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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Yummy Chinese BBQ, Ashfield



Rotating food is fun.

I'm sure this is why sushi trains offer so much appeal. A mesmerising rhythm of food on the move. Like pigs on spits. And now, behold, the spinning skewer.



We'd come prepared tonight. Stomachs hungry and any jackets left in the car before we step into the smoky confines of Yummy Chinese BBQ, a temple of all-you-can-eat feasting in Ashfield, in Sydney's inner west.

The thick fog of charcoal smoke hangs heavily in the room despite the presence of overhead exhaust fans. On each table is a narrow metal grill fuelled by charcoal. There is little in the way of explanatory service or introduction, and we take cues from other customers in the room and head straight for the buffet.


Salads and cold meats

A bain marie in the back corner holds a host of dishes to keep the hunger pangs at bay. We load up our plates with cold Peking ribs, tofu and vegetable stir-fry, clams, squares of shallot pancake, garlicky wedges of raw cucumbers and cool and crunchy cold potato strips.



What's much more exciting is the wall of skewers. Lamb, chicken, beef and seafood, we find a rainbow of skewers sorted neatly into black narrow tubs.


Skewers

It's easy to get carried but we resist restraint and pile only two plates high with skewers. Our favourites include the chicken hearts which we devour with gusto, and whole prawns which are plump and sweet.

A flat grill can be placed over the barbecue to cook mushrooms, lotus roots, calamari, tongue and mussels. We find ourselves continually going back for more of the wagyu beef slices that are extraodinarily tender.


Skewers on the barbecue

Each metal skewers has a flower-shaped metal cog at its base, and when placed into the barbecue slot, the skewers spin like twirling ballerinas. It's spellbinding, more so because we're watching our dinner slowly cook before our eyes.



It's a relaxing way to enjoy a dinner - not quite as chaotic or work-intensive as Korean barbecue. There's also a sense of accomplishment each time an empty skewer is deposited into the metal cannister on the table.



We eat ourselves into a protein coma before helping ourselves to the dessert buffet, a modest display of fresh fruit, chewy rice dumplings, squares of carrot cake, frozen vanilla ice cream and a deep vat of sago pearls in a thin coconut milk soup.

And as for the amount of food you'll find yourself easily putting away, I'm sure it's the act of rotating foodstuffs that send the hypnotic message "now you're getting hungry...". At least, that's my story. And I'm sticking to it.



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Yummy Chinese BBQ on Urbanspoon

Yummy Chinese BBQ
287 Liverpool Road, Ashfield, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9798 2666

Opening hours:
Sunday to Thursday 5pm-10pm
Friday to Saturday 5pm-11pm

All-you-can-eat $28.90 per person (prices correct as at October 2010)


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Yummy Chinese BBQ, Haymarket

All You Can Eat - Kansai, Sydney
All You Can Eat - Kaizen BBQ, North Ryde
All You Can Eat - Nagoya Japanese BBQ, Haymarket
All You Can Eat - Nick's Bondi Beach Pavilion
All You Can Eat - Suminoya, Sydney

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/30/2010 02:05:00 AM


Friday, October 29, 2010

Freebie Friday: Win a Braun Multiquick Cordless



Are you looking for an incentive to get back into the kitchen?

New gadgets always get me excited about cooking again, especially those that involve speed and power. This week's Freebie Friday is the new Braun Multiquick Cordless, a rechargeable hand blender that allows you to chop, crush and puree without being tethered to a power outlet.



THE PRIZE:
One lucky reader will win a Braun Multiquick Cordless hand blender.

Prize value: AU$249.95

~~~~~
HOW TO ENTER:
All you have to do is fulfil the requirements below:

Option 1:
  1. Leave a comment on this post and tell us: How would you use the Braun Multiquick Cordless?
  2. And then send an email to grabyourforkfreebiefriday@yahoo.com.au with the subject heading "Braun" and include your full name and a copy of your published comment from this post.
Option 2:
  1. Enter via the Grab Your Fork facebook fan page. Simply leave your answer on the event listing here.
*This competition is open to Australian delivery addresses only.

The winning entry will be decided on honesty, creativity or entertainment value. Don't be shy! You gotta be in it to win it! Readers may submit one entry per day as long as each answer is different.

The Braun competition closes on Monday 22 November 2010 at 9.30pm AEST. The winner will be announced on Grab Your Fork on Tuesday 23 November 2010.

EDIT: This competition has now closed. The winner has been announced here.

More Grab Your Fork competitions to enter:
> Win a four-pack of Endeavour True Vintage Beer
(entries close Sunday 7 November 2010)

> Win a Mexican/Spanish spice kit worth $50 (three to win)
(entries close Tuesday 16 November 2010)

> Win a gold double pass to MasterChef Live worth $140 (two double passes to win)
(entries close Monday 29 November 2010)

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/29/2010 02:01:00 AM


Thursday, October 28, 2010

Fresh tofu and soy milk at Nhu Quynh, Yagoona



Fresh soy milk.

It's the keen eyes of Speedy who spots it first, a nondescript shopfront but for the 6-foot tall raft of empty polyurethane bottles stacked by the door.

We have only just emerged from Rodriguez Brothers a few doors up, laden down with fresh chorizo and morcilla blood sausage and white anchovies and more, but we take one look at each other, grin and step through the door.


Fried tofu $2.00
$5.50 for three boxes or 1kg

The counter at the front at empty but we can hear plenty of noise down the back, a rabble of voices amidst a clatter of kitchen activity. A laminated menu of items in both Vietnamese and English is sticky-taped to the rear wall. The counter is bare but for a few bottles of soy milk and some plastic boxes of fried tofu.

A shop assistant hurries forward and helps us with our order. We both take some fresh soy bean milk ($2.50 for two litres). The milk is still warm in the bottle, and later when I try it at home, the milk is fragrant, slightly nutty and not overly sweet. It's a treat to have it whilst the milk is still warm.


Fresh tofu $1.70
$5 for 3 boxes or 1kg

I'm keen to try the fresh tofu and the shop assistant has to duck down the corridor again before returning with a tray. The two blocks of tofu are fresh from the steamer and hot to touch.


Fresh steamed tofu

The tofu is of the firm variety, more crumbling than quivery, and eating it warm enhances its subtle flavour.

Fresh tofu two doors down from chorizo and jamon heaven? This is why I love Sydney and its bountiful south west!




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Nhu Quynh
477 Hume Highway, Yagoona
(opposite KFC)
Tel: +61 (02) 9707 3239 (call between 1pm-5pm)

Open 7 days

Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Yagoona - Rodriguez Brothers

Bankstown - El Bahsa Sweets
Greenacre - Sabbagh Patissery
Punchbowl - Rabeih Sweets (Aug07) and (Mar05)

Bankstown Bites Food Festival 2009
Bankstown Bites Food Festival 2008
Bankstown Bites Food Festival 2005

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/28/2010 07:31:00 AM


Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Boteco, Surry Hills


Classic caiprinha $15 and
melancia and flor de laranjeira watermelon and orange blossom caipifrutas $16

Cocktails? Yes please.

Tonight we're at Boteco, a name given to the small bars commonly found in Brazil. These neighbourhood hangouts are filled with locals after work or on weekends, a casual spot to enjoy an ice cold beer and eat cheap and cheerful snacks known as petiscos.


Boteco

Boteco in Sydney is significantly fancier than its counterparts in Sao Paulo, a cosy space that is warm with timbers, soft lighting and a cow-skin rug on the floor by the bar. Although there are sunny gerberas perched in miniature Coke bottles on every table, we're more impressed by the drinks list, where every beer is South American and the wines come exclusively from Brazil, Argentina and Chile.


Pisco sour $16

The drinks menu could keep you occupied for a month - a comprehensive selection that includes plenty of cachacas, the popular spirit made from fermented sugarcane.

Our party of four seeks post-work revival in the classic caipirinha, a combination of cachacas, sugar and lime, watermelon caipifrutas (a caipirinha with fruit) and the Chilean national drink, the pisco sour.

The pisco sour is particularly good, topped with a pristine layer of foamy egg white.


Blackboard specials

Menus double as placemats, with options supplemented by a list of specials written on the blackboard by the bar.


Bacalhau salted cod balls $9

Our first dish, bacalhau, kick off things with a bang. These deep-fried fritters of salted cod are only petite, but we bite through its golden skin to find a fluffy core that is generous with tender fish fibres. Other bacalhau fritters I've tried in the past tend to be more potato than fish, but these crunchy orbs are pocket rockets of flavour.


Parmesan rice balls with chickpeas and spinach $12

Parmesan rice balls are a great vegetarian dish, providing a textural contrast between creamy rice, deep-fried shell, tender spinach and moreishly toothsome chickpeas.


Pastel crispy cheese and herb turnovers $10

Our Brazilian ex-pat is overjoyed at the sight of the pastel, crescents of flaky pastry filled with molten cheese which we eat with dollops of salsa.


Mandioca frita cassava chips $6

But my heart tonight is won over by the cassava chips, a glorious vision of deep-fried starch that is every bit as good as it looks. The chips, so crunchy on the outside you want to weep, are sweet and starchy in the middle, like a cross between a potato and a white sweet potato.


Palm hearts salad with red onion, tomatoes and cucumber $7

Palm hearts are another Brazilian favourite, most often served in a salad. The palm hearts are tender and taste a bit like a pickled artichoke.


Nightly special: Picanha chorico skewers with cassava chips $16
includes glass of Cabernet Franc Roserra 2006

We take advantage of the nightly special that includes a glass of wine. Tonight it's skewers of chorizo interspersed with cubes of juicy picanha beef. The side serve of cassava chips disappears equally quickly.


Grilled pork chop carioca with tutu bean puree and kale $23

Grilled pork chop is the last dish to arrive, a hefty cut of meat with appetising grill marks beckoning us closer. The meat is perhaps a touch too salty for me, but the pork is tender, and I quickly grab the bone for a porcine lollipop.

Brazilians love their beans, and tutu is one reason why. This puree of black beans is smooth and satisfying, a dish that coos comfort food with every spoon.


Pudim de leite $7
Brazilian-style creme caramel

We find a little room for desserts. Of course we do. Brazilian-style creme caramel is a shimmering wedge of eggy baked custard, delicate to eat and silky in texture.


Brownie $10
Dark chocolate brownie with homemade coconut and tapioca ice cream

The brownie isn't what I'd call a typical Brazilian dessert but the homemade coconut and tapioca ice cream is worth pursuing. Studded with tiny pearls of cooked tapioca, the ice cream is so good it deserves to be piled high in a parfait glass and served on its own to savour slowly.

But even after dessert I'm still thinking of those cassava chips. And maybe another bacalhau ball or two.




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Boteco on Urbanspoon

Boteco
421 Cleveland Street, Surry Hills
Tel: +61 (02) 9318 2993

Opening hours:
Tuesday to Friday 6pm-12am
Saturday 5pm-12am
Sunday 5pm-10pm

Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Brazilian - Churrasco, Coogee
Peruvian - La Parrillada

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/27/2010 02:25:00 AM


Tuesday, October 26, 2010

My's Vietnamese Restaurant, Canberra



"The best part of the apple is definitely eating the core."

There's a slight pause in conversation as I allow this piece of information to sink in. Across the table, Hannah looks at me in earnest, unblinking.

"You. eat. the. seeds" I clarify.

"Well it started out of laziness, because I couldn't be bothered finding a bin, but now it's my favourite part," she says, nodding eagerly.

It's not the first conversation I've had with Hannah, a chocolate-loving food blogger, but it's my first one In Real Life. My day job had taken me to Canberra and I grasped the opportunity to finally meet the girl I'd been chatting with online for over a year.


Campfire beef $21.90

We'd agreed to meet for dinner at My's Vietnamese Restaurant, a taxi ride that took me out of Canberra's city centre and into the wild west. It almost feels like a blind date, meeting a blogger the first time, especially when I'm sitting in a cab heading toward dinner and wondering whether we'll hit it off.

I recognise her immediately. Corkscrew curls. Alone at a table for two. I push forward a tote bag of edible gifts I'd collected in the previous week. She plucks out each item one by one and gushes with such enthusiasm I feel like I'm getting more out of the exchange than she is. In the meantime, I'm more than chuffed with her gift to me, a bar of dark chocolate with coffee and fennel by Canberra company, The Curious Chocolatier.

We have to send away our waitress three times before we're ready to order, distracted by presents and conversation and menu choices.


Dark chocolate with coffee and fennel by The Curious Chocolatier

I'm surprised by how busy this little Vietnamese restaurant is on a Monday night, watching as several people who turn up without a booking are sadly turned away.

We start with the campfire beef, always a favourite dish of mine, particularly as it involves the spectacle of fire at your table. Our bowl of raw beef slices cooks at a rather gentle pace, although we prefer it to the wild bonfire raging at the table next to us, whose occupants end up summoning a waiter to help tame the greedy licking flames.


Cooked beef with lettuce, vermicelli, pineapple, mint and cucumber on a rice paper sheet

We assemble the cooked beef slices on rice paper sheets and pile it high with a mixture of vermicelli noodles, shredded lettuce, pineapple chunks, cucumber and fresh sprigs of mint.


DIY rice paper roll

Wrapping the rice paper roll tightly is an art I've invested hundreds of calories dinners practising. What I love more is the social aspect of making your own dinner at the table, waiting for your chance to grab a bit of meat and a sprinkle of salad, and then the personal satisfaction of dunking your roll into the sweet nuoc cham dressing, and savouring the crunch of lettuce, the tender beef and the zing of mint and pineapple on the palate.


Bean curd with lemongrass and chilli $13.90

I'd had my eye on the crispy pork belly but Hannah's preference for lighter fare leads us to compromise on the beancurd with lemongrass and chilli. It's not the crispy deep-fried silken tofu I'd envisioned, and the sauce is more Thai chilli sauce than fresh chilli and fragrant lemongrass, but I feel better for it, even though images of pork fat ribbons do pop into my head every second mouthful.


Prawn and pork paw paw salad

Prawn and pork paw paw salad is much more of a hit, a tangle of julienned paw paw clustered in a lofty nest that hide slices of pork and peeled prawns. The fish sauce dressing is light, sweet and refreshing and a garnish of crushed peanuts provides a pleasant contrasting crunch.

Needless to say we talk non-stop throughout dinner. Mostly about food. And blogging. And travel. And food.

The next morning I tell my work colleagues about dinner and eating apple cores.

"Oh apple cores are the best," someone pipes up. "The seeds are great. I eat kiwifruit skin too."

Since then I've eaten two apple cores. It's bizarrely satisfying to have no rubbish for the bin, but I'm not yet convinced. Is the eating of apple cores a widespread phenomenon or does it just give you the pip?

You can read Hannah's very sweet (and prompt) version of our dinner on her post here.


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My's Vietnamese Restaurant
35 Brierly Street, Weston Creek, Canberra, ACT
Tel: +61 (02) 6288 6565

Open 7 days 11am-3pm and 5pm-10.30pm

Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Canberra - Le Rendezvous
Canberra - Mecca Bah
Canberra - Pancake Parlour
Canberra - Senso Restaurant (truffle lunch)

~~~
FREEBIE FRIDAY WINNERS
Congratulations to the following Grab Your Fork readers: Sugarpuffi, Anthony, Steph, Natalie D and Stephen. Your tips on favourite foodie stops have won each of you a copy of the 2011 Foodies' Guide to Sydney. Congratulations!

Missed out this time? Don't forget to enter the competitions still open:
(entries close Sunday 31 October 2010)

(entries close Sunday 7 November 2010)

> Win a Mexican/Spanish spice kit worth $50
(entries close Tuesday 16 November 2010)

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/26/2010 03:13:00 AM


Monday, October 25, 2010

Molecular Gastronomy at Chef's Armoury, Rosebery



"I've got the perfect book for this," says Leigh Hudson at Chef's Armoury.

It seems highly appropriate that The Big Fat Duck Cookbook by Heston Blumenthal is used to depress the plungers of nine loaded syringes in a molecular gastronomy cooking demonstration called Tokyo Food Trends held for SIFF.


Loading the syringe with red capsicum puree

Tonight Pig Flyin' and I are guests at the preview class of this event, a chance to run-through the entire demonstration before the following four days of paying customers.


Perspex tray with capsicum caviar pearls

A perspex stand with nine slots at the top takes pride of place on the demonstration counter. Leigh gets the class underway with little introduction.

He loads nine syringes with equal measures of capsicum puree, thickened with sodium alginate. As he pushes the book down onto the nine syringes, individual drops rain into a tray of calcium chloride solution. The calcium chloride sets each drop so it looks like caviar pearls.


Capsicum caviar pearls

The pearls set from the outside in, and should only be left briefly in the solution so its core is still in a liquid state. This means when a diner bites through the membrane, it imitates a caviar pearl, with a surprise burst of liquid in the middle.


Collecting the pearls

The pearls are collected and rinsed briefly in plain water to remove the calcium chloride.


Making white soy foam


Capsicum pearls on sushi rice with kingfish sashimi and white soy foam

Our first dish of the evening is a sashimi plate, the capsicum pearls spilling over a sailboat of sushi rice and nori seaweed, anchored by a pat of fiery wasabi.

Soy lecithin has been used to create the puff of white soy foam that sits on two firm fresh slices of kingfish.


Tomato jelly with sesame sand, fresh tomato with homemade Kewpie-style mayonnaise

A cube of tomato jelly served with sesame sand is one component of the next dish. The sesame sand is made by baking a flattened mixture of melted isomalt and sesame seeds on a Silpat baking sheet, and then blitzing the biscuit in a food processor to create granulated sand.

The second plate is a simple wedge of seasonal tomato, super ripe and sweet, accompanied with a swirl of Chef's Armoury own homemade Kewpie-style mayonnaise. This Japanese mayonnaise differs from European recipes with its inclusion of yuzu juice, dashi powder and rice vinegar instead of lemon juice.


Making miso soup balls using reverse spherification

The demonstration moves to the process of reverse spherification. Instead of incorporating sodium alginate into a mixture and setting it in a bath of calcium chloride, the mixture is thickened with calcium gluconate and set in a bath of sodium alginate.


Miso soup with scallion oil

A miso soup (made using red and white miso) is set into a lustrous yolk that sits in a puddle of scallion oil. We slip the miso yolks into our mouths and laugh when it explodes with a salty umami miso soup centre.


Clack egg cracker

The Clack egg cracker is the kind of contraption that makes every food geek sit up and take notice. The silver hat is rested on top of a boiled egg and the metal ball is lifted to the top of the pole and then allowed to descend at free speed until it hits the bottom with a "clack".


Egg shells with their tops cut off

What it does is cause a stress fracture at the base of the helmet, allowing the top of the egg to be removed cleanly for fancy egg shell presentations.


Spooning dashi stock over the 64-degree egg

Leigh slips out the wobble of soft-boiled egg, replacing with a bed of rice, onions cooked in dashi stock and then placing the egg on top.


Chicken kushikatsu


Miniature oyakodon

Chicken kushikatsu, skewers of chicken fillet rolled in panko crumbs and deep-fried, arrive in miniature milk bottles. Leigh serves them with the egg, calling it his miniature oyakodon, a take on the traditional Japanese dish of simmered chicken, egg and onions served over a large bowl of rice. Oyakodon means "parent and child" and refers to the use of both the chicken and the egg in this dish.


Yuzu jelly with fizz

A palate cleanser of yuzu jelly sets our tongues tingling with fizzy citric acid and sugar.


Snapper with dashi, white soy and porcini soup

We move onto the elegant simplicity of snapper, a moist and buttery piece of fish resting in a dashi, white soy and porcini soup. Cubes of carrot and turnip are intensely concetrated, a characteristic explained when Leigh tells us each has been cooked sous vide, the vacuum-sealed bag eliminating any loss of flavour.


Yabbies in the frypan

A jostle of yabbies in the frypan look decidedly cute, even though Leigh had told us he'd bought them all live only that morning.


Yabbies lounging around

He perches the heads of the yabbies at the front of our plates, claws hanging over the sides as though they're escaping the steam from a relaxing soak in the bathtub.


Adding the mashed potato cream using an espuma gun


Yabbies cooked in miso butter with mashed potato cream

There is no hesitation not to use fingers when we're served our bowls of yabbies. After savouring the tail meat, we crack open the shells are prise the cavity and claws of their precious flesh. However the highlight is the mashed potato cream, a foamy puree that is lighter than air after being forced through an espuma gun, originally used to whip cream in the 1960s but now making a comeback as an indispensable device in the field of molecular gastronomy.


Green tea partfait with macadamia praline, green tea soil and red bean

Our first dessert is a wheel of smooth and airy green tea parfait rolled in a crunchy gravel of macadamia praline. Red beans are a little chewy but I don't mind the contrast in texture, and both the beans the green tea soil (mixed with isomalt and crushed) provide a welcome counterbalance to the sweetness of the ice cream and praline.


Make your own dessert

Our final activity is hands-on, an opportunity to construct our own version of black forest cake using ready-made ingredients.


Using the espuma gun

For the most part, our desserts look the same, an assembly of chocolate cake layers sandwiched with kirsch anglaise and chocolate mousse, but it does give each of us and opportunity to play with the espuma gun.


My black forest cake: chocolate cake and chocolate sponge layers
sandwiched with sour cherry gelatine disc, kirsch anglaise and chocolate mousse
topped with chocolate ganache, green tea soil and a toffeed maraschino cherry

A few towers topple before they make it back to the dining table but the components taste so good that presentation almost doesn't seem to matter. I'm intrigued by the use of charcoal powder in the chocolate cake. Leigh's assistant, Eddy, says it gives a natural black colour when baking, and is barely discernible in charcoal flavour.



It's an entertaining evening, and enlightening too. Maybe I should have paid more attention in high school chemistry all those years ago!

Grab Your Fork and Pig Flyin' attended the Tokyo Food Trends preview session as guests of Chef's Armoury. Tokyo Food Trends ran from Tuesday 19 October to Friday 22 October 2010.


View Larger Map

Chef's Armoury
747-751 Botany Road, Rosebery
(between Queen and Morley Avenue)
Tel: +61 (02) 9699 2353

Opening hours:
Monday to Saturday 10.30am-4.30pm

~~~
FREEBIE FRIDAY WINNER
Congratulations to Eliza Jane who has won a copy of Ferran Adria's biography "Revinventing Food: The Man Who Changed the Way We Eat".

Missed out this time? Don't forget to enter the competitions still open:
(entries close Monday 25 October 2010) <- CLOSES TODAY (entries close Sunday 31 October 2010)

(entries close Sunday 7 November 2010)

> Win a Mexican/Spanish spice kit worth $50
(entries close Tuesday 16 November 2010)

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posted by Helen (Grab Your Fork) on 10/25/2010 02:21:00 AM



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