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Sydney’s weather has eased slightly, and I’ve leapt at the opportunity to turn the oven on!

This kamut, potato and beer bread comes from Tessa Kiros’ Falling Cloudberries.   The loaf was soft and slightly cakey,  with a pronounced but not unpleasant bitterness from the Guinness.  It was very tasty smothered with Pete’s homemade butter, and topped with fresh tomato and sheep’s milk cheese.

The bread only used 60ml of stout, and I was loathe to waste the rest of the can, so I made a Chocolate Guinness Cake (topping up the shortfall in beer with 60ml of water).  It was moist, dark and very grown-up, and baked particularly well in my extra-large bundt pan.

Some more experiments with choux pastry – this time chocolate fondant covered éclairs and mini Paris-Brest wheels…

Finally, a comment left by Deb reminded me that I had half a carton of buttermilk in the fridge that needed using up.  I baked an old standby, the Buttermilk and Almond Cake, and dressed it up with a generous swirl of Pete’s freshly made white nectarine and raspberry conserve.

Pete, who was mildly miffed at only getting three slices of Guinness cake, declared that this one was all his…

Peter, Peter, couldn’t be sweeter
How does your garden grow?

With sage so fine…

And crops of thyme…

And sweet-scented o-reg-ano!

PS. Our herb garden is only three weeks old!  Pretty good, eh?

PPS. I’d love any suggestions on what to do with all these herbs…

I don’t cook a lot of Chinese food, much to my mother’s chagrin, but one dish that I do make regularly is her soy sauce chicken and potato stew.

Mum, or Mah-Mah as she’s known to the boys, has been cooking this dish for as long as I can remember.  It was always served in a square Corningware casserole dish, and my sister and I always fought over the potatoes.  Now when I cook it, I add massively more potatoes than anyone can eat, just to make sure there’s plenty to go around!

Like all recipes of this ilk, there aren’t fixed quantities to the ingredients used.  My mother always eyeballed the amounts, and then tasted before serving to see if everything was in balance.  It was always perfect.

  • 1 – 1½ kg free range chicken pieces, preferably drumsticks or thighs
  • Sweet dark soy sauce
  • Kikkoman Teriyaki Marinade, or light soy sauce
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 large garlic cloves, chopped
  • lots of potatoes, peeled and cut into large chunks
  • ground pepper
  • oil for frying
  • cornflour (optional)

1. In a large mixing bowl, marinate the chicken pieces in a generous splash of sweet soy, a little Teriyaki sauce and ground pepper.  Below are the brands my mother and I use, but feel free to substitute your own.  Leave the chicken to soak for about half an hour.

2. In a large pot (I use a wok), heat the oil and fry the onion and garlic briefly, then lift the chicken pieces out of the marinade (don’t throw it out!) and add them to the pan.  Fry until the chicken is slightly crisp on the outside.  Add water to the remaining marinade and pour it over the chicken. You want quite a lot of liquid in the pot.

3. Add the potatoes, and stir to coat them in the sauce. Bring  to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer, covered,  until the chicken is cooked, and the potatoes are fork tender.  Taste the sauce, and if necessary add more dark soy if it needs sweetness, or Teriyaki if it needs more salt.

4. Once cooked, remove the chicken and potatoes with a slotted spoon and place them in a square Corningware pot (ok, you could use any serving dish you choose).  Heat the sauce to reduce it slightly, then pour over the chicken and potatoes and serve. Alternatively, mix a little cornflour with cold water, stir it into the sauce, and bring it to the boil again before pouring over the other ingredients.

We usually serve this with basmati rice and  stir fried greens. And I’m completely content, because there’s always a potato or two left over.

Sharing some of the gorgeous coloured ceramics my eyes have been blessed with recently! I spotted these handpainted Turkish bowls at the Orange Grove Organic Markets.

Edit 17/02: I picked up a card from the stall-owner last Saturday. If you’re interested in these bowls, you can contact Metin on tel. 0413 638 591 or email: aydinmetin@yahoo.com. He’s at the markets on the first and second Saturdays of every month.

And here are the plates and tile that graced our table at Kazbah on Darling, a Middle Eastern and North African restaurant in Balmain.  The food was pretty good too!

Tah-dah!

Mark and Bruce at Real Food Has Curves (what an irresistible name!) wrote a three-post recipe for Paris-Brest, a French pastry traditionally made to celebrate and nourish athletes at the end of the long Paris to Brest bike race.  Created in 1891, the wheel-shaped ring of choux pastry is filled with crème pralinée and sweetened whipped cream.

I had to walk to the shops twice to buy necessary ingredients – not quite the 1200km between Paris and Brest – but I figured that justified me eating a generous slice nonetheless.

The guys have written the best instructions I’ve come across yet for choux pastry, and I’m confident that it’s something I’ll be baking regularly from now on.  I won’t repost their recipe here, but will instead refer you directly to their first post: Paris-Brest, Part 1.

I followed their instructions to the letter to make the nougatine and choux pastry, but substituted my own recipe for crème pâtissière (forgive me, Bruce!), which is made in the microwave in just a few minutes.

The nougatine, also known as almond praline, was remarkably simple to create  from icing sugar mixture and flaked almonds.  Yet another useful addition to my dessert répertoire! Here’s a photo of it before it was pulverised and added to the pastry cream…

Some assembly photos :

Choux pastry ring cut open for filling…

Crème pralinée, made by folding the crumbled nougatine through the pastry cream, was spread over the base, then topped with sweetened whipped cream, piped in a swirly pattern…

Here’s the  finished pastry, dusted with icing sugar…

I let this set up in the fridge for a couple of hours before attempting to cut it, as the cream was quite soft. It sliced beautifully after that.

Now, time to ring the neighbours and share the love around!