I have balanced the healthy fish, salsa verde and kale with potato wedges baked in goose fat.
That should keep all the gods happy.
WHITING FILLETS WITH SALSA VERDE AND DUTCH CREAM POTATO WEDGES
MASTER STOCK PORK BELLY WITH BABY BOK CHOY
This time I used it to braise a piece of Berkshire pork belly from the Byron Bay hinterland about 50 kms from here.
MASTER STOCK PORK BELLY WITH BABY BOK CHOY
Friday, September 26, 2014
SEARED PETUNA OCEAN TROUT WITH THAI HERB SALAD
This was quickly seared, skin side only, in coconut oil.
A tangle of Asian microherbs on top, dressed with macadamia oil, rice vinegar, lime juice and a couple of drops of sesame oil.
SEARED PETUNA OCEAN TROUT WITH THAI HERB SALAD
CHICKEN CHOP WITH EGGPLANT GRATIN, SALSA VERDE AND CARAMELISED BABY TOMATOES
So here they are with a dusting of sea salt, dried chilli and rosemary. Small eggplants interleaved with tomato and with panko crumbs on top went into the oven until soft and golden. Amoroso tomatoes caramelised until dark, sticky and concentrated. Tangy salsa verde to liven things up.
CHICKEN CHOP WITH EGGPLANT GRATIN, SALSA VERDE AND CARAMELISED BABY TOMATOES
Monday, September 15, 2014
SALMON ADOBADO WITH BLACK BEAN, AVOCADO & FETTA SALAD
What great culinary gifts México gave us with avocado, tomato and black beans. Come to think of it, we could add chocolate and corn to the list.
SALMON ADOBADO WITH BLACK BEAN, AVOCADO & FETTA SALAD
Sunday, September 14, 2014
RICE NOODLES WITH CHICKEN AND LAP CHEONG
The usual suspects as far as flavourings - garlic, soy sauce, chilli bean paste, ginger, fried eschalot, fish sauce, sugar, fresh chilli, coriander leaves and ground roasted rice.
RICE NOODLES WITH CHICKEN AND LAP CHEONG
Thursday, September 11, 2014
MOROCCAN LAMB WITH HARISSA, CHICKPEAS AND SPICED ROASTED
Home made harissa, pumpkin from our neighbours' farm and organic chickpeas cooked in chicken stock (home made). All this home-made start-from-scratch stuff makes me feel kind of Amish.
MOROCCAN LAMB WITH HARISSA, CHICKPEAS AND SPICED ROASTED
Friday, September 5, 2014
WILD BARRAMUNDI WITH QUINOA & KALE SALAD
Nothing but fish flavour here. Pan seared, a squeeze of lemon juice, a sprinkle of sea salt.
WILD BARRAMUNDI WITH QUINOA & KALE SALAD
Thursday, September 4, 2014
QUAIL WITH STREAKY BACON, PUY LENTILS AND POLENTA
The streaky bacon comes from a family of Italian immigrants. It's not too salty and lightly smoked - just perfect. Remarkably (or encouragingly), both of these products come from supermarkets - not a place I normally shop for food.
Continuing the Franco-Italian theme, there are Puy lentils and polenta, both cooked using home-made quail stock.
QUAIL WITH STREAKY BACON, PUY LENTILS AND POLENTA
Monday, September 1, 2014
LAMB SHANK WITH CELERIAC MASH
LAMB SHANK WITH CELERIAC MASH
Friday, August 29, 2014
HOLMBRAE CHICKEN WITH ROASTED FENNEL, CHOKO AND DUTCH CREAM POTATO
Well, I think these Holmbrae chooks from the NSW Southern Highlands come closer than any other Australian chicken. This one was rubbed with rosemary salt (from Salt, Meats, Cheese) and simply roasted, along with wedges of choko, baby fennel and Dutch cream potatoes.
HOLMBRAE CHICKEN WITH ROASTED FENNEL, CHOKO AND DUTCH CREAM POTATO
Thursday, August 28, 2014
FENNEL RISOTTO
FENNEL RISOTTO
CHICKEN THIGH WITH TWO SALADS
So, chicken thigh with two salads it is.
CHICKEN THIGH WITH TWO SALADS
Sunday, August 24, 2014
BRAISED WAGYU RUMP CAP WITH BABY KALE, RED CABBAGE & AIOLI
Australia produces some great wagyu (Kobe) beef. A lot of what's labelled wagyu here is a cross - usually wagyu and black Angus. The best pure wagyu gets shipped to Japan or snapped up by top-end restaurants. The big demand is for the premium cuts - porterhouse, eye fillet, rib fillet, rib. The rump cap is one of the unloved bits. Treated with love, it produces deliciously satisfying meals.
The piece I bought (about 1.25 kg) was braised whole in red wine, veal stock, with garlic, bay etc. It had about 6 hours cooking at 130C. Braised red cabbage underneath with baby kale leaves tossed in a tablespoon of walnut oil and a little red wine vinegar. Roasted garlic aïoli. Heaven.
BRAISED WAGYU RUMP CAP WITH BABY KALE, RED CABBAGE & AIOLI
BARBEQUED LAMB SHOULDER WITH CAPSICUM JAM
I love lamb shoulder. It needs & deserves long slow cooking. This one was rubbed with rosemary, mint and garlic. I roasted it at 140C for 3 hours, then finished it on the BBQ.
Red capsicum jam is delicious, easy and versatile - gently braised in olive oil, with smoked paprika, cumin seeds and red wine vinegar. Then palm sugar added to caramelise.
Maple glazed heirloom carrots from the weekly farmers markets are so packed with flavour.
BARBEQUED LAMB SHOULDER WITH CAPSICUM JAM
Saturday, August 23, 2014
ADOBO PRAWNS WITH ROASTED CORN AND CHIPOTLE SALSA
I realised I haven't been cooking as much Mexican food as I used to. One dish doesn't make amends, but it's a start.
So, classic flavours here. Prawns dusted with a seasoning of ground chipotles and other goodies. Roasted organic corn, tomato, local avocado, black beans and coriander under it. A chipotle salsa reclining to the side and a clutch of microherbs on top.
ADOBO PRAWNS WITH ROASTED CORN AND CHIPOTLE SALSA
Thursday, July 31, 2014
ROASTED VEGETABLES WITH ROAST GARLIC AIOLI
To my devout carnivore friends, I'm sorry. There's no meat in this picture.
To my devout vegan friends, I'm sorry. There's egg in the aïoli.
To the rest of you, here's something delicious for those times when you don't need flesh.
You can use all combinations of vegetables for this. Root vegetables are especially good - parsnips, Jerusalem artichokes, celeriac. I've used chokoes (I hate them boiled, but love them roasted), fennel and Dutch cream potatoes.
The roast garlic aïoli is a Christine Manfield recipe I have been making for years - and it always works and tastes brilliant.
ROASTED VEGETABLES WITH ROAST GARLIC AIOLI
Monday, July 28, 2014
STIR FRIED MINCED KANGAROO WITH CHILLI AND CORIANDER
There's a bit of faith required here. This dish is much tastier than it looks. Trust me.
It looks like a pile of chopped brown stuff with the occasionally green coriander leaf and a few pieces of fried eschalot. What you have to imagine is the richness of kangaroo, the sweet unctiousness of coconut oil and the marriage of garlic, chilli, soy sauce and palm sugar - with chopped coriander and a couple of tablespoons of fried eschalot added before serving. So good I want to cook it again. Now.
STIR FRIED MINCED KANGAROO WITH CHILLI AND CORIANDER
Sunday, July 27, 2014
BARBEQUED BABY OCTOPUS WITH SQUID INK RISOTTO
I've always liked the visual drama of squid ink risotto. There aren't enough black foods in the world - and this is one of the few. This is true black. Black as jet. Black as #000000.
There are two ways to get the squid ink you need for this. You can squeeze it from the ink sacks of fresh squid or octopus. Or you can buy it in jars from specialty grocers.
Once cleaned and cut into pieces, the octopus was marinated in olive oil, chilli and garlic before cooking. Just a light squeeze of lemon juice over the plated dish and that was that.
BARBEQUED BABY OCTOPUS WITH SQUID INK RISOTTO
Saturday, July 26, 2014
STIR FRIED CHICKEN WITH SNOW PEAS AND MINT
Stir fries aren't pretty. You can't beautifully plate up a stir fry. It is what it is - a bunch of ingredients flipped and slapped and stirred around a wok over a fierce heat.
So here is this version with chicken thigh meat with ginger, soy sauce, chilli bean paste, snow peas and mint.
STIR FRIED CHICKEN WITH SNOW PEAS AND MINT
Friday, July 25, 2014
GRILLED QUAIL WITH PUY LENTILS, RED CABBAGE AND BABY SPINACH
There used to be a restaurant south of Sydney that specialised in birds - duck, pheasant, guinea fowl, quail, spatchcock and pigeon. It was a great place for a slow weekend lunch. The birds were raised on a nearby farm - called, surprisingly, the Game Farm. The introduction of random breath testing killed business in the restaurant - as it did for other out-of-town restaurants.
Luckily, the farm continued. These quail come from The Game Farm. I've take some of the work out of eating quail by removing the breast and legs from the carcass (which I used to make quail stock - which I used to cook the lentils).
The Puy lentils have a wonderful nutty flavour, enhanced by the stock in which they cooked. The cabbage was braised with red wine vinegar, sugar, quail stock, garlic, star anise and bay leaves.
The baby spinach leaves were barely wilted in a covered pan over low heat.
GRILLED QUAIL WITH PUY LENTILS, RED CABBAGE AND BABY SPINACH
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
SPAGHETTI AL PANGRATTATO
Have you been to the opera? Did they have surtitles? Have you read the story line of an opera? Or the libretto? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then answer the next question. Did the words strike you as silly?
They did for me - in many operas at least. Sublime music, glorious singing - but singing about something inane in an improbable story.
Well the name of this dish reminds me of opera. Spaghetti al pangrattato sounds so much sexier than wheat strands with fried breadcrumbs.
Like a lot of Italian pasta dishes, this is really simple, but delicious. Basically breadcrumbs (home made from sour dough) shallow fried until golden, then mixed with cooked spaghetti, extra virgin olive, a little chilli, saltand garlic. That's it.
SPAGHETTI AL PANGRATTATO
Monday, July 21, 2014
POT AU FEU
I don't know if history books record how many wars started over food. My guess is quite a few. Some might have started because a city's food supply was cut off. That's enough reason reason to go into battle. I wonder how many battles started over a recipe. I wouldn't be surprised if there are a lot of them.
I remember a Rick Stein TV program where Carcassonne and neighbouring Castelnaudary battled over what goes into a true cassoulet. I remember Jamie Oliver cooking in an Italian village in which the local women almost beat him out of town for the liberties he was taking with a traditional pasta dish.
So it is with this humble French country stew. It seems that recipes for pot au feu are treasured family secrets and each is the only true way to make this dish. So at risk of upsetting French families with their firm beliefs about what should and shouldn't go into a pot au feu, here's mine.
This one started when I bought a nice piece of wagyu topside at the local markets. I immediately thought of a slow braise. I used red onions, parsnips, potato, tomato, celery - because I had them all on hand. I used bay leaves and thyme - also because I had them on hand.
It cooked for 5 hours at 140C. It was delicious. Was it authentic enough to satisfy a French country woman? I don't know. It satisfied me and our guests and worked a treat with a 1982 Chateau Léoville Barton.
POT AU FEU
Saturday, July 19, 2014
OCEAN TROUT WITH GINGERED SNOW PEA TENDRILS & ROE
Ocean trout is possibly my favourite eating fish. I write possibly because there'll be times when I might name yellow fin tuna or line-caught wild barramundi or coral trout as my favourite. And if I included crustaceans, I'd definitely include Western Australia scampi, Balmain bugs and blue swimmer crabs to my list.
When I can, I buy it with the skin on because the fat just under the skin adds extra flavour. So this piece was simply sautéed skin-side down in coconut oil. I tossed some snow pea tendrils with ginger, soy sauce and fish sauce and heated them just enough to take some of the unruly springiness out of the stems. Rice underneath and fresh unpasteurised roe on top. Embarrassingly simple and oh so healthy.
OCEAN TROUT WITH GINGERED SNOW PEA TENDRILS & ROE
Thursday, July 17, 2014
GRILLED CHICKEN WITH SMOKED ORANGE CAPSICUM SAUCE AND CORN SALSA
I like flavour in food. I lived in Mexico for a couple years. The first chicken I ate there had flavour, flavour I had forgotten. I took one bite and was immediately and magically transported to childhood and the flavour of a roast chicken on Sunday. I had forgotten that this is what chickens taste like - when they're free to graze on wild grasses and seeds, when they aren't encouraged to grow abnormally fast.
I occasionally taste chickens with real chicken flavour here in Australia. They invariably come from small producers and are sold by old-fashioned butchers.
Because I like flavour, I buy chicken on the bone and with the skin on (unless doing an Asian stir fry). Here's a thigh from a local butcher. He gets his chickens delivered on Tuesdays and cuts them up for sale. One of my favourite pieces is this thigh, which he calls a chicken chop.
It's simply brushed with olive oil and dusted with salt and chilli. The organic corn (organic because I suspect that most non-organic corn in Australia is genetically modified) is roasted and mixed with lime juice, coriander and a drizzle of maple syrup.
The orange capsicums are sweated with onion, smoked paprika and turmeric in olive oil. I then add a little chicken stock and purée smooth. It's delicious with chicken, fish and pork.
So there it is - vaguely Mexican. And full of flavour.
GRILLED CHICKEN WITH SMOKED ORANGE CAPSICUM SAUCE AND CORN SALSA
CAULIFLOWER SOUP WITH ROASTED TWEED VALLEY PECANS
This one is based on home made chicken stock. The cauliflower is slowly roasted to deepen the flavour. Then the two are introduced and blended with a little salt, pepper and nutmeg. I sometimes roast hazelnuts and drizzle hazelnut oil on top. This time I stirred in a little roast garlic infused olive oil and sprinkled some roasted local pecans.
CAULIFLOWER SOUP WITH ROASTED TWEED VALLEY PECANS