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eG Foodblog: rarerollingobject (2011) - Mealtimes at the University of

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#31 gfweb

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 07:39 AM

I'm gone for 12 hours and look what I missed!

#32 Zeemanb

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 08:25 AM

This is going to be awesome....my brain stopped working at the sight of uni-on-toast. That is just shameless, and this is from a guy waiting for someone to invent biscuits and foie gras gravy, :biggrin: .

#33 John Michael

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 08:31 AM

Any chance we might get to see the final version of the beet-root cured salmon?very interesting combination, beets, salmon and vodka! You go girl!!!

#34 Boilerfood

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 08:37 AM

I too enjoyed the color coded books. I look forward to reading your blog!

#35 Genkinaonna

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 09:34 AM

Oh wow, that seafood! And those zucchini fritters look so delicious...I would have those for breakfast anytime!
If you ate pasta and antipasto, would you still be hungry? ~Author Unknown

#36 Peter the eater

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 09:36 AM

who in their right mind doesn't want to see more photos of seafood?!

Well put.

What a market! I'd get some baby abalone and razor clams to start. Can you find sea cukes there? BTW, ten out of ten for the uni on toast with lardo.

Seafood and extreme cheese, thank you.
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#37 auds

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 09:59 AM

RRO aka Kate! Yay! I've been hoping you'd do a blog--your dinners always look so amazing. Looking forward to another great week. Food blogs are on fire lately.

#38 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:01 PM

Thanks for your kind words, everyone! I'm very excited to be blogging and just thrilled that you're taking an interest!

As for the colour coded books..there are two reasons for that. One is, as I mentioned, we have A LOT of books and apart from one shelf of queued newbies, have pretty much read all of them. I also have a pretty strong visual memory, so I realised one day that the majority of time I was looking for a book, I was first picturing it visually in my mind and then irritatedly scanning nine bookcases for books with that colour spine. It was a short jump to thinking that this is how I should organise my books in the first place, though it wouldn't work for everyone I realise. (It's actually been quite controversial among my friends, many of whom dismissed it as frippery and something the village idiot would dream up!).

As for the doing..chronic insomnia. :rolleyes: I average about 3-4 hours a night, and when you're regularly awake at 4am looking for something to occupy yourself with, reorganising that many books seems like a worthwhile endeavour. :wink:

#39 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:03 PM

And speaking of the bookshelves, I'll ignore the liquor for now, but are those two little egg coddlers on the right? And if so, do you use them? I've got several and rarely use them, but I do think they are adorable.

Really looking forward to your blog this week!


Wow, very good eyes! They are indeed antique Royal Worcester egg coddlers! I do use them, but not hugely often..I like coddled eggs, but they are a pain to clean. One is holding paperclips right now, surely what egg coddlers aspire to for their retirement. :wink:

#40 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:08 PM

YAHHH !! We hit the blogging jackpot with RRO / Kate!

That Uni with lardo looks fabulous. Can you get live sear urchin at the market?

The seafood looks so fresh and about half the cost of what it would be in the US. Is that price point typical or was it because it was a market specializing in seafood?


I haven't seen live sea urchin at fish markets, but if you're really keen and don't mind a bit of potential pollution, you can actually find them on beaches around Sydney. In fact, I go swimming at one of Sydney's dozens of ocean pools and recently stepped on a sea urchin that had washed over the wall! Much swearing and muttering picking those spines out of my foot.

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Photo credit: NSW Ocean Baths

As for the prices, they are per kilo, so halve them again for a per pound price I guess. I actually think the Fish Market's prices are a little higher than elsewhere, for the absolute quality. Mid week, I'll show you my 'normal' fish shop in Chinatown, which is cheaper again.

#41 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:13 PM

Any chance we might get to see the final version of the beet-root cured salmon?very interesting combination, beets, salmon and vodka! You go girl!!!


Yes indeed, in an hour or two from now, it'll be breakfast! I cure salmon a lot actually, I've posted this before, but other variations I've tried for the cure flavourings:
Chineseish - flavourings of sugar, salt, Sichuan pepper, a little five spice, shaohsing wine, scallions and ginger
Vietnameseish - sugar in the form of both sugar and caramel sauce, salt, fish sauce, cassia/cinnamon, star anise, black pepper and chilli. Added a splash of Vietnamese moonshine.
Thaiish - palm sugar, salt, lemongrass, galangal, red chilli, tamarind, crushed coriander roots and leaves, and garlic. Didn't use alcohol here and it was fine, slightly different texture.
Japaneseish - yuzu koushou, Okinawan black sugar, soy sauce and a mirin/sake combo
Frenchish - sugar, fleur de sel, herbes de Provence, lavendar petals, and some Pernod. I used fresh thyme too but it was too overpowering by the end of the cure so would omit that next time.

who in their right mind doesn't want to see more photos of seafood?!

Well put.

What a market! I'd get some baby abalone and razor clams to start. Can you find sea cukes there? BTW, ten out of ten for the uni on toast with lardo.

Seafood and extreme cheese, thank you.


You can get sea cucumbers from time to time, they're caught of Western Australia I think. I've seen them more regularly in Chinatown, and dried, of course.

That cheese is a thing of beauty. And the best part is, if around dessert time I distract my boyfriend with, say, an orange or nice juicy apple, I can get things like blue cheese all to myself.. :cool:

#42 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:21 PM

I realised that I was totally remiss yesterday, as I forgot to show you the greengrocers we went to after the fish market!

I tend to shop most days for fresh food, as I need it(meat, fish, herbs), partly because that's what keeps me inspired to cook and partly because I just like to. Vegetables and fruit though I do a big weekly shop and replenish mid week as need be. I alternate weeks between the farmers' market (which I'll show you on Saturday) and my favourite grocer, Harris Farms at Broadway, for Sydney players.

This store is AMAZING. You wouldn't think it's much at first glance, but in addition to beautiful fruit and vegetables:

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They also have a good range of meat, including free range pork, which I really appreciate. (Free range and organic is now common for chicken, but less so for pork, which is pretty industrially farmed too):
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Lots of interesting smoked fish (tuna, kingfish, eel, trout):
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Six different kinds of couscous!
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Lots and lots of small-grower olive oils:
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Edited by rarerollingobject, 24 July 2011 - 12:35 PM.


#43 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:33 PM

Amazing range of vinegars, verjuices and vino cottos. Fig vino cotto, fig and raspberry vino cotto, smoked pineapple vinegar..all here.
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Good antipasti and pickles:
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Want goose fat? No problem:
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Massive wall of cheese:
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Big range of flavoured labneh (yoghurt cheese):
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Goats' cheese section :wub: :
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Yoghurts etc:
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Savoury fruit pastes (quince etc, for cheese courses):
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Do you need some stinky durian cordial? They have that:
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Or elderflower cordial, or cherry juice?
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Chunks of Callebaut dark, milk, hazelnut and white chocolate; check out the massive slabs at the bottom!
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Deli meats, including Iberico ham:
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Ice cream (elderflower! burnt fig and balsamic vinegar! lemon curd! such great flavours) and handmade ice cream sandwiches:
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Xiaolongbao at the bottom, Taiwanese dumplings to the left and porcini mushrooms at the top:
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Big range of edamame, lots of different kinds:
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Buffalo dairy products - ricotta, butter, taleggio, gorgonzola, mozzarella:
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Bread:
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Five different kinds of horseradish!
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Another gratuitous wall of cheese shot:
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As you can tell, I'm in love with this store. They have EVERYTHING. If they sold toothpaste and detergent, I'd probably never set foot in a supermarket again. :biggrin:

#44 Darienne

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:34 PM

Absolutely mind blowing.
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#45 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 12:44 PM

Absolutely mind blowing.


I think it's pretty amazing. And it's just a shop in the middle of a carpark in a suburban shopping centre..not exactly one of Sydney's 'celebrity' food destinations! :laugh:

Harissa, goose confit, halvah, smoked pigs' trotters, preserved lemons, fair trade coffee, buffalo yoghurt, yuzu salt, Persian fairy floss, samphire, edible flowers, fresh borlotti beans, Epoisses cheese, palm sugar dumplings, mache, chioggia beets, fresh (green) almonds, tiny wild strawberries, pomelo, bottarga..these are just some of the finds I've had from that wonderful place.

(No, not affiliated..I wish I was!)

#46 Prawncrackers

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 02:47 PM

That Uni with lardo looks fabulous...


I want to second that, fab start to your blog!

#47 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 02:56 PM

OK, Monday morning. Blechh. Here's our weekday home coffee setup; a middling espresso machine (actually pretty good for its price), a grinder, and beans from Toby's.

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I am REALLY glad for my coffee this morning; I mentioned my boyfriend is a Professor of Resource Economics. Well, it's customary for PhD students to give their professors gifts at the end of their thesis. Because many of Michael's students are farmers' kids, this has often meant thrilling windfalls of produce from their farms; a litre of new season's olive oil? Yes please! A kilo of rare hen of the woods mushrooms? Yippee! And one of the latest ones was 2kg of coffee beans from the first crop of one student's fledgling family coffee plantation. And the grinder. We'd been using a tiny one you can just see at the left, but this grinder is much better.

It was such a touching gift, but the coffee...wasn't good. I don't know if it was the beans or the roast, but knowing all the blood, sweat and tears his family had put into them, we couldn't bring ourselves to throw them away so have been suffering through 2kg of the worst coffee ever. I feel quite bad even saying that, but we drank it, dammit. We've only just finished it and I can't tell you how relieved I am..

So Michael makes me coffee while I'm in the shower, and serving it in these double walled insulated glasses means that I can dawdle as long as I want and the coffee doesn't get cold. It's pretty good, though he always makes it too milky and I've given up trying to steer him otherwise.

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And the salmon! This is last night's beet-cured salmon, with the cure washed off.

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Sliced thinly and served on a rye cracker smeared with avocado, black pepper and flaky salt, it's not a bad breakfast at all.

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#48 percyn

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 03:05 PM


YAHHH !! We hit the blogging jackpot with RRO / Kate!

That Uni with lardo looks fabulous. Can you get live sear urchin at the market?

The seafood looks so fresh and about half the cost of what it would be in the US. Is that price point typical or was it because it was a market specializing in seafood?


I haven't seen live sea urchin at fish markets, but if you're really keen and don't mind a bit of potential pollution, you can actually find them on beaches around Sydney. In fact, I go swimming at one of Sydney's dozens of ocean pools and recently stepped on a sea urchin that had washed over the wall! Much swearing and muttering picking those spines out of my foot.

Ouch !!

As for the prices, they are per kilo, so halve them again for a per pound price I guess. I actually think the Fish Market's prices are a little higher than elsewhere, for the absolute quality. Mid week, I'll show you my 'normal' fish shop in Chinatown, which is cheaper again.

I already factored the weight and currency conversion into my mental equation. The prices per kilo were similar to the price per pound in the US.

It's been a while since I was in Australia and that seafood along with the ocean pool makes me want to make a trip there in Dec (cold here, warm there).

ETA: BEAUTIFUL beet cured salmon - the color looks almost like Tuna.

Edited by percyn, 24 July 2011 - 03:06 PM.


#49 heidih

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 03:59 PM

The cured salmon is gorgeous and the other elements of the combination sound like a perfect little meal. How does the beetroot come through? Can you share the rub proportions to amount of fish? I have seen others here do cured salmon and this has tipped me over the edge into experimentation territory.

Balmain bugs prepared in garlic sauce were the highlight of my trip to Port Macquarie. Sea sweetness was a perfect description.

As everyone has noted, Harris Farms is a treasure
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#50 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 04:06 PM

The cured salmon is gorgeous and the other elements of the combination sound like a perfect little meal. How does the beetroot come through? Can you share the rub proportions to amount of fish? I have seen others here do cured salmon and this has tipped me over the edge into experimentation territory.

Balmain bugs prepared in garlic sauce were the highlight of my trip to Port Macquarie. Sea sweetness was a perfect description.

As everyone has noted, Harris Farms is a treasure


It is gorgeous, I just love the colour of the ruby beetroot against the coral salmon..the beetroot just gives it a faintly nutty, sweet but also savoury flavour, nothing very strong at all but definitely interesting.

And it couldn't be easier, you should try it! The proportions I use are: for about 300g of salmon, mix 1 large or 2 small grated beetroots, 25g salt, 25g sugar, zest of 1 lemon and 1 tsp of white pepper, which I forgot this time around. One tablespoon of vodka is optional, it slightly changes the texture if you leave it out but still nice. You could also add chopped dill, or even a tsp or so of horseradish or hot mustard. I like a short cure, 12 hrs or so, because I don't want to change the texture of the fish too much but 24hrs will give you a firmer result.

#51 annabelle

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 04:30 PM

What a lovely peak at Oz, Kate! I only know it from "Underbelly" and this is certainly much, much nicer. :cool:

#52 heidih

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 04:34 PM

So... your ability to give the proportions of the salmon rub ingredients raises the question about how you record such things. Notebooks, software, in your head??? I ask because I have just recently begun to at least handwrite things that work well after kicking myself in the rear numerous times when I was unable to replicate a dish.
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#53 Shalmanese

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:14 PM

Ah, Harris Farm, how I miss thee. Their orange juice is some of the best I've ever tasted, almost indistinguishable from freshly squeezed. Also, they used to have a fantastic house brand olive oil. It was something like $8 for 1L and packed an immense, peppery punch.

Are you planning on going to the Haymarket? That was the other main place I loved to shop.
PS: I am a guy.

#54 Shalmanese

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:16 PM

Also, I'm insanely jealous of the fresh passionfruit. I don't think I've seen a passionfruit since I got to the US :(.
PS: I am a guy.

#55 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:27 PM

Ah, Harris Farm, how I miss thee. Their orange juice is some of the best I've ever tasted, almost indistinguishable from freshly squeezed. Also, they used to have a fantastic house brand olive oil. It was something like $8 for 1L and packed an immense, peppery punch.

Are you planning on going to the Haymarket? That was the other main place I loved to shop.


Sure am. There as we speak (my office is in Haymarket). Let me know if there's anything in particular you'd like to (re)see, always happy to take a walk.

Also, I'm insanely jealous of the fresh passionfruit. I don't think I've seen a passionfruit since I got to the US :(.


WHAT?! That really astounds me..passionfruit is common as dirt here. I don't know why I'd assumed you could get them in the US..I suppose they're just one of those things so ubiquitous I've come to take them for granted. Last week alone we went through 18 of them, squeezing them for juice!

Edited by rarerollingobject, 24 July 2011 - 06:28 PM.


#56 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:32 PM

What a lovely peak at Oz, Kate! I only know it from "Underbelly" and this is certainly much, much nicer. :cool:


Hehe..well I HAVE an underbelly, so it's not totally unrelated! :raz: Actually, depending on which series you've seen, a lot of it was set around where I live!

So... your ability to give the proportions of the salmon rub ingredients raises the question about how you record such things. Notebooks, software, in your head??? I ask because I have just recently begun to at least handwrite things that work well after kicking myself in the rear numerous times when I was unable to replicate a dish.


A heady combination of head, vast Google docs spreadsheets and Evernote. I jot things down in Google docs (ideas for meals, flavour combinations, shopping lists, planned meals) so I can access them from my phone, ipad, work laptop or at home. Then if they're a keeper, I tag them into Evernote, which is kind of a universal capture tool, also accessible from anywhere. I keep notes, recipes, web links, photos there..like a shoebox of ideas.

But also, from my head..mind is constantly racing with ideas and curiosity and lying awake thinking about things. This doesn't always work so well though - refer totally forgetting white pepper in the salmon rub. :wink:

#57 annabelle

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:42 PM

I watched the Aussie series last summer. How cool that they shot some of it around your neck of the woods!

#58 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 06:49 PM

I watched the Aussie series last summer. How cool that they shot some of it around your neck of the woods!


And a new series of Underbelly is about to start - it's also set in Woolloomooloo, and it's about the notorious (real life) feud between warring brothel madams, each of whom headed up violent all-female roaming razor blade gangs in the 1920s and 1930s. Razor blade gang fights were apparently very common, a lot of slashings and throat-cuttings and disfigurements..among the women! You can't make this stuff up.

Edited by rarerollingobject, 24 July 2011 - 06:49 PM.


#59 Ashen

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 09:06 PM

That salmon looks amazing . It has me craving fresh montreal bagels and good cream cheese.

I loved the tour of the grocery store, I can't imagine any ordinary store around here carrying Callebaut . I love that stuff , my wife just made a white chocolate fresh berry cake yesterday. . 1.5 pounds ( 700 gm ) of white callebaut, golden,black and red raspberries, blueberries, and strawberries. It is a once a year indulgence using 30$ worth of white chocolate in one cake like that.
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#60 rarerollingobject

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Posted 24 July 2011 - 09:10 PM

My work coffee setup. I actually wasn't that much of a coffee drinker before I started this job, but now I have a solid 2-3 a day habit. I work in a ridiculously male-dominated environment (ie. senior executive: 19 men, 3 women including me), which I raised eyebrows at when I first started, but I quickly realised it's not so much a boys' club as a coffee drinkers' club. EVERYTHING, every meeting, every planning session, is done over coffee, the whole organisation runs on it.

But it's quite a nice custom, really. We all run up tabs here and half the time I get down there to pay mine and find someone else has already paid it. :smile:

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Not much time to get out around Chinatown today but did stop in for sushi from a sushi train next door. The quality here is good, and the turnover/freshness is high. That's a huge aquarium that runs the back wall..the awkward irony of looking at fish looking at you eating fish.

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In a hurry, so grabbed octopus, bonito, tuna and a soft shell crab roll.
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Still peckish on the way back, I stopped in at the Thai grocery next to my office (there are 4 in a 1 block radius!) to browse all their amazing pre prepared meals and snacks and sweets. I often buy their zhoong.

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Came away with a tub of mango and a little sachet of chilli salt to dip the sweet mango slices into. Hot and sweet and salty..that should shut me up for awhile.

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