Tag Archives: mussels

poetry, cabbages & cream

A big thank you to local poet Kathryn Boorman for coming into the belly kitchen today and sharing stories of living and travelling in Vietnam and Cambodia, and especially for reading her beautiful poetry.

The local poets’ group aint called Dangerously Poetic in jest – have a look at the powerful piece below – it starts with fried chicken, and ends with painful words and memories that (yet again) had Kathryn in tears when she read them.

 

Chuc Mung Nam Moi  – Happy New Year 2008

by Kathryn Boorman ©

 

Phung takes me to her family restaurant.
In the kitchen there’s a cage
crammed with scrawny chickens –
beside a bucket of feathery hot water.
For Tet, the main course is grilled chicken
squashed flat on the plate, wings in full flap
head back, beak open in a silent scream.

Across my mind, Kim Phuc runs screaming,
her arms like wings
Trang Bang in 1972
napalm has burnt off her clothes.

In Ho Chi Minh City
at the American war crimes museum,
her photo screamed from the wall.
A man with no hands offered me her book
there on the cover she ran to the camera
he took my two hundred thousand Dong
with his wrist stumps.

In 1972, we marched in protest
then in our lounge rooms, watched
stricken Vietnamese faces
in black and white-
lit up a joint-
while Kim Phuc’s skin
fell from her flesh.

Phung smiles, serves me chicken and rice.
I stare at the blind eyes above the mute beak
and bite into a wing.
It is too tough
it is
too tough.

© Kathryn Boorman 2009

[please do not use without Kathryn’s permission]

 

Kathryn will soon lead a tour group to meet the friends she has made in Vietnam and Cambodia.

For more information:

www.womens-holidays.com bushwisewomen@gmail.com

Kathryn will also be teaching creative writing classes through Dangerously Poetic kathrynboorman@gmail.com

www.dangerouslypoetic.com is the poetry group website, and the next event is the launch of Bev Sweeney’s poetry book, Pirouettes and Prayer. Friday 19th Sept 7pm St Martins hall, Stuart St, Mullumbimby You do not need to be a poetry writer to attend, just a poetry lover.

 

 

IN SEASON AUGUST

 

Lots of citrus and cabbage family members of all kinds at this time of year, and also maybe a time when we can indulge in a little cream, or the richness of macadamias.  After all,  in the depth of winter the temperature even drops below 15C!  (Just put that in to torture people who have to deal with seriously cold weather for months on end – but when you are used to the heat, even our mild winters can make us run to a hot filling dish).

 

This is an experiment and a compromise, trying to get the freshness of salad but not the full raw hit that can be a bit much in winter.  I love coleslaw, but seldom make it.  It is of course  great as a side dish, in sandwiches, keeps well, just as good the next day.  I’ve since made a version first cured and then dressed in a mustard/lemon vinaigrette, that one is best cured longer with less salt and sugar, as it doesn’t have the lovely richness of macadamias to balance the salt.

I had macadamias & lemons, so this is a

 

VEGAN MACADAMIA COLESLAW-ISH SALAD – A BELLY LAB RECIPE BY SISTER TESS

serves 4-6

shred half a white or savoy cabbage (probably red is fine too)
cure in a mix of sugar, salt and lemon juice (equal quantities, about 1 tbs each for half a cabbage, or a bit more),

leave for at least 30 minutes, massaging/mixing occasionally
squeeze, drain, keep a bit of liquid in case you want to add to salad

(opt) do the same  cure in a separate bowl with some thinly sliced onion

meantime make a food processor dressing of macadamias, olive or macadamia oil, mustard, lemon juice

roughly tear a few herbs, dill is great

mix, check for taste, maybe add lemon or curing liquid

 

 TEETOTAL MOULES A LA CREME – LEMONY CREAMY MUSSELS – A belly lab recipe by Sister Tess

 

This one was born from a hankering for moules a la creme, a French classic, simple mussels in a cream and herb sauce.  All the recipes call for white wine, which I just don’t drink much in winter.  And I had some lovely local creme fraiche, so I used that instead of cream.  Mussels are one of the healthiest, most sustainable types of seafood you can eat.

1 Kg mussels

2-3 tbs creme fraiche or to taste

untreated lemons – 1 or 2 depending on size – juice and zest

butter

1/2 roughly chopped onion or 2 shallots

roughly chopped herbs eg parsley or chervil

 

open mussels in own juice, remove and filter liquid.

In the same pot, soften onion in butter, add lemon juice

Add mussels, some cooking water if you want more liquid, lemon zest, mix just long enough to reheat

add herbs, creme fraiche and pepper

eat with lots of good bread

 

love and chocolate covered cabbages,

Sister T

 

sunshine & soup

Well it just sounds good doesn’t it, sunshine and soup.  And that’s what we had on the first belly of August, with a slightly worn out (post Byron Bay Writers Festival)  Sister T and the wonderful novelist Charlotte Wood in the belly kitchen, talking food writing and a lovely sunny inspiring festival.  We were joined for in season goodness by Miss August, Alison Drover, “wrapped up like a strudel” (many layers).  And yes we talked soup, because the nights are still cold enough to enjoy, in Charlotte’s words, the solace of soup.

 

Charlotte Wood is the author of several beautiful novels, The Submerged Cathedral, Pieces of a Girl, The Children, & Animal People, & has edited the collection of stories Brothers & Sisters. She is now working on her next novel, but her last book is a collection of essays on food and cooking, and simple recipes, called “Love and Hunger – thoughts on the gift of food”. She has just been a guest on several panels at the 2012 Byron Bay Writers Festival. She was the special guest with the wonderful Gail Jones last Saturday in Byron at a dinner entitled ‘Australian literary treasures’.

 

 

Charlotte Wood graciously allowing Sister T to point a phone at her, the morning after a very busy Byron bay Writers Festival

 

SPICY MUSSEL BISQUE RECIPE – by Charlotte Wood

 

from “Love & Hunger : Thoughts on the gift of food”, Allen & Unwin 2012

 

Adapted from Jared Ingersoll’s crab bisque recipe.

 

Serves 4

 

1 teaspoon each cumin, caraway and coriander seeds

1/4 teaspoon fenugreek seeds

150 ml vegetable oil

1 & 1/2 large red capsicums, seeded and chopped

4 cloves garlic, squashed

2 ripe tomatoes, chopped

1 stick celery, roughly chopped (It may be worth peeling this first if you can be bothered

1 medium fennel bulb, roughly chopped

1 red onion, chopped

1/3 cup soft brown sugar

Pinch chilli flakes

Salt and pepper

1.5 kg black (or ‘blue’) mussels

1 large glass white wine

600 ml chicken stock ( I use homemade – if you use packaged, omit seasoning the soup until the last minute, if necessary)

1/2 bunch coriander, leaves and stem separated

Crusty bread, to serve

Optional : 2 tablespoons harissa – I love Yalla harissa and keep a pot of it in the freezer for digging into it to add extra kick to all kinds of dishes. If you don’t want this or can’t find it, you could perhaps double the spice mix and chilli at the beginning for some extra kick.

 

1. Preheat oven to 180 C.

2. Toast the spices in a dry frying pan until fragrant, then grind in a mortar and pestle or spice grinder.

3. Heat a deep roasting tin in the oven or on the stove top and, when hot, add the oil and all the vegetables except coriander leaves.

4. Sprinkle the spices over the vegetables with the sugar, chilli flakes and seasoning, and mix well. Roast in a moderate oven for about 1 hour.

5. Meanwhile, scrub and de-beard the mussels, then place in a covered pan with a big glass of white wine and simmer over a medium heat for about 10 minutes, or until the mussels are opened. Remove them from the pan to cool, reserving the cooking liquid. When the shells are cool enough to handle, remove the meat from the shells and set aside.

6. When the vegetables are soft, smell good and are a little coloured, remove from oven. Transfer the vegetables and the mussel meat into the large bowl of a food processor and puree until smooth – or keep it coarse if you prefer a more rustic texture.

7. In a sizable pot add the stock to the mussel cooking liquid, then add the puree and simmer gently for about 15 minutes.

8. Add the chopped coriander leaves and harissa if using, stir to combine, and serve with crusty bread.

 

PHARMACY IN A BOWL SOUP RECIPE – by Charlotte Wood

 

from “Love & Hunger : Thoughts on the gift of food”, Allen & Unwin 2012

 

Serves 8

 

Feed this to anyone who has a cold – they will feel better instantly.

 

Olive oil

5 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 brown onion, finely chopped

2 small red chillies, finely chopped

1 stick celery, finely chopped

1 leek, finely chopped

1/4 white cabbage, finely chopped

1 red capsicum, roughly chopped

3 carrots, roughly chopped

3 litres chicken or vegetable stock

1 head broccoli, roughly chopped

1 x 400g. can tomatoes

1 cup Puy lentils

Salt and pepper

Grated parmesan, to serve

 

1. Saute’ the garlic, onion, chilli, celery, leek, cabbage, capsicum and carrots in batches in the oil until well browned.

2. Put the chicken stock in a big pot on the stove and bring to the boil, tossing in all the sauteed ingredients.

3. Add broccoli and tomatoes, and simmer until all vegetables are tender.

4. Reserving stock, remove vegetables with a slotted spoon and puree in a food processor or blender until smooth (or roughly blended, depending on how rustic you like your texture).

5. Return pureed vegetables to stock and add lentils. Simmer for 15-20 minutes or until lentils are tender (more if you want them falling apart). Season well with salt and pepper.

6. Serve with a sprinkle of parmesan.