ragingyoghurt

Category Archives: dinner

4

being a slack bastard, i still haven’t dealt with the previous two memes hurled my way. i’m sorry. your time will come, memes!

however, this evening, a short, sweet one beckoned, and because i am too full of mashed potato (and sauteed red cabbage and steak) to go to bed (and also i am trying to have the food settle enough that i might have a piece of chocolate), i am playing along:

1 delve into your blog archive.
2 find your 23rd post (or closest to).
3 find the fifth sentence (or closest to).
4 post the text of the sentence in your blog along with these instructions.
5 tag five people to do the same.

so. the sentence, from june 18, 2003:

“unfortunately the photographic adventure was cut short, because a maniac was trying to kill us, and we had to throw him off the balcony.”

what!? yes, i know it seems a long way from talk of cake or mashed potato… but you see, the camera was chocolate. now you really want to run over to the archives don’t you?

run! i pass the baton to: carla gypsygirl, gem, hikaru, krissie and stellou.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 September 2005 at 8:28 pm
permalink | filed under blog, dinner

2

i’d been meaning to make spanakopita for ages. what’s not to like? all crunchy pastry and salty fetta and dilly spinach. it seemed like the time was nigh when i walked past my local fruit shop and a table was piled high with $1.99 bunches of spinach. a week, two weeks, i walked by, always thinking, hmm… must get some filo pastry and then i’ll be set. already there was a block of fetta in my fridge.

so, wednesday i finally remembered to get a packet of filo at the supermarket, and went by the fruit shop, and the spinach was back up to $2.49. but it didn’t matter — i was on a mission! when i got home, with my filo and two bunches of spinach and a bunch each of dill and spring onion, i was quite unthrilled to read the side of the pastry packaging, which said: thaw completely at room temperature for at least four hours, or overnight in the fridge and then two hours at room temperature. hrm.

so, thursday, i googled “spanakopita recipe” and spent an hour or so walking in between the kitchen and the computer, being methodical. and then there it was: spanakopita. yummy, crunchy, salty, dilly spanakopita.

the dinner was made all the more pleasant by the prospect of cakes for dessert. mmm… plural cake. these were purpose-bought that afternoon at christopher’s cake shop, a tiny greek bakery behind taylor square. the evening’s selection included something which was a chocolate rum ball mixture coated in ground almond cake coated in dark chocolate, a cherry strudel, and a couple of things involving cake and ground almonds and filo. as you can see, there is no such thing as too much filo (or too much cake).

posted by ragingyoghurt on 11 June 2005 at 5:05 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, dinner, kitchen

7

at about 4am i was on the couch downstairs to escape the boy’s snoring. it was to be the last time i would be asleep all day. i knew i was asleep because i was dreaming that i was sitting at my computer, and i heard the baby cry, and the boy brought the baby to me to be fed, and by “brought” i mean that he held her hand and walked her over, because evidently dream baby could walk. real life baby though, cannot, and so i sleepclimbed the stairs to the bedroom, where she actually was having a bit of a grumble. the boy optimistically thought he’d be able to put her back to sleep and sent me back downstairs, where for an hour and a half i lay awake listening to her emit sporadic beeping noises, just like that smoke alarm whose battery is running low. then at 5.40, when the boy decided that he’d had enough, child was unceremoniusly plonked back in the cot, and the boy appeared downstairs with a frown and a blanket. oh, unhappy baby! so. back upstairs, fed the child, who seemed to go back to sleep up until the point she was put back in her cot, when she decided to be awake for the day. it was 6am, there were birds chirping, fair enough. so. back downstairs, where the next two hours were spent entertaining the baby, washing the dishes and baking a batch of ginger ale scones. before i knew it it was time to put the baby back to bed and get dressed for yoga.

yoga makes it all better.

and so do instant noodles! it was all i could fathom “cooking” tonight following a post-yoga afternoon of a couple of not-quite naps inbetween laundry and the baby and dishes and the baby and the internet and the baby. the alternative was an old christmas pudding and cream — i would only have felt a little bit guilty, and it would have been tasty i’m sure.

but in the end the noodles won. i resisted the temptation to follow the instructions on the pack —
“place the rice vermicelli, soup base and seasoning oil into a bowl. pour in 400cc of boiling water. cover up the bowl for 3 minutes. and now soft and appetizing rice vermicelli is ready for serving.” — yum. and instead put a pot on the stove. it only extends the cooking time to ten minutes, to add such things as pork dumplings, pumpkin, chinese broccoli, lotus root, bamboo shoots and a sprinkle of japanese chili pepper, and makes it a bowl of nourishment and comfort.

my preferred brand is a relic of my childhood: chu qian yi ding. tonight i had the artificial beef flavoured rice vermicelli, but look at all the flavours the normal wheat noodles come in. it’s rather amazing what comes out of a little silver foil packet.

and maybe there is room for pudding and cream after all.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 7 May 2005 at 7:50 pm
permalink | filed under boy, dinner, grumble, kid

1

on a day when there happens to be a block of feta in the fridge, as well as eggs and milk, it may pop into your head that a feta omelette needs to be had. and if you were also reading a particular foodblog that morning, it might spur you on to ensure that such an omelette would be had for lunch.

and so such and such were placed in a pan, and topped with a couple handfuls of incidental rocket (sadly, supermarket rocket, which seemed to have no taste of rocket, or anything), and then folded over and plopped onto some soy-linseed sourdough. and a forgotten jar of pickled beetroot at the bottom-back of the fridge was happy to oblige.

but why so lucky as to have feta in the fridge? it’s just that when my mother was here the other month, one of the things she left me was two slimy mackerel in the freezer. bet that mackerel thought that calling itself “slimy” would be some sort of deterrent, a survival tactic. HAHA fishy, the joke’s on you! we will eat you nonetheless, for you are not only not slimy, but quite meaty and tasty, with that feeling between my molars, of oily fish.

“just brush them with olive oil and season with salt and pepper,” said my mother before she boarded that plane home, and so i did. while the boy cooked them up on the balcony barbeque, i roasted some thick slices of desiree potato and threw together a greekish-nicoiseish salad of cucumber, green beans, the afore-mentioned rocket, some oven-roasted grape tomatoes and smooth creamy feta. mmm…

posted by ragingyoghurt on 6 May 2005 at 8:10 am
permalink | filed under dinner, kitchen, lunch

5

this afternoon, a sunny sunday afternoon, around lunchtime, my little mother walked up the street to the fish shop in the mall to procure some prawns with which to fry up some kuay teow, penang style. on her way home, less than a block from the front door, a slightly built aboriginal youth with short curly hair and dressed in a red-and-white horizontally-striped shirt came up behind her, shoved her to the ground, grabbed her handbag and ran to the council flats a short distance away, from whence he was spirited away in a white car. people still push little old ladies down in the street? but she is resilient; hours later, after the police interview, the mugshot viewing, the walking up and down the neighbourhood streets in a vain attempt to find her handbag, she was frying up noodles at the stove. the bastard hadn’t taken the prawns.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 March 2005 at 10:37 pm
permalink | filed under around town, dinner, grumble

4

two weeks ago, we fired up the barbeque on the balcony. nothing fancy, just some sausages and steaks and cheeses and houseguests. a thoroughly pleasant affair that ended with the sound of midnight oil wafting over from aussie stadium. rock!

and then.

over the last couple of days, we’d been sticking our noses up into the occasional breeze, sniffing, then asking, “what’s that smell?” or “hmm… what died?”. yesterday, the boy walked over to the corner of the balcony where it smelt deadest and fossicked around a little. quite a bit of spluttering ensued as detective goren revealed…

the bloated corpse of a sausage lying at the bottom of a bin. the deceased had been a raw sausage that had fallen off the grill the night in question, and had been picked up and tossed into the bin, and then forgotten. in the meantime, there had been crazy hot days, and days of welcome gentle rain, and so now, mr sausage was rotting away in a small amount of stagnant collected rainwater. with the lid of the bin fully removed, the smell of death intensified, and made its way into the living room. oh how our eyes watered!

quick! shut that door!

eventually the boy picked up the deadly sausage of decaying flesh (using the hand in plastic bag trick used in dogpoo removal, but still!), and carried it through the apartment to the garbage room downstairs. but the odour lingered, and a couple hours later, far, far away in the park, we could still smell the sausage.

on a happier note, this morning the boy asked, “if i made pancakes, would you have some?”. i thought it was a trick question at first, forgetting that i’d already had a breakfast a couple of hours earlier. whatever, the answer was “YES!”.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 13 February 2005 at 8:31 pm
permalink | filed under boy, breakfast, dinner

5

there is a place two or three suburbs away, where you make a call and they bring you chinese food. i never make the call. well, i did, once, several years ago, and then again, tonight.

can i just say, the home delivery menu is your standard A4 folded down into thirds setup, and not counting the six special budget packs and the three party set menus on the back flap, there are 179 items listed. actually, i’m just looking at it again, and if you count the un-numbered item, All Sauces 80c, there are 180 choices for dinner.

it’s just that i was really quite hungry at five this afternoon, and hungry in particular for sweet and sour pork and fried rice. the more fluorescent the red of the pork, and the more glistening the rice, the better. the boy said, “why don’t you call new addison?” i fetched the menu from the bottom of the menu drawer, and it instantly became clear that sweet and sour pork and fried rice had to be deprioritised. under the “chef’s suggestion” heading, for instance, i really wanted the Deep Fried Brocolli [sic] in Batter with Mushrooms and the New Addison Special. what was in the Special? dunno, but it was the second most expensive thing on the menu, right after the Imperial Queen King Prawn.

after much deliberation and debate on whether two out of three dishes ordered could be deepfried (boy: yes; me: no, surprise) the boy made the call. Fried Salted Chilli Squid, Garlic Lamb and sorry, what?

the Deep Fried Brocolli [sic] in Batter with Mushrooms hadn’t been on the menu in three years; our menu was dated july 2000. we ended up with a much more sensible Bean Curd with Special Combination Vegetables, which when it arrived, turned out to be broccoli, choi sum and snow peas, all a lovely shade of green.

the nice delivery man also thoughtfully brought us an up-to-date menu. it is a bit shorter than v.2000, and in fact most of the missing items were specialties that the (previous?) chef had suggested: the Deep Fried Brocolli [sic] in Batter with Mushrooms, New Addison Special and the lesser Mok Lee Special. also gone were All Sauces and the entire section known as “western dishes”. which is a pity, because what i had actually most wanted to get from it was the Hot Chips $2.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 4 February 2005 at 8:51 pm
permalink | filed under dinner

1

you may have surmised from my last post that i really do like green food. the last couple of days, there has been rigatoni with broccolini and peas, with parsley and feta pesto. mmm… green… and see, it sounds fancy, but involved just one pot in which the pasta was boiled, and then the other greens blanched — the peas were even the frozen kind. the pesto was the store-bought kind, and is amazing just eaten in spoonful out of the container, which is what i may well do with the remainder. so. after the pot contents were drained, they went back on low heat and the pesto mixed through and viola! a very green meal in no time at all, with hardly any washing up after, hurrah!

there has also been a home-delivered thai green curry from a place that says it will be about half an hour, but ten minutes later it arrives at your door. there was so much gravy that the next night i poached two bits of salmon in it, with a handful of green beans thrown in.

and then there was this ugly thing:

rye toast, with avocado, fried halloumi and roasted zucchini.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 26 January 2005 at 8:32 pm
permalink | filed under dinner, lunch

8

fancy that. just as i settled in to gussy up this previously posted account of my jaunt into the golden brown country and the golden brown (and pink! and red!) cakes that were encountered, chairman kaga revealed the secret ingredient on “iron chef“: it was dessert battle! in particular, it was strawberry dessert holiday battle!! well!!!

um. so that put the business on hold. this morning i settled in at mr computer with a cup of vanilla green tea and a platter of chocolate sprinkles on white bread… and then a lightning storm thundered in. and then maeve woke up… and then i had a cup of blueberries with yoghurt… and a nectarine… and then maeve went back to sleep… so now it’s three hours later, and before i get too distracted by the gapkids website, i thought i’d best continue.

so. where we were headed, with the car packed to the roof with all the portable baby furniture (and baby) and fishing rod and travel snacks we could fit, was country victoria. ned kelly country victoria, to be precise. there was no set date for our return; we had as much as two and a half weeks if we wanted, house sitting for the boyss aunt in rutherglen. we were welcome to eat anything from the garden: the beans, the eggs, the mulberries, the potatoes from mick’s prized patch. if they had been ripe we could also have gorged ourselves on the peaches from the tree in the middle of the yard right next to the enormous hills hoist, and the grapes, and what appeared to be 20 kilograms of kiwifruit hanging from the trellis. perhaps it was just as well the hanging fruit wasn’t ready for harvest — there is a bit of a rat infestation in the roof, and they run along the grape and kiwi vines, and i’m sure they lick the fruit every now and again. lick, lick.

i was promised driving lessons along country roads, and a cheese factory excursion, and a visit to the beechworth bakery that had been too crowded the last time we breezed through. in the end, i had just the one driving lesson (my second ever, don’t worry, i won’t be hitting a road near you just yet), the milawa cheese company was a gracious host with a counter lady who let us sample every single cheese — and there were lots — on her tray, and the beechworth baker served up this raspberry and pastry cream extravaganza:

mmm…

in rutherglen itself, the black dog bakery had two sorts of cream lamingtons on display: regular brown cube, and little pink ball. there was only a brief discussion in my head as to which it would be.

back in the kitchen i cut it in two –half for now, and half for later. but after eating the first half, i discovered that my hand, all cream and coconut fingers, was rifling in the paper bag for the other bit.

in corryong, home to the man from snowy river, the bakerylady asked if i wanted the apple and blueberry pie with cream or without. this time there was no discussion at all. it was stowed carefully in a shady spot of footspace in the car, and due to the ham and pickle on pumpkin bread sandwiches that we had packed for the drive, wasn’t actually devoured until cooma, on the picnic blanket under a tree.

homeward, we stayed the night in canberra, at a motel next to the harmonie german club. oh how we rubbed our hands in glee at the thought of schnitzel or fat sausages and sauerkraut for dinner. but after we signed in and walked the 20 metres through the gaming lounge which was enough to infuse us with a cigarette-smoky odour for the rest of the evening, we discovered that the little nook of a restaurant offered such standard pub fare as steak and chips, or chops and chips, or fish and chip [sic], or thai style salmon rissoles and chips. right at the bottom of the chalkboard, though, was the schnitzel, so we had that. it ended up being a homey, tasty, gravy-covered thing nestled amongst the boiled pumpkin, peas and potato, and the mound of sauteed mushroom-silverbeet. the counter lady, who had started off a bit surly when i asked what the mustard chicken at the top of the menu was (“well, it’s chicken, with mustard…” she said, pointing at the grimy jar of grainy mustard on the counter), came over to admire maeve, and then a little while later brought us a small bowl of chips and gravy while we waited for her to boil up some fresh vegetables.

the next morning found me in a kingston bakery buying breakfast. the apple pie looked magnificent:

and indeed the pastry was a sugary, crunchy treat, but its interior turned out to be a cavernous space with a gummy, apple-studded filling hugging the edges like a big mass of boogers. perversely, i persisted, and it seemed to improve with each bite. sort of. just.

anyway, what i was really excited about was the tray of cake by the counter, above which the placard read: “new red velvet cake”. i had been reading of this cake recently, and being too lazy to actually make one, i didn’t think i’d get to experience it any time soon. and here it was.

here it is, having survived the trip back up the remembrance driveway, sustaining me as i ploughed through a week and half of mail, comprised mainly of bills and kmart catalogs:

it was red and velvety, with a very sugary frosting — so sugary i contemplated not actually finishing it, though in the end nothing remained, not even the superfluous compund chocolate button. in short, it was a tasty cake, and i should have saved it for the horrible chore of wading through the week and half of email, which totalled 767, and out of which only one was not smutty, or an offer of pain relief, or a newsletter. thanks mum!

so there you go: the cakes of my recent past. somewhere in between there was the mammoth slice of mars bar cake that i somehow forgot to photograph. well. you know how it is… the cake frenzy.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 January 2005 at 7:19 am
permalink | filed under boy, cake, dinner, snacks, trip

2

happy new year breakfast.

xmas came early, on the twenty-second, with the arrival of nellie, who in a fit of human endurance, rode the terrible air canada route between new york and sydney via vancouver and honolulu. as if that weren’t enough, she arrived bearing gifts: the new satrapi (which in its original french is already the old satrapi), a just-read-on-the-plane sedaris, the bumper hardcover compendium of american elf (which is so bumper that its 500 pages have wrenched themselves from the binding), and an assortment of condiments including beets and cherry jam (according to the flowery italian label, 170% fruit content).

with the baby and the copious end-of-year meat consumption worked into the routine, everything fell into place. post-christmas we took it as far as the rock, on a road trip into those parts of the brown country where it’s normal for a day to be 36°. squatting in the boy’s grandmother’s retirement flat, we kickstarted each morning with a breakfast made up of any combination of bacon and sausage and egg and beans and white toast, or all at once. and then ended each day at the old family home with the kitchen table a smorgasbord of barnyard meats and an assortment of coleslaws.

along the way was young, cherry capital of australia, where the best meal was not the cherry pie — pastry all sodden and doughy — in the tearoom of a reknowned jam factory, but the $7.95 roast lamb special at the young services club, with help-yourself, all-you-can-eat hot vegetable and salad bar; the lamb was moist, tender and gravied, the hot vegetables included corn on the cob, and one of the salads was whole pickled beetroot. nor did the town yield the best cherries of the trip; these came from a fruitshop in a mall in wagga wagga, and for a whole cent cheaper per kilo.

incidentally, the cheesymite scrolls at the wagga baker’s delight are at least twice the size of the ones from the surry hills bakers delight, and the custard scrolls much more custardy. which makes one think that wagga is where it all happens. whoulda thunk?

posted by ragingyoghurt on 4 January 2005 at 6:22 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, dinner, lunch, nellie, snacks, trip
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