Author Archives: sister T

eating bugs & salad

 
 
 
 
 
SALAD ALTERNATIVES – by Alison Drover
 
Asparagus (in season October/November) with coddled eggs and chopped pecans or macadamias
 
 
 
What you will need:
 
2 pots of boiling water one for eggs and one for asparagus. The eggs form the basis of your warm dressing so you need to be organized.
 
·       60ml vinegar ­
·       8 large organic or free range eggs
·       80ml extra virgin olive oil ­ local is best
·       16 pieces of asparagus
·       salt pepper
·       lemon thyme
 
Pop eggs into the water for 4 minutes only. You want the eggs to be runny inside but white on the outside. Take a clean tea towel and scoop out the content of the egg into a bowl. This is going to be your dressing. Add the anchovy dressing and then drizzle in the oil and salt and pepper.
Cook your asparagus in the boiling water for about 5 minutes and then check it. It
should be firm but not crunchy otherwise too acidic. Remove asparagus from the
boiling water and place separately to avoid further cooking.
 
Arrange your sparagus on a platter, drizzle with your egg dressing and then grate your lemon zest over it.
 
 www.forkinthefield.com Fork in the Field
E:    contact@alisondrover.com
 
The Alison Principle sustainability food consulting, projects and events
www.thealisonprinciple.com
 
Follow me @ http://twitter.com/ alisonprinciple
 
 

bush chook and kangaroo

Sometimes on belly we have guests and interviews plannned that we think are completely unrelated, and as we follow the food stories and take our usual tasty tangents, all sorts of interesting links appear and reappear.  This was one such show.  Ilias invited his friend Dino’s mum, Paraskevi a.k.a Beryl, and I (along with sister Deanna), recorded some stories from the 2013 Sample Food Festival, including a lovely interview with Australia’s only ‘hatted’ indigenous chef, Clayton Donovan.  And somehow we ended up spending a lot of time discussing how to cook the Australian national crest, the kangaroo and the emu, a.k.a. in Paraskevi’s wonderful euphemism, ‘bush chook’.

Here is  an old family recipe.
YIAYIA KONSTANDINIA’S YIOUVETSI
Ingredients for four hearty diners!
MEAT
3 halved lamb shanks, skin cleaned off.
2 lamb necks cut in 2 or 3, trimmed of fat. 1 heaped tbsn thick tomato paste diluted in water and 2 large chopped tomatoes
5 cloves garlic, 1 large bayleaf, cracked pepper, salt, knob of butter, olive oil
SAUCE
5 ripe large Roma tomatoes, diced
4 tbspns flat parsley, roughly chopped
2 large brown onions, roughly chopped
2 Heaped tbspns of thick tomato paste diluted in water
Butter and olive oil
Salt, cracked pepper
PASTA-500gms risone pasta -Divella, San Remo, Misko etc.
METHOD
Heat oven to 220C
Mix all MEAT ingredients together in a very well greased ovenproof (preferably earthenware) deep ‘pudding’ or mixing bowl, large enough to fit the meat and with a little space to spare.
Place UPSIDE DOWN in the centre of a 30-35cm x 10cm deep, well greased baking dish (ie Bessemer or Le Creuset or earthenware are good).
SAUCE
Gently sauté onions in the oil and butter and pepper, add diced tomatoes and parsley. Sauté gently fir a few minutes then stir in remaining ingredients.
Place this sauce in the large baking dish, distributed evenly around the bowl. Place a heavy rock or other object on top of the bowl to keep it secure and tight. Pour about 5 cups of boiling water over the sauce (the water should come up about 3-4cm around the bowl.
Place in oven and reduce temperature to 190C. Roast for about 1-3/4 to 2 hours always topping up boiling water to 3-4 cm, as above.
Remove from oven and check for taste – esp for salt and gently distribute the pasta around the baking dish, add about 3cm of water above the pasta.
Return to oven until pasta is cooked and water is absorbed but not dried out. It has to be juicy.
Fry a large knob of butter until it is brown and pour this over the pasta.
NOW FOR THE DRAMA AND DELICIOUS AROMAS
Serve at the table by slowly prizing the bowl off the meat and allowing the meat to fall out of the  bowl into the dish.
Each guest may serve themselves or the host may do so.
Best served with Strained sheep or goat yoghurt, cucumber/tomato salad.
Do provide thin skewers so guests can prize the bone marrow out of the shank bones. Have some moist hand towels handy for those who handle, and like to clean every tasty morsel off, the bones. Do, also, provide a large bowl for the ‘denuded’ bones!
YIAYIA KONSTANTINIA (1875-1956) via granddaughter BERYL GEORGAKOPOULOS.

Byron Bay in a cookbook, sample fest ’13 & going crabbing with Max

But first….. a little colour therapy.

 

tropical flowers: Sister Michael, Lilith, Sister Tess & 2 members of the Mana Aloha hula troupe

 

 Lilith, belly astrogourmet and hula queen, and some of the dancers from the Mana Aloha troupe danced the very tasty Island Style hula at bayfm's closing event.  They are launching a facebook page this Sunday so look for Byron Bay Hula on facebook if you'd like to see how fabulous they are.  They say that they perform in all sorts of places, including aged care homes.  Must be great therapy, all that colour and bone melting music. They also start teaching  Hawaiian Hula at the Ewingsdale Hall this month, we'd love you to come along and dance on the radio for the belly listeners if you learn to hula. Classes start Thursday 26 September from 4.45pm, $20 for 2 hours.

To contact Mana Aloha (it means powerful love or love power) :lilith@byrononline.net

 

FROM : BYRON BAY : A Food Journey through the Region, by Nelly le Comte and Remy Tancred

 

byron bay cookbook pork

slow bread, fermentation and sampling spring

The first belly of spring today and we are fermenting with life, from a light and fresh book review, to festival previews and reports, the odd world of North America in a sister D edition of our belly bulletin, & we are harnessing natural, time honoured bread making to bring wheat back into the lives of many of us who find the average loaf very hard to digest, with slooow baker & fermenter Clive Lawler.
They say you  never forget your first, and it's true:  Clive Lawler was the first guest I interviewed all on my own in the old bayfm love shack, all alone with the buttons and gear of the radio magic panel.  He is a  slow bread maker now based in Brisbane, coming back to this area to present occasional workshops.  His books available online or at Santos Warehouse in the Byron Industrial estate.
When we first spoke he was experimenting with fermented nuts, and making a version of the no knead bread that you can easily find online and on the belly website, we have been making this in our house ever since, but Clive has moved on a long way with his methods since then.  

Listen to the interview audio below for lots of tips on slow baking and fermenting, or get along to his 'playshop' this weekend in Byron Bay.

Where – Starseed Gardens, Byron Bay

When – Saturday 7 & Sunday 8 September

Connect with Clive and check out workshop details and lots more through his Facebook page here

Clive is sending us a couple of his fermented spread recipes soon.

 

AUDIO

clive1 start

clive part 2

clive part 3

clive end

 

BELLY BULLETIN  – this week, news from North America by sister D

A recent food poisoning incident at the Canadian National Exhibition‭ (‬CNE‭) ‬in Toronto,‭  ‬Ontario has unfairly been blamed on the‭ “‬cronut‭”‬.‭  ‬223‭ ‬people were affected by food poisoning after eating a calorie laden‭ “‬cronut burger‭” ‬last weekend.‭  ‬The‭ “‬cronut‭” ‬a cross between a croissant and a doughnut was created by Dominique Ansel bakery in New York City.‭  ‬Wildly popular,‭ ‬it has inspired many imitations hence the‭ “‬cronut burger‭” ‬at the CNE.‭  ‬The cronut burger is a heart stopping mixture of a beef patty topped with cheese,‭ ‬served in a cronut bun with a maple bacon jam.‭  ‬Turns out the culprit of the food poisoning was not the cronut after all,‭ ‬but the maple bacon jam.‭  ‬Long live the cronut‭!!!  

In related news,‭ ‬not to be outdone by their American neighbours,‭ ‬a Canadian patisserie in Toronto‭; ‬Calfouti,‭ ‬has created the‭ “‬crookie‭”‬.‭  ‬Yes,‭ ‬the‭ “‬crookie‭”‬.‭  ‬Part croissant and part oreo cookie…only in North America.‭  ‬We could expect no less from the continent that created the‭ “‬turducken‭” (‬chicken,‭ ‬stuffed inside a duck,‭ ‬stuffed inside a turkey‭) ‬and the‭ “‬piecaken‭” (‬pie baked inside a cake on top of another layer of pie baked inside a cake‭)‬.‭  

Good news for coffee drinkers.‭  ‬New research has shown that regular coffee drinking can prevent the recurrence of prostate cancer for men.‭  ‬The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center found that consuming four or more cups of coffee a day is associated with a decreased risk of prostate cancer recurrence in addition to decreased progression of the tumour.‭  ‬It should be noted the study only found an association rather than proof of causation,‭ ‬the authors note that the coffee may hold the protective benefits because of the anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties.‭  ‬More research is needed in this area,‭ ‬but for the time being,‭ ‬drink up‭!

More good news for lovers of hot beverages.‭ ‬ Research has shown that two cups of hot chocolate per day boosted brain blood flow and memory in a sample of elderly with narrowed arteries.‭  ‬The research involved a sample of‭ ‬60‭ ‬people with a median age of‭ ‬73‭ ‬who were not diagnosed with dementia.‭ ‬Harvard Medical School in Boston who conducted the study reported improvements in working memory and an improvement of blood flow to working areas of the brain.‭  ‬Dr.‭ ‬Farzaneh Sorond who led the study said‭ “‬we’re learning more about blood flow in the brain and its effect on thinking skills.‭  ‬As different areas of the brain need more energy to complete their tasks,‭ ‬they also need greater blood flow.‭  ‬This relationship,‭ ‬called neurovascular coupling,‭ ‬may play an important role in diseases such as Alzheimer’s‭”  ‬More research is needed to explore the relationship between cocoa and blood flow and cognitive capacity,‭ ‬but again‭… ‬we say,‭ ‬drink up‭!

Death Valley National Park in the United States are tired of people trying to cook eggs on the floor of the national park.‭  ‬Officials have written on the Death Valley facebook page that maintenance crews have been busy cleaning up eggs,‭ ‬egg cartons,‭ ‬and shells strewn throughout the car park.‭  ‬In a ironical twist,‭ ‬it was actually a Death Valley employee who sparked the egg cooking trend by posting a video of an egg cooking in the‭ ‬127‭ ‬degree F‭ (‬52‭ ‬C‭) ‬heat.‭  ‬The video notes a frying pan should be used however,‭ ‬as the ground‭ “‬makes a mess and it doesn’t work‭”‬.‭  ‬Clearly,‭ ‬the message is not sinking in as tourists continue to crack eggs on the ground in the midst of a current heat wave on the west coast of the US.‭  ‬This is not dissimilar to the trend some time ago of people baking trays of cookies on their dashboards of their vehicles in the summer heat,‭ ‬following a post of the same that went viral.‭  

 

Book Review:‭ ‬Marie Claire-Summer:‭ ‬Simply Fresh Food by Michele Cranston

Review by Sister Deanna


Well,‭ ‬the title does not lie with this cookbook,‭ ‬it is simple and it is fresh.‭  ‬It was difficult to get the full flavour‭ (‬pun intended‭) ‬of this cookbook as the ingredients are geared towards summer produce and thus we are not quite there yet.‭  ‬Having said that,‭ ‬the recipes that were tried were very simple,‭ ‬easy to make,‭ ‬and as one of the taste team noted‭ “‬good for a young uni student who doesn’t know much about cooking‭”‬.‭   ‬I’m inclined to agree,‭ ‬this book s strength is its simplicity,‭ ‬and its use of fresh foods,‭ ‬making it a great book for young cooks who want to cook simple,‭ ‬fresh,‭ ‬and flavourful food.‭ ‬It is produced by Marie Claire,‭ ‬so it is not surprising that it targets a younger demographic.‭  ‬Indeed,‭ ‬throughout the book in between recipes,‭ ‬the reader is treated to pictures of young twenty-something women frolicking in the sand and sea.‭  ‬Frolicking aside,‭ ‬a further strength in addition to simplicity and freshness is the inclusion of colour pictures of each recipe.‭  ‬The cookbook is divided into five sections:‭ ‬fruit,‭ ‬leaf,‭ ‬sea,‭ ‬husk‭ (‬grains‭)‬,‭ ‬and basics.‭  ‬Full of fresh ingredients,‭ ‬the meals were light and flavourful.‭  ‬Sometimes however,‭ ‬the ingredients should have been left to themselves.‭  ‬There were a few recipes that imparted a few too many flavours‭ ( ‬a salmon recipe comes to mind‭) ‬that masked the beautiful flavour of the ingredients as too many spices and flavourings were added.‭  ‬One taste team member commented‭ “‬way to ruin a perfectly good piece of fish‭”‬.‭  ‬On the whole however,‭ ‬this cookbook was reviewed positively.‭ ‬Great for simple,‭ ‬healthy mid-week meals,‭ ‬and for the young cook starting out.‭  ‬I for one will be adding a few new recipes from this book to my repertoire.‭  

Leah Roland & Yolanda Santiago on radiothon belly

Yes, lots of visitors expected in the belly kitchen today for our second special radiothon belly.  Leah Roland from the Bangalow Cooking School, Yolanda Santiago presenter of Radio Latina, and some even the bellysisters will not know about until they manifest in the studio, so listen up!  And please call 6680 7999 while we are on air to subscribe, so we can send you lots of bellysister love and put you in the additional belly draw for two beautiful cookbooks generously donated by Belinda Jeffery.

 

images

 

YOLANDA'S  CHICKEN MOLE RECIPE

1/8 teaspoon Anise seeds
1/2 medium Onion
 chopped 1/2 slice of Bread
1 tablespoon Sesame seeds
1 tablespoon Margarine
1/4 cup Pine nuts
1/2 cup Tomato sauce
2 Chicken breast fillets
3 Peppercorns
1 cup Chicken broth
1 Garlic clove minced
1 tablespoon Sugar
2 Cloves
2 tablespoon Ground chilli
1 Serano chilli (optional)
3 Wedges Mexican chocolate

Place chicken breast in a pot and cover with water till just immersed. Boil chicken for 1/2 hour. Remove chicken. Strain broth and reserve. Heat margarine and cook onion and garlic till soft. Add the rest of the ingredients and simmer for 1/2 hour. With a food processor, puree ingredients, adding more broth or water if necessary. Return ingredients back to pot and add chocolate to melt. Add boiled chicken pieces and simmer sauce on medium-low for an hour. Add more broth or water as necessary to keep the sauce from getting too thick or burning. 

Note: If you want to do this sauce ahead of time, after adding chocolate cool and store in the refrigerator. When ready to use, add boiled chicken pieces and cook as directed above.

Love and mole… Yolanda


         

pizza, focaccia and a better workplace through baking

Today on belly we were visited by Nick Dingle – former New Yorker and Pizza Maker extraordinaire to talk to us all about baking with yeast.  Pizza,  focaccia, bread, and more.  Then Kim Kendall joined us from Mullumbimby Community Health to talk about the community health “Bake off” and creating community through food.  As we say on belly : “Cooks WILL save the world”.
NICK’S FOCACCIA RECIPE
 Focaccia is an Italian flatbread, served in a hundred different ways and with a hundred-or more-different tastes added to the basic recipe.  It’s easy to mix olives, rosemary, artichokes, sun-dried tomatoes through the dough, or to sprinkle over the top.  Coarse sea salt on it’s own makes a fine focaccia.  In New York, where I grew up, we knew a focaccia variant as Sicilian Pizza.  It’s simply smeared with sugo (passata) and sprinkled with mozzarella and parmigiano and baked until perfect with slightly browned mozzarella and a soft spongy crust.  Add your favourite toppings before baking and dig in…..You often see folks buying a piece of this from Italian bakeries, and walking along munching away. Great portable lunch….I’ve done it myself in Rome, Venice and Brindisi.
 So, how do we make the stuff?  It’s easy, as long as the recipe is followed.
 Ingredients:
 1 tsp sugar
 1tsp dry yeast
 1tsp salt
 75ml warm water(like hot)
 225gm plain flour(better if you can get pizza flour)
 30ml Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Combine all the ingredients together at once.  I know many look to activate the yeast in the water with the sugar, and you can do this, but at Your Italian Kitchen time is always a priority.
 Mix it all together.  Now it needs kneading.  Either use a mixer with a dough hook.  10-12 minutes. Medium speed.  OR.  Knead by hand on a floured board.  Only use enough flour to keep the dough from sticking.  Too much flour makes a tough dough.  By hand, I usually go about 15 minutes.
 Put your kneaded dough into a lighty oiled (Olive oil, of course) bowl and cover with plastic or a damp tea towel.
 Allow the dough to rise by 2.  Take it out of the bowl and punch it down, roll out, and fit into a baking tray lined with paper or brushed lightly with olive oil.  I like to let mine rise again, but that’s not always done.  Once ready for the oven, top with a sprinkle of sea salt flakes, rosemary, sliced tomatoes, olives, passata and cheese, or, well whatever you fancy, trying and pop into an oven pre-heated to 240 degrees celsius.
 Bake until the golden brown, or if topped, the edges are nicely browned.
 Done.  Slice and add anything else you’d like.  I like fresh tomato, and then fresh basil added at the end of cooking, along with fresh bocconcini.  Light, fresh and a great starter for a dinner, or an easy weekend lunch addition.
 DO NOT EXPERIMENT until you’ve tried it a few times, and understand the process.  Cooking, it is said, is an art, but baking is a science.
 Would love to see any of you down at YOUR ITALIAN KITCHEN in Ocean Shores for authentic Italian Pasta and real Italian Pizza, because life is too short to eat bad pizza
IN SEASON – AUGUST
Time for winter soups, mushroom everything, hearty pies and more and more of that bumper citrus crop.  Sister D is cooking a lot of fish to try and use more lemons, and we have enlisted Di Hart  (see her boot muster in the food events below) to give us some in season suggestions too – oddly, she suggests lemons and fish!
See Diane’s blog for her fabulous fish and potato pie, she has included lots of photos.  The bellysisters love that she has designed it to be cooked in one pot, and the leeks, fennel and lots of parsley in the recipe, all doing well in August.
“Fish Pie with Mashed Potato –
A few chilly nights and I start thinking of comfort food – this dish certainly fits the bill – and it is so easy to make and very adaptable.  It’s the kind of thing my mother used to make with smoked fish – like haddock.  I make it with whatever fresh and chunky fillet fish I can get at our farmer’s market on a Friday morning – but you could use fresh salmon or add some prawns if you were making it for a dinner party
So many fish pie recipes involve a lot of different stages and consequently quite a few dirty dishes – with this one you make it and bake it in just the one pan – now, that definitely has to be a bonus!  Oh, did I say that it tastes delicious too?”
http://growfoodslowfood.blogspot.com.au/2013/07/fish-pie-with-mashed-potato.html
And here is Di’s sweet suggestion, a very simple looking recipe with lots of good extra tips.  Anything with the zest of 5 yes 5 lemons has got to be good.
LEMON, ALMOND AND RICOTTA CAKE RECIPE – by Diane Hart
300g butter
1 1/2 cups castor sugar
4 eggs
2 cups almond meal *
3/4 cup fine polenta
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
Zest of 5 lemons and juice of 1 lemon
3/4 cup ricotta (you need the cake kind and not the creamed)
Icing sugar for dusting
*NOTE: I use bulk, whole almonds, with the skin on, and grind them myself – it’s cheaper and adds extra fibre to the cake.
Preheat oven to 160oC
Line 26cm springform pan with non-stick baking paper.
In food processor beat together butter and sugar until creamy, add eggs one at a time.
Add remaining ingredients except icing sugar and ricotta.
Fold in ricotta so that it stays in lumps (that’s the white bits in the photo above)
Pour into tin and bake for approximately one hour – test with a skewer that it comes out clean.
Cool completely in tin and serve with cream or yoghurt.
BELLY BULLETIN
FOOD EVENTS
Northern Rivers Food is holding a seminar of media training for people who have or are thinking of setting up a food related business.Telling your story and getting the right media coverage is the secret of so many successful companies, they say.
Hosted by journalist and mushroom grower Donna Harper,  the event will include talks by : Remy Tancred –  founder of Sample magazine and director of the Sample Food Festival.  Janella Purcell, ex bayfm presenter – Naturopath and Author –
 Janella will provide an insight into how to prepare for being interviewed for print, radio and television.   Trudy Johnston – on Writing a Media Release to Attract Attention”.  The evening will conclude with a panel discussion involving  media experts and successful marketing executives from Northern Rivers Food businesses.
Register online at Northern Rivers Food.
The date is Monday, 12th August, 4.00pm – 7.00pm
Ramada Hotel  Cost: Members $20 Guests: $40
And the Sample Festival signs have gone up around town.  If you are visiting and love good food, think about coming back soon for the Sample Festival, a big hit with locals and visitors in the last 2 years.  Sample 2013 will be held at the Bangalow Showgrounds on Saturday 7 September from 8am to 4pm.  There will be more than 200 exhibitors.  Food tastings, cooking demos, a farmers market, kids cooking classes, music, all sorts of good stuff, showcasing the food of our region.
See www.samplensw.com   The event is free, tasting plates will be  $5 or $10, there are some separately ticketed cooking classes and a seafood feast lunch that you will need to book pretty soon if you are interested.
Finally, get yer boots out.  Old boots that is, ready for a new life in a garden.
Gardener, fabulous belly guest and blogger Diane Hart wants your boots.
This is what she says:
“I am doing a workshop for the kiddies at the upcoming Living Earth Festival
in Mullum on 1st September and I need all your old boots.  I NEED ALL I CAN
GET!  I will be talking about the ‘Wonderful World of Herbs’ and then the
children get to plant them out and have something to take home with them
(maybe your old boot!).    There are collection boxes at the Mullum Community Gardens and the the Mullum Co-op.
 I am sure it will be a fantastic day and hope to see you there.  See the
Mullum Community Garden website for details.” Diane’s very informative gardening and cooking blog is at
http://growfoodslowfood.blogspot.com.au
IN THE NEWS – by Sister Deanna
Research from the University of Minnesota has shown that ritualistic behaviours can influence the perception of flavour and consumption of foods.‭  ‬The study found that the rituals performed before eating can change the perception of the food consumed and improve taste.‭ ‬In the experiment,‭ ‬participants were placed into two groups:‭ ‬one group ate a piece of chocolate following a detailed instructions of a‭ “‬ritual‭”‬,‭ ‬the control group were asked to relax for a time and then eat the chocolate in any way they desired.‭  ‬Results showed that the participants who had performed the ritual rated the chocolate higher,‭ ‬savoured it more,‭ ‬and were willing to pay more for it than the control group.‭  ‬Further research found that‭ “‬intrinsic interest‭” –‬rituals drawing people into what they are doing accounted for the positive effects of rituals on the experience of eating.‭  ‬Belly sister Dee notes:‭ ‬this is in line with the concept of‭ “‬mindfulness‭” ‬and being fully present in what we are doing.
Recent research has found the surprising result that antioxidants may block the cardiovascular benefits of exercise in older men.‭  ‬Research published in the Journal of Physiology has found that the natural antioxidant found in red grapes called resveratrol blocks many of the cardiovascular effects of exercise including reducing blood pressure and cholesterol.‭  ‬This is a surprising result as there has been recent attention to resveratrol and is available as a dietary supplement due to it’s role in explaining the cardiovascular benefits of red wine and other foods.‭  ‬The authors were surprised to find that resveratrol decreased the positive effects of exercise on cardiovascular health particularly as these results were the opposite of animal studies.‭  ‬Clearly,‭ ‬this study has wider implications for future research,‭  ‬as Micheal Joyner from the Mayo clinic notes‭ “ ‬too often human studies focus on large scale outcomes and clinical trials and not on understanding the basic biology of how we react‭”
The world’s first in vitro meat-‭ ‬a‭ ‬250‭ ‬000‭ ‬Euro burger made from lab grown beef will be revealed and tasted this week.‭  ‬The burger,‭ ‬which took over two years to make,‭ ‬is being touted as the beginning of a new solution to the problem of population increase and a growing demand for meat products.‭  ‬The burger was created using stem cells extracted from cattle.‭  ‬The tissue is then ground up and mixed with lab grown fat to produce the lab grown burger.‭  ‬Researchers believe this‭ “‬test tube‭” ‬meat could lead to the sustainable production of low cost food without the need for livestock.‭  ‬Professor Mark Post,‭ ‬the creator of the burger notes this is a proof of principle project,‭ ‬and that more work is needed before lab grown meats are commercially available.
And finally,‭ ‬on another technology note,‭ ‬NASA has put forward money towards the creation of a‭ ‬3D pizza making printer.‭  ‬In an attempt to extend the menu for astronauts,‭ ‬NASA is funding a project aimed at creating a‭ ‬3D printer to create pizza.‭  ‬The printer will fabricate the different toppings from their component ingredients.‭  ‬A digital recipe will be used to combine powders containing proteins,‭ ‬carbs,‭ ‬and oils to create food products that have a similar taste,‭ ‬nutrition,‭ ‬and smell as the real thing.‭  ‬The ingredients will be in powder form,‭ ‬with the moisture taken out,‭ ‬and are predicted to last‭ ‬30‭ ‬years.‭  ‬It is hoped this‭ ‬3D food printing device will be ready by the end of the year‭…‬.Maybe we are not so far off‭ “‬food simulators‭” ‬featured in Star Trek after all‭…

tempeh and flavours of lebanon

Sister Michael’s in the kitchen with Mandy from Gwen Tempeh talking all
things Tempeh. What is it? How do you make it? Where can you get Mandy’s
yummy home made Tempeh? He is playing some great new Australian music and
in the second hour talking with Elaine Anthony, co-author of “The Original
Lebanese Cookbook”. So put the kettle on , get your aprons ready and settle
in to have some fun in the Belly Kitchen!
 Elaine’s book:
http://www.allenandunwin.com/default.aspx?page=94&book=9781743312919

bastille to the bush

Today on belly we are storming the Bastille and then heading to the bush for an indigenous feast.  Fortified with a large helping of socca, a favourite recipe from La Table.

 

‘Socca’ – Traditional pancake from Nice, France. And it’s gluten free!
230g Chickpea Flour
450ml Water
1 ½ tblsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil
12g Salt
2 Egg Yolk
2 Egg White
Pepper
Put all ingredients, except not the egg whites, in jug & blend until smooth. Transfer batter into a large bowl.
In a separate bowl, whisk egg whites until soft peaks
Gently fold into batter mix.
Pre-heat a non-stick frying pan, add olive oil & then pour in some batter to desired size of pancake. When small bubbles appear on top the pancake is ready to turn over. Pancake is ready when you can touch the centre & it lightly springs up.
Pre-heat oven to 100
Add caramelised onions (spread out) with goats cheese on top of pancake. Place in oven for a few minutes to warm cheese & onions.
Serve with fresh green salad leaves with a lemon & olive oil dressing.

 

La Table – BASTILLE DINNER
Saturday Evening ~ 13 July
5.30pm  pre-dinner reading by award winning writer  Camilla Chance
From 6.30pm  Leif a talented multi-instrumentalist musician
performing in a French Celtic style.
MENU
Entrée – Celeriac Veloute, Blue Cheese Custard, Pecan Crust, Pepper Cracker
Main – Beef Cheek ‘Bourguignon’ Daube, Smoked Pork,
Garlic Croutons, Winter Vegetables
Dessert – Poached Quince Tartlet, Mascarpone, Caramelised Ginger Syrup
$59 per person
Seating will be limited for these events and special dietary requirements must be requested with reservation. Bookings Essential  6684 2227
contact@latable.com.au
Vive la Revolution !

Veet’s July veg, Canada Day, flavour science & eating a book

Today sister Tess and sister D invite you to take a seat at  the belly table, as  we meet local vegetarian chef and cookbook author Veet Karen, and explore some of her favourite flavours to use in the month of July, we look into the surprising science of flavour , celebrate Canada Day with Greg Wyler and launch our cookbook review segment with a very interesting wholefood baking book.

 

[sorry about everything being squished together, we are trying to fix the issue]

VEET’S BEST IN SEASON FOR JULY

The bounty of beautiful winter vegetable dishes below are all by Veet of Veet’s Cuisine, see her website for details of her books and catering.  And her facebook page for regular suggestions on what to put on your plate.

Veet's warm cauliflower salad

Veet’s warm cauliflower salad

CAULIFLOWER PEA POACHED EGG AND GOATS CHEESE
For the first week or so of really cold weather each year I can’t even contemplate eating a salad and then the salad cravings begin again.‭  ‬Apparently as a four year old living in a hostel for migrants the only food I asked for was salad and it is still a very big and important part of my diet.‭  ‬This year after my ten day break from salad,‭ ‬the cravings began and this little salad was born.‭
1/2‭ ‬cauliflower
good quality cold pressed olive oil
200‭ ‬g shelled fresh peas
1/2‭ ‬jar of Meredith Valley goats cheese
4‭ ‬good size handfuls of organic cos or mixed lettuce
4‭ ‬organic,‭ ‬free range eggs
1‭ ‬avocado
1/2‭ ‬tsp cumin seeds cauliflower
salt
freshly cracked black pepper
dressing of your choice
Serves‭ ‬2-4
Cooking and prep time:‭
45‭ ‬minutes to‭ ‬1‭ ‬hour
Cut the cauliflower into bite size pieces,‭ ‬place in a baking tray,‭ ‬drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle a few pinches of salt over the top.‭  ‬Bake in a moderate oven for‭ ‬15‭ ‬minutes.‭  ‬Then sprinkle the cumin seeds over the cauli and cook for a further‭ ‬5‭ ‬minutes or until tender.‭  ‬Meanwhile,‭ ‬wash the lettuce,‭ ‬slice the avocado thinly and cook the peas in salted boiling water for‭ ‬5‭ ‬minutes.‭  ‬Assemble the salad in individual bowls in the following order-‭ ‬lettuce,‭ ‬avocado,‭ ‬cauliflower,‭ ‬peas and goats cheese.‭  ‬Poach the eggs to your liking and place on the top of the salad.
Pour over your favourite dressing.‭  ‬See page‭ ‬37‭ ‬for options or squeeze on some fresh lime juice and drizzle the oil from the goats cheese.‭ ‬Yum,‭ ‬I want to go and make it now‭!
For a‭ ‬vegan option omit the eggs and cheese and add some fried or oven baked tempeh.
Mak and Veet cauliflower soup

Mak and Veet cauliflower soup

MAK AND VEET CAULIFLOWER SOUP
I love blended soups and my partner loves soups that are chunky and have lots of different flavours.  This soup I created the other day to please us both.  It worked fabulously.
1 cauliflower, cut up small including the nut
2 cloves garlic, minced (optional)
2 tbsp butter or olive oil
1 tsp cumin
1 tsp organic herb salt
salt and pepper to taste
filtered water to just cover the cauliflower
4 tbsp yoghurt (optional)
4 people
Heat the butter or oil in a saucepan.  Add the minced garlic, cauliflower, cumin and herb salt and sauté for 5 minutes.  Add the water and bring to the boil.  Turn the heat down and simmer for 15 minutes or until the cauliflower has started to break down.  Turn off the heat and serve into individual bowls with a tbsp of yoghurt in each, if using.
PALAK PANEER HOME STYLE WITH SILVERBEET
This Palak Paneer is similar to the palak paneer you will find in Indian homes and not in restaurants.‭  ‬As it is not a blended palak,‭ ‬you blanch the silverbeet to retain the lovely green colour and as it isn‭’‬t overcooked the flavour is hands down better this way.
Veet's home style palak paneer

Veet’s home style palak paneer

2‭ ‬bunches of silverbeet‭
250‭ ‬g paneer cut into cubes
2‭ ‬onions finely diced
2‭ ‬tsp finely grated ginger
2‭ ‬cloves garlic minced
2‭ ‬tomatoes finely diced‭ (‬these are optional‭ ‬– they are not traditionally used but I like the flavour they add‭)
1‭ ‬tsp cumin seeds
2‭ ‬tsp‭  ‬ground coriander
‭½‬ tsp garam masala
2‭ ‬chillies finely chopped
3‭ ‬tbsp cold pressed olive oil
1‭ ‬tsp salt and to taste
Serves:‭ ‬4‭ ‬if the only curry or‭ ‬6‭ ‬to‭ ‬8‭ ‬if eating with other curries
Preparation and cooking time:‭ ‬35‭ ‬to‭ ‬45‭ ‬minutes
Wash the silverbeet really well and blanch it for‭ ‬3‭ ‬to‭ ‬5‭ ‬minutes in a small amount of boiling water.‭   ‬Remove it from the water and let drain.‭  ‬In a wok slightly heat‭  ‬2‭ ‬tbsp of the oil and add the cumin seeds,‭ ‬chili,‭ ‬garlic,‭ ‬ginger and onion.‭  ‬Fry until the onion is translucent.‭  ‬Add the‭ ‬tomato,‭ ‬1‭ ‬tsp salt,‭ ‬coriander and garam masala and cook for a few minutes.‭  ‬Next cut the blanched silverbeet very finely and add to the wok.‭
Cover and cook for‭ ‬5‭ ‬minutes then turn off the heat.‭  ‬In a frying pan fry the paneer in the remaining oil.‭ ‬You only need to brown two of the sides of the paneer.‭  ‬Drain the cooked paneer on kitchen paper.‭   ‬Finally Add the paneer to the silverbeet,‭ ‬it should be still warm but if you would like it h otter just heat up for‭ ‬5‭ ‬minutes or so.‭  ‬Serve with brown rice or millet.
WATERCRESS AND CARROT SOUP WITH COCONUT AND LEMON
I do prefer watercress raw but the flavour it creates in this soup is quite‭ ‬sensational.‭  ‬If you would like to add more protein to this soup you can add‭ ‬1‭ ‬cup of washed red split lentils at the same time as you add the water.
500g carrots finely diced
1‭ ‬onion finely diced
2‭ ‬cloves garlic minced
4‭ ‬tsp organic herb salt‭ (‬or to your liking‭)
juice of‭ ‬1‭ ‬lemon‭
400ml coconut milk
1‭ ‬bunch coriander
1‭ ‬or‭ ‬2‭ ‬chilies,‭
1‭ ‬bunch watercress‭
1‭ ‬cup roughly chopped almonds
Add a small amount of‭ ‬cold pressed‭ ‬olive oil to‭ ‬a frying‭ ‬pan and fry the carrot,‭ ‬onion,‭ ‬almonds and garlic for a few minutes,‭ ‬add enough water to just cover the carrots etc-‭ ‬bring to the boil and then simmer for‭ ‬10-15‭ ‬minutes or until carrots are tender,‭ ‬roughly chop watercress and coriander and add to the soup,‭ ‬also add the coconut milk,‭ ‬lemon and chilli,‭ ‬there is your soup.‭  ‬However‭ ‬if you like blended soups you can blend it‭ ‬before you put the coriander and watercress in.‭  ‬Use the coriander then as the garnish.
NEW BRIGHTON MARKET SALAD
1 bunch Denise Latham’s watercress
1 handful of pea sprouts
1 handful of sunflower sprouts
1 handful of radish sprouts
8 – 10 strawberries sliced finely
2 mandarins peeled and sliced finely
juice of ½ lime or 1 lime – up to you
a good splash of Summerland olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup of roughly chopped macadamia nuts
Mix everything together and serve straight away.
All above recipes courtesy of Veet’s Cuisine
New Brighton Market salad

New Brighton Market salad

 

 

THE BELLY BOOK REVIEW – EATING A BOOK NO. 1 – by Sister Deanna

 

Wholefood Baking by Jude Blereau, Murdoch Books 2013

 

Author Jude Blereau has amassed a tremendous effort in putting together a book highlighting the use of wholefood ingredients to achieve a wide variety of delicious recipes.  The first 60 pages of the book cover in detail baking techniques, tools, and ingredients and provide useful instructions on replacing butter, milk, yogurt, buttermilk and eggs.  In the absence of “traditional” baking ingredients, she provides tips on food combining to address issues of raising, binding, and the addition of fats.

Jude’s recipes feature wholemeal and semi-refined flours and semi-refined sweeteners.   Most recipes are wheat free, with a variety of gluten free options, and many are also egg and dairy free.  Many recipes have a variety of options according to the reader’s preference, and wheat-free recipes often have dairy and egg-free alterations.  Some recipes include butter and milk, however most recipes can be made dairy free using fat alternatives such as coconut milk, coconut oil, macadamia oil, etc., and dairy alternatives such as rice and almond milk.  Apple cider vinegar features heavily throughout the book in the egg-free recipes, to interact with leavening agents (baking powder/soda) and ensure a good rise.  Sweetness is achieved through the use of rapadura sugar, maple syrup, and rice syrup.

And now for the taste.  In order to get a good cross section of recipes, I sampled at least one from each section of the book.  All managed to have a good balance of flavours with just the right amount of sweet.  The sweet, combined with the wholemeal flours, and addition of fruit and nuts in many recipes made me feel like I was doing something good for my body, rather than indulging on empty refined sugars and fats.  In the main, I was trying to focus on recipes that were egg and dairy free to see just how adaptable they are to substitutions.  I was pleasantly surprised.  As Jude herself notes however, it is not possible for any egg substitute to provide the “moisture, richness, binding, leavening and structure” (pg. 34) of eggs.  Comments from the “tasting team” (family and work colleagues) were never about the taste, as each recipe was received enthusiastically, though some did comment on the nature of the crumb, and the density of some recipes.  As Jude notes in her book, many of the recipes are best eaten warm, on the day made.  Trying all recipes both on the day I made them, and the following proved this to be true for many of the cake, muffin, and scone recipes, which were a bit dry (though still tasty) the next day.

Of note, two recipes in particular fooled the taste team, who could not believe they were “free” of so many ingredients: 1) Dairy-free and egg-free chocolate cupcakes (which were also wheat free) with creamy chocolate and coconut fudge icing and 2) Dark chocolate and coconut ganache tart (dairy free, egg free and wheat free) .  The chocolate tart is worth a special mention, as while a lot of the recipes in the book are a tad complex (though Jude provides very thorough instructions for each recipe) the filling in the chocolate tart has got to be the easiest and one I have ever made and very tasty as well.  This last statement is saying a lot, as I love my eggs and cream!  An honourable mention goes to the Date and Pecan Streusel Cake.  Deliciously nutty, fruity, and caramelly when served warm, and full of wholesome ingredients.  The wholesome nature of this cake lends itself well to a variety of occasions, and Jude suggests perhaps even serving it for breakfast on occasion, a comment echoed by the taste team.

The only real downfall of the book is the high cost of many of the ingredients that feature in the recipes.  I actually had to stop tasting as my wallet couldn’t handle it.  That is not a criticism of the book per se, more a sad reflection on our society that whole foods remain so expensive.  While not suitable for the family on a budget, if you have the time and passion to delve into Wholefood Baking, there is a wealth of wholesome, delicious recipes to be explored.

Lani, Star Wars to Kohinoor & Jeni’s Bali & 2013 Byron writers festival

Today on belly we met Lani Kennedy, one of our wonderful locals who has cooked in some very interesting places since, as she says ‘lying her way into the food industry’, from some wonderful Sydney inner city restaurants & the eastern Suburbs party set, to the green hills behind Mullumbimby, even on the sets of some of the biggest movies ever shot in Australia, like Moulin Rouge and Star Wars.  She is probably the only woman in Australia who can do the can can while whipping up a mayonnaise with a light sabre.   And she saw Keanu Reeves in the closet with her own eyes (he was hiding from his fitness trainer at the time, as he ate a pancake that was definitely not allowed on his diet.  I’m sure quite a few listeners of both sexes would have felt a little hot and bothered as Lani told her story of Keanu on his knees, begging for pancakes).
Although she remembers fondly the variety and sky’s the limit catering budgets on blockbuster movie sets, these days Lani is very happy putting on the occasional friendly event in Upper Main Arm with her friend Cass.
“I now cook for fun, here and there, and love taking food to parties, and eat well at home !! I mainly eat vego, but do eat seafood as well, and am big with legumes and food from all corners of the globe”.
Get in touch with her at sweetqueen27@gmail.com
The next Social at the Kohinoor Hall is Friday June 28.  All belly listeners are invited to get in touch with Lani and Cass if interested in going along.
Lani says : “myself and a friend Cass, cook up food made with love and integrity, to the crowd. It is a relaxed night of locals or non-locals, catching up, and keeping the hall alive…most people think nights at Kohinoor are full of ferals, lentils and dogs on bits of string…., in fact it’s a mixed bunch of “ex-Aquarius” types who now have money, young 30 something families, single trendies, and some barefoot ferals who don’t have money for food, so we trade with them washing dishes for us”
LANI’S RAS EL HANOUT RECIPE
I really enjoy making my own curry powders, and keeping them in a jar for a multitude of uses. Curries, soups, mix w/ yogurt for a fish marinade, or in couscous, or lentil salads.
This is a Moroccan mix called “Ras El Hanout”, which translates to “Head of the Shop”, meaning,“No 1 spice mix” !!
1 tbs coriander seeds- toasted
1 tbs cumin seeds- toasted
2 tbs cardamom pods
1 tsp nutmeg
3 star anise
1 tbs cinnamon ( or 2 sticks)
1 tbs dry ginger powder
1 tbs peppercorns
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp allspice
5 dried bay leaves
Grind all of the above (except bay leaves), in a mortar & pestle or spice grinder.Place the leaves in later, and use as needed.
***Place in a clean jar and use whenever the fancy takes you !!
*** good for a gift too, just add a fancy label
CROISSANT & RICOTTA PUDDING RECIPE
Here’s a luscious dessert I make at Kohinoor Hall social nights, from time to time.
It is always extremely popular, and the combination of flavours and textures, is sublime !!
200ml milk
200ml pouring cream
1 vanilla bean, split & scraped
120gm caster sugar
3 eggs
200g ricotta
20ml Frangelico liqueur
½ cup of Nutella spread
3,one-day old croissants
50gm chocolate pieces
*Oven 180C fan-forced, 200C conventional
**Combine milk, cream & vanilla bean in saucepan. Bring to the boil, then reduce heat to simmer for 5 mins.
**Strain into a bowl, then whisk sugar and eggs until combined.
Add Frangelico and hot milk mixture and whisk again.
**Meanwhile slice croissants lengthways into slices, and spread lightly with Nuttella. Dip slices into egg custard. Alternate slices and ricotta slices in the base of a 40cm x 15cm baking dish. Scatter with choc pieces, and pour over remaining custard.
**Bake for 20-30 mins, or until golden and puffed. Serve with cream or ice-cream (yummo, I promise)
JENI CAFFIN – BALI, BARBARA’S FOOD WRITING WORKSHOP, & THE FESTIVAL FOOD EVENTS
Jeni Caffin, Byron Bay Writers Festival director, visited belly to tell us what food events and food writers are turning up this year.  She also shared some of her memories of the wonderful food in Bali, where she ran the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival.  Six months after leaving Bali, she  desperately misses the food.
“onde onde, proper tempeh, vegie nasi campur, jogja gudeg, bakwan jagung.”
And if you see her rushing around looking undernourished at the festival, go and find her a corn fritter.
“I am totally obsessed with corn at the moment. White corn I nibble straight
off the cob, raw, but my favourite treat at present is a corn fritter.”
We had a quick chat about Barbara Sweeney’s food writing workshop, on this Saturday.  This is now sold out, although Jeni kindly made an extra place available for a bayfm subscriber (congratulations Meredith), but do contact the Northern Rivers Writers Centre if you want to register your interest in a future workshop on this topic.
After years of chasing her, author Kerry Greenwood is coming to the festival, and will be on various panels all weekend.  Her most famous character is Phryne Fisher, where everything about Melbourne in the Twenties is faithfully recreated, including the food and luscious cocktails.  But as we mentioned on previous shows, she also has a series featuring a character who is a baker/sleuth in modern day Melbourne, Corinna Chapman.  I encourage you to check out both these series, they are light but very well written, and do cover a lot of social issues in a very digestible way, they are definitely not just froth.
Lucio Galletto, a chef, restaurateur, art lover and cookbook author, originally from the beautiful Italian region of Liguria (the Italian Riviera), owner of Sydney institution Lucio’s, will also be on a festival panel and at a food event.
This is an extract of information on the Byron Bay Writers Festival site, go there for more and to book.
AN ORDINARY LIFE: AUSTRALIAN STORIES LITERARY LUNCH
Steve Bisley & Denise Scott in conversation with Jane Caro
Steve Bisley is an Australian actor, lauded for his work in Mad Max, Police Rescue, Water rats and Halifax fp. Denise Scott is a comedian, radio personality and actor.
Byron Beach Cafe Clarke’s Beach, Lawson Street, Byron Bay
12.00pm – 3.00pm (Friday 2 August) $95
YOU’VE BEEN IN MY MIND
Tipples & tapas Dave Graney in conversation with Lucky Oceans
Dave Graney is a rock musician and singer-songwriter  Lucky Oceans, legendary pedal steel guitarist and presenter of Radio National’s The Planet.
The Pass Cafe, Brooke Drive, Byron Bay
6pm – 8pm (Friday 2 August) $30.00
THE FUTURE OF TRUTH: THE PUBLIC’S RIGHT TO KNOW
Literary dinner MJ Akbar and Charles Lewis in conversation with Christopher Warren
Two of the world’s most respected veteran journalists in conversation with the CEO of the Walkley Foundation for Excellence in Journalism. MJ Akbar joins us from India, where he has recently resigned from the post of Editorial Director of India Today. Charles Lewis is an investigative journalist based in Washington DC and founder of The Centre for Public Integrity.
Fishheads Restaurant, Jonson Street at Main Beach, Byron Bay
7pm – 10pm (Friday 2 August) $95
THE ART OF FOOD: WHEN PALATE MEETS PALETTE
Literary lunch – Lucio and Sally Galletto in conversation with ABC broadcaster Simon Marnie
Lucio’s Italian Restaurant in the Sydney suburb of Paddington was established in 1983 and enjoys a remarkable reputation for exceptional Italian food and magnificent Australian art. “Food and art for me is like the air that I breathe,” says Lucio Galletto OAM. “The combination of great food, great service and great art on the walls is, in my view, one of the best dining experiences you can imagine.” Over a lunch created by The Byron at Byron’s Head Chef Gavin Hughes, inspired by Lucio’s sumptuous book The art of pasta.
The Restaurant, Byron at Byron Resort & Spa Broken Head Road, Byron Bay
12pm – 3pm (Sunday 4 August) $100
BELLY BULLETIN
The Earth Policy Institute, a US environmental think tank, has reported that the world production of farmed fish has overtaken the production of beef for the first time in modern history.  This happened at the end of 2011, and the gap widened in 2012, with farmed fish at 66 million tons and beef at 63 million.  This year farmed fish may also overtake wild caught fish for the first time.  Beef and wild fish both boomed from 1950 to the 1980s, but their production has slowed down as we basically run out of fish in the seas and places to put cows.  The cost of feed has also been rising, and it takes a lot more feed to produce beef per kilo than other animals.  However, while some types of seafood farming are sustainable, carnivorous species like salmon and prawns are typically fed 2 kilos of wild caught fish for every kilo of weight.  The Earth Policy Institute recommends a greater focus on small scale inland aquaculture, with no external inputs or outputs, and as usual, that we should all eat less animal foods.  In the United States the amount of meat in peoples’ diets has been falling since 2004,  consumption of beef per person has dropped by more than 13 percent, chicken by 5 percent, fish  by just 2 percent.  Go to www.earth-policy.org for the full article.
Choice reports that Australia’s food and health ministers finally approved a star rating system for packaged foods.  Companies now have a year to voluntarily implement the system, otherwise it will be made mandatory.  The Australian Food and Grocery Council is still attempting to water down the new system, although it is already a compromise.  Reports originally recommended a traffic light system as being easier for consumers to understand.
We should now see in stores food  with at the front of the packaging  a rating from half to 5 stars, telling us how healthy the food is – the more stars the better.  And information on sodium i.e. salt content, saturated fat, sugars and kilojoules. The information will sit underneath the star rating and be presented either per 100g/mL of the product, or per pack where the product is designed to be consumed in one go.
Coles is in the news again as the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission assesses claims that the bread it sells in supermarkets as “baked today, sold today”, was actually baked as far as Ireland, or in other places in Australia, frozen, delivered and reheated in store.  Those of us who don’t have the time or desire to cook for dinner parties or our families, can now claim confidently that every mouthful came from our own kitchen.  After all, even the dishes that don’t need heating probably spent a bit of time in your fridge.
What is amazing is that our food production system is so skewed that it is cheaper for a large company to import frozen bread from Ireland, than to make it on the spot.
And finally, local herdsharers and raw milk lovers, take heart from a recent court win in the US state of Wisconsin.  A farmer who set up the ‘Moo-shine club’ were prosecuted for the sale of raw milk.  They are members of a herdshare – collectives which share ownership of a herd of cows. Farmers sell shares in their livestock, and shareholders receive raw milk in exchange for a fee used to help maintain the cows.  Vernon Hershberger, who founded the club, was found not guilty of selling without a licence.  Fans paraded outside the courthouse with placards stating “my milk, my body, my choice.
Love and chocolate covered writers (or actors, if you prefer),
Sister T