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MENU SPECIALS
Lemon Myrtle Risotto
Plump al dente wheat berries in a creamy lemon myrtle and chicken risotto, served with a sprinkle of freshly cracked black pepper...
Banana Slice
Caramelized Banana Slice. Fantastic restaurant style dessert that even kids can make!
Savoury Mince and Vegetables
Savoury Mince and Vegetables. A successful family classic proven over time to thrill the worst food critics, beautifully showcased...
Sponge Cake
Baking with Ovalett Sponge Cakes Emulsifier. The good, bad and ugly of making sponges with an egg foam stablizer/emulsifier...
Masterchef Australia
MASTERCHEF AUSTRALIA. The 2-minute Noodle Cook's hilarious National TV debut...

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Gluten Free Flours

Sorghum III Texture

Indian grocers provide a range of non-wheat flours suitable for bread making:

Lentil = urid/urad dal
Chickpea = besan/gram/garbanzo
Sorghum = juwar/jowar/milo/cholam
Millet = bajri/kurakkan
Red Millet (Finger Millet) = ragi
Water Chestnut = singoda
Amaranth = rajagro
Buckwheat = kutta ka atta/kuttu/kasha

Shown in this post is a beautiful sorghum bread made without GFG, xanthan or guar gum. The beautiful texture is controlled by room temperature fermentation (25-30 degrees). Slowing down the fermentation gives a much more refined and softer texture.
White Sorghum Loaf

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

Breakfast Special

Birthday Breakfast

Poached egg with vintage cheddar in a tomato cup, premium leg ham, buttered melba toast, and spicy fresh tomato puree with basil dip.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Paper Chef #40 - Simplicity

Potato Soup in Dish

This month's Paper Chef is hosted by April's winner, Bron Marshall. Paper Chef is a culinary challenge where cooks and chefs alike brag and boast showcase their cooking creations using 4 secret ingredients. Challengers have one weekend to star in their own kitchen stadium, like an Iron Chef, to cook for an international internet audience, and to write about their experience.

Bron, with the help of 2 beautiful fairies, randomly picked the secret ingredients:

Prosciutto
Floury Potatoes
Thyme
Mother’s Day

... the fourth ingredient selected for Mother's Day is STOCK. A good stock makes a great difference to a dish. Most people can identify with the labour of love that goes into creating the heart and soul of a meal. Stock making clearly reminds of a motherly figure bent over a stove carefully skimming off the fat. Without this skimming, we won't be light as fairies!

Since parents of baby boomers go through post war frugality, the dish presented for the challenge is titled Simplicity, a deconstructed vichyssoise, a French potato and leek cream soup. The dish is served as a creamy base with components of the soup: onion, leek, potato, thyme, and molded jellied stock (not shown here). The soup is usually served chilled, but can be heated. To serve warm, omit the jellied stock or set the stock with translucent starches like water chestnut or potato.

Potato Soup Closeup

Soup
1 leek, cut into 2 cm lengths
2 floury potatoes, peeled
1 waxy potato, peeled
1 L chicken stock
1 onion
1 garlic
1 bay leaf
4 sprigs of thyme
1 teaspoon green peppercorn
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 pickling onion
1 cup milk (or 150 mL cream)
2 tablespoon butter (omit if using cream)

To make the soup, bring to boil all ingredients except milk and butter. Simmer for 1 hour. Remove the pickling onion, waxy potato and green leek parts after 15 minutes.

When the soup is ready, remove the bay leaf. Add butter and milk. Puree in a blender until smooth and creamy. Chill if serving cold.

Prosciutto Chopsticks

For serving
1 stalk spring onion
8 slices prosciutto
1/2 cup jellied stock (boosted by pork rind)
1/2 teaspoon gelatin, if required
4 sprigs of fresh thyme

Cut the spring onion into decorative strips. Use iced water to curl.

Cut the prosciutto into 1 cm wide strips. Wind the prosciutto strips around a thin roll of baking paper shaped like a chopstick. Microwave on high for 30-45 seconds until crisp. Slide off the baking paper.

Heat the jellied stock, adding gelatin if needed. Pour into flexible ice cube molds and chill. Use star molds to appease Bron's fairies. Omit the jellied stock if serving the soup warm. The stock can also be set in water chestnut flour or potato starch to avoid melting.

Vichyssoise

Assembly
Pour the soup into shallow serving dishes. Add waxy potato cube, halved pickling onion, fresh sprig of thyme, molded jellied stock, and a slice of green leek. Place prosciutto chopsticks over the dish as shown. Garnish with spring onion.

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Sunday, May 03, 2009

Chef's Special: Wattleseed and Date Millet Bread

Wattleseed Date Millet Bread

A gluten-free treat featuring bush tucker wattleseeds and dates in a moist, fluffy, flexible red millet bread. This lovely bread makes an excellent substitute for raisin toast. The bread contains no xanthan, GFG or guar gum.

Wattleseed Date Millet Loaf

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Saturday, May 02, 2009

Masterchef Victory

Self saucing Ravioli

The high standard commanded by Masterchef Australia judges means an Australian bush tucker dish titled "Secrets" with a theme of "Black and White in Harmony", a technically challenging lemon myrtle scented self saucing ravioli with a liquid soup filling, gives way to dishes like lamb and mash. Self saucing ravioli like the ones designed by Noodle Cook for this blog are perfect with Campbell soup as a filling.

In the aftermath of a Masterchef victory for John the villain, who celebrates with a gleeful "You can't cook!", Noodle Cook blogs away, dreaming of the great dishes that could have been...

aniseed myrtle...

Champagne Jelly

wattleseed...

Bush Tucker Lamb and Figs

mountain pepperberries....

Confit Salmon

bush tomatoes...

Bush Tomatoes

quandong...

Bush Tucker Beef

lemon myrtle....

Lemon Myrtle Wheat Berry Risotto

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Friday, May 01, 2009

Moroccan Beef Casserole

Moroccan Beef

2 onions, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
2 carrots, cubed
2 teaspoons coriander seeds, crushed
2 teaspoons cumin seeds, crushed
2 teaspoons turmeric
400 g gravy beef, cubed
1 x 400 g canned tomatoes in tomato juice
2 strips lemon zest
1 x 400 g canned chickpeas, washed and drained
400 g potatoes, cubed
2 teaspoons cumin seeds, crushed (extra)
olive oil, about 4 tablespoons

In a cast iron casserole heated to medium temperature, saute onions in 1 tablespoon oil until yellow. Add the garlic. Saute until the onion starts to brown. Add the carrots and saute for 1-2 minutes. Remove from the pan.

Add more oil. Fry the meat, in batches, until starting to brown. Remove.

Add more oil. Toast the coriander and cumin until aromatic. Add the turmeric. Return the meat and cook for 1-2 minutes. Add the carrot mixture. Pour in the canned tomatoes. Add enough water to cover the top of the meat and carrots.

Reduce the temperature to low, cover the casserole and simmer gently for 1 hour.

In a separate pan, toast the extra cumin in about 1 tablespoon oil. Toss the potatoes in the oil. Saute for 1-2 minutes. Add the potatoes and the chickpeas to the casserole. Adjust water to cover the meat and vegetables.

Simmer for another hour until the potatoes are cooked.

Serve with couscous, cooked with mint, lemon zest and turmeric, and boiled broccoli florets.

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