Archive for January, 2007

Leftover Tuesday

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Let me just go on record as saying that I absolutely love leftovers. We tend not to have too much of it lying around these days, because when I cook, I cook enough for exactly three, so that B can have it for lunch at work the next day.

But there is often so much potential in discovering a little bit of this and that in the fridge (as long as it’s not growing colonies of mold). Even if it’s just cobbled together, heated up, and eaten with some sort of rice, pasta or potato.. it always tastes good because all the work that went into making the original dish, was done ages ago.

In celebration of leftovers, I made these curried vegetable puffs recently. They don’t look like a product of leftovers, but rather deceptively, they were composed from ingredients that were given a second breath of life : scraps of pastry that had been rerolled for a second use, an opened jar of chilli and ginger Masala paste, and odd bits of vegetables that were lying around. Paired with a cucumber and yogurt dipping sauce, they were quite well received by the friends I served them too. Thankfully, each pastry was eaten, as I can’t imagine what I would then do to the leftovers!

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Quay

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A recent evening spent at Quay Restaurant has left me convinced that this is, right now, Sydney fine dining at it’s very best. Faultless service, gorgeous views, and the food, oh the food!

We start with an appetiser of salmon, roe and cauliflower cream in a shotglass. Delicious, and a great indication of things to come.

Next, a Sea Pearls dish, which is one of the most interesting I’ve ever encountered. It consists of three balls on the plate – one is tuna sashimi topped with what looks like miniature grapes but is actually what the restaurant calls “green caviar”, a special seaweed sourced for them by a microbiologist. The second is a lump of brandade, covered by tiny individual drops of egg white. The last is a ball of glassy jelly, like a large eyeball, filled with caviar and sliced pearl meat. By description alone, it might sound a little incoherent, and the smokiness of the jelly verges on being overpowering, but the dish works wonderfully together as a play of textures and flavours, and I love every bit of it. We also try the Crisp Confit of Rare Breed Suckling Pig Belly, served with green lipped abalone, cuttlefish and handmade silken tofu, which I’ve been assured was very good, seeing as I was paying too much attention to my own dish, to try it.

For the main, I can’t resist the very luxurious sounding Mud Crab Congee even though it’s listed on the entrees section. And while it might seem weird to pay $36 for rice porridge, it turns out to be everything you’d want congee to be, and more. Underneath the cap of buttery foam hides fleshy, tender pieces of mud crab and broken bits of rice, swimming in a very tasty broth. B has the Crisp Skinned Murray Cod which is perfectly cooked, and he even borrows my spoon to scrape the final dregs of sauce from his plate.

At this point, I’m almost full, but push on we must, for the sake of research. The Caramelised Raspberry Millefeuille is a two storey crunchy, fruity, creamy affair with just the right balance of tartness and sweetness. It disappears before I know it, while B makes short work of his White Peach dessert. The combination of jelly, granita and ice-cream makes for a sweet and refreshing end to our visit.

By the way, Steve, you had better come with us on our return visit, because they have Chateau Pinsan by the glass on the dessert wine list!

Quay Restaurant
Overseas Passenger Terminal
The Rocks
Sydney 2000

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Bistrode

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In the spirit of “read the book, now see the movie”, I’ve got the cookbook (Two’s Cooking by Jane and Jeremy Strode), and now I’ve finally visited the restaurant. Bistrode, in Surry Hills, is an unpretentious and incredibly welcoming place serving very tasty, deceptively simple food.

If like us, you go with some friends, start by telling them where Bistrode is exactly, so that you don’t have to wait while Calamari walks his asparagus legs hundreds of metres down the street, more than amply passing the restaurant. Once seated, and menus perused, you might choose to order the refreshing Cucumber Gazpacho; tangy, with big juicy chunks of prawn and “ice-cubes” of tomato, or the Crispy Pig’s Ear Salad with Pickled Egg. The slices of pig’s ear were so delicious; I felt a bit like Homer, eating a big bag of pork crackling. The dish as a whole was possibly a little too vinegary for me, but those porcine windcatchers were unbelievably good, I tell ya! B had the Tomato, Bread and White Anchovy Salad, which was very good as well.

The Wagyu Corned Beef dish B had as a main reminded me that I had promised a bunch of friends a corned beef dinner awhile back,.. oh, maybe two years ago,.. and still haven’t honoured the promise. This dish, and the Lamb Rump with Green Sauce, are just the types of dishes I dream of serving to friends. Elegant, simple, and packed with flavour.

Onto the desserts, I really enjoyed the Blueberry and Gin Soup with Lemon Pannacotta – so much so that I didn’t bother much with pestering the others for a taste of their desserts. Calamari’s Honey Tart with Peanut Butter ice-cream looked great, and I’m sure it tasted great too – maybe Calamari will let us know some time – but I was too busy spooning blueberries into my mouth to ask. B had the Clafoutis which came piping hot, studded with plum pieces and bits of chocolate, and with a jug of pouring cream on the side.

We were surprised to find by about 11pm, that we were the only ones left in the restaurant. So K downed his coffee, and out we tumbled onto the street, bellies happy and full.

Bistrode
478 Bourke St
Surry Hills 2010

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