Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

  • Slow Cooked Beef in Red Wine

    I have a confession: I’m a slow cooking novice. I’ve steamed, I’ve baked, I’ve stewed, I’ve boiled and I’ve stir-fried. But until yesterday, I’d never slow cooked before.

    I know I’ve been, ahem, slow to jump on the slow cooking bandwagon. People have been telling me for years how they lived by their slow cookers during winter. They raved on about how easy slow cookers were to use: according to them you just chucked some browned meat, vegetables, stock or wine and herbs into the cooker at breakfast time, et voila – you’d return home at night to a beautifully cooked casserole. Working mothers, in particular, sang its virtues as slow cooking meant they could have a home cooked meal on the table a few minutes after they’d walked in the door. Maximum reward for minimal effort.

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  • Caramel Pudding with Honey Ice Cream

    There are times when you just need to make a pudding. Perhaps you’ve had a lousy day at work. Or you are feeling a little fragile. Maybe you just feel like spoiling yourself and those lucky enough to be fed by you.

    Whatever the reason, the tail end of winter, with its beautiful, sunshiny days and cool nights, is the perfect time for this recipe. The voluptuous caramel pudding is soothing and satisfying while the honey ice cream reminds you that spring, and therefore summer, are just around the corner. Which is reason enough to celebrate.

    This dish was inspired by a Nigella Lawson recipe. I made it for dessert one Friday night and it was so darn good that I had to make it again two days later when we had a family celebration.

    It’s so simple and quick to make, too. Can you chuck some torn up croissants in a dish? Boil some sugar water? Whisk some eggs? Throw it all in the oven? Of course you can. So you have no excuses not to make this dish.

    Cook it. Eat it. You won’t regret it.

    By the way, I don’t make the honey ice cream – I buy a tub of Golden North honey ice cream, which was my favourite when I was a child. Eating it reminds me of long, lazy summer days spent in the pool playing Marco Polo and pretending to be mermaids and narwhales. You could substitute it with vanilla or macadamia nut ice cream. But only if absolutely necessary.

    INGREDIENTS

    3-4 large croissants, to fill a small oven proof dish as per above
    150 mls thickened cream
    150 mls full fat milk
    3 large eggs, beaten
    100 grams caster sugar
    1 teaspoon vanilla essence
    4 tablespoons water
    Golden North honey ice cream

    METHOD

    Preheat oven to 180 degrees Celcius (160 degrees if fan forced).

    Tear the croissants into small pieces and put into a small oven proof dish until dish is comfortably full as per picture above. I used three and a half croissants.

    Put the sugar and water into a small saucepan and mix to combine. Bring to the boil and then let it bubble away for about 5 minutes on a medium heat to caramelise – once it changes colour from clear to a dark orange-brown it is ready.

    Turn to low heat and add cream and vanilla essence. Whisk furiously away as the sugar will start to turn into toffee and you’ll end up with chunky bits as per the picture below. Whisk fast to dissolve the toffee over a low heat.

    Turn off the heat and then add the beaten eggs to the mixture, stirring to combine.

    Pour mixture over croissants and leave for 10-15 minutes.

    After 15 minutes the croissants should have absorbed all the liquid and be gorgeously moist.

    Bake in the oven for 25-30 minutes until the top is crisp and beginning to brown.

    Serve with a generous scoop of honey ice cream in individual dishes.

    Be prepared for requests for seconds.

    Perfect for 4-6.

  • Throwing a kid’s birthday party without losing your mind

    Children’s birthday parties often start with squeals of delight and joyful anticipation but end in tears and swearing. From mum and dad, I hasten to add.

    You see, us Generation X parents always want to do our best for our kids. Our mothers made us every single cake from The Australian Women’s Weekly Cake Cookbook when we were growing up and we feel responsible for ensuring our own kids have those same special memories of their birthdays.

    So, yes, we can get carried away. Been there, done that, had the breakdown over the icing that wouldn’t set.

    But this year I got smart. I managed to pull off a 5 year old party for 20 children with a fully home cooked menu without breaking a sweat, a nail or a plate over somebody’s head (usually, my unfortunate husband). A first for me.

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  • Honey and Lemon Tea

    G’day. I’ve been itching to update you on our recent holiday with a ‘Malaysia: Best Eats’ special and a report on Melaka’s legendary Jonker Street. Unfortunately, I (and the rest of the family) have been hijacked by a killer virus that has knocked the stuffing out of us. So I’ll be offline for a few days more, and will return asap with more food news and recipes. In the meantime, I’ll be drinking lots of honey & lemon tea.

  • Postcard from Malaysia

    8 days in Malaysia = 40 meals = me coming home with an extra 3 kgs around my waist.

    Was it worth it? Oh, yeah. Because Malaysia is a foodie’s paradise. There’s just so much good stuff to eat there.

    Malaysia boasts a wonderful mix of Malaysian, Indian and Chinese food, along with the intriguing Nonya style of cooking, which blends Chinese ingredients and cooking techniques with Malaysian spices. The result of intermarriage between early Chinese migrants and local Malays, Nonya cooking features heavy use of coconut milk, candlenut, galangal, belachan, sambal, tamarind, asam flower (torch ginger), lemongrass, and pandan leaves.

    Food in Malaysia is cheap and readily available at all times of the day and night. Whenever I had a craving for fried noodles at 10pm at night I could always find a hawker stall within a 5 minutes walk of wherever I was. Love that convenience.

    So what were our favourite dishes? Well, we ate a LOT of good food there but these dishes below were the stand outs. If you’re visiting Malaysia, or eating at a Malaysian/Asian restaurant you must try some of these. Luckily, we have some fantastic Malaysian restaurants in Australia so I don’t have to wait another year until my next fix.

    I don’t have photos of everything we ate unfortunately – travelling with two small children meant that the best laid plans often went out the window. But that’s life with small children for you.

    PS Watch out for an upcoming post about the Soong family in Malaysia and my grandmother’s asam laksa recipe.

    HITS

    1) My top Malaysian dish is Penang’s signature noodle soup, the Asam Laksa. Both my husband and I are completely addicted to this chill-hot, tamarind-sour, asam (ginger) flower-tinged fish noodle soup. I can honestly say I never get enough of this dish. It’s the most marvellous combination of flavours – the fresh pineapple, onion and mint cut through the strong fishy flavour making it all at once savoury, sour, sweet, hot and salty. I find it endlessly satisfying.

    2) Hot on the heels of the Asam Laksa is the Char Kway Teow (Fried Noodles). Simple to prepare (watch out for an upcoming recipe), these noodles are pretty much universally beloved. Prawns, sliced fish cake and cockles are fried with garlic and sambal chilli before being mixed with fresh flat rice noodles, spring onions and fresh bean sprouts. Soya sauce is added for flavour and then an egg is cracked into the wok, allowed to partly set and then mixed through the noodles. This was my preferred choice for supper every night.

    3) Chicken Rice or Pork Rice are also firm favourites of ours. Chicken Rice is either roasted or poached chicken served with chicken flavoured rice (rice cooked in chicken stock). Hainese Chicken Rice is of course the ultimate chicken rice – tender poached chicken is served with chicken rice and a bowl of clear soup, and accompanied by a fresh gremolta-esque sauce made with ginger and spring onions and a fresh garlic chilli sauce. My children love chicken rice – when we were in Malaysia they had it at least once a day.

    Pork Rice is roasted pork (either Char Siew style or roasted style as per below) served with plain rice. The belly pork is tender and juicy while the skin is crunchy and salty. Not surprisingly, my kids loved this, too.

    4) The better known laksa, Laska Lemak or Curry Laksa, is also a favourite of mine. A coconut curry soup is poured over hokkein or rice noodles (or a mixture of both), fried tofu puffs, chicken, prawns and fishcake, and garnished with fresh beansprouts, sambal and often, half a boiled egg. It’s a deeply satisfying and filling dish, and hugely popular in Australia.

    5) I never miss eating Satays when I’m visiting Malaysia. I love everything about them – the lemongrass and onion marinade, the tender chicken or beef skewers, the thick, roasted peanut chilli sauce, the cubes of starchy cooked rice and the roughly chopped cucumber and raw Spanish (red) onion that accompanies them.

    6) We had the most marvellous Sui Gao (water dumplings in Cantonese)  at my grandma’s house bought from the local hawker place. The pastry was beautifully light, and the filling was a wonderful combination of pork, carrot, Chinese mushroom, crispy water chestnut, vermicelli, and spring onions. It was so good I am determined to make them at home – watch out for an upcoming recipe.

    7) Congee or Chinese porridge (we call it by its Cantonese name, Jook Jook) is readily available throughout Malaysia. Rice is cooked in lots of water with ginger until it breaks down, becoming like thick soup. Then shredded meat (chicken, pork or beef), seafood (dried scallops and prawns) or century year old eggs are added before the congee is flavoured with spring onions, white pepper, soy sauce and sesame oil. Dried anchovies and roasted peanuts are also sometimes added. It’s very much Chinese comfort food – people eat it for breakfast, when they’re sick or when they’re feeling fragile.

    8. Dim Sum – Dim Sum is not actually Malaysian but Chinese. My kids loved the siu mai (steamed pork dumpling) and char siu bao (roast pork steamed bun).

    9) Curry Fishballs. I’ve eaten these wandering around night markets in Hong Kong many times but I never expected to see them in Malaysia. But the dim sum seller on Jonker Street in Melaka was selling them as ‘Melaka satay fish balls’ and they were fantastic. In Hong Kong you eat them on a stick but in Melaka you buy them by the cup.

    10) Mee Goreng is a popular dish in Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore. I quite enjoyed this dish but my two kids refused to eat it. Not sure why but that meant more for me then!

    11) I’ve had Pineapple Tarts many times before but this was the first time I’ve really appreciated them properly. Pineapple tarts are simply a small pastry filled with pineapple jam. But this is so much better than the sum of its parts. For starters, the pastry is gorgeously light and flaky (thanks to the use of lard, not butter) and the homemade jam is fibrous, dense and not overly sweet. It’s a fantastic combination and perfect after a chilli hot meal. Just make sure you eat them outside as they crumble all over your clothes.
    12) Fruit in Malaysia is so good. It’s so flavoursome and sweet because the fruit has been allowed to ripen properly. In Malaysia, fresh juices abound (we love drinking watermelon, sugarcane, carrot, star fruit and coconut juice) while fresh fruit, conveniently peeled, cut up into small pieces and bagged, is available everywhere – a much healthier version of ‘fast food.’ Below are duku langsat and mangosteen from the local market.

    13) Fatty Crab is the name of a well known restaurant that specialises in, you guessed it, crabs. One night my Auntie brought some Fatty Crab chilli crab home. Cooked Singapore style in a thick, sweet chilli gravy, the crabs were absolutely sensational. In the restaurant you can order toast to mop up the gravy – a seemingly unorthodox combination that is just so right.

    14) Peanut Pancake is a sweet, crepe-like snack available at morning markets and at street stalls. A thin batter is poured into a metal mould to make a round crepe shape, and dusted with roasted peanuts, brown sugar, and sweet corn before being folded in half and popped into a paper bag. It’s absolutely delicious and very, very moreish.

    MISSES

    1) I know people who love Popiah. My dad, for instance, always orders this soft spring roll filled with stir-fried and raw vegetables covered with a hoisin-y, peanut-y sauce. But I just don’t get popiah. I eat it and I’m nonplussed. For me, it’s a non-event. And it’s not because I’m not into spring rolls; I adore fresh Vietnamese spring rolls and I’ll eat my mother’s deep-fried Cantonese spring rolls by the plateful. But I just don’t get popiah. So I don’t.

    2) I also don’t understand the fuss about Asam Pedas, which we ate in Melaka. Everyone told us we had to eat this dish in Melaka; my cousins, my aunt, our taxi driver – they were all enthusiastically singing the praises of Asam Pedas. Basically, it’s a piece of fish cooked in an Asam sour thick gravy/soup, served with a plate of plain rice, fried cabbage (very nice, actually), half a boiled egg and raw cucumber slices. The idea is that you mix the gray and fish over the rice as you eat. As I love Asam laksa I was expecting great things from this dish but both my husband and I were distinctly underwhelmed. Put it this way: I’d eat it if there was nothing else available.

    3) Wonton Mein (Wonton Noodles) is available throughout Malaysia but it’s just not very good. I guess I’m a traditionalist when it comes to wonton mein – I expect it to look and taste as it does in Hong Kong, where it originates. The Malaysian versions often introduce rogue ingredients and flavours that I think detract from the simplicity of the dish. You can order wonton mein either wet (in soup) or dry (on a plate with a small bowl of wonton in soup separately). But I would rather order something else in Malaysia.

    4) One of Melaka’s signature dishes, Chicken Rice Balls, also left me unimpressed. Basically, it’s your normal Chicken Rice but the rice is shaped into small balls. The idea is that you can dip these in the sauces and pop them straight into your mouth. But I like dribbling the chicken soup, chilli and spring onion/ginger sauces over my rice and eating it quite wet. So the ball concept just doesn’t appeal to me. My kids, however, loved it.

    5) Now I usually love Roti Canai, an Indian-esque flatbread made freshly before my eyes. And I love dipping it into an curry sauce before stuffing it greedily in my mouth. But my experience one night when we were staying at the Sheraton in Kuala Lumpur has put me off it, at least for now. At 10pm, I’d had a craving for food so ventured out to see what I could find. I ordered some char kway teow from a hawker stall and then a roti canai from an Indian restaurant and it all looked great. But when I got back to the hotel and decanted the curry sauce from it’s plastic bag into a bowl, a big black beetle emerged. Eeeeeewwwww!!! Thankfully, the beetle was dead but it was still disgusting. As the sauce sits in an open warming dish, the beetle must have fallen in sometime during the day. This brings me to my number one tip when eating street food: eat fresh!