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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...

Friday, January 16, 2009

Masterchef Audition Day

Masterchef

The big day arrives. The dish cooks to perfection. Noodle Cook feels like the winner with the Masterchef hat already. What do the judges think of a platter which explores new tastes while showcasing Australian bush spices and herbs? Would the judges accept melding of opposite tastes as implied by colours of black with white, or red with green? What about the European and oriental tastes crafted by adjusting aniseed myrtle?

The platter demonstrates Noodle Cook's low temperature cooking skills such as slow roasting at 75 degrees Celsius to achieve a tender juicy pink texture for beef shin. Also featured are olive oil infusions and flavoursome sauces from chicken stock and veal glace.

Salad of black fungus and enoki mushroom with deep fried salt bush, dressed with onion, ginger and garlic olive oil infusions:

Salt Bush Salad

Beef shin two ways: slow roasted with mountain pepperberry bush spice crust, and confit in lemon myrtle, aniseed myrtle and mountain pepper leaf infused oil:

Bush Tucker Beef

Two sauces to compliment the beef - quandong gastrique with red wine, and a mildly spiced pepper jus flavoured with mountain pepperleaf and green onion.

Glazed wattleseed figs in red grape juice reduction with aromatic herbs:

Wattleseed Figs


.... amazingly, the judges want Noodle Cook back for the Day 2 audition!

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Masterchef Hat Swap

Field Hat
With one day left, there nothing much to do as cooking only takes 5% of the time according to John Torode of Masterchef UK.

The cooking starts at 6 pm with an estimated completion around 12 midnight. Saving electricity on the oven, a confit, scheduled for completion in around 10-12 hours, cooks simultaneously. All Noodle Cook has to do is to prepare the rest of the dish at 5 am and drive off to the audition with the winning dish at 7 am.

Noodle Cook's dreams of swapping field hat and boots for a real chef hat, instead of a paper one from internet competitions, and chef shoes, start to take shape, even if it is just one day at the Masterchef audition.

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Masterchef Stock and Sauces

Bones

Noodle Cook's great tasting dishes centre around well made clear, flavoursome, gelatinous stocks. For the audition dishes, the bulk of the budget ends up in quality bones leaving next to no budget for the dishes. Sadly, there is no budget for a nice Margaret River shiraz for the planned quandong gastrique, nor a quality white wine for a mountain pepperleaf jus, and a lemon myrtle vinaigrette.

If taste is what makes a great cook, then Noodle Cook has what it takes, a natural talent to combine disparate ingredients, a skill that turns a disastrous meal into one fit for a dinner party or a top restaurant.

No budget is no excuse for Noodle Cook, more determine than ever to be a real Masterchef. Fillet steak is out, but beef shin only costs $6.50 per kg. Is braised beef shin, better known as gravy beef, a cut popularize by grandma's generation, a dish for Masterchef? Perhaps not.

Suddenly, a light flashes at the end of the tunnel. Beef shin slow roasted at low temperature using Neil Perry's technique produces a steak like roast, with a beautiful moist pink texture, and sumptuous, melt in the mouth gelatin. With time for salt curing of about 72 hours, a confit in flavoured oil at the same low temperature produces a similar moist texture.

Now back on track, Noodle Cook, with confidence back, finishes planning the dish that will impress the judges. There is no time for a trial run since slow roasting takes 6 hours for 600 g of meat. Really, the trial looks like a time waster, since Noodle Cook makes very few mistakes: every disaster can be fixed with a great tool like Photoshop.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Masterchef Dishes

Excitement mounts when the promised email, with audition details, arrives. There is a chance to cook for the judges on the next day after passing the first day with a prepared plated dish. Therefore, two dishes need to be decided upon before the audition.

Noodle Cook

Browsing through the electronic restaurant,  three easy dishes stood out as potentials: beef carpaccio, self saucing ravioli, and sausage chains with quail egg locket.

Noodle Cook

Meatballs do not sound very classy, however when plated up, the dish looks appealing enough for fine dining instead of a day to day family meal. Frugal turkey mince becomes "Chain with heart of gold".

Noodle Cook

John remains adamant that only Noodle Cook's dumplings taste good and everything else just LOOKS good. Regardless of which dish goes to audition, Noodle Cook plans ahead by making a good chicken stock. After the fiasco with the stove, the crockpot seems the best appliance to use.

Back to the shops again. The IGA butcher declares no chicken bones due to the hot summer. Not deterred, Noodle Cook grabs 2 marked down whole chicken. With instructions from Jamie's Kitchen, Noodle Cook practices cutting the chicken for saute, or French style boning. Problem solved, the carcass bones go into the crockpot.

Chicken Stock
1 slice of pork hock
2 chicken carcass
2 teaspoons fennel seeds
1 teaspoon peppercorn
1 knob ginger
1 onion
6 garlic cloves
2 carrots

1. Simmer overnight on low. 
2. Defat.
3. Strain the stock.
4. Reduce 50%.
5. Store in the refrigerator or freezer until ready to use.

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Masterchef Progress Fires Up

Olympic Flame
Everything that can go wrong happens sooner than one can brag on a blog when the stove decides to take John's side. The demi glace emulsifies while Noodle Cook watches in horror. The stove's thermostat jams on high, no doubt the result of John's "fix" to the lose oven door during the previous week. It looks like simmering for 24 hours out of question, not to mention COOKING the audition dish on a stove that no longer works. But nothing stops a determined electronic Masterchef with Olympics size vision, not even when dishes suffer the dreaded "fusion curse", a hangover from Noodle Cook's fusion style cooking. Driving 35 km to another kitchen makes no difference, not much at all, when you think about being closer to some of the better, cheaper produce in town.

Olympic Flame
Noodle Cook rushes out for more marrow bones, onion, parsnip, celery....

Noodle: Well, these are the produce that will give me my 2 minute of national TV fame on Masterchef cooking programme.

Sue at IGA: Really?

Noodle: There are a lot of talented chefs out there. I am just a home cook.

Sue at IGA: Good Luck.

Noodle: Thank you!

Whew! Hopefully Sue fails to notice the marked down goodies from the reject trolley during the conversation. A Masterchef in the making has to start somewhere, and a humble beginning is just as a good place to start as any.

Veal Glace
2.5 kg mini marrow bones
1 parsnip
2 carrots
2 celery stalks
2 onions
4 tablespoon olive oil
1 t peppercorns
2 L boiling water
1 tablespoon whole Australian bush tomatoes

1. Roast the marrow bones at 200 degrees celsius for 1 hour until golden brown. Discard the oil.
2. Cut the vegetables into 5 cm pieces. Place in a large stock pot and caramelize vegetables in the olive oil.
3. Add the roasted bones, peppercorn and water.
4. Simmer, at 1 bubble per second, overnight or around 24 hours.
5. Defat and then strain the stock.
6. Reduce the stock until thick and syrupy.
7. Add the bush tomatoes in the last 30 minutes of cooking to impart a caramelized sun dried tomato taste.
8. Retrieve the bush tomatoes for future use, such as on a cheese board or in a salad.
9. Refrigerate or freeze the demi glace until required.

There is no brown roux thickener, wine or European herbs in this version of demi glace so as to make it versatile for a range of dishes including oriental. Appropriate wine, herbs and spices are added at the time of making the sauces or soup. This sauce base is particularly suitable for adding a savoury character to fruit based gastrique, such as in oriental-style sweet and sour dishes.

Noodle Cook, being the 2-minute expert, uses baby food thickener as the instant fix to runny sauces.

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

A Secret Confession

Noodle Cook
With an obsession for cast iron cookware, Noodle Cook falls in love with Jamie Oliver At Home. The beautiful 26 cm lime green tegame comes from Kitchen Discounts. At $89.95, it is 55% off RRP.

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Masterchef Audition Preparation

Trinity Oil Infusions
While John the villain in this blog keeps no secret on how bad everybody else's cooking tastes, judge John Torode from Masterchef UK has this to say: "Have fun. Oh, and a little tip. The shopping and reading and sourcing and eating is 95 per cent of food and the cooking is just five per cent. Love all the other stuff and the cooking will be a breeze."

In contrast to John Torode's opinion, Noodle Cook spends 95% of the time DESIGNING using principles of design, as used in visual art. In food, the artistry goes beyond visual, with taste adding a extra dimension, and ambiance, such as temperature, lighting and sound, contributing to the overall success of a dish.


Reading and drooling over the mind blowing creations from 3 hat chefs seem like fun. As an inexperience suburban home cook, Noodle Cook, who plays second fiddle to the executive chef in the home kitchen, has no chance of achieving those dishes in less than 5 days. Suddenly, the two Paper Chef hats which bring Noodle Cook from suburban obscurity to international limelight, on the computer screen, amount to nothing in comparison to real life 3 hat chefs.

Peter Gilmore - Quay
Shannon Bennett - Vue de Monde
Mark Best - Marque
Chui Lee Luk - Claude's
Guillaume Brahimi - Guillaume At Bennelong
Greg Doyle - Pier
Peter Doyle - Est.
Neil Perry - Rockpool
Tetsuya Wakuda - Tetsuya's
Justin North - Becasse
Armando Percuoco - Buon Ricordo

Of admiration are Chefs Neil Perry, Tetsuya Wakuda and Chui Lee Luk who demonstrate exceptional talents in their mastery of oriental ingredients.

Noodle Cook's version of confit salmon result from ideas gleaned from Chef Tetsuya's confit ocean trout.



With no chance of affording a Rockpool "session", Noodle Cook successfully slow roasted at home using Chef Neil's cookbook instructions for slow roast rib of beef.


John Torode's five per cent cooking sounds good until the preparation time is taken into account. Noodle Cook needs a good stock to make demi glace, which takes 24-48 hours. There is no time at all to lose as Noodle Cook rushes to the local IGA shops for marrow bones which costs around $2.90 per pack.

With a non-existent budget for fresh restaurant grade produce, Noodle Cook seeks out local shops with a high turnover, noting the "market" days when the shop replenishes supplies. Seasonal produce usually cost less, and amazingly, the full flavour, mature produce in the reject trolley cost even less!

The budget groceries from oriental shops gives a cheap skase like Noodle Cook plenty of inspirations. However, a slight problem arises when Noodle Cook's rudimentary language skills cause miscommunication in both directions. How does one use an unfamiliar product with an unpronounceable name???

With confidence dropping lower by the minute, Noodle Cook starts on the demi glace while searching inspirations for a dish that impresses the judges. There's still that essence in Noodle Cook, a burning desire to succeed, to bring alive a passion for good food in a real restaurant. Masterchef gives the opportunity to follow through the electronic dream lived out in this blog....


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Friday, January 09, 2009

Masterchef Rivalry

Noodle Cook


Noodle: I'm selected to audition for Masterchef! What do you reckon I cook?

John: Masterchef??? You??? You've got no experience unlike me! I fed 2 ravenous boys. I should be the one selected! I am THE master chef. Your food is BEAUTIFUL, but INEDIBLE. Why don't you just stick to dumplings.

Noodle Cook's attempts to prove otherwise at breakfast with buttered mushroom, cooked to golden perfection...

John: The smells make me puke!

No one can possible goof up on boiled egg...

John: Don't do me a boiled egg. It's always too hard!

Scrambled egg with cheese, perhaps...

John: Is this egg?? What is this???

Noodle Cook's confidence starts to sink like the Titanic as villainous John remembers and reminds of the "United Hearts" debacle, an overambitious attempt at French cooking to be like top Chef, Chui Lee Luk of Claude's.

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Thursday, January 08, 2009

Masterchef Inspiration

Noodle Cook
The call from Masterchef Australia appears genuine. So, with less than 8 days, Noodle Cook rushes to cookbooks by top chefs for inspiration, like Neil Perry's "The Food I Love, Beautiful, Simple Food to Cook at Home".

BEAUTIFUL plays some importance, but it appears success lies in the word SIMPLE, after the lessons learnt in the artistic "United Heart" (同心) creation, a French style dish which utilizes Australian desert limes and Chinese ingredients like dried oysters, onion hearts, and Chinese celery. The flavours prove too complex for the tasters. In particular John, the villain in this blog,  proclaims the dish inedible (sob, sob, sob) after the other tasters try not to grimace.


Australian Desert Lime jelly and oyster avocado mousse, fused together as united hearts, garnished with onion hearts (flowering stalks with buds) twisted in a knot. A chilled appetizer or cheese course served with a beet root fruit sauce and an oyster flavoured cream.

The dish that Noodle Cook creates must be simple, beautiful AND withstand summer heat. With so many ideas running through the head, Noodle Cook's cool, level head, starts to puff up like a Michelin Chef, and then deflates, as stage fright takes over: the chill goes down the spine and the feet suddenly feel cold. There's no time to perfect "beautiful, simple food" like Chef Neil in 8 days!

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Masterchef Dreaming



The mobile phone rings at midday while Noodle Cook, the self proclaimed electronically qualified "Masterchef", with geologist boots on instead of chef hat, looks down a microscope for evidence of the next diamond mine.

"Congratulations, you have won one of 100 places out of 6000 applications to audition for Masterchef!"

Stunned, Noodle Cook tongue twists into a knot while the brain races excitedly. Maybe it's no more running a restaurant electronically through a blog: Pinocchio getting a chance to become real???

"You need to impress the judges with a dish on 16 January. Please bring 2 plates. There's no refrigeration..... You'll get an email shortly with details."

Noodle Cook, the dreamer, starts visualizing the dishes created for Paper Chef challenges. The euphoria of winning the Paper Chef's hat for the month with Bush Tucker Lamb starts coming back. The winning dish features Australian bush herbs and spice in a beautiful green marbled lamb parfait with orange basil seed champagne jelly.



By the time the caller says good-bye, Noodle Cook has forgotten to ask for the name of the caller, the time to show up, and the location of the audition, or in this instance, the place where dreams potentially become real....

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