Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

  • Meet a Food Lover: Simon Bryant (ABC’s The Cook and The Chef) + giveaway

    Simon Bryant — a.k.a The Chef to Maggie Beer’s Cook on ABC’s successful TV series — has just compared me to a punk rocker and I kinda like it.

    We’ve been talking about the rise of food blogging and food bloggers in general. Unlike some high-profile chefs, Simon is a big fan.

    “I love you guys. You’re out there, writing about food, photographing it. You guys are like the punk rockers of today.”

    Come again?

    “Well, in the 60s and 70s, musicians that couldn’t get a look-in from the major labels just went ahead and put out their own albums. They didn’t wait for permission. They just went ahead and did it. Same thing happened with publishing. You don’t have to wait around for a (record or book) deal anymore – you can just do your own thing.”

    He’s right, although I’ve never thought of it like this before.

    I mention that there are certain circles who are a bit snobby about food bloggers and the fact that many lack formal qualifications.

    “To say you have to be qualified to be a good cook or writer or photographer is ridiculous,” Simon scoffs. “Maggie Beer isn’t trained yet she could cook most of us under the table. And look at bloggers like What Katie Ate (Katie Quinn Davies’ blog). She does fantastic work.”

    I’m glad Simon is so keen on food bloggers because he’s going to be speaking to a whole bunch of them — 80 in total — at the upcoming 3rd Australian Food Bloggers Conference that I am helping to organise. Simon is going to be talking about restaurants that use local and seasonal produce, the implications and what reviewers should consider when writing up their meal.

    It’s a subject he knows a lot about as Simon was Executive Chef at the Hilton Adelaide for 10 years. Now, post The Cook and The Chef, he wears any number of hats, acting as patron or ambassador for various good causes (including Animal Welfare League SA, Animals Asia Foundation and the Adelaide Showgrounds Farmers Market’s ‘Kids Club’) and working as a consulting chef, recipe developer and freelance writer. He also contributes a column to SA’s food magazine, Sumptuous).

    Simon has been a champion for local and seasonal food and sustainability for the longest time. It’s a passion that has led him to set up his new company, Dirty Inc, which sells kabuli chickpeas, red nugget lentils, red nipper lentils and Tasmanian wakame (seaweed).

    So how did it all come about, Simon?

    “By accident,” he laughs. “Chefs often get access to unusual products that the public can’t buy. I came across these producers selling amazing, unusual chickpeas and lentils for export and I wanted to use them so I asked them what was the minimum amount that I would have to buy.”

    And from such a casual question a new company was born.

    If you haven’t already twigged, Simon is incredibly down-to earth and warm-hearted. His food – captured so beautifully in his new cookbook, Vegies — is the same, honest and unpretentious. It looks incredible, yes, but it looks like food you want to eat, not admire. Photographer Alan Benson has done a superb job, as has the design team.

    I’ve made Simon’s Pickled Cabbage and Soybean Stir-Fry twice now — see the top of this post — and I love it. It’s such a simple dish but so breathtakingly good. In Adelaide, it’s known as a BBC – Beancurd, soyBeans and Cabbage – and is on the menu of many of our popular Gouger Street restaurants.

    So how did the cookbook happen, Simon?

    “It was Maggie Beer,” he says. “She’d been telling me for ages that I should write a cookbook but I just hadn’t got started. So one day she comes over, pulls out the laptop and sits me down to write it.”

    How lucky Simon is to have such a great friend in his life.

    Later, the talk turns to vegetables and I ask Simon — a long-time vegetarian — how to get my two kids to eat more vegies.

    “Kids like eating food that they’ve grown,” he says. “Get them growing some vegies and they’ll eat them.”

    He’s right. My kids love eating vegies picked from my parent’s garden or fruit picked directly from the tree or plant when we go fruit picking.

    Simon Bryant has inspired me yet again. And I – and my kids – will eat better for it.

    Vegies (Penguin/Lantern) is currently available at all good book stores.

    Win Vegies by Simon Bryant!

    Thanks to Simon and Penguin/Lantern, I have one (1) copy of Vegies to give away.

    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 subscribe to The Hungry Australian updates you will receive five entries.
    4. For three (3) bonus entries, login to Pinterest, follow The Hungry Australian, pin the book cover above and then Pin 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. One lucky winner will be chosen at random.
    8. Thanks for entering and good luck!

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • Chocolate Bundt Cake with Salted Caramel Sauce

    Two words: Salted. Caramel.

    Be still my beating heart.

    Salted Caramel is the taste sensation that shows no sight of ending. Quite rightly so, for the combination of butter, sugar, syrup, salt and cream is simply sublime, prompting spontaneous groans from serious-minded men and women, who are helpless before its power.

    I adore salted caramel but had never made it at home. So when Sweet Adventures’ Feeling Saucy blog hop rolled around, I knew my moment had come.

    CQ8uhN on Make A Gif, Animated Gifs

    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: Berry Nice to Meet You (August 2012); 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 KC at the Capers of the Kitchen Crusader is our lovely hostess so if you blog and love to cook check out her Feeling Saucy post and join in the fun. You have until Monday September 24th to join the hop.

    To make this cake, I used this great chocolate cake recipe I created for AustralianFood.About.com and adapted this salted caramel sauce recipe by Nigella Lawson for Stylist Magazine.

    Make it. Eat it.

    You’ll weep, dance and sing.

    And don’t forget to scroll to the bottom of the post to check out all the other ‘Feeling Saucy’ entries. Enjoy!


    Salted Caramel Sauce
     
    Author: 
    Recipe type: Dessert
    Prep time: 
    Cook time: 
    Total time: 
    A sublime salted caramel sauce for pouring, dipping or bathing in
    Ingredients
    • 75 grams unsalted butter
    • 100 grams raw caster sugar
    • 3 tablespoons rice malt syrup
    • 130 mls cream
    • 1 tablespoon salt
    Instructions
    1. Put first three ingredients into a small saucepan and bring almost to the boil.
    2. Immediately add the cream, stir and then simmer for three minutes.
    3. Add salt and stir.
    4. Turn off heat and leave to cool. The sauce will darken and thicken.
    5. Store in the fridge but heat up before serving.

  • Meet a Food Lover: Sneh from Cook Republic

    I read  a lot of food blogs. Some I visit for a minute or two, while others I can hardly bear to tear myself away. With the latter, I explore deeper and deeper into their archives, marvelling all the time at the quality and consistency of their work.

    Sydney food blog, Cook Republic, is one of those blogs I can happily spend hours on. Sneh’s work has a striking aesthetic – it’s lovely but edgy, not pretty. And her photography is nothing short of spectacular.

    Sneh is one of the judges for the upcoming Eat Drink Blog 3 photography competition open to all Australian food bloggers. So with the recent announcement of the photography competition I thought it was a great time to ask Sneh a few questions.

    Sneh, you’re a modern renaissance woman. You do so many things – graphic and web design, recipe development, styling, photography – and you do them all so well. When people ask you what you do, how do you define yourself? 

    A very interesting question, Christina, one that I have pondered over myself several times. I usually tell people that I am a designer and writer. I follow that up by saying that I also do photography and styling. But for the most part, I am first and foremost a designer.

    Where did your passion for design come from? Who are your design heroes and your greatest influences?

    I have been creating art since I was a child. Even when I was ten years old, I was doing pastel portraits, charcoal sketches and dry paint street art. My dad used to create fantastic portrait sketches and beautiful hand lettering. I remember going through his artwork, completely in awe of what was on the pages. I wanted to emulate him. When I was at uni, I discovered the wondrous world of digital art and web design. Walter Disney has always been my design hero for a very long time. Some of the best children’s illustrators from a long time ago to modern day have been my biggest design influences.


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  • 8 Favourite Things: September

    Spring is here! Hurrah!

    *Happy dance*

    Spring has arrived not a moment too soon in Australia. I love the possibilities of this season, the all-day feeling that something good is just around the corner.

    What am I saying? All sorts of good stuff is happening right now! Here’s my list of what’s making me happy at the moment.

    1) Sweet Adventures feeling saucy bloghop

    I love our monthly, Sweet Adventures’ dessert-themed bloghops. They’re a wonderful way to meet new food bloggers and collect all sorts of interesting new recipes. So if you blog and cook, you really should join us for September’s hop, Feeling Saucy. You could make a self-saucing pudding, a sticky date pudding with caramel sauce, a chocolate sauce to accompany vanilla ice cream or a berry pudding with berry sauce – we encourage you to be as creative as possible! Check out all the details over at The Capers of the Kitchen Crusader, our hostess for this month.

    2) Guest posting for JJ at 84th & 3rd

    Isn’t it amazing that I can be in two places at once? Right now I’m here but I’m also guest posting for the lovely JJ at 84th & 3rd. Spooky, huh?  So head on over to JJ’s fabulous blog and check out my Delicious Power Crackles recipe (pictured above). JJ’s having the adventure of a lifetime around America at the moment but I’m sure she’d love to hear from you, too.

    3) Goodies from the Adelaide Beauty Conference

    On Saturday 1st September I was honoured to be part of a panel discussion on blogging at the Adelaide Beauty Conference. I had a great time comparing notes with the other panellists, Celeste and Melissa, and meeting a great bunch of local beauty bloggers. At the end of the day I left with four (!) goody bags containing over 30 products to try from some savvy Australian beauty companies. I’m currently using the awesome Instant Length Transplant Lengthening Kit from Mirenesse and it is indeed so much more than a mascara. I’m also loving A’kins’ Cellular Radiance Serum, Natio’s Colour Creme Gloss in Happy (how appropriate!), Sukin’s antioxidant eye cream and Kuu Konjac’s Pure Sponge.

    4) Amazing almonds

    I usually blog about my work projects on my portfolio site but I just had to share this one with you here. After all, it was The Hungry Australian that led directly to my new gig with the Australian Almond Board. I’m happy to let you know that I’ve been contracted by them to create a new recipe site showcasing almonds. It’s a tremendous opportunity and I’m excited to be working with them over the next 10 months on this project.

    5) Opportunity International’s Food for Thought campaign in October

    I’ve blogged before about the Food for Thought SA dinner happening soon at the Adelaide Entertainment Centre to raise funds for Opportunity International. What I didn’t know was that in October you can also hold your own event to raise funds and awareness for people living in poverty. Check out the details here.

    6) The return of Almost Bourdain

    Almost Bourdain, an incredible Sydney food blog authored by the talented Ellie is back! I was a big fan of Almost Bourdain when I started blogging and was sad and puzzled when she stopped blogging a year ago without an explanation. So I was delighted to learn today that Ellie is now back and sharing her recipes again. If you don’t know her blog go check it out right now.

    7) Hanging with bloggers

    Next month I’ll be heading to Melbourne for the ProBlogger Conference – if you’re going be sure to say hi. I’m excited about spending two days hearing from some fantastic speakers and getting to know bloggers from all over Australia.

    8) The Hungry Australian takes a trip

    I love, love, love to travel and it looks like I might be heading overseas next month on a food/art/fashion famil. It’s an incredibly exciting destination and somewhere I’ve never been before – I’ll let you know more as arrangements are confirmed.

    Have a great September!

    Christina xx

  • Guest Post: Breakfast in Singapore

    For this next post, I’m delighted to hand the reigns to my friend, Cheng Lei.

    Lei is like me, half Aussie and half Chinese. I first met her in Shanghai in 2004 when we were both working there. Lei had gone to China as an accountant and ended up as the China Correspondent on CNBC, interviewing people like Bill Clinton as part of her everyday  — yawn, yawn — work.

    Yep, the girl’s got game. She’s also blessed with warmth, wit, strength and intelligence. Actually, she’s one of my favourite people ever.

    Lei is currently stationed in Singapore but is about to move back to China (Beijing) for her next gig. When I mentioned the idea of a guest post to her she couldn’t wait to share her love of Singapore’s breakfast scene as a fitting farewell. Enjoy! 

    A Singapore Breakfast

    Everything that I love about Singapore can be found at a market/hawker centre.

    On weekend mornings, when breakfast doesn’t have to be my standard sandwich in the taxi going to work, I take the whole brood to Meiling Road Market, in the heart of Queenstown, one of Singapore’s earliest residential suburbs.

    At eight in the morning, it is as local as it gets. Grannies in wheelchairs are drinking kopi o (black coffee with sugar) and mothers are queueing up for breakfast takeaway.

    Downstairs is a clean and airy space where families hold stalls selling fresh produce.  There is even a vegetable stall called “Daddy Veggie” with a Chinese sign that says “dad plants, son sells”.

    At Ah Soon’s fish ball stall, I pick up Yong Tau Foo (fish paste filled tofu and vegetables) for lunch later.

    Do you know why so many Singaporeans talk about their favourite hawker center stalls?  It’s the memories and the comfort of consistency. It’s the fact you can grow up, move house, fall in and out of love, but know that in that same corner of the same building, the skinny uncle in the white shirt is still making these delicious (and healthy) fish treats that make noodle soup a slurping sensation.

    They are so pretty, too, the red peppers and green lady fingers (okra), golden tofu puffs and purple eggplant — all set off by the snowy fish paste.  Cooking is super easy, too. You simply pop them in with noodles in boiling water/stock, wait till they float up and become plump, and serve them with your favourite dipping sauce.

    Meanwhile, upstairs is a feast for the senses.  Hear the happy hum of chatter as orders are placed and delivered, the rhythmic chopping of shallots and coriander. Behold the fish balls jumping into steaming stock, the carrot cake (made with turnip) being expertly tossed, and the Prata (pancakes) being acrobatically flipped.

    Elsewhere bunches of sugarcane are being pressed into yellow-green juice — the ultimate balm for a chilli-stung tongue. Drool at freshly steamed rice noodle rolls being smothered with sweet dark soy and sprinkled with sesame seeds.

    Be impressed by the old school food packaging too. Fried dough fritters come wrapped in brown paper to absorb oil.  Nasi lemak (coconut rice) are ensconced in fragrant Pandan leaves. Icy cold soy milk and grass jelly are ladled into plastic bags with sturdy string-ties.

    The bill for all this hearty, homey grub?  $1.20 for cane juice.  $3 for duck noodles.  $0.8 for dough fritters.  $1.20 for 6 pieces of Yong Tau Foo. Scarcely enough to buy a Starbucks latte.

    Food. Family. Fun.

    I love Singapore.

    (c) Words by Cheng Lei & photos by Wei.

    Cheng Lei is a Chinese-Aussie reporter and mum of two who lives by the Chinese maxim “food is the god of life”.  She firmly believes you can learn everything about a place by visiting its fresh food markets.  

  • The Complete List of Adelaide Food and Wine Blogs – UPDATED

    Following in the steps of Ed and Helen, who published lists of the Melbourne and Sydney food blogs, respectively, I decided it was time Adelaide had her turn.

    So here it is, The Complete List of Adelaide Food & Wine Blogs (and blogs that include a food/wine section). Blog are organised firstly by the year of launch and then alphabetically.

    Happy browsing!

    Last updated: July 2014. There are currently 114 blogs on this list. 

    2000

    2005

    2007

    2008

    2009

    2010

    2011

    2012

    2013

    2014

    Adelaide Food and/or Wine Blogger?

    If you’re a South Australian food or wine blogger and would like your blog added to this list, please comment below with your blog name, url and the year of launch.

    All food and wine bloggers based in South Australia are invited to join the Adelaide Food Bloggers Group (ask to join the group on Facebook and then send me a direct message (DM) with your blog address to confirm your membership). We share foodie and food blogging tips, information and resources and host occassional meet-ups.

  • Meet a Food Lover: Billy Law (A Table for Two & MasterChef) + giveaway

    Billy Law is that guy from MasterChef Australia. Or that guy from popular Australian food/photography/travel blog, A Table for Two. Yes, that guy, the cool Asian-Australian with the cheeky grin, infectious energy and fondness for checked shirts.

    But now Billy Law is also that guy who published a cookbook.

    Have You Eaten? is Billy’s first book and it covers his culinary journey from growing up in Ipoh, Malaysia, to landing in Sydney, Australia and learning to cook. It’s a gorgeous book full of mouth-watering photography, eye-catching design and Billy’s trademark enthusiasm.

    Like Billy, my father was born in Malaysia (Penang) and came to Australia to study. So Billy’s book was a poignant read for me as it featured so many great Western dishes as well as Malaysian favourites like Curry Laksa, Har Mee (Prawn Noodle Soup), Nasi Lemak (Coconut Rice) and Char Kway Teow (Fried Rice Noodles).

    Curious to learn more about the man behind the book I recently asked Billy a few questions.

    Congratulations on your first cookbook, Billy! How did it all come about? 

    Thanks Christina! Remember I first met you earlier this year for Tasting Australia in Adelaide? I met my publisher Paul McNally exactly at the same event two years ago and became good friends. I didn’t tell anyone that I was on Masterchef last year, then he saw me on TV cooking up a storm and next thing I know I received an email from Paul asking me whether I’d be interested to write a cookbook with Hardie Grant. The rest is history. It all happened very fast; we started the project in Oct 2011 but then everything has to be put on hold during Christmas season. In Jan 2011, that’s when everything was going ahead in full swing and it took me five months to write, cook, test, photoshoot everything until is finished. It was hard work but rewarding, especially when I have to cook at least 15 recipes a week!

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  • The Hungry Australian on the ABC Foodi App for Ipad

    Yesterday I received a long-awaited email from the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Commission) informing me that their updated Foodi app for Ipad is now available for download from the Apple store.

    Why am I so excited? Well, because three of my recipes from The Hungry Australian appear on the Foodi app, alongside recipes by chefs like Maggie Beer, Simon Bryant, Matt Moran, Bill Granger and Poh Ling Yeow!

    *pinches self*

    I don’t know how I’ve managed to kept quiet about this for so long. I was approached by a producer at the ABC way back in February and it’s been a long six months waiting to see the final result.

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  • Meet a Food Lover: Karen from Citrus & Candy

    To kick off my new Meet A Food Lover series I’m proud to present this interview with Sydney blogger Karen from Citrus and Candy.

    When I started blogging in mid 2011 Citrus and Candy was one of the first food blogs I stumbled across. Karen’s mouth-watering photography immediately caught my attention and I remember being struck by how artfully she used light and shade to create drama in her photographs.

    Later, I met Karen at Eat Drink Blog 2, and remember feeling slightly awestruck in her presence. At dinner we discovered we shared a passion for Penang Asam Laksa. Now anyone who loves Penang Asam Laksa as much I do immediately qualifies for lao peng you or ‘old friend’ status with me.

    So without further ado, let’s get up close and personal with Karen from Citrus and Candy!

    *Drum roll*

    Karen, you’re an Australian born in England to Malaysian parents. So what’s on the menu when you catch up with your family? Who cooks?

    Me! My mother is a great cook but she’s lost the love for it and sees it as a chore now so she doesn’t make a lot of the dishes I grew up with (gawd I miss her salted fish fried rice!). So I tend to take over but I only ever make assam laksa, congee or nasi lemak. And when it comes to English food, it’s me again. But I still rely on her for bak kut teh, beef rendang and curries.

    What are your top 5 Malaysian dishes?

     Only five? How to choose?!

    1. Assam Laksa (see below) – a thick murky fishy noodle soup that’s sour with tamarind and lemongrass, spicy, sweet and salty. It’s fresh, aromatic, pungent and flavoursome.
    2. Har Mee (Prawn Noodle Soup) – a spicy prawny bisque-like noodle soup with pork.
    3. Malaysian Chicken Rice – rice cooked in chicken stock with a tinge of ginger and fried shallots and served with either super tender poached chicken, roast chicken or char siu and siu yoke (chinese bbq pork and crispy roasted pork belly pieces).
    4. KL Hokkien Mee – fried egg noodles with a thick dark slurpy gravy flavoured with pork fat, cockles and sweet soy. A bib is recommended.
    5. Apam Balik or Ban Jian Kuih – Malaysian peanut pancakes/crepes; can be either crispy and thin or thick and bready. Like a pancake omelette folded over a mound of ground peanuts, sugar and melted butter (sometimes cream corn but that’s a big no for me!).

    With lots of food blogs focusing on healthy food – not that there’s anything wrong with that! – I love the fact that your blog celebrates the joys of fat, sugar and salt. What are your favourite dessert recipes?

    Oh gosh it’s terrible right? Whenever I’m brainstorming or looking at recipes, I automatically start thinking, this needs more butter/caramel or how can I turn this into a chocolate dessert?

    I always tell myself to eat better but I have to be realistic (or rather accept that I’m weak-willed) because there’s no way I could ever live without dessert and fried foods so it’s everything in moderation (well at least try).

    My favourite desserts are tarte tatins, chocolate fondants or anything with brioche. Actually anything with gooey chocolate, crème patissiere, salted caramel and lots of butter is fine by me!

    What are the kitchen items and gadgets you can’t live without?

    I love my chinese cleavers like they’re my family. I never realised just how valuable having a super sharp cutting instrument was until I cooked in other kitchens and had to use their crappy dull knives to chop (from then on I vowed to always travel with my cleavers if I’m going to someone else’s kitchen!).

    I also couldn’t live without my silicone spatula, Pyrex measuring jug, measuring spoons, digital scales and Kitchenaid mixer.

    What are your favourite cookbooks and blogs?

    The books that I’ve thumbed through most are Heavenly Cakes by Rose Levy Beranbaum, Flour by Joanne Chang, Jamie’s Great Britain and Cooking For Friends by Gordon Ramsay.

    For blogs, there are so many that I love that I can’t possibly list them all. Raspberri Cupcakes and Spicy Ice Cream are good friends of mine but they are just the most brilliant bakers and I’m always in awe of their work. I also adore Souvlaki For The Soul, David Lebovitz, Desserts For Breakfast, Bakers Royale and Call Me Cupcake.

     

    Congratulations again for being a NuffNang Best Photography Blog Finalist for 2011. What was it like attending the awards ceremony in your home town of Malaysia? 

    Thank you! It was a huge surprise but I was thrilled to fly home to KL! It was a bit of a surreal Alice-in-Wonderland kid of night with the whole glitzy Hollywood-esque ceremony and the buzz around some bloggers who are like celebrities over there.

    The blogging industry is so huge, intense and competitive in Asia whereas it’s still a new thing in Australia and for most of us, it’s a thing we do quietly on the side. So it was a little bizarre but all in good fun. I’m just grateful that I was able to pop in a quick visit to my grandmother who I haven’t seen in 3 years (plus I couldn’t wait to get my fixes of iced milo and assam laksa!).

    Karen, you are still using the same camera — a Canon EOS 1000D with a Canon EF 50mm F/1.8 lens — that you began blogging with in 2008. How did you teach yourself about photography? 

    You should’ve seen me on the first day I got my Canon 1000D. I was so lost with all the buttons and I had no idea what anything meant so it took me 5 minutes of fiddling before I threw the DSLR aside and pouted for my old point-and-shoot. Luckily I forced myself to pick it back up!

    I made sure to read up on digital photography and the technical stuff; from online tutorials on photography blogs and websites to checking out photography groups on Flickr (there’s a lot of good advice and tips to be had from other photographers). Then it was just practice practice practice. I took photos everywhere I could under different lighting situations; outside, inside, portraits, pets, dinners and low light.

    How long did it take you to get to know your camera and feel happy about the photos on your blog?

    It wasn’t until recently that I was happy with the photos but then again, I’m always striving for more so even though I’m happy now, I know that I can push myself to do better. I’m not even a perfectionist by nature but having great photos is a huge motivator and there’s always more to learn. Just learn the basics then practice your butt off (and consider each ugly photo a learning curve).

    Are there any camera accessories that you think are essential? 

    A diffuser and reflector are my best friends. Whether I’m using natural light through the glass door or artificial lamps, the light is always too harsh so a diffuser softens the blow and helps with over-exposure. If you don’t have one, translucent white fabric or tracing paper works too. And I need the reflector for bouncing light onto dark spots. This can either be a simple white cardboard, mirrors or (like me) one of those silver foil cake boards.

    I also recommend a tripod if you have shaky hands and iffy light but personally, I don’t use it too often.

    How do you get that beautiful lighting in your photos? Do you have any food photography tips you’d like to share? 

    Natural lighting is the way to go. It shows off the food beautifully and it means less work tweaking with camera settings and photo editing. I like to do most of my photos in front of my big glass door around the late afternoon where the light is the softest and most diffused. Although lately I’ve been working with artificial light but I’m still a beginner with that.

    As for the food photography tips, start with the fundamentals – ISO, exposure, aperture, shutter speed, light metering and white balance; how to adjust their settings on your camera quickly and knowing what each one does for your photos.

    The other important thing is how to use the available light. This took a lot of trial and error for me because I don’t have an awesome studio, my house isn’t very well lit and I have ugly sponged yellow walls. But with a bit of diffusing, reflecting and white balance adjustment, I learned to co-operate with my house. I must’ve taken photos in all the rooms to figure out what worked best for me but everybody’s “studio” is different so you’ll have to see what works for you at your place.

    You’re a proud Photoshop whore. Can you take us through the steps you’d typically go through when editing one of your photos? 

    Oh I love, love Photoshop because frankly, photos never look as nice straight off the camera without some kind of post-processing. I don’t do anything fancy, just noise reduction, sharpen, brightness and contrast, white balance, colour boost and resizing. Sometimes I love playing around with filters.

     

    What’s next for you Citrus and Candy?

    A holiday will be nice! I still ache for Malaysia like crazy. But for now, I miss my blog and kitchen so I really ought to pay more attention to it.

    All photographs (c) Karen from Citrus and Candy. Republished with permission.