Monday, January 30, 2012

GAZPACHO WITH SCHOOL PRAWNS

Either this is a VERY large bowl of soup or they are VERY small prawns. And the answer is the latter. These local school prawns are about 5cm from end to end (and half that when shelled). You wouldn't want to be shelling a lot of them, because they're fiddly little critters. But you WOULD want to be eating a lot of them because they are SO sweet.
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STIR FRIED PRAWNS WITH CHOY SUM

A stir fry is about as simple as food gets. And this is about as simple as a stir fry gets. Prawns sautéed in peanut oil with crispy prawn chilli paste (from most Asian grocers), garlic and ginger. Steamed choy sum and light soy sauce added at the end and that's it.
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Saturday, January 28, 2012

MEZCAL CURED SALMON SALAD

I didn't do medicine. One reason is that I didn't do well enough to get into the Faculty of Medicine. I did get into architecture - but as far as I know, nobody has ever been cured by a building. I thought of this tonight because this is about the only curing I'm capable of now. I bought a salmon tail on Thursday and cured it in mezcal, sugar, salt and coriander seeds. Tonight I composed this salad (and a salad is all the composing I'm capable of, despite 6 years of piano lessons and a stint in the school choir). Black beans, Lebanese cucumber, baby roma tomatoes and baby spinach. Healthy, colourful ... but hardly enough to cure someone.
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HOR MOK PLA

In Thailand, this steamed fish curry would be prepared in banana leaf cups. Our neighbours have a banana plantation and I can get banana leaves whenever I need them. However, we've had a bit of rain around here these past couple of days - enough to cause local flooding - and I wasn't in the mood for traipsing around in the mud to cut a leaf, so I made do with glass bowls. If you haven't had this at a Thai restaurant or cooked it yourself, give it a go. It's really quite simple. Ten minutes prep and 30 minutes cooking. It's a mix of finely sliced fish (I used barramundi), lime juice, fish sauce, palm sugar, red chilli paste, coconut milk and egg. I lined the base of the cooking vessels with Thai basil leaves, spooned in the mixture and steamed. That's kaffir lime and chilli on top.
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Friday, January 27, 2012

BARRAMUNDI WITH MISO & GOMADARE SAUCE AND STEAMED BOK CHOY

I can't imagine any food more appropriate on Australia Day than something Asian.
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OCEAN TROUT WITH TOMATO AND BASIL SALSA

There's a local fisherman at the weekly markets. He sells fish caught just off the coast here. He usually supplements his catch with a few other species from boats up and down the coast.  For the past few weeks he has had ocean trout - maybe my favourite fish. Nothing complicated about the way I've done this. Simply pan fried in a little grapeseed oil and a salsa of deliciously sweet local tomatoes and shredded basil.
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Monday, January 23, 2012

DUCK CONFIT WITH ROAST KUMERA MASH AND SPICED BEETROOT

Ever made duck confit? Once you have located the duck fat you need, the dish is quite simple. I did the first stage (slow cooking the duck in a bath of fat) on Saturday. The final stage (heating and crisping the skin) takes 30 minutes. I also roasted the kumera in a slow oven (about 130C) until it was soft, then added butter, salt and pecan oil and puréed. The roasting intensifies the flavour of the kumera. The same technique works equally well with pumpkin, parsnip, carrots, Swedes, turnips or white sweet potato. I roasted the beetroots in foil, peeled, diced and mixed with hazelnut oil, beetroot vinegar and coarsely crushed hazelnuts.
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Saturday, January 21, 2012

WAGYU RIB FILLET WITH TRUFFLED POMMES ANNA

Couldn't resist this 10+ marbled wagyu in Sydney. As befitting a great chunk of cow, I didn't do much to it - simply rubbed in a little olive oil and sprinkled with Tetsuya's truffled salt before searing in a cast iron pan. The potatoes also got a little truffle salt - along with an indecent amount of Lurpak butter. With all that richness, a simple mesclun salad seemed right - with EVOO/sherry vinegar/ Pommery mustard vinaigrette
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Thursday, January 19, 2012

SPAGHETTI WITH HEIRLOOM TOMATOES AND SHAVED PARMESAN

Away for a few days, so a simple pasta on returning home. Spaghetti with olive oil, garlic, fresh heirloom tomatoes and shaved parmigiana reggiano.
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Monday, January 16, 2012

TUNA, CAPSICUM AND SUN-DRIED TOMATO PIZZA

There was a time in the 80s when there was a plague of sun-dried tomatoes. They were everywhere - on pasta, on pizza, in sandwiches and wraps, in pastes, in eardrums, in artwork, on military service, cricket fields, student protests ... and then we fell out of love with them. A shame, because when they're good they are very very good. But when they are bad, they are in supermarkets - usually overpowered by dried herbs (like a Subway store). I used a small amount of sun-dried tomatoes (1 1/2 per small pizza), along with yellowfin tuna, ripe red capsicum, baby capers and home-made tomato passato and pizza dough. That's it. Everything but the tuna and capers went into the oven from the start. The fish and capers were added 2 minutes from the end, just long enough to heat through.
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Sunday, January 15, 2012

CHIPOTLE RUBBED TUNA WITH CORN SALSA AND HEIRLOOM TOMATOES

How Mexican is this? Fish, chilli, corn and tomatoes - basics of Mexican cuisine. If Columbus hadn't sailed to the Americas, someone else would have. If the Spanish hadn't colonised the continent, someone else would have. If they hadn't taken tomatoes, corn and chilli back to Europe, someone else would have. It's hard to imagine Italy without its tomatoes or polenta. It's hard to imagine Belgium or Switzerland without chocolate. It's hard to imagine summer without mango or avocado. All have their origins in Mexico and other countries of central america. This is yellowfin tuna, caught off Mooloolaba, a couple of hours' drive north of here.
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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

OCEAN TROUT WITH PICKLED CABBAGE AND THAI CURRY REDUCTION

I don't mind admitting I have been reduced to tears once or twice in my life. I'm not sure what a curry gets reduced to, but here's a very simple sauce that works beautifully with the other components here.

THAI CURRY REDUCTION
2 teaspoons of yellow curry paste (you could also use laksa paste or red curry paste)
2 teaspoons of crispy prawn chilli paste (from Asian grocers)
4-5 tablespoons of coconut cream.

Put the three ingredients into a small saucepan and reduce over medium heat.

PICKLED CABBAGE
Fine slices of sugarloaf cabbage ( about 2 cups)
Teaspoon of salt
Teaspoon of sugar
Tablespoon of coconut vinegar
A few drops of sesame oil

Mix all ingredients and allow to macerate for about an hour

The skinned ocean trout was simply sautéed in grapeseed oil over medium-hi heat - but cooked only on the skin side. That's it. Give it a go.
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Sunday, January 8, 2012

BARRAMUNDI WITH FLAGEOLET & TOMATO SALAD AND ROCKET

Very simple - both me and the dish. Panko-crumbed barramundi on a bed of flageolet beans and tomatoes with a caper vinaigrette. Wild rocket on top. Ten minutes prep. Ten minutes cooking. Fast food.
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KITCHEN EQUIPMENT CIRCA 1500 BC

My Mexican friends know what this is. For the rest of you, it's a lesson in durability and obsolescence. The metate (the gently curved rock on the bottom) and the mano (the stone baton on top) are essential pieces of Mexican kitchen equipment. They're essential today - just as they were 3500 years ago. They are made of bassalt. This one measures about 14 inches (34cm) wide by 17 inches (41cm) deep by 10 inches (24cm) high (at the back). It weighs about 25 kilos. It has three legs and slopes toward the front. It was/is used for grinding (mostly) dry ingredients. The most common were/are corn (to make tamales and tortillas) and cocoa beans (to make chocolate and mole). In Oaxaca (in southern Mexico) metates are often hand painted on their sides and given as wedding gifts. Once given, they become family heirlooms, passing from cook to cook. Today, many Mexican cooks use a food processor or blender. However, the end result is different. A metate and mano grind ingredients, whereas a processor or blender shreds.
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Saturday, January 7, 2012

ROAST CHICKEN WITH 2 VEG

I don't know about you, but when I see menu descriptions like roast chicken with 2 veg, I have memories of RSL clubs, country pubs, school dining rooms, hospitals, soup kitchens ... not that I have experience of all of these. Yes, roast chicken with 2 veg is an accurate description, but it doesn't really do it justice. The chicken is the front half of the Alstonville chicken cooked last night. I salted the skin and left it to draw out moisture, then patted it completely dry so the skin would crisp up nicely. One of the veg is steamed broccolini. The other is actually 2 veg in one - mashed Jerusalem artichokes and sebago potato. The glossy brown stuff on the left is garlic jam ... which might count as another vegetable. Or maybe not.
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Friday, January 6, 2012

LEG OF CHICKEN WITH ROASTED CORN & KUMERA SALAD AND PICO DO GALLO SALSA


When I dropped in at Jack Sprat's, my local butcher, these chickens had just arrived. They are bred at Alstonville, a town south of here. Paul the butcher gets a delivery every week, usually on a Wednesday, but not always. It really depends on the mood of the farmer. These aren't certified organic chickens. Apparently the farmer couldn't be bothered getting his farm accredited. But it seems that his farming methods are totally organic. They are the best tasting chickens available around these parts. The only better chicken I've tasted in Australia is from the Mudgee farm of Angela and Carlo Colaiacomo of Sydney's AC Butchery. And the best chicken I've eaten ANYWHERE is in Mexico (mostly bought from the market at Prado Norte in Mexico City). These legs rest on a bed of roasted corn, kumera, maple syrup, pecan oil, lime juice, salt and coriander. I served a simple pico di gallo (cock's beak) salsa with it.
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SPAGHETTI WITH SAUSAGE SAUCE

Sometimes you feel like pasta with a meat sauce, but don't have the 11/2 -2 hours needed to make a Bolognese or classic ragú. Here's a great substitute.

SAUSAGE SAUCE
(For 2)
Olive oil
2 large Italian pork and fennel sausages
3 Roma tomatoes, diced
2 cloves garlic, chopped
300 mls white wine
2 tablespoons tomato paste
Pinch of nutmeg
Salt
Pepper

Heat the olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Squeeze the sausage mixture from the casings into the pan. Break up the meat with a spatula or fork. Cook, turning frequently, until browned. Add the rest of the ingredients and cook uncovered until the sauce has reduced by about half and thickened, which should take no more than 30 minutes. That's it.
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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

KING PRAWN LAKSA

If you're Australian, you'll know laksas well. If you're Singaporean or Malaysian, you'll know them even better. I had my first laksa at the original Malaya restaurant on Sydney's George Street in 1973. At the same meal, I also had my first kapitan prawns, kway teow and sing chow chow mai. I don't know how many laksas I have had since then. I do know that when Peter Tan opened the Singapura in North Sydney, I was there for three of the first 4 services. Even if you know laksas well, you mightn't know that the long leaf shown here is laksa leaf - which is also called Vietnamese mint. It grows in the garden, which is handy, because it's one of those herbs that you don't need often and you don't need a lot of and when you do need it, you can never find it in stores. King prawns aren;t called king prawns because they're big or somehow regal. It's simply the name of this variety of prawn. Best thing to drink with a laksa? Beer.
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RED EMPEROR WITH ASPARAGUS AND BROAD BEAN PUREE

If you're not familiar with red emperor, it's a reef fish with mild and sweet, flaky flesh. Nothing flashy done with it here. Simply lightly coated in panko crumbs and sautéed in ghee. Served with steamed asparagus and a purée of steamed and skinned broad beans, extra virgin olive oil and salt. If you haven't tried broad beans prepared this way, give it again when they are next in season. This was a method I learnt many years ago from a chef mate, Steve Manfredi in Sydney - and I have been in love with it ever since.
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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

KNIVES | TOJIRO FLASH CHEF'S KNIFE

Like a lot of foodie tragics, I buy the cookbooks of the world's best chefs. It doesn't matter that I am hopelessly ill-equipped to match their culinary genius. I can look at the photos and marvel at each component and the artistic composition on the plate. I can read the recipe and imagine how each component tastes, then imagine all of the flavours and textures working in harmony. There is one thing I can do that puts me on equal terms with a chef like Heston Blumenthal - and that is to use the same knife that he does. This is a Tojiro knife. It is constructed of 63 layers of Damascene laminated steel. The moment I held this knife, I knew it was something special. The balance and weight seemed perfect. It's hard to explain the pleasure from working with a knife like this - so I won't. Just trust me. It is a beautiful knife.
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Monday, January 2, 2012

SALAD OF CHICKEN, CUCUMBER, HERBS AND ROASTED RICE

A typical - but not traditional - Thai salad. Smoked chicken, eschallots, cucumber, Thai basil, mint, coriander, chillies and Kaffir lime leaves with a dressing of palm sugar, crispy prawn chilli paste, lime juice and fish sauce, sprinkled with ground roasted rice after plating up.
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KNIVES | SHUN SANTOKU

Caterers and amateur cooks have one advantage over professional chefs. Because we're working in our own kitchens or with one or two others in a borrowed kitchen, we can buy special knives that would be impractical for chefs. (Why? Because knives get knocked around in a commercial kitchen. They also get knocked off.) I have mostly bought German knives, sometimes French. However I have lusted after a Japanese knife since seeing some exquisite hand-made sashimi knives in Tokyo Mart in Sydney's Northbridge 20 years ago.
Those hand-made knives can easily costs $1000, even $2000. They are treasured for the fame of the knife maker (or sword maker, since the best Japanese knife makers were traditionally also sword makers), as much as for the craftsmanship on display in each knife. Shun knives don't have the history of some of the rarer knives made totally by hand. They have only been made since 2003. They're largely hand forged from 16 layers of steel. The handles are asymmetrically shaped and best suit a right handed cook. They are lighter in weight than equivalent European knives, but feel like an extension of your hand. The santoku shape is versatile and 12.5cm blade makes it a great knife for when a full 20cm or 27cm chef's knife is overkill.
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Sunday, January 1, 2012

RISTRETTO

It's 3pm January 1, 2012. The year is 15 hours old. I didn't make any resolutions - but if I had, it would have been to take time to really enjoy life's simple pleasures. And here's what I have enjoyed so far today -
Waking up - the value of waking can't be over-estimated.
The unconditional love of a dog - and in this case it's not even our dog, but our neighbours'. He just happens to regard our home as part of his turf.
A walk by the beach - something we try to do several times a week, along Kirra, Greenmount, Snapper Rocks, Duranbar and the Tweed River.
Nature - like the poincianas covered in vermilion flowers, the rainbow lorikeets hanging like fruit from the grevillea, the water dragons sunning on the rocks, the cackles and chortles of friar birds, the smell of the sea ... and more.
Fresh fruit - like the mango we shared a while ago. Along with peaches, mangoes remind me of what's so special about summer.
Ristretto - coffee at its purest. In the book and film of Perfume, Jean Baptiste Grenouille spent a good part of his (misguided) career trying to distill the pure essence of all that he found (which included virgins - hence the 'misguided'). If he were to distill the essence of coffee, he would start with a ristretto.
If these were all the simple pleasures I experienced today, I'd be happy - but as I wrote, it's only 3pm and I have a feeling there are some more waiting to be (re)discovered in the hours ahead.
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VEGETABLE SOUP WITH AIOLI

I don't make soup as often as I should. (I also don't drink enough water, but that's a different story.) I had bought some Jerusalem artichokes, asparagus and sebago potatoes at the markets. I always have home-made chicken stock in the freezer. And I had cooked some flageolet beans. That was pretty much all I needed to whip up this soup. I also had some home-made aïoli in the fridge, so a dollop of that went in after plating up and some toasted slices of Sonoma sourdough on the side and it's all done.
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MOROCCAN BRAISED GOAT

Have you eaten goat? If of North African, Central Asian or Mexican background, I expect you have. If of European, North American, South East Asian or South Pacific backgrounds, possibly not. I think it tastes a little like lamb - but simultaneously richer yet more subtle than lamb. In Mexico we most frequently ate it roasted slowly over hot coals or as barbacoa (covered in a spiced chilli paste, wrapped in banana leaves and cooked for 4-5 hours over low heat). The spices in this Moroccan-inspired dish differ from those in a barbacoa - but there are some common spices (as you'd expect - the Spanish would have taken cinnamon, cumin, cloves and other Moorish spices when they invaded the Americas). I served it with ptitim - also called Israeli couscous.
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