Feeds:
Posts
Comments

hommu3

Lovely Sawsan, the Chef In Disguise, posted a recipe recently for her homemade hummus. It’s delicious!

I was up early yesterday morning, so I thought I’d give it a go. As advised, I’d soaked chickpeas the night before – it took less than half an hour of boiling to get them to the right consistency.

I was intrigued that Sawsan’s recipe included Greek yoghurt. We make it every week (it’s very easy – here’s our tutorial from 2010), so we always have some on hand. I also added a splash of hot water to the chickpeas as they were blitzing to produce a smoother result. The kitchen was a bombsite by 7am…

hommus1

But it was so worth it! Sawsan’s recipe produces a silky smooth, rich dip with perfectly balanced flavours – it’s not too oily and the combination of yoghurt and lemon juice adds a delicious tang. If you’re still buying hummus from the supermarket, do give this a go. You’ll never go back!

hommus2

bollie

We’ve had some amazing wines lately.

I’ve been opening carefully cellared bottles to share with my sons, both of whom love the older vintages. Ever since the boys were little, I’ve put bottles aside in the hope that we could drink them together one day. So this is, quite literally, a dream come true…

wynns

ridge

. . . . .

Anita, Alison, Jenny, Helen and I are new-old friends.

We reconnected at our 40 year class reunion in May and have eagerly sought out opportunities to spend time together since. We met up at Central Park last week, ate yum cha at Din Tai Fung and then spent an hour charging around Daiso like the crazy old women we are.

After buying everything from fillable tea bags to battery-powered erasers to microfibre polishing slippers (and face massagers and detox foot pads, each item costing just $2.80)…

daiso

…we dropped into the Koi Dessert Bar for cake and coffee…

koi3

Apart from being delicious, this funky new cafe offers some of the prettiest treats Sydney has ever seen…

koi2

koi1

. . . . .

My brilliant friend, the Spice Girl, took me to this little Taiwanese restaurant in Chatswood. It specialises in street food…

baodao1

The menu made me laugh out loud…not sure stewed pork trotters need to be labelled as a “non veganism meal”…

baodao2

Speaking of the trotters though, they were ridiculously good…

baodao

I took Pete back to try these steamed pork belly buns (3 for $10) and he loved them…

baodao3

. . . . .

I’ve had trouble all year sourcing chestnut flour, so I was pretty excited to find it at a deli in Five Dock last week. I bought the last two bags they had and made up a batch of my favourite brownies (plus a tinned peach cake for my mum)…

cake1

These are the most expensive brownies I make, and every time I put a batch together, I feel incredibly grateful that we can afford such luxuries. Each tray uses 750g (!!) of Callebaut Belgian chocolate, and that’s before the imported chestnut flour, butter and eggs. They’re decadent, rich and wickedly delicious. We make a point of sharing them around…

cake2

. . . . .

The sun is shining in Sydney today and life is grand.

I hope you’re all eating and drinking and making merry too!

My father was the most wonderful man.

When I was born, he was already a successful architect in Malaysia, living in a big house with four servants. My mother was ten years younger, and she took care of my sister and I while Dad worked long hours as the managing partner of a large architectural firm.

It was an idyllic, relaxed lifestyle, surrounded by friends, family and comfort. But racial tensions in Malaysia in the late 1960s had Dad worried.

One morning he woke Mum up and announced that he didn’t want to raise his daughters in a country where he felt they wouldn’t have opportunities for schooling, so they were moving to Australia. At the time, I was almost four years old, and Cynthia was still a toddler.

And that was that.

Within a few short months, Mum and Dad had packed up their lives and, with no job and nowhere to live, boarded a plane to Sydney with two small children in tow. They went from a big house with maids to a small rental on a busy main road with an outhouse toilet. Mum spoke very little English. Dad, who’d bought a new car to bring me home from the hospital when I was born, caught trains and buses to job interviews. My mother didn’t know how to cook (remember the four servants) so for the first few months, we lived on rice porridge.

Every important thing about life that I needed to know was taught to me by my parents through this single, monumental act of love. I learnt that family is massively more important than wealth and comfort. I learnt that you support your partner no matter how difficult the journey. I learnt how to be brave even when it’s hard. My parents taught me, in a way that words never could, what love and sacrifice and commitment and family really means.

It was brutally hard on my mum. She was only young – in her late twenties – and whilst Dad quickly found a job, she was stuck at home with two small children. It was terribly lonely without the support of her family and friends, at a time before email or Skype or free international phone calls. Mum and Dad would only ring home a couple of times a year – through an operator – at a cost of $12 for three minutes (which was a fortune in the 60s and 70s).

We went back to Malaysia for holidays a few times in the early years. Certainly not often, as it was very expensive, but my memories of those visits are still vividly clear. They were always happy times, especially for Mum, who would visibly relax as soon as we got off the plane. It was years before she felt the same degree of comfort here.

. . . . .

alexlee2

As an adult, I have a great passion for Malaysian food.

I could never figure out where it came from. We always ate Chinese dishes at home, so it wasn’t a cuisine I grew up eating, nor do I cook a lot of it now. But when it’s my turn to choose a dinner venue, I’ll almost always suggest Malaysian.

Earlier this week, I dragged Pete and Big Boy into Broadway for lunch at Spice Alley…

spicealley1

This little inner-city laneway mimics the hawker stalls of Asia, but in a very upmarket way – the cutlery is made of disposable wood, the stalls are cashless, and the vibe is funky. We bought lunch from the Alex Lee Kitchen, paying with a tap of my debit card…

alexlee3

alexlee4

alexlee1

Then I wandered over to Kopi Tiam (“Coffee Shop”) and came back with one of my favourite desserts of all time, an ice kachang. It’s made by adding jelly and flavourings and condensed milk to a mountain of shaved ice (and usually creamed corn as well, although I always ask for it to be left out).

A friend of mine saw the picture below and said…”maybe it doesn’t photograph well..” That surprised me, as I thought it was the most beautiful dish I’d seen in weeks…

icekachang
For me, it was a joyous dining experience.

My ever insightful husband figured it out – eating at hawker stalls was a huge treat for our family when we went to Malaysia for visits in those early years. It was a time when my parents (Mum in particular) were relaxed and happy. I’ve been seeking to recreate those childhood memories – the smells and the tastes and the shared laughter with extended family – for my entire life.

And indeed, Spice Alley has a lovely, familiar feel to it…

spicealley3

It’s cosy without being claustrophobic, although it’s probably packed on the weekends…

spicealley4

spicealley5

spicealley2

. . . . .

It was a wonderful meal for so many reasons – spending time with Pete and Big Boy, eating food which evoked such powerful childhood remembrances, but most of all, because it made me think really hard about what my parents went through nearly fifty years ago. As a teenager, I was often resentful of the academic demands they placed on me. But as an adult I can look back and understand completely – they had walked away from a life of comfort and ease to give us greater opportunities. Surely it wasn’t too much to ask that we make the most of them?

In the last few years of his life, Dad and I spoke every single day.

“Darling”, he would say, “I’m so proud of you. You’re doing a wonderful job raising my two beautiful grandsons.”

I can’t tell you how much I miss hearing that.

It didn’t matter to him that I hadn’t gone on to be a corporate lawyer or a doctor or an academic. All he cared about, because he truly loved me, was that I was happy. He made me believe that the way I had chosen to live my life was not only good enough, it was the best of choices. He super-boosted my self-esteem every single day and I’ll cherish those conversations forever.

I’d like to think that Dad would look back on his life…on all the hardships and sacrifices he and Mum made in those early years…and think it was worthwhile.

I try to live the best life I can to make it so.

Sunshine on the water makes me happy…

lighte

. . . . .

Sunshine on the bridge can make me smile…

. . . . .

Mirrored reflections look so lovely…

lightf

. . . . .

Sunshine on the sea…all the while…

lightb

lighta

It’s taken me a long time to get my mum to eat sourdough.

She’s never been a fan of hard crusty bread, so I had to find a way to bake a consistently soft crusted loaf before I could win her over.

I began with a variation on the Overnight High Hydration formula (quantities below are for one loaf, but I’ve made a double batch in the photos below):

  • 60g ripe starter (fed at a ratio of one part water to one part bakers flour)
  • 350g water
  • 20g olive oil
  • 5g brown sugar
  • 500g bakers/bread flour
  • 9g fine sea salt.

Follow the instructions as per the high hydration tutorial (adding the sugar and olive oil in with the water) and allow the dough to prove overnight. The following morning, shape the dough into a loaf and place it on a large sheet of parchment paper. Cover and allow to rise briefly.

Soak a Römertopf clay pot in the sink. Don’t preheat the oven.

Once the pot has soaked for about 15 – 20 minutes, slash the risen dough and carefully lower it into the wet base. The parchment is important, or the loaf will stick like crazy to the clay. Carefully position the lid on top.

ssd1

Place the pot(s) in the unheated oven and turn the temperature to 220C with fan. Set the timer for 30 minutes. Once it goes off, open the oven, remove the lid carefully, rotate the pot and bake uncovered for a further 20 minutes at the same temperature.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool on a wire rack. Take care not to put the hot Romy onto a cold bench as it could crack…

ssd2

The crust will seem firm to start with, but will soften up as it cools…

. . . . .

I’ve been baking this loaf for Mum now for a couple of months, and she’s a big fan – she’s noticed that the sourdough doesn’t give her stomach cramps in the same way that supermarket bread does.

ssd4

I think the two critical elements here are the addition of a little bit of oil, and starting the dough off in a cold oven. The pre-soaked clay pot adds steam as the loaf is rising, further helping to keep it soft, but this method may also work in a regular covered enamel roaster (although I haven’t tested it yet). If you try it, please let me know how you go!