eG Foodblog: haresfur (2011) - not exactly bush tucker
#91
Posted 13 April 2011 - 09:23 PM
I'm enjoying your blog, haresfur. Vicarious food travel again... yay ! Why is that your all-time favourite piece of pottery ? Please give us the insider's-eye-view.
#92
Posted 13 April 2011 - 09:38 PM
That fish & chips looked stellar. My first job was at a fish 'n' chips joint down the street from me. They didn't tell you when they hired you that the smell just NEVER comes out of your clothes. Or your hair. FOR months....well, and the clothes, never. But I still do crave a good fish 'n' chips.
Love the pottery cups for the wine. I bet that they would hold the chill on a white or rose quite nicely.
"Let's slip out of these wet clothes, and into a dry Martini" - Robert Benchley
Pierogi's eG Foodblog
My *outside* blog, "A Pound Of Yeast"
#93
Posted 13 April 2011 - 09:53 PM
Here's one for Peter Eater
The lobster mold on the cover of the Canadian book inspired a huge double take, because I KNEW I wasn't seeing it right!
#94
Posted 14 April 2011 - 01:39 AM
I got up a bit late but figured I had time to go grab some bread from the Good Loaf sourdough bakery hidden behind the Bendigo Bank headquarters. I got a cappuccino too. I don't know what they put in it but I got into the zone at work and didn't even grab a slice of the bread, much less lunch.
Needless to say I was pretty hungry when I got home and a simple meal was in order after the deep fried excess of yesterday.
Let's see, the pumkin soup is from Aldi. I can make better but it's not bad. The "brie" is from Tasmania, the dip from Wholefoods and is quite tasty. The olive oil is local and sold from a small shop located at Bendigo Pottery, the oldest operating pottery in Oz. I'll try to find some photos of the shop, or at least the pottery.
#95
Posted 14 April 2011 - 05:20 AM
Here's one for Peter Eater
The lobster mold on the cover of the Canadian book inspired a huge double take, because I KNEW I wasn't seeing it right!(Yes, I have a dirty mind...
)
That is a controversial lobster dish on haresfur's cover. And for the record it's Peter THE eater.
I just made a cornish game hen with chestnut stuffing. . .
Would you believe a pigeon stuffed with spam? . . .
Would you believe a rat filled with cough drops?
Moe Sizlack
#96
Posted 14 April 2011 - 08:20 AM
We've cooked a few roo steaks, kabobs and some mince since we got here. I have to say that the taste isn't that far off from beef. However, it does smell quite gamy so they're being cooked, especially the mince. I like to have roo more often but it's just not as available as the other meats. The only place I've seen them is at the supermarkets and one butcher shop that has it frozen to a stage that I can't even tell what cut it is.
Sounds like alligator meat here in SW Florida. If you find it in a restaurant it is fried and served with bbq sauce. In the odd store it is invariably frozen.
#97
Posted 14 April 2011 - 09:50 AM
My apologies, no double entendre intended. I must be getting old, apparently a dirty mind is the second thing to go...
Here's one for Peter Eater
The lobster mold on the cover of the Canadian book inspired a huge double take, because I KNEW I wasn't seeing it right!(Yes, I have a dirty mind...
)
That is a controversial lobster dish on haresfur's cover. And for the record it's Peter THE eater.
#98
Posted 14 April 2011 - 10:14 AM
Hmm, favourite pottery... On second thought, that's sort of like favourite wine, can I only have just one? Seriously, the cup shown is probably near the top. It is so small and simple but has so much going on with the shape and the way the cross-hatching changes part way down, the rough texture on the unglazed foot, and the luscious sparkling saturated iron glaze that flows down just to the bottom.I'm enjoying your blog, haresfur. Vicarious food travel again... yay ! Why is that your all-time favourite piece of pottery ? Please give us the insider's-eye-view.
Aside from that I have some wonderful small bottles, glazed only by the ash of the kiln, by a friend Jack Troy who literally wrote the book on wood fired pottery. And another bottle by Otto Heino, who recreated a prized ancient Chinese glaze when he was in his 70s and found himself selling pots for up to $100,000. All are beautiful but also feel wonderful in your hands. That's the trouble with museum pots - you miss out on the tactile aspects.
Then there are all the Japanese pottery areas/styles. I'm drawn to Tamba, Shigaraki, and Oribe ware. I'd love to go explore them sometime.
Edited by haresfur, 14 April 2011 - 10:40 AM.
#99
Posted 14 April 2011 - 10:29 AM
Thanks for the tips. I think you are right, Skippy is a meat that will really show the cooks skill or lack thereof.I've had the same problem with those supermarket roasts. Thing is, there's no standard size for those roasts. Sometimes you get too little ones. Sometimes a big one. Sometimes a biggish one and a little one. The instructions are written for none of these and you need to work off temp. What's the right temp for medium-rare roo? God knows. I'd be shooting in the direction of venison, I guess, given the flavour profile isn't too different.
Also, I've found the 'Macro Meats' stuff from the supermarkets isn't particularly good. It's inexpensive, yeah, but you get what you pay for. You can order better quality 'roo steaks and roasts (maybe stick with the steaks--the roasts are probably easier to over- or under-cook when we're not entirely sure what temp. we're aiming for) through butchers and poultry stores. If you're ever down in Melbourne, visit The Point @ Albert Park. The rest of the menu dances between so-so and nice, but the 'roo fillet is excellent.
So, yeah, for foreigners ... raw or undercooked (as opposed to medium-rare--you can't eat this stuff above medium and you really don't want to eat it blue) it has a very bloody, irony flavour. Not nice. I'd have to put away a few beers before I could be convinced to try someone's 'roo tartare. Overcooked it tastes of little. Medium-rare, tho', and it's a bit--a bit--like venison. It's lean. Put the mince into something that's slow-cook-a ragu, say--and you end up with something that regular punters probably couldn't tell apart from beef, but the steaks are quite different ... while still having that basic 'red meat from a decent-sized mammal' quality.
#100
Posted 14 April 2011 - 10:46 AM
I thought all wine was healingI love the boiled coot and mixed knuckles.
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The healing beers book also caught my eye.....I kinda wish you had a healing wines one as that's my drink of choice lol.
#101
Posted 14 April 2011 - 05:11 PM
Hmm, favourite pottery...
Yes, favourite anything, just about, eh ?
Then there are all the Japanese pottery areas/styles. I'm drawn to Tamba, Shigaraki, and Oribe ware. I'd love to go explore them sometime.
I really hope you get the chance some time, I'm sure you'd have a ball. Thanks for answering. I should go off and look for (Japanese / craftsman)ceramics threads on eG, there should be some.
#102
Posted 14 April 2011 - 08:17 PM
Thanks for the tips. I think you are right, Skippy is a meat that will really show the cooks skill or lack thereof.
I've had the same problem with those supermarket roasts. Thing is, there's no standard size for those roasts. Sometimes you get too little ones. Sometimes a big one. Sometimes a biggish one and a little one. The instructions are written for none of these and you need to work off temp. What's the right temp for medium-rare roo? God knows. I'd be shooting in the direction of venison, I guess, given the flavour profile isn't too different.
Also, I've found the 'Macro Meats' stuff from the supermarkets isn't particularly good. It's inexpensive, yeah, but you get what you pay for. You can order better quality 'roo steaks and roasts (maybe stick with the steaks--the roasts are probably easier to over- or under-cook when we're not entirely sure what temp. we're aiming for) through butchers and poultry stores. If you're ever down in Melbourne, visit The Point @ Albert Park. The rest of the menu dances between so-so and nice, but the 'roo fillet is excellent.
So, yeah, for foreigners ... raw or undercooked (as opposed to medium-rare--you can't eat this stuff above medium and you really don't want to eat it blue) it has a very bloody, irony flavour. Not nice. I'd have to put away a few beers before I could be convinced to try someone's 'roo tartare. Overcooked it tastes of little. Medium-rare, tho', and it's a bit--a bit--like venison. It's lean. Put the mince into something that's slow-cook-a ragu, say--and you end up with something that regular punters probably couldn't tell apart from beef, but the steaks are quite different ... while still having that basic 'red meat from a decent-sized mammal' quality.
I actually find cooking the steaks to be quite easy. I cook them the same way as I do beef. Salt, pepper, into hot pan, 2-3 minutes on each side and let them rest. If I fancy a little sauce with it, I just drizzle on some blood plum vinegar.
#103
Posted 14 April 2011 - 08:27 PM
RooRibChops with garlic and rosemary?
MedRare on the charcoal?
#104
Posted 15 April 2011 - 03:59 AM
I had a really nice meal at the restaurant once. BTW her father is a potterSo I'm guessing that's not an "I Heart Cholesterol" Cookbook...but I bet the recipes would be GREAT if it was!
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I have the Caprial's Desserts cookbook, and I used to go to the restaurant all the time before it closed. And I was wondering what to do with that bag of newts that have been sitting in the back of the fridge!
Apparently I "heart" cholesterol, or at least it "hearts" me and likes to stick around. You have to go to huge extremes for diet to make a big difference. Still I try to avoid the worst offenders except bacon, and cheese, and...
#105
Posted 15 April 2011 - 04:33 AM
The good news is I made it back to the office in time for beer club. The James Squire Porter was rated highly by most members.
When I made it home, I was pretty tired so an easy meal of butter chicken was in order. My routine is to chop an onion and fry it up in olive oil along with a cup of brown rice (medium grain is sold in the supermarkets) until the rice is toasty and the onion translucent. I threw in some Hungarian yellow peppers from the garden because I needed to use them up. Then add 2 cups water. I also added about an ice cube size chunk of frozen turkey stock. After about 1/2 hour of simmer place chicken on top and dump a jar of butter chicken sauce over. Cook another 15 minutes or so until the chicken is done. Bone-in chicken takes longer.
While the chicken was cooking, I made a small French 75 but replaced the champagne with Duck and Bull cider. Yummy.
1 oz Tanqueray gin
1/2 oz lemon juice
Shake with ice, strain into a champagne flute, top with sparkling cider. Garnish with lemon twist.
My champagne flutes came from my grandfather and they are a bit small for even this reduced volume so I added more cider after the first few sips.
#107
Posted 15 April 2011 - 08:42 PM
#108
Posted 16 April 2011 - 12:46 AM
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Unless there are three other people." Orson Welles
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#109
Posted 16 April 2011 - 12:48 AM
LOL. Correct he is after tuna - only spring water, not oil. The purple packages are pet mince (no not minced pets!). I try to buy the stuff that doesn't make a point of advertising that it contains kidney because Dalmatians can get crystal problems in their urine, similar to gout (different from the common cat crystals) so purines are better avoided. The brown bottle with the yellow pull-ring cap is Bundaberg ginger beer. Aussies do like their ginger beer and I can't complain about that.LOVE the cat staring longingly at the contents--I'm assuming the open tuna! Or....wait.....your cat looks remarkably like mine A.K.A. Dr. Hannibal Lector. I'm away from my house at the moment, did the good doctor jump ship and run away to your house?
#110
Posted 16 April 2011 - 01:08 AM
I got up early fed and walked dogs (saw a wallaby). Then cobbled together advice from here and Alice Waters and a few guesses along the way.
First I salt&peppered the lamb and browned it in olive oil.
I took the lamb out and browned the root vegetables a little.
Took that out and put in a separate casserole. Then I cooked up a mixture of chopped leek, onion, and shallot in the pot. Took that out, added some white wine and deglazed the sides a little. The leek mixture went back in, along with a couple of chopped tomatoes and rosemary.
Put the lamb on top, covered and put both dishes in an oven heated to 150 C and immediately dropped the temperature as low as it could go. I put the meat thermometer on the shelf and the temperature ranged from about 75 to 84. I haven't really figured my oven out yet. It has a convection element at the back instead of the N American Norm bottom element. The grill is separate, below the oven.
Then with fingers crossed I left for lunch with friends.
#111
Posted 16 April 2011 - 01:22 AM
Lunch was at the Cosmopolitan Hotel. Well, not actually at the hotel, which had a fire several years ago. The new owners have been working to restore it and in the mean-time serve meals in the old stables in the back. The kitchen is in a caravan.
I had roast duck with duck & juniper pie and lentils. The duck was pretty good, the "pie" wonderful and the lentils were very good, too.
Here are a few of other meals:
It was a beautiful autumn day and the locals were out at the bar, watching the world go by:
#112
Posted 16 April 2011 - 02:59 AM
The lamb was cooked but not exactly melting away. Maybe another half day would have helped. It tasted pretty good to me. We ate one shank's worth and have leftovers for something.
I also served it with mashed sweet potato, ginger and a bit of sour cream. A bit too much sour cream but it turned out pretty well. Opened my last bottle of Davenlore merlot from Prosser Washington. Made me realize how much I miss Washington merlot. Good thing I have a few bottles of their Cabernet, though. Eileen used to work with one of the owners and we really like their wine. Much better than knowing someone who's wine you aren't fond of.
#114
Posted 16 April 2011 - 03:19 AM
On the other hand Bendigo water is very soft and tastes really good after some pretty advanced purification. I usually try to capture the water for plants as I'm waiting for the hot water to reach the sink. I keep a pitcher handy and pour it into a plastic water jug if I'm not using it for the plants right away. Of course it would have helped if they had put the water heater closer to the kitchen & bath, rather than at the back of the house (outside).
And another more or less food related item are the eucalyptus leaves I gathered for the last family members, a couple of stick leaf insects I bought from a friend's kid who has quite a little business going.
#116
Posted 16 April 2011 - 07:12 AM
#117
Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:47 AM
I loved the kitty peeking into the fridge, too. We once had to keep a bungee cord on our fridge because we had a cat who learned to open the door and help himself to what looked good. Once while I was on a trip, poor Mr. Kim forgot the cord and came home to an open fridge door with a clay pot on the floor and chicken bones strewn about the house. I hope none of your friends learn that trick!
#118
Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:51 AM
#119
Posted 16 April 2011 - 12:01 PM
Anne
#120
Posted 16 April 2011 - 12:31 PM
I love the "parting shots" of the tea pots - another of my weaknesses. Did you make some of them?
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