Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

  • A Father’s Day Brunch & Two Fab KitchenAid Giveaways!

    Bacon.

    Did that get your attention?

    If you’re a pork eater, bacon has to one of the ultimate brunch dishes.

    This isn’t any old bacon either: this is Schulz Bacon from the Barossa Valley, officially Australia’s best bacon, as judged at the Sydney Royal Show.

    *Gazes dreamily into the distance.*

    Father’s Day is only a few days away in Australia — Sunday September 2nd to be exact — so I thought I’d share some recipe ideas in case you’re thinking of cooking your old man brunch.

    On our Father’s Day Menu (in order of appearance):

    • Schulz Bacon and Free-Range Eggs (sunny side up);
    • Strawberries from the Adelaide Hills;
    • Truffled mushrooms made with truffle paste by The Mushroom Man;
    • Sourdough from Dough – served fresh and toasted;
    • Bauernschinken (similar to prosciutto but smoked and lightly seasoned) from Barossa Fine Foods;
    • Mini Truss Tomatoes;
    • Nuage Blanc (White Cloud), a French-style soft cheese by B.-D. Farm Paris Creek;
    • Wastonia Cheddar from Western Australia, a bitey cheddar with a wonderful melty mouth feel;
    • Cheese Factory crackers from Say Cheese;
    • Spanish Salami (a mildly seasoned salami) from Barossa Fine Foods;
    • Tangelos, grapefruits and lemons from a friend’s garden;
    • Coffee; and
    • Juice.
    All produce was bought from the Adelaide Central Market unless otherwise stated.

    Now if my dad were in his native Malaysia he’d be tucking into a Nasi Lemak (coconut rice) with extra curry and sambal, some fried noodles and maybe some dim sim that he bought at his local market for breakfast.

    But after 40+ years in Australia he’s certainly learned to appreciate a Western-style breakfast and enjoys the lavishness of a spread like this. So the other day, my parents came around for a pre-Father’s Day brunch.

    This brunch is all about timing, people. Don’t think you can just nonchalantly put the eggs on and then start casually plating the other bits and pieces. You don’t have to be militant but you do have to do things with some thought and planning to ensure that no one eats cold toast, or worst, cold bacon. (No!!!)

    Luckily, most of this brunch should be served at room temperature (the bread, the butter, the cheese, the fruit, and the tomatoes) so these can be easily plated and set aside, leaving you to juggle just the eggs, bacon, mushrooms, toast, coffee and tea.

    Do remember to have the oven on low so you can keep the eggs, bacon, toast or mushrooms warm while you’re finishing up.

    Brunch is such a wonderful start to the day. It’s one of the easiest and most relaxed ways I know to entertain friends with kids.

    The wonderful spread of food and drink on the table always brings a smile to people’s faces, too.

    Happy Father’s Day, dad. We love you.


    Bacon, Eggs & Truffled Mushrooms for A Father's Day Brunch
     
    Author: 
    Recipe type: Breakfast
    Prep time: 
    Cook time: 
    Total time: 
    Make your dad brunch for Father's Day - it'll make him happy!
    Ingredients
    Bacon & Eggs
    • 1-2 slices of bacon per person
    • 1 egg per person
    Truffled Mushrooms
    • 1 tablespoon butter
    • 1 clove garlic, finely chopped
    • 350 grams button mushrooms, brushed and quartered
    • 2 teaspoons truffle paste
    • Salt & pepper to taste
    • Parsley
    Instructions
    Bacon & Eggs
    1. Pre-heat oven to 100 degrees Celsius and place an oven-proof plate in it.
    2. Place bacon in a cold, non-stick fry pan and then place over medium heat. Cook, turning regularly, until the meat is nicely charring and the fat is crisp and brown.
    3. Meanwhile, fry the eggs one at a time in a bilini pan. As the eggs are done, slide them onto the warmed plate in the oven to keep warm so you can serve everyone at the same time.
    Truffled Mushrooms
    1. Heat up a non-stick fry pan over a medium heat and then melt the butter.
    2. Add the garlic and stir continuously with a wooden spoon for about 30 seconds before adding the mushrooms.
    3. Continue cooking, stirring regularly until mushrooms are cooked through and the edges are starting to crisp.
    4. Add two teaspoons truffle paste, and then grate fresh pepper over the mushrooms. Taste and then add salt as desired.
    5. Garnish with fresh chopped parsley and serve immediately.

    KitchenAid Giveaway!!

    Thanks to Filtered Media I have two KitchenAid packs to give away for Father’s Day.

    Each pack contains one KitchenAid artisan 2-slice toaster (valued at $169) and one KitchenAid artisan coffee maker (valued at $199).

    The packs come in black or red. Here is an example of each prize below. Aren’t they stunning? You can imagine what they’d look like in the other colour if you squint.

    Give Away Rules:

    1. This competition is open to Australian residents only. 
    2. Log in to enter using the entry form below and click on each task to view the instructions.
    3. You will receive one (1) entry for each task you complete below. For example, if you leave a comment below you receive one entry. If you leave a comment and ‘like’ The Hungry Australian on Facebook you will receive two entries. If you leave a comment, ‘like’ The Hungry Australian on Facebook and follow me on Twitter you will receive three entries. You get the drift!
    4. For three (3) bonus entries, login to Pinterest, follow The Hungry Australian, pin the two KitchenAid prize photos above and then Pin at least two of the photos from this post. Once your Pinterest board is complete return here and click the +1 Do It option for the Pinterest Board Entry Option and then enter the link to your Pinterest board. If you aren’t currently signed up to Pinterest email me at info@hungryaustralian.com with ‘Pinterest please’ as the subject line and I can send you an invitation to join.
    5. For each of the tasks below click on the +1 Do It button to follow the entry instructions and record your entry. *** Don’t forget to do this for each task you complete otherwise your entry will NOT be counted! *** 
    6. The more times you enter the greater your chances of winning.
    7. Two lucky winners will be chosen at random.
    8. Thanks for entering and good luck!

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • Guest Post: Eating 101 (A Beginners’ Guide to Food)

    I’d like to welcome my friend, Kerina, as my guest for this next post.

    Kerina and I met in a Philosophy 1A lecture at the University of Adelaide and bonded over a shared love of indie music and girl bands that could rock out. The next year we both started writing for On Dit, the Adelaide University students’ newspaper. We were appointed Music Editors with another friend in 1995, and then elected Editors in 1996. It was when we were laying out the weekly, 80-page A3 newspaper that Kerina realised that she loved design more than words; she later retrained as a graphic designer. 

    Ten months ago, Kerina and her fiancé welcomed a baby boy to their family and I blogged about the importance of feeding new parents.

    Here’s what Kerina has to share about her son learning how to eat. 

    Imagine, for a moment, an alien lands on your doorstep.

    As part of explaining life on our humble planet, you introduce them to our concept of food. They’ve never felt the joy of sinking their teeth/gums/tentacles into a ripe peach. They’ve never winced at the sourness of lemon, or experienced the fire of chilli. They don’t know that bananas taste better peeled.

    How do you begin to introduce the vast scope of flavours and textures for the first time, to somone for whom food is a new concept?

    Ten months ago we welcomed R into our family, and five months ago we started on this journey together.

    Tasting those first single-ingredient purees was a surprising experience for both of us. As adults, we take for granted the taste of most fresh produce: we see the carrot on our plate, and know how it tastes before it reaches our mouth. The expectation is well-established.

    Continue reading

  • Discovering my Inner Baker (crushing on KitchenAid)

    Bakers are made, not born.

    Don’t believe me?

    A few years ago, my cakes (and my photography) looked like this:

    Emily Birthday Cake

    Notice how this cake is leaning precariously to one side and the very runny icing is pooling in the middle?

    *Cringe*

    At least my daughter looks darling in her cute fairy-outfit-over-pyjamas look. (Wait, did that comment just turn me into a Mommy Blogger? lol)

    The photograph says it all: I used to SUCK as a baker.

    But over the last couple of years my baking has improved a lot. Over the last year it’s improved dramatically.

    Why?

    Mostly, I’ve made more of an effort. I studied cookbooks and food blogs, bought some great kitchen gadgets (a revolving cake stand, an offset spatula, assorted cake pans and cooling racks), and kept the pantry stocked with baking essentials (flour, sugar, butter, eggs, milk, vanilla, coconut, and icing sugar) so I could bake whenever the urge arose.

    But credit must also go to my latest kitchen accessory and my serious new crush, the KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer.

    A few months ago, I received an email from the good folk at Filtered Media about KitchenAid. I responded and not long after a red KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer arrived at my home for a test drive.

    Now I’d never had a stand mixer before and had always been curious about Kitchenaid’s stand mixers. Yes, the looked gorgeous, and came in variety of fantastic colours but what was the fascination with them all about? Were they really that good? Or was it a case of style over substance?

    Over the next few months I used the KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer regularly, up to four times a week. I made cakes, meringues,  pavlovas,  custards, ice creams, biscuits, Swiss meringue buttercream and slices.

    It was a revelation.

    I’m an impatient person so holding a hand mixer for 10 minutes to cream some eggs and sugar together is not my idea of fun. I usually manage around three minutes before getting bored and chucking the mixture in the pan. This might be OK for some cakes but for others it was a disaster.

    So I love being able to pop the ingredients into the mixing bowl and then potter around the kitchen while the KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer worked its magic.

    Moreover, the cakes it produces are impressive.

    Check out the height of this meringue on this Quince Meringue Pie.

    I made the exact same cake two days earlier with my hand mixer and it didn’t look anything like that.

    Now have a look at the Dark Chocolate & Strawberry Swiss Meringue Buttercream Cake  I made for my daughter’s sixth birthday party.

    Yes, I know the Strawberry Swiss Meringue Buttercream has separated a little – I was up late prepping and couldn’t be bothered waiting for the butter to chill. Still, it’s not a bad looking cake and it tasted magnificent.

    Perhaps you’re more into trifles?

    This was a berry trifle I made for a commissioned e-book. It was a real hit at a family dinner.

    Speaking of hits, do you like cake pops?

    These were some delightful and not-too-sweet cake pops that I made for my daughter’s party.

    Perhaps you’d prefer something a little healthier?

    That was my Berry Pistachio Tart with a wholemeal base I made for Sweet Adventures’ Nuts about Nuts bloghop.

    Now it’s true that most of these cakes could have been made equally well with a hand mixer, especially for more patient types. But would you have actually baked them or just thought about it and decided it was too hard most of the time?

    But even if you are are a motivated and patient baker, it’s when you’re baking cakes like sponges that the KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer really earns its keep.

    Check out this Instagram of a Victoria Sponge with Berries I made for About.com.

    The cake mixture needs to be beaten for a  full 10 minutes: it’s the only way to get that fabulous height.

    I’d never made a Sponge Cake before because I didn’t feel like I had 10 minutes of my life to spare to hold a hand mixer. But now I just chuck all the ingredients into the KitchenAid Artistan Stand Mixer and it does the heavy lifting for me.

    *Sniffs. Wipes tear.*

    I love it and I can’t imagine my life without it now.

    What about you, dear reader? Do you  use a hand mixer or stand mixer? And how does it affect your baking?

    *** Upcoming Giveaway ***

    Do you love KitchenAid, too? Next week I’ll be giving away two packs containing a KitchenAid Artisan 2-slice Toaster plus a KitchenAid Artisan Coffee Maker for Father’s Day! Don’t miss your chance to win this fantastic prize.

    With thanks to Lisa McLean and Sarah Broome at Filtered Media.

  • Blood Oranges with Dark Chocolate and Sea Salt

    I’m having a passionate affair with citrus at the moment.

    My fruit bowls are filled with gorgeous tangelos, yellow grapefruit, pink grapefruit, oranges, mandarins and blood oranges.

    I love them all but I have a soft spot for blood oranges; they’re such an incredibly sexy fruit. I’d never tried one until a few years ago but now I can’t get enough of them.

    The other day I was cooking a Blood Orange and Dark Chocolate Bundt cake for my Australian & NZ Food site on About.com  (the recipe will be up shortly). It was an intense, grown-ups’ cake and I wanted to decorate it accordingly.

    So I made these – Blood Oranges with Dark Chocolate and Sea Salt. Do you like the appropriately moody look of these photographs?

    They looked striking on top of the cake and tasted extraordinarily good. In fact, you could serve them on their own as a very stylish dessert.

    So go on then. Toddle off to the shops now. You really won’t want to miss out on experiencing these.

    Tell me, dear reader: what produce are you obsessed about at the moment?

    Blood Oranges with Dark Chocolate and Sea Salt
     
    Author: 
    Recipe type: Dessert
    Prep time: 
    Cook time: 
    Total time: 
    A sexy yet simple dessert made in a flash!
    Ingredients
    • 2 blood oranges
    • 150 grams best dark chocolates
    • 2 tablespoons sea salt flakes
    Instructions
    1. Line a baking tray with baking paper.
    2. Peel oranges, removing as much pith as possible.
    3. Carefully separate, being careful not to break the skin.
    4. Heat chocolate up in microwave in narrow cup. Try 30 seconds, then stir, then another 30 seconds.
    5. Once chocolate is melted, dip an orange segment into the cup.
    6. Jiggle the orange around so that the excess chocolate falls back in the cup. You don't want the chocolate to be too thick.
    7. Lay the orange segment carefully on the baking paper.
    8. Sprinkle with sea salt.
    9. Let set at room temperature for 1 hour before eating.

     

  • Hello Strawberry Soup. It’s Berry Nice to Meet You!

    Do you like berries?

    You do?

    Well, you’ve come to the right place then. Welcome to Sweet Adventures’ Berry Nice to Meet You blog hop!

    For those new readers, Sweet Adventures is a group of Aussie foodbloggers – 84th & 3rdThe Capers of the Kitchen CrusaderDelicieuxDining With a Stud, and I, The Hungry Australian, who host a monthly, dessert-themed blog hop. You can visit the other blogs taking part in our hops via the thumbnails at the bottom of each post.

    Previously, we have hosted: Nuts About Sweets (July 2012); Sweet as Pie (June 2012); What’s Your Cup of Tea? (May 2012); Lemons (April 2012); Layer upon Layer (March 2012); Love at First Bite (February 2012); Death by Chocolate (January 2012); Festive Favourites (December 2011); and Great Australian Pavlova (November 2011).

    This month it was my turn to host again and I opted for beautiful berries.

    Continue reading

  • Ms 5 Year Old turns 6!

    My daughter just turned six (six!) so we threw a little shindig for six of her school friends + family.

    Here’s what was on the menu:

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  • 8 Favourite Things: August

    I’m feeling extra enthusiastic at the moment because I’m so glad to be on the mend after 3+ weeks of flu/cold. Speaking of feeling the love, here are eight things I want to share with you this month.

    Eating, drinking, blogging

    I’m so excited about Eat Drink Blog 3  – the Australian Food Bloggers Conference, that I and a committee of local food bloggers are organising for November 3-4 in Adelaide, South Australia. We have such an incredible line up of speakers this year – they are some of the most inspirational, talented and passionate food lovers around and I have to keep pinching myself to confirm that they’ve all agreed to be part of Eat Drink Blog 3. Registrations open TODAY so if you’re an Australian food blogger, check out the Eat Drink Blog site for all the details.

    Bake the world a better place

    On Monday 27th August the Red Cross are holding the Big Bake Cake, a charity event to raise funds for those in need. All you have to do is bake a cake, host an event (you could do it at your workplace or school) and encourage people to make a donation. Easy, right? For all the details and to register as a  host, check out the Big Cake Bake.

    Moi at the Adelaide Beauty Conference?

    A few weeks ago the lovely Celeste from Travelling in Mary Janes asked me if I would speak about blogging at the Adelaide Beauty Conference on September 1st. I told her I would be honoured to and then started panicking about what I would wear, beauty-wise, to the conference. My favourite perfume — Diptyque’s L’Ombre dans l’Eau — is obviously a must but I’m going to indulge my inner show girl and break out the false eyelashes, too. *flutter flutter*

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  • Berry Nice to Meet You!

    Hello! I’m back!

    I’m still not 100% but at least the tastebud-destroying throat lozenges and heart rate-accelerating cold tablets are finito. Thank goodness for that because there has been so many nice things happening that I’ve wanted to share with you.

    First up, I’m excited to let you know that it’s time for another Sweet Adventures Blog Hop!

    For those new readers, Sweet Adventures is a group of Aussie foodbloggers – 84th & 3rdThe Capers of the Kitchen CrusaderDelicieuxDining With a Stud, and I, The Hungry Australian, who host a monthly, dessert-themed blog hop.

    Previously, we have hosted:

    This month it was my turn to host again and I opted for beautiful berries.

    So if you blog, and like to experiment in the kitchen, we invite you join us for the Berry Nice to Meet You blog hop kicking off on Monday 20th August.

    Continue reading