Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

Occasional stories, food and travel inspiration

  • 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

  • Two photographs for a grey Sunday

    I’m still sick with a ghastly virus/infection and busy working on Eat Drink Blog 3 as well, so my half-completed posts will continue to sit in my draft box for now.

    But I’m feeling in the need for some change around here so I thought I’d show you a couple of my recent food photographs to end this grey and miserable Sunday.

    Above is an Instagram of a dish I made for an upcoming, commissioned recipe e-book. Can you guess what’s in this dish?

    This was an absolutely stunning dish, in fact, my mouth is watering just looking at this photo. It’s perfect for a special occasion so I think I’m going to cook it as part of our Christmas Day lunch this year.

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  • Is Goodlife Pizza the best pizza in Adelaide?

    Today we’re on a mission to discover whether Goodlife Pizza is really the home of Adelaide’s best pizza.

    ‘Best of’ titles are always controversial due to the subjective nature of the judging process. To be completely fair you would have to organise a blind tasting of pizzas, eaten side-by-side, each sampled within moments of them emerging from the oven. This is probably not altogether feasible.

    What makes a good pizza anyway? The taste and the texture of the base and the combination and quality of the toppings – all of these factors play a part of course. Everyone has their own favourites and biases when it comes to specific toppings, though, and where you eat the pizza and in whose company can also affect the enjoyment of your meal.

    Goodlife Pizza is often touted by pizza lovers as one of the best pizza restaurants in Adelaide, mentioned in the same breath as Amalfi’s, Enzo’s, Russell’s and Panacea, where I enjoyed a very decent pizza a few weeks ago.

    Goodlife make their pizza using organic Lauke flour from South Australia, filtered water and fresh yeast, ageing each base for 24 hours. They use organic ingredients and free-range products where possible.

    The only quibble I’ve ever heard levelled at Goodlife is regarding its pricing: Goodlife pizzas range from $13.90-$19.90 for a 1-2 person margherita pizza to $25.50-$38.50 for a 1-2 person Spencer Gulf King Prawn pizza.

    That’s quite a lot for a pizza if you consider that you can get a budget Dominos pizza for $6.95 on a Tuesday. Yes, there is no comparison between the ingredients or the love, care and technique put into each pizza but are the pizzas at Goodlife really that much better?

    Today, on this gloomy Winter’s day, we’re going to try to answer that question at Goodlife’s Hutt Street restaurant. So this lunchtime I’m joined by three pizza lovers: my brother, and his two friends, who are both called Andrew but who are invariably addressed by their respective surnames.

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  • The Pot, Hyde Park, Adelaide

    It’s a chilly Winter’s day and I’m running late for a lunch date with my friend, Kerina. I’m not sure what happened but when you have small kids you can have two hours to get ready and still not manage to leave the house on time. Do other parents experience this?

    So when my 5 year old and I arrive at The Pot in Hyde Park I’m feeling a bit hassled (my toddler is with my parents). My patient friend, on the other hand, is enjoying a cup of English Breakfast tea and looks completely relaxed.

    One lovely thing about old chums is that they readily forgive your lapses and Kerina and I have known each other for nearly 20 years. We met first year at Adelaide University during a Philosophy 1A lecture and hit if off when we discovered we both loved Sydney band The Clouds. Later, we edited Adelaide University’s newspaper, On Dit, together.

    I scope the restaurant. It feels brisk and modern, utilitarian and unfussy in design (e.g. the industrial lights, the brown paper ‘wallpaper’ and the brown paper ‘table linen’), and professional but relaxed.

    We’re starving – I haven’t eaten since 7:30am – so decide to order straight away but are stumped by the breakfast menu, which offers me too many dishes that sound like ‘must-haves’. In the end we decide to order four dishes to share, plus another English Breakfast tea ($4) for me and a Coco Pops milkshake ($7) for my daughter.

    “I can’t work out why my (skinny) jeans seem tighter all of a sudden,” I say brightly as I hand back the menus to our friendly server.

    The first dish is all about the magic of mushrooms.

    Mushrooms and fresh cheese are popping up everywhere I’ve eaten lately. I enjoyed fried mushrooms with Woodside Cheese Wrights fresh curd on grilled bruschetta at Maggie Beer’s Farm House and roasted mushrooms on ciabatta at No 58 Cellar Door and Gallery.  I also cooked Balsamic Mushroom and Taleggio cheese for my About.com site.

    The Pot’s version – Truffle Mushrooms with Fresh Ricotta on Grilled Bruschetta ($18) – sees buttery fried mushrooms enhanced with the subtle flavour of truffles and finished with some good olive oil and fresh parsley. I die for truffles and would have loved double the amount used in this dish but it is still very good.

    Kerina orders the Scrambled Egg, Blue Swimmer Crab, Tomato and Toast. I adore the sweetness and firmness of Blue Swimmer Crab flesh and the egg and crab are such a killer combination. I also like tomatoes with my eggs – as long as they don’t make the dish soggy – and here The Pot have got the consistency just right.

    The next dish is my favourite and it’s so good I’m going to call it now: The Pot’s Confit Duck and Scallop Omelette ($22) is up there with Cafe Ish’s legendary Soft Shell Crab, Avocado and Sweet Chili Omelette that I ate in March. It’s one of those dishes that you eat and think, of course!, because it’s such an inspired combination of flavours and textures.

    The eggs goes superbly with the richness of the duck, the just cooked scallops and the hoisin-y sauce, while the fresh spring onions, coriander and strips of chilli offer some relief from the richness and cut through the heaviness of it all. It’s a bit like a breakfast version of Beijing Duck (roasted duck served with Chinese-style pancakes, hoisin sauce, spring onions, cucumber and hoisin sauce). Go to The Pot as soon as possible and order this dish.

    My daughter wants a burger so I order her The Pot’s breakfast burger ($15)  which is actually a Berkshire ham and Tilset cheese roll, finished off with a freshly fried egg and creme fraiche. It comes with a (home-made?) tomato sauce/relish, which she doesn’t like, but I do. See how she’s picked bits out of the roll?

    Nom nom nom.

    After lingering to catch up on our news we head out into the cool air, feeling up to anything. The lunch has been a tonic for both of us and we’re feeling revitalised and refreshed. The marvellous thing about old friends is that they don’t judge and you can relax completely around them.

    Actually, I think The Pot might just qualify for ‘old friend’ status. Try it and tell me what you think.

    The Pot
    160 King William Road, Hyde Park, South Australia
    Tel:  08 8373 2044
    Email: eat@thepotfoodandwine.com.au

    Christina Soong-Kroeger dined at The Pot courtesy of Mushroom Growers Australia as part of Mushroom Mania.

    Mushroom Mania is on for all of July and over 2,000 restaurants are participating by putting delicious mushrooms on the menu. See Mushroom Mania for details. You can also enter the Eat.Blog. Win. competition, which closes soon. All you need to do is eat out at one of the participating restaurants, order a mushroom dish and then write a short review about it on the entry page. All entries go into the draw to win a $150 best restaurants voucher. Too easy!

    The Pot Food & Wine on Urbanspoon

  • Gourmet Live’s Image of the Week!

    I’m sick with a virus so I’ll keep this short but I wanted to share some good news with you.

    A couple of weeks ago I received an email from American Gourmet Magazine’s blog, Gourmet Live, telling me that they were making my Fig, Prosciutto and Pear Salad, Image of the Week. Here’s what they had to say about it:

    Of course I was thrilled, but surprised too, because that recipe/photograph was blogged in February 2012, some five months ago. The Gourmet Live researcher told me she’d wandered all over my site and also loved my Mini Berry Puddings for Busy People and my Easy Honey Ice Cream with Burnt Toffee Popcorn. She’s clearly a woman who loves her dessert, just like me!

    I love that about blogging – every day my blog puts me in touch with people from all over the world that I’d never usually come across. A shared interest in food is such a lovely way to meet someone.

    OK I’m starting to fade out again so I’m going to head back to my lemon tea and my chicken soup now. Hope you’re well and have a great day!

    Christina x

  • Nuts about Sweets: Berry Coconut Pistachio Tart

    I adore nuts but they don’t always like me back. Specifically, I’m mildly allergic to almonds, hazelnuts and walnuts. This is rather a bore but at least I can still eat peanuts and pistachios, which are my favourites in any case. I can eat roasted and salted pistachios every day, and often do.

    So pistachios were an obvious choice for this month’s Sweet Adventures‘ bloghop, Nuts about Sweets, hosted by the lovely Nic at Dining with a Stud.

    I’ve made a number of sweet treats with pistachios on this blog before – namely, Mini Berry Puddings for Busy People, Rosewater, Cardamon and Pistachio Lassi, and Mini Apricot Trifles – but I felt like baking something for this hop.

    I toyed with the idea of making pistachio macarons, pistachio biscuits or a pistachio cake but in the end went for this fabulous tart. This Berry Coconut Pistachio Tart is heavily inspired by Heidi Swanson’s Macaroon Tart from her Super Natural Ever Day cookbook.

    I made her recipe first, then I mucked around with the ingredients, quantities and method until I came up with this version. It’s an easy recipe to make and extremely delicious.

    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:

    To take part in this month’s hop head over to Dining with a Stud where you can find out all about how to link up your own nut (or seed) recipe. And don’t forget to scroll to the bottom of this post to check out all the other nut recipes.


    Berry Coconut Pistachio Tart
     
    Author: 
    A lovely berry and coconut tart sprinkled with pistachios.
    Ingredients
    Base
    • 1 cup wholemeal flour
    • ⅓ cup shredded dried coconut
    • ¼ cup brown sugar
    • 100 grams butter
    Filling
    • 4 egg whites (large)
    • ¼ cup brown sugar
    • 1.5 cups frozen berries, thawed
    • ⅔ cup shredded dried coconut
    Topping
    • 80 grams roasted pistachios, shelled and crushed
    Instructions
    1. Preheat oven to 180 degrees Celsius.
    2. Make base by mixing flour, brown sugar, butter and coconut in a large bowl.
    3. Stir thoroughly, breaking up any lumps of brown sugar.
    4. Press into a tart tin, using your fingers to press it into place.
    5. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes and then remove to a chopping board. Keep oven on.
    6. Meanwhile, make meringue by beating egg whites with a stand or hand mixer until peaks form.
    7. Add sugar, a little at a time, and then continue to beat until meringue is thick and glossy.
    8. Spoon ⅔rds of the berries over the tart base, spreading them evenly over the tart.
    9. Sprinkle half of the coconut over them and then fold the other half into the egg whites, being careful not to bash the air out of it.
    10. Using a spatula, spoon meringue on top of berries, smoothing down to the edges.
    11. Dot remaining ⅓ of berries on top.
    12. Bake in oven for 20-25 minutes until nicely brown.
    13. Remove to chopping board and let sit for 15 minutes before garnishing with chopped pistachios.

     

  • 8 Favourite Things – July

    Hello dear readers. Forgive my recent absence – it’s been a memorable few weeks for all sorts of reasons. I’ll have a few things to post about soon but in the meantime here’s what I’m loving right now.

    (1) Peonies. I adore peonies – they’re by far and away my favourite flower, along with David Austin roses. When I saw the ones at the top of this post at Coles (Coles!) the other day I was flabbergasted as they are typically only available in Australia for about three weeks in November. So I had to buy them, didn’t I. Aren’t they lovely?

    (2) Mad about Mushrooms. This month I will be visiting two Adelaide restaurants and reviewing their mushrooms dishes on this blog as part of Mushroom Mania, a month-long celebration of all things mushroom. I’ve been dying to try the two restaurants I’ve chosen so can’t wait to tell you all about my dining experiences.

    (3) DIY Craft. I’m never short of ideas for making crafty things but my execution of said projects is often less than ideal. Luckily, the projects I tackled this week with my kids (2.5 and 6 years old) are all about spontaneity and joy, not precision and perfection. Firstly, inspired by this post by Lady Croissant, we turned a scribbled over coffee table in the playroom into the stylish talking piece above with the help of a little Japanese washi tape. Then, inspired by the gorgeous work of Confetti System, the current darlings of the design world, we made this whimsical decoration for our living room. What do you think of our work?

    (4) Blogger Love. I’ve had some lovely shout outs from some wonderful bloggers lately. Georgia from Rainbow Bakery made an Apple Crumble Pie inspired by my Free-Form Apple Tart, Tania from My Kitchen Stories made a Very Simple Banana Tarte Tatin with Golden Syrup Ice Cream based on my Honey Ice Cream and Patty from The Fearless Cooking Club made my Honey Ice Cream as part of an Ice Cream Social. Wait, an Ice Cream Social? That is just so… brilliant.

    5) KitchenAid Stand Mixer. The good folks at KitchenAid sent me a fire engine red stand mixer to test drive and I’m not sure I’m ever going to be able to return it. It’s sexy, reliable and brilliant in the kitchen. So far I’ve made a Victoria Sponge with Berries, a Quince Meringue Pie and a Berry & Coconut Meringue Tart. Next up, home-made pasta, ice cream and sausages.

    (6) Penelope Trunk. I’m sure some of you are familiar with Penelope’s blog. Penelope is a highly intelligent American with Aspergers who founded The Brazen Careerist, has the #1 career blog in the world, and is syndicated to 200 newspapers. She’s not to everyone’s taste – her tweeting of her miscarriage mid-business meeting generated a hail of coverage in both the blogosphere and traditional media – but she’s searingly honest and always backs up her savvy and unconventional advice with current data. A true original.

    (7) Chocolate and wine classes. Chocolate and wine classes have been popping up at all kinds of food festivals lately. I’ve always wondered if they were a genuine tutorial in chocolate and wine tasting or simply an excuse to eat a lot of chocolate. So I was pleased to receive an invitation to a recent Chocome chocolate and wine class for media at the National Wine Centre. And I now know the truth: they are a genuine exercise in matching chocolate to wines AND a great excuse to eat a lot of chocolate. That’s known as a choco-licious win-win. The National Wine Centre will be running further chocolate and wine classes on July 21, August 18, September 22 and October 13. Book now.

    (8) A List Blogger Bootcamp. Regular readers will know that I recently celebrated my one year blogging anniversary. This has led me to ask all sorts of question of myself that sound like the title of of a Judy Blume novel: Who am I?, Why Am I Here? and Where Am I Going? So to help figure this out I’ve recently joined the A List Blogger Club. I first heard about A List Blogger Bootcamp from Jules Clancy (The Stone Soup) during a panel discussion at last year’s Australian Food Bloggers Conference. It sounded interesting and I filed it away in my head for future investigation. A couple of weeks ago  I came across it again and decided to sign up. I’ve only just started scratching the surface of the members-only content but I wish I had signed up earlier as it’s full of excellent, useful information. I love this kind of self-discovery – I call it navel gazing with benefits.

    So tell me, what are you currently loving?

    * All images taken with Instagram – follow me at @thehungryaustralian * 

  • Barossa Valley: Maggie Beer, Rockford & Appellation at The Louise

    Regular readers will know how much I love the Barossa Valley, Australia’s most famous wine region. I’ve written before about how much I love visiting and how I day-dream about moving my family there. Situated about an hour from South Australia’s capital of Adelaide, it’s a picturesque region with world-class wineries, numerous fine dining restaurants, galleries and an excellent farmer’s market.

    So I was thrilled when I found out that as part of the recent Tasting Australia media famil, I would be visiting the Barossa Valley for two days with a group of international food journalists, authors, chefs and bloggers.

    Here are some of my trip highlights.

    Maggie Beers’ Farm House

    This is moments just before the Maggie Beer knife incident.

    Yes, I cut my finger while chopping pears next to Maggie Beer. I’m not proud to admit it.

    Ridiculous, right? Here I was cooking with one of the legends of Australian cooking in front of a group of distinguished foodies. It should have been one of my finest hours but instead I’m so intimidated I actually manage to cut myself while chopping the pears. Complete fail. Massive shame attack.
    Luckily, a glass of Maggie’s Sparkling Ruby Cabernet helped me to recover my composure. It’s a delightful non-alcoholic wine made with early harvest Cabernet grapes. Isn’t it just the most gorgeous colour?

    We’re at Maggie Beers Farm House today for a special audience with Maggie. We cook lunch with her in the very kitchen that her hit TV series, The Cook and The Chef was filmed. I feel privileged.

    Maggie is a gracious and exuberant host, a consummate multi-tasker and a highly focused and energetic woman. As she shares her plans for her hugely successful signature label gourmet food line, I’m reminded that there is no secret trick to success.

    My mate Thang (@ThangNgo) from popular Sydney blog, Noodlies, recently tweeted:

    “My Viet corner shop man opens 6am everyday. He now owns a huge mansion. Success is just consistent hard work.”

    To which I (@HungryAustralia) replied,

    “Yes, there’s no secret trick to long-term, sustained success. I love the saying, ‘the harder I work the luckier I become’. True!”

    Maggie is a success because she works bloody hard. Yes, she’s talented, knowledgeable, passionate and energetic. But it’s her strong work ethic and perfectionist streak that ensures that she is constantly striving to improve and grow. She’s an absolute inspiration.

    Lunch today is a lovely roasted pheasant salad – Maggie started her career with the legendary Pheasant Farm Restaurant after all – featuring radicchio and rocket and dressed with olive oil and Maggie’s signature verjuice. It’s the type of food – heavy on protein and vegetables – I can eat happily for lunch any day of the week.

    Dessert is the pear pie that I have had a hand, sorry, finger, in making. *Groan*. Served with Maggie Beer’s own vanilla bean ice-cream, it’s comfort food with a capital C.F. I make a lot of crumbles and pies for my family in winter – it’s my way of saying ‘nyah nyah nyah’ to the chilly nights.

    It’s been a memorable visit. Thank you Maggie for your warmth and hospitality. I shall return and when I do I’ll come in disguise so you don’t recognise me as the twit that cut their finger in your kitchen.

    Maggie Beers’ Farm House
    End Of Pheasant Farm Rd, Nuriootpa SA 5355
    Tel: 61 (0)8 8562 4477
    Open everyday, 10.30am – 5pm, except New Year’s Day, Good Friday, Christmas and Boxing Day.

    Rockford Wines

    This gentleman from Rockford looks completely relaxed, doesn’t he? He could be enjoying a a balmy Spring day. He must have the constitution of an ox because it is actually absolutely freezing!

    We arrive at Rockford on a chilly and overcast Autumn morning. Storm clouds cover the sky and the air is damp with moisture.

    After a brief explanation of the winery’s history and Rockford’s wine-making process, breakfast is served outside in their lovely courtyard. Today Rockford’s chefs Sandor and Lauren Palamai have prepared a menu featuring fresh produce grown at Krondorf Farm.

    We’re all shivering so we leap upon the hot food with enthusiasm. First up, this lovely porridge with fruit and nuts.

    Next we’re served mini leek and chicken pies. The pastry is golden, flaky and light while the filling is gorgeously moist and succulent without being gluey. I manage two before they’re all snaffled up.

    The next dish, scrambled eggs with salmon, is gorgeous. I adore the combination of salmon and eggs – it’s one of my favourite breakfasts – and here the eggs are barely cooked, just as they should be.

    To finish, we enjoy some lovely friands dusted with icing sugar. They’re delightfully chewy, but not overly sweet. I’m loving them but I’d be loving them even more if they came with a cup of hot steaming tea.

    I complain about the cold to Helen who immediately says, “I know what will warm you up. Let’s do a jumping shot.”

     So we do. Helen pulls off her signature karate kick but I am wearing a skirt so settle for an exuberant ‘What a Feeling’ type jump.
    By the way, she’s right. After the jump, and the hysterical giggling, I’m a lot warmer.
    Rockford Wines
    Krondorf Road
    Tanunda, South Australia
    Open 7 days 11am – 5pm
    Tel:  +61 8 8563 2720  or1800 088 818 (Free call)
    Email: info.contact@rockfordwines.com.au

    Appellation at The Louise

    We’re running late and as our bus pulls up to Appellation at The Louise we see executive chef Mark McNamara and what seems like the whole kitchen and wait staff standing outside, waiting patiently in the chilly wind. They must be freezing but they greet us with smiles and firm handshakes  – it’s an impressive first impression, and one that only grows steadily during our time at Appellation.

    Mark McNamara and Mark Hix (above) greet each other warmly. They’re both two hard-working chefs at the top of their game.

    Before we separate into groups for our masterclasses we take a group photo.

    From left to right: Richard Fox, Martin Bosley, Elaine Reeves (The Mercury), moi, Rebecca Variadel (Inside Cuisine), Helen Yee (Grab Your Fork), Antony Suvalko (Foodie), Angeline Thien (Singapore Women’s Weekly), Julie Buiso,  Grant Allen (New Zealand Herald), Lynnette Lim (Wine & Dine Experience), Billy Law (A Table for Two), Kaylene Murray from Style Living, Christine Salins, Tom Murray (Style Living), Ryan Edwards (Appellation) Bingbin (China Daily), Mark McNamara (Appellation), Ruby Stobart (Appellation) and Mark Hix.

    Then we split into groups – some of us make pig head terrine in the Appellation kitchens, some of us explore the kitchen garden and some of us have a bread making masterclass with Mark and pastry chef Anna Motteram using a nearby kitchen. I’m in the last group. I’m glad to be in the warmth of a kitchen but even more glad to have a chance to get up close and personal with Mark and Anna.

    Mark explains that Appellation bake three differnet kinds of bread every day — a plain loaf, a fennel and sultana and a rye bread — with South Australian Lauke flour. Using a natural ferment process that captures the indigenous yeast in the air, they created a speciality sour dough starter with high levels of natural bacteria and yeast. It’s extremely sensitive to humidity so they feed it once a day in summer and three times a day in winter.

    After Mark and Anna demonstrate the correct kneading technique we are all encouraged to have a go.

    It’s a lot harder than I imagined – you need to put some serious effort into the kneading! Now I understand why bakers have serious forearms.

    Ta da! And here’s the finished bread, hot out of the oven. It smells so good I have to restrain myself from diving straight in.

    Afterwards, Mark shows us how to make a Lime Pie, using a Thomas Keller (French Laundry) recipe as a starting point. This is a gorgeous pie but one that requires a lot of work over a hot stove – the sabayon needs a good ten minutes of solid whisking. Mark manages it with a smile.

    As we cook, I ask Mark about his plans as he’s just announced that he’s stepping down from Appellation in June.

    “I’ve been cooking for 35 years,” he says. “I want to go to India and travel, have a break, get inspired again. I may even do some study or training.”

    And afterwards?

    “Well, there are opportunities of some consultancies, cookbooks and writing,” he says, with a smile.

    Personally, I am sure that Mark will be besieged with offers and can’t wait to see what he does next.

    Here’s the finished pie, served with slow-roasted quinces as part of our lunch afterwards. It’s wonderfully light and fragrant with lime.

    Lunch is spectacularly good. Check out some of the beautiful bread sticks wrapped in prosciutto and our stunning main, Duck Two Ways with butternut, sunchokes and pomegranate.

    Mark’s successor at Apellation is his Sous Chef, Ryan Edwards. Like all of the Appellation team, Ryan comes across as completely focused, respectful and professional. In fact, when reflecting upon our class and lunch at Appellation, the saying ‘well oiled machine’ springs to mind.

    So I very much look forward to returning to Appellation when it reopens in July. Yes, Mark will be gone, but his legacy, and the excellent Appellation team, will continue to wow and delight.

    Appellation at The Louise
    Corner Seppeltsfield and Stonewall Roads
    Marananga, Barossa Valley, South Australia
    Tel: +61 8 8562 2722
    Email: stay@thelouise.com.au

    Christina Soong-Kroeger visited the Barossa Valley as a guest of Tasting Australia.

  • My One Year Blog Anniversary!

    Happy Birthday to The Hungry Australian! A year has flown by and I’m so happy to be here, blogging.

    I started The Hungry Australian on a whim a year ago with this post — Chinese Sausage Omelette — to find the joy in writing again. One problem with being a control freak and a perfectionist is that you set yourself very high standards. This can be helpful in some ways but hugely unhelpful in others.

    Now I’ve always been a writer — and been lucky enough to be paid for my writing since 1996 — but in 2011 my writing suddenly ground to a halt. I was on an extended maternity break and writing was suddenly no longer a side-line but the main event. Overnight, it became intimidating to me; I became crippled by self-doubt and paralysed by indecision.

    So blogging was a way for me to find the joy in writing again. It has absolutely brought this back to me, and so much more besides. A year ago I would never have imagined that today:

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  • Piccadilly Restaurant, Mount Lofty House

    Don’t you just love a good fountain?

    I’ve always liked the idea of having a fountain in my front yard. However, if I wanted a fountain like this one I think I’d have to move to a much bigger house with an enormous front yard to do it justice.

    Luckily, the fountain is perfectly proportioned for its position in the gardens of Mount Lofty House in the Adelaide Hills, a stunning boutique hotel and function centre. I recently visited Mount Lofty House on the Tasting Australia media famil to dine at its Piccadilly Restaurant. Headed up by executive chef Girard Ramsay, Piccadilly focuses on local and seasonal produce and maintains its own organic kitchen garden.

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  • Quince Meringue Pie

    Ever since I started cooking with quinces a few weeks ago I’ve been dreaming up ways to enjoy this magnificent fruit.

    So when Sweet Adventures‘ Sweet As Pie bloghop rolled around, I decided quinces had to be the star ingredient. But what type of pie would I make?

    After a couple of false starts I settled on this Quince Meringue Pie, a kind of mish-mash of my Free-Form Apple Tart and my Mini Lemon Meringue Pies, using slow-roasted quinces.

    Yes, roasting the quinces takes some hours. I’m not going to lie; this is not a dessert that can be made on the spur of the moment. But good things come to those who wait so think of this pie as the culinary equivalent of your perfect partner – chances are, it won’t be the first person you fall for.

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  • Tell us what you want at Eat Drink Blog 3

    As mentioned in my last post, I am one of the organisers of Eat Drink Blog 3, the Australian Food & Drink Bloggers Conference, which will take place in Adelaide later this year.

    I attended Eat Drink Blog 2 last year in Sydney and had a fantastic time. I remember walking into the conference room full of bloggers packing SLRs, smartphones and Ipads and thinking, ‘yes! I’ve found my people.’

    OK, I can be a little dramatic at times. But the relief of finding a group of people who ‘got’ me was immense.

    I didn’t have to explain to this group why I love shopping at markets, why I had a cupboard full of food props, why I often ate my food cold because I was photographing it or why I spent hours cooking, writing, editing, posting, tweeting and instagramming about food.

    They got it. They understood. They were driven by the same passion, creativity and curiosity.

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  • 8 Favourite Things – June

    I love winter food and fashion but could do without the chill factor. All I want to do is stay indoors with the heating on. No wonder there are so many books on my list this month, but first up there is some very exciting news…

    (1) Eat Drink Blog 3: the Australian Food Bloggers Conference in Adelaide!
    Amanda from Lambs Ears and Honey and I recently received an unexpected email from the Sydney organisers of the second Australian Food Bloggers ConferenceTrinaSimon and Jen wanted to know if we’d be interested in organising the next conference in Adelaide later this year. After discussing the idea with the Adelaide Food Bloggers Group we were delighted to accept! So if you’re an Australian food blogger, watch out for an official announcement soon. There will also be a number of excellent sponsorship options for companies keen to partner with Eat Drink Blog 3, so please do drop me a line if you’d like to know more.

    (2) Sweet As Pie blog hop
    Food blogger? Love pie? Then you must join us for this month’s Sweet Adventures‘ blog hop, Sweet As Pie. Hosted by the lovely KC at Capers of the Kitchen Crusader, this month’s blog hop is a celebration of pie in all its glory. So check out KC’s post, put on your thinking hat and get baking.

    (3) Bedside table books
    I’m reading a half dozen Australian cookbooks and memoirs at the moment thanks to Wakefield PressPenguin/Lantern, and Hardie Grant. On my bedside table are Barbara Santich’s tome on Australia’s gastronomic heritage, Bold Palates, the charming Blue Ribbon Cookbook by Liz Harfull, Stephanie Alexander’s epic memoir, A Cook’s Life, the mouth-watering French Food Safari by Maeve O’Meara with Guillaume Brahimi, Barossa Food by Angela Heuzenroeder and Seasonal Fare by Susan Johnson.

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  • Fleurieu Peninsula: Willunga Farmers’ Market, Coriole Vineyard & The Elbow Room

    The Fleurieu Peninsula is situated along the coast in South Australia, about an hour from Adelaide, the capital. It’s a region renowned for its wineries, restaurants, seafood and gorgeous sceney.

    As part of the Tasting Australia food festival I visited the Fleurieu with a group of international food journalists and writers. Here is Part One of my trip highlights:

    Willunga Farmers’ Market

    Shopping at farmers’ markets is one of my favourite weekend activities. I relish the irregularity of the produce, the care and thoughtfulness put into the stall displays, and the pride the growers have in their produce.

    South Australia’s oldest farmers’ market, the Willunga Farmers’ Market, is held every Saturday morning at Willunga Town Square. With over 55 stalls, it’s both a great market and a real community hub where friends and neighbours meet to share their news and catch up over a coffee.

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  • Easy Honey Ice Cream with Burnt Toffee Popcorn

    I’ve made honey ice cream before but frankly, it didn’t rock my world. It was OK but there were no goosebumps, no sighs of utter bliss. So I was keen to to try it again, especially after meeting a nice gentleman from Golden North at Food SA’s recent Think Food event.

    I’ve been a big fan of Golden North’s signature honey ice cream since I was a kid but my Dad and I were convinced that the original recipe had been tinkered with – sometimes the honey flavour was strong and other times it was barely discernible. Similarly, the colour seemed to vary from a pale buttercream to a more golden yellow.

    So I took the ice cream sample the Golden North representative offered and interrogated him as fiercely as I could while spooning ice cream into my mouth.

    Surprisingly, he assured me that their recipe for honey ice cream has never been changed. Any variations in taste and colour are because of the seasonal variations in the Blue Gum honey they source from a local apiary.

    Blue Gum honey? No wonder I like their ice cream so much: blue gum honey – produced by bees feeding from Eucalytus globulus – is my go-to Australian honey. And, as luck would have it, I’d recently visited Buzz Honey in the Adelaide Hills and bought myself a one kilogram tub.

    It seemed like the universe was trying to tell me something.

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  • Lady Grey Bundt Cake with Rosewater Icing

    Although I’ve flirted with coffee over the years I am, at heart, a tea drinker.

    I like English Breakfast or Japanese green tea in the morning, Earl Grey or Lady Grey in the afternoon and Rooiboos (African bush tea) or peppermint tea after dinner. Not to mention the endless cups of Gook Bo – a heady mixture of whole chrysanthemum flowers and pu-erh tea – I consume when enjoying yum cha (literal translation: ‘drink tea’).

    So I was quietly thrilled when we decided to go with a tea theme for this month’s Sweet Adventures‘ dessert-themed blog hop hosted by the lovely JJ from 84th & 3rd. Check out JJ’s post for all the details of how to join in the fun. We also have a special give-away this month courtesy of Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea – scroll to the bottom of this post for all the details.

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  • Foraging: picking apples for a free-form apple tart

    I want my children to know where food comes from.

    I want them to have a positive, interactive relationship with food. I want my children to eat seasonally, ethically and sustainably. I want them to understand that the choices that they make at the market or grocery store have consequences, both for themselves and for those that produce, promote and sell food.

    I want. I want. It sounds all so self-centred and self-righteous, doesn’t it? It’s all about me, not them.

    But I want my children to recognise and respect the cyclical nature of life. I want to share with them the warm glow of satisfaction gained by planting, tending and picking your own fruit and vegetables, and the thrill of catching your own food.

    We grow lots of herbs and some fruits and vegetables at home but our backyard is not ideal for a vegie patch (not enough free space and not enough sun). So I look for other opportunities to teach my children about food. Last summer we caught crabs and cockles (pipis) with them and went strawberry and cherry picking, too.

    A couple of weekends ago, my parents invited us to go apple picking with some friends.

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  • 8 Favourite Things: May 2012

    I’m a Virgo – as if you couldn’t tell – so I love making lists. Here’s my (inaugural) monthly list of things, foods, events and experiences that I’m loving this month.

    1) Tasting Australia

    The recent Tasting Australia 2012 drew some 50,000 international and Australian chefs, food media, food producers and food lovers to Adelaide, South Australia, for an 8-day festival featuring 80+ events. I’ve already posted a recipe – Red Quinces, Haloumi & Rye – inspired by my Tasting Australia media trip and will be posting many other write-ups over the next few weeks.

    2) Cooking with inspirational pros

    I’ll never forget chopping pears for a pear tart with bubbly Australian food legend Maggie Beer – see photo above – and learning how to bake bread with the charming Mark McNamara, outgoing Head Chef of Appellation at The Louise. Two extraordinary and inspiring food lovers, they’re also two of the most professional and hard-working people you’ll ever meet.

    3) My new gig as Australian and New Zealand Food Expert at About.com

    My Australian & New Zealand Food site on About.com went live last week. Check out some of my articles and recipes including 72 Hours in Adelaide for Foodies8 Edible Souvenirs, Grilled Seafood Salad with Persimmons and Mini Pavlovas with Pomegranates.

    4) What’s Your Cup of Tea? blog hop

    Sweet Adventures’ What’s your Cup of Tea? blog hop has just been announced by the lovely JJ from 84th and 3rd, hostess of this month’s dessert blog hop. So pull on your thinking cap, get cooking with tea and join in the fun. What’s Your Cup of Tea? kicks off on May 21st and entries can be linked up all week. This blog hop is open to all food bloggers – check out details at 84th and 3rd.

    5) Skinny jeans

    My love affair with all jeans skinny continues with my new J Brand jeans and Ksubi jeans bought on sale at David Jones. Guys, I’ve been waiting for you my whole life.

    6) MAC ladybug lipstick

    If there is a more genius red lipstick than MAC’s Ladybug lipstick on the market I’ve yet to meet it.

    7) Coffee

    After a week of drinking coffee twice a day on the Tasting Australia media trip I am now addicted to the little brown bean again. The jury is still out on whether this is a good thing or not…

    7+1) New foodie friends

    I’ve made so many new food-loving friends this month via Tasting Australia, this blog, the Adelaide Food Bloggers Group and my new About.com gig. A shared love of food is such a great way to start a friendship, don’t you think?

    So what are you loving this month? Hit me with your tips and suggestions!

    Photo credits: Duck Two Ways at Appellation at The LouiseKay and I making cheese at Producers (thanks to Billy from A Table for Two)salt and pepper squid by the Star of Greece,  fruit and nut porridge at Rockford, Maggie and I cooking at the Pheasant Farm, tea (thanks to JJ from 84th and 3rd), pomegranates at Willunga Farmers Market, making bread at Appellation at The Louise and Thai Lamb Salad at No 58 Cellar Door and GalleryAll photos (c) Christina Soong-Kroeger except where indicated.

  • Red Quinces, Haloumi & Rye

    After a week spent travelling around some of South Australia’s most wonderful food regions on the Tasting Australia media famil, I’ve been dying to get back into the kitchen.

    In particular, I’ve been keen to make this dish – Red Quinces, Haloumi & Rye – inspired by the work of two different Chefs – Mark McNamara, outgoing Head Chef of Appellation at The Louise and Simon Burr, Head Chef of Kangaroo Island Sailing.

    Last week I found myself sailing around the Fleurieu coast on Lady Eugenie, Kangaroo Island Sailing’s 21 metre long ketch rigged yacht with a dozen international food media. While we sipped sparkling wine and enjoyed the sun and spray, Simon prepared delicious canapés in the small kitchen below deck.

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  • A new gig, a new look and a new direction

    When I started The Hungry Australian last June, I had few expectations other than getting in the habit of writing again and easing my way back into the workforce after an extended maternity break.

    Along my blogging journey I found my voice again. Not the self-conscious voice I had been using to pen my short stories and literary non-fiction (memoir) essays but my true voice, my authentic voice. One of the greatest compliments I’ve had about my blog has been from one of my oldest friends who told me, “it’s just like having a conversation with you.”

    That’s exactly how it should be.

    Why all this talk about writing and voice, I hear you ask. Isn’t this a food blog?

    Well, yes it is, but I have always considered myself a writer first and a food blogger second. Blogging was simply a new way of publishing my work, one that I became instantly addicted to for its immediacy and sense of community.

    So I’m thrilled to (finally) let you know about my new gig as Australian & New Zealand Food Guide for About.com, part of the New York Times Company. I’ll be producing eight recipes, reviews and articles for my own section – Australianfood.about.com –  each month, showcasing the best of Australian and New Zealand food to a whole new, international readership. It’s a marvellous opportunity and I’m sure I’m going to have a lot of fun with it.

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  • Red Lentil Dahl for a Rainy Day

    This has been the strangest year, weather-wise. The temperature has veered from the 40s to the low teens, without any particular rhyme or reason. One day I’m in a Sophie Loren-esque red sun dress and sandals licking gelati by the beach and the next day I’m in my black skinny jeans, long-sleeved Ts and trench coat, with both hands wrapped around a mug of hot chocolate.

    All this unpredictability plays havoc with my cooking. I spot some lovely watermelon at the markets and decide to make a watermelon, mint, fetta & black olive salad but when the time comes to eat it the skies are grey and a brutal wind is shaking the trees. Who wants to eat a salad then? Not me. I’m craving slow-cooked casseroles, spicy curries and steaming hot noodle soups to warm me up from the inside.

    Today was such a day. I had a day of writing and cooking planned and got straight into the writing part. But after two hours of fairly solid work I was chilled to the bone.

    So I decided to warm myself up by cooking a spicy red lentil dahl. After a few minutes chopping and then frying the garlic, onion and ginger, I added some turmeric. The minute the golden spice hit the pan, the glorious fragrance filled the kitchen and instantly the house seemed infused with its warmth. I added lentils, tomatoes and garam masala before leaving the dahl to simmer while I heated up some rice and unhurriedly fried some pappodams.

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  • Mini Lemon Meringue Pies

    After having to miss the Sweet Adventures Blog Hop in March, I’m happy to be back on board this month with this lemon-icious recipe.

    I’ve actually used lemons picked from our own lemon tree, which I thought was a write-off after the plasterers decided to empty their buckets around it when we were renovating. Turns out our tree is a lot harder to kill than I thought – hurrah!

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  • My Grandmother’s Prawn Sambal

    It’s good to be back.

    Regular readers will know that I’ve been blogging only occasionally lately, rather than my usual 2-3 posts a week. I had been unwittingly hijacked by a number of work projects and family issues and didn’t have the time or energy, much less the inspiration, to blog.

    As we all know, inspiration is essential to the success of any creative endeavour. Without it, I ended up standing in front of the pantry and fridge, waiting for the ideas that never came. It was a completely depressing state of affairs: the kitchen, usually one of my happiest spots at home, started to feel lonely and neglected.

    One day late last week, I found my passion for food again. I wanted to celebrate its return by cooking something special as I joyfully reclaimed my kitchen.

    So I chose this recipe – Malaysian Sambal Udang (Prawn Sambal) – which was created by my paternal Grandmother (my popo) and pieced together painstakingly by my cousin Carina. I’ve adapted it further, as the ingredients are a little different in Australia, to recreate the taste I remembered.

    I only have my memory to guide me as my grandmother passed away a few months ago. She was 93 when she died and had lived a long and full life, with mostly good health. She left behind four children, eight grandchildren, seven great-grand children, and a wealth of memories and recipes.

    While it’s never easy to say goodbye to those we love, I am comforted by the fact that people live on forever in your heart and memories. It doesn’t make the absence of them any easier, but it does mean that the most important part of them – their spirit, their essence, their soul – remains and that they can continue to impact on your life in all sorts of good and helpful ways.

    In my grandmother’s case, she was an excellent and thoughtful cook. Every time we visited Malaysia we would be treated with a smorgasbord of our favourite foods – fried chicken, sambal hebi (dried shrimp sambal), fish head curry, Penang Asam laksa, pineapple fried rice, yong tofu (stuffed beancurd), water spinach fried with sambal belchan, and fried eggplants stuffed with minced prawn.

    It was completely excessive but cooking was her way of demonstrating her love. It’s something my dad learned from her, and something I in turn picked up from my parents.

    When I surprised them with this dish last week the look on their faces said it all.

    “You’ve just gone to the top of the class,” my dad declared, as he hugged me.

    “It’s just like I remember it,” smiled my mum.

    Thanks, folks. That’s high praise indeed, but I’m just passing on the love.

    INGREDIENTS

    • 3 medium onions, peeled, and chopped roughly
    • 4 cloves garlic, peeled
    • 2 lemongrass stalks, white part only, chopped roughly
    • 2-5 Birds Eyes chillis
    • 1 tablespoon belcehan (fermented shrimp paste)
    • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
    • 1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
    • 500 grams raw, peeled prawns
    • 1/3 cup water, just boiled
    • 3 tablespoons tamarind concentrate
    • 2 teaspoons sugar
    • 1/2 teaspoon salt
    • 2 teaspoons light soy sauce

    METHOD

    1. Process onions, garlic, lemongrass and chilli until finely diced. Use 2 chillis for a mild-medium curry, 4 for a hot curry and 5 for an extra hot curry.
    2. Heat up a wok until smoking and then add oil. Heat for a few seconds until it starts to shimmer then add processed mixture and belcehan.
    3. Fry over a medium heat for a few minutes, stirring all the time, until fragrant and starting to ‘split’.
    4. Add turmeric and fry for another minute, stirring briskly, and then add the prawns and 1/3 cup just boiled water.
    5. Stir to combine, coating the prawns with the mixture.
    6. Add tamarind, sugar, salt and soy and continue stirring, until prawns are pink and cooked through.
    7. Serve with steamed rice and fried Chinese vegetables.

    *******************************************************************************

    My article on persimmons including my favourite ways to eat this gorgeous fruit, is out now in the latest issue of Sumptuous. I’m also a featured  contributor this month – thanks guys!

    I was also happy to learn this week that Honest Cooking, the American online food magazine that I contribute to, has been nominated for ‘Best Group Blog’ in the prestigious 2012 Saveur Food Blog Awards. Honest Cooking is less than a year old so it’s a wonderful achievement for editor Kalle Bergman and the international team of contributors. If you enjoy my writing, please do take a moment to head on over to the site and vote for us.

  • Singapore Takeout / Iggy’s Pop Up Dinner, Sydney

    I’ve visited the lovely island country of Singapore at least a half dozen times over the years and have always considered it to be a foodie’s paradise. After all, Singapore boasts a wonderful mix of Singaporean, Malaysian, Chinese and Indian food, remarkably good food courts and colourful open-air hawker centres.

    I’ve never thought of Singapore as a fine dining destination, however, so I was a little intrigued when an invitation to Singapore Takeout in Sydney popped into my inbox a few weeks ago.

    While I always enjoy visting Singapore, die-hard travellers have been known to dismiss it as a safe but boring place – they say it’s hot, it’s humid, it has great hawker stalls and lots of shopping malls but that’s about it. It’s a perception that Singapore Tourism is determined to change with their provocative, new ‘Get Lost’ campaign, which targets both new and returning visitors:

    Working in conjunction with ‘Get Lost’, Singapore Takeout is a travelling pop up food event, aimed to show a select audience a different, more sophisticated side to dining in Singapore.

    Singapore Takeout has showcased the work of some of Singapore’s top chefs to leading media, food bloggers and competition winners in London, New York, Dehli, Paris, Moscow, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Dubai and, most recently, Sydney (12-14 March). The take-away message is clear: Singapore  has evolved. It’s way more interesting and sophisticated than you may think.

    At the Sydney event I attended, two dozen Aussie food bloggers were treated to a five course degustation by Ignatius Chan and Head Chef Akmal Anuar from Iggy’s, ranked 27th in The San Pellegrino World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2011 and listed 1st in The Miele Guide 2011/2012 Asia’s Top 20 restaurants.

    Simon from Simon Food Favourites has made a fantastic video of the night, which pretty much sums it up. Nice work, Simon! You can spot me in the front row in the aqua dress and white jacket.

    For those that prefer old-school blogging, first up was nasi lemak, the classic Malaysian hawker dish. Iggy’s version was a nod to the authentic flavours of the dish (coconut milk, pandan, fish, peanuts, tamarind etc) while reinterpreting it in a completely modern and playful way. I actually liked this a lot although I really felt the lack of the usual sambal kick.

    Next came sushi, Iggy’s style. Beautifully fresh fish was wrapped around a soy meringue base topped with wasabi paste – an intriguing concept that actually worked very well.

    The next dish, cold capalleni, was a delightful dish inspired by the Chinese New Year dish, yu sheng (raw fish salad). It pleased on many fronts: the presentation was lovely, the flavours (sesame oil, yuzu and horseradish) were wonderfully pure and the ponzu granita and deep-fried quinoa added  welcome textural and sensory contrasts.

    The next dish, the slow-cooked beef cheek marinated in Bass Phillip pinot noir for 40 hours, was outstanding. The meat was melt-in-your -mouth tender, falling apart with a mere nudge of my knife, and presented on a gorgeous wedge of white radish. Top marks, team.

    The final dish was a fantastic fusion of East and West. A funked up version of kaya toast (kaya is a coconut, egg and pandan jam) was accompanied by Teh Tarik (‘pulled’ tea with condensed milk) flavoured ice cream and deep-fried tea leaves. It was so good Penny from Jeroxie and I are going to attempt to make our own versions at home.

    During the dinner the friendly bloggers at my table – Simon from The Heart of FoodThe Food Pornographer, Thang from Noodlies, and Penny from Jeroxie – reminisced about our favourite Singaporean hawker dishes. Many expressed regret that dishes like Haianese Chicken Rice, Curry Laksa and Har Mee (prawn noodles) were not on the menu that night.

    So after the Singapore Takeout dinner a bunch of us – my whole table plus Helen from Grab Your Fork, Susan from Chocolate Suze, Thanh from I Eat Therefore I Am, and Tina from Food Booze Shoes – went to Mamak, a Malaysian restaurant in Chinatown. We ordered way too much – namely, sweet and savoury rotis, satays, fried chicken, Teh Tarik, and Ais Kachang (red bean, coconut milk sweet corn and rosehip syrup on crushed ice) – and then proceeded to eat it all.

    Afterwards, uncomfortably full and unable to sleep, I pondered. When I am next in Singapore would I do something similar? Could I imagine treating myself to a a fine dining experience and then following it up with a late-night supper at a hawker centre?

    Of course I could.

    Bloated belly aside, that’s having one’s cake  – or kaya toast – and eating it, too.

    Christina Soong-Kroeger visited Sydney as a guest of Singapore Takeout, part of the Singapore International Culinary Exchange (SPICE), a joint initiative of the International Enterprise (IE) Singapore, Singapore Tourism Board (STB), and SPRING Singapore. Thanks to Laura Barette at Frank PR for organising my flights and accommodation. 

    For more information about Singapore check out:

    **************************************************

    By the way, a huge thank you to the anonymous person who nominated me for a Best Australian Blogs 2012 award. I’m truly touched and very grateful.


  • Sweet Adventures’ Layer Upon Layer Bloghop kicks off 19 March

    There’s something about a layered dessert that speaks of thoughtfulness. It’s an indication that someone’s made an effort to make you feel special.

    There are so many different layered desserts, too, such as trifle (check out the Mini Apricot Trifles with Cardamon and Pistachios above), baklava, cheesecake, ice cream or yoghurt sundae, layered Asian jelly, multi-layered cake or a layered ice cream dessert.

    So I am chuffed that this month’s Sweet Adventures dessert-themed bloghop, is Layer Upon Layer, hosted by the lovely KC from The Capers of the Kitchen Crusader.

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  • Chicken, Bacon & Mushroom Pie

    Where has the Australian summer gone?

    It’s been raining steading all day. The air is chilly and an unfriendly wind is tormenting all the trees in the garden, blowing them from side to side without mercy.

    I don’t like this weather. I’m like a cat: I don’t like being cold and I hate getting wet. So I am going to stay inside, work on my laptop and bake a pie.

    Not just any pie though; this pie was inspired by my mother in law’s chicken pie or huehner pastete, originally found in France and England and enthusiastically adopted by the Germans. Please note my use of the word ‘inspired’ – I don’t want to cause any more sleepless nights for  German blogger Bertl from Zwiesel, a small town in the Bavarian forest.

    Bertl recently wrote an outraged post about my unorthodox weisswurst, sauerkraut, red cabbage and potato mash recipe. You can read his critique and my response, his initial comment on my post and his follow up. (His comments are in German so you may need a translation program). This was one of the first recipes I blogged so you are not allowed to look at the photos – just peek at the text through your fingers.

    But let’s get back to this rather glorious pie.

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