Lauraine’s blog
16 October 2012
The picture tells a story. 39000 Yen for 6-7 wild matsutake mushrooms equates to about $600. Ouch. These are the first of the season and I spotted them in the Nishiki market in Kyoto.
We'd had some as part of a kaiseki meal, served in a clear broth the night before. The soup was wildly savoury and delicate at the same time with a touch of lime to push the flavours to the forefront. Yum. Perfect seasonal eating in Japan...that’s what food is all about here.
It was a superb meal, and at the conclusion, after the rice course had been served, I presented my card to chef Ikeda of the Kyokabutoya restaurant. On the reverse side of my card I have a photo of my duck, beetroot and honeyed walnut salad. The chef became extremely animated.
It seems he loves duck more than anything and so even though we were 'complete' as they say when describing that very satisfied feeling, he produced a magnificent vacuum packed duck breast from the refrigerator. It was about twice as large as any I have seen in New Zealand, and amazingly meaty.
He cut three neat slices from it, fired up the grill again and quickly seared it for us. He then cut each slice into two, served with a little sweet sauce and we were in heaven. I never believed a business card could have such effect!
29 September 2012
I have just put some artichoke hearts on to poach. I bought them at the Matakana farmers’market this morning and hopefully my purchase is going to get 11 year old Remo a step closer to accompanying his parents to Viet Nam. He’s growing vegies at home to sell. These artichokes are going to be served to some visitors tonight as a simple entrée. I intend to serve them with vinaigrette, some toasted pine nuts and a few herbs. That’s all.
I am encouraged into such simplicity by a ‘chef’s dinner’ I ate at Ima Cuisine in Fort St, Auckland. Owner and chef Yael Shochat had just returned from Israel, and created a six course menu of utter simplicity. It was pure inspiration for me. From the first bite to the last the emphasis was not on any smart new tricks, just new ideas and combinations – minimalism springs to mind, and yet I know lots of thought and careful preparation had gone into our dinner.
We started with a single perfect strawberry. Yael had tossed it in balsamic and herbs, it was rolled in crushed sesame seeds. That got our taste buds working. It’s spring of course, so next up, asparagus. Everyone should be serving asparagus whenever they can now it‘s finally in abundance. We were served just two spears each (see what I mean about minimalist?) They were magnificent, wrapped in warqua pastry and served with fresh green basil oil. Warqua pastry is that paper thin, crunchy pastry that’s also used in making another middle eastern specialty, brik. Yael’s was a triumph.
Passionfruit and citrus ceviche came after that. Delightfully refreshing flavours with tiny strips of Hapuku, although the little hints of chilli almost but not quite, overpowered the delicacy of the dish. Yael showed me her new gadget acquired in Israel, a carrot-hollower-outerer (if you’d asked me I might have said it was an abortion instrument) and so had stuffed her spring carrots with something she called Arab beef. It was presented on a root vegetable soil as is the current trend, but her ‘soil’ was quite identifiable with lovely hazelnuts crushed to create added texture. Delicious and so unusual.
Not enough use is made of terakihi in restaurants and a lovely piece of fish, still sporting its skin, was pan-fried perfectly, sitting on a dollop of perfect potato puree with rich reduced shellfish saffron sauce and a garnish of slithers of the sweetest young snowpeas. We loved that course.
One lamb cutlet doesn’t sound much, but this one, coated in herbs and spices and sitting on a generous bed of rice, lentils, pinenuts, almonds and pistachios, and complemented by a totally delicious Moroccan beetroot salad, was a perfect size at that stage of the evening. We stripped the bone clean, as we should.
The final note, dessert, was quite dreamy. I am not a fan usually of halva but the halva parfait with a nugget of pistachio baklava and a round scoop of brilliant orange mandarin sorbet had me almost licking my plate. What a treat the evening was. $70 for that menu! And I forgot to say, we were thrilled to be looked after by Dominique from Gather & Hunt. How good is that?
Ima Cuisine, 57 Fort St, Auckland City, T 09 300 7252
19 September 2012
I'm trying so hard to meet deadlines. There's a ton of work to be done and my editor at Random House should probably chain me to my desk.
Today I could not resist getting into my kitchen to deal with some lovely thin-skinned lemons a good friend had sent home for me. So now there's an enormous jar of preserved lemons sitting in the kitchen and we will have to wait a whole month before we can try them.
Here's the recipe, adjusted from Greg Malouf's lovely book, Moorish.
- 1.5kg thin skinned lemons
- 350g sea salt
- 1 tbsp lightly crushed coriander seeds
- 2 cinnamon sticks
- 2 bay leaves
- 2 tbsps honey
- 250mls lemon juice
- 750mls warm water
Wash and dry the lemons. Cut them lengthways into quarters, from the point of the lemon to three-quarters way down. Leave them joined together at the base.
Stuff the centre of each lemon with a heaped teaspoon of salt. Arrange them neatly in a 2 litre jar, sprinkling each layer with more salt and crushed coriander seed as you go. Stuff the cinnamon sticks and bay leaves into the jar.
Mix the honey and lemon juice with the warm water until the honey dissolves. Pour into the jar so the lemons are completely covered. Screw the lid on and out the jar into a large pot on top of a piece of cardboard (this stops the jar vibrating.) Pour in enough hot water to come half way up the jar and bring it to the boil slowly. Boil for six minutes, then lift the jar out and store in a dry cool place for at least a month before opening. Once opened, keep in the refrigerator.
31 August 2012
Three chefs; three courses; three wines. A perfectly balanced meal, just as you’d expect when the heroes of the city’s premier restaurant strip get together to give Auckland a ‘Taste of Federal Street.’
Sky City makes some audacious moves and populating their three lead restaurants with internationally recognised stars, at Depot, Al Brown (Wellywood), The Grill’s Sean Connolly (Sydney) and dine by Peter Gordon (London but mostly sleeping on AirNZ) has been an unqualified success.
Al kicked off our dinner and introducing his dish, showed us you can take the boy out of Wellington but you can’t take Wellington out of the boy. He was 'Apprehensive About Auckland', but is pretty relaxed here now. So much so that he called the current restaurant promotion ‘Auckland on a Plate’ rather than ‘Auckland Restaurant Month’. Well, yes, maybe. That’s what we should be doing here anyway; emulating the capital city’s capital food event, but right now it’s limited to the CBD.
Anyway on with the food. Taking inspiration from the oyster pan roasts he loves in New York’s Grand Central Station Oyster Bar, Al Brown dished us up an oyster and fennel stew topped with a tangle of fennel and apple. I have been to GCSOB and know that Al’s was so, so much better and more modern than anything served there in New York. The Tio Points were lightly poached, the scampi was ever so sweet and fresh and the sauce divine. I hope this dish makes it onto the menu at Depot soon.
Sean Connolly amazed me. Twelve hours earlier he’d been cooking Alpine Merino lamb at Lake Hawea Station out of Wanaka while I’d watched and now here he was, neat and trim in his whites dishing up a melt in the mouth wagyu fillet steak with a tender potato fondant and cress. The posh version of steak and chip he called it, and it was top notch fare.
Peter Gordon is always so lovely. Nothing about him or his food, he just stood there singing the praises of all the staff who had helped with the evening. We should thank him for no-one has done as much for NZ food internationally. His dessert tasting plate was a study in contrasts. A bowl of his signature coconut tapioca with mango and passion fruit and avocado yuzu sorbet – I could eat that every night. Beside that a peanut butter parfait with salted caramel, chocolate delice and hazelnut parfait and a mystery sauce. Three ingredients only – sugar, cream and soy sauce. Now that’s fusion!
A very smart evening in Dine and what a nice touch, the menu signed thoughtfully for every guest. Mine’s hanging on my wall already.
Depot, The Grill, & dine by peter gordon. All on Federal Street, Auckland City.
23 August 2012
What a privilege! Last night I ate at The Grove. Monica Galetti of Le Gavroche restaurant was here to cook in ‘Auckland Restaurant Month in the Big Little City.
It was a flawless performance; superb food that show off the food and style of the London three-Michelin-starred restaurant owned by the Roux family, a lovely bevy of wines to match, and service that didn’t miss a beat by Michael Dearth and his skilled front-of-house team.
Many of Auckland’s restaurant supremos turned out which indicates the respect this Samoan lass, a former young star apprentice in Wellington, has earned within the industry. And the food didn’t disappoint.
The first course, a duck consommé with a tiny horseradish custard, was sublime. (I wish I could make my duck that tender.) The next course was a show stopper. A ragout of poached oysters with fresh truffles sat in a sauce so good I actually licked my plate clean – as did a few others around me. This wondrous sauce was a variant on beurre blanc, albeit made with pigs trotters and perfumed with New Zealand’s finest seasonal black truffles. I could have happily waltzed home at that point and been very satisfied.
But there was more in store. Amazing octopus with a broth of barley and dominated by saffron appeared, perfect with Trinity Hill Chardonnay ’10. The Grove’s staff really worked overtime on those first three courses. Each required attention at the table. The consommé was poured hot at the table, and then there was a lot of grating to be done. Fresh truffle over the oysters and fresh lime over the octopus - very efficient and rather grand, this makes for great food theatre.
The lamb course was oh-so-pretty - a tiny lamb double cutlet with black garlic, tiny nuggets of fennel and an olive sauce. I loved the master touch of a garnish of pea shoots and the tiniest nasturtium leaves I’ve ever seen. Then a blue Leagram cheese pannacotta with pear balsamic. I must confess I’m not a fan of composed cheese courses; they always seem like they’re laboured, rich and should belong in old-fashioned restaurants, but this was the exception. Soft and creamy, it was the perfect play on the wonderful combination of pear and blue cheese, and piquantly matched to Mt Difficulty Pinot Noir.
To finish, a classic from Le Gavroche, palet au chocolate amer. Melt-in-the-mouth bitter chocolate mousse. Divine stuff to end a divine and seamless evening. It cannot be easy to step outside the usual comfort zone of your own kitchen and give it over to another chef, but Ben Bayly and his team did a splendid job and Monica was a charming, confident cook. Now I want to know, when’s she coming home to NZ?
16 August 2012
If ever there was a perfect meal, this was it. Sid Sahrawat has been cooking a Tuesday test kitchen all year with eight experimental courses for $80, so that’s about 170 dishes to date. The clever girls from gather&hunt.co.nz asked Sid to choose his top eight dishes for their Tasting Club and that’s where I was last night.
Sidart restaurant is a little gem, dark and intimate with great views of the city from the Ponsonby Rd ridge. An ideal setting for a wonderful meal. Dominique and Courteney of Gather & Hunt commissioned a keepsake booklet for the menu with lovely hand drawings, yet still kept secrets to be revealed as the dishes arrived.
Each course was perfect; innovative, sometimes daring and perfectly balanced so the flavours and textures played out to create a feast for eyes and mouth. The first course, ‘cucumber olive and buttermilk’ was a brilliant start. Paper thin slices of crisp apple, cucumber ribbons, buttermilk sorbet and ever so slightly crunchy olive dust. With eight courses stretching ahead, every little mouthful refreshed and surprised. A tiny mound of ‘mushrooms, sago and almonds’ followed. Sago chips (!) shaved and purred Jerusalem artichokes, crunch almond and almond skin, three mushrooms; enoki, shiitake and oyster mushrooms topped with truffle foam. What a taste and texture sensation.
Then a little preserving jar. ‘snapper, lychee and nim jam.’ Coconut puree underneath, a chunk of nim jam marinated ocean fresh snapper in tempura, a tangle of bean sprouts and spring onion, all topped with a bright flavoured coriander and chilli sorbet. Who ever thought of putting snapper in a jar? This was a veritable masterpiece, and of me, the absolute standout dish of the night.
At this point my husband declared Sid is the Tetsuya of New Zealand, and he also thought the meal better than the degustation we’d had several years ago at El Bulli. He’s not often wrong, my husband.
‘Salmon, butternut and octopus’ came next; salmon skin chips, aloe vera foam, beet sprouts, pinenuts, crème fraiche, a tiny mound of grated fresh butternut and salmon confit. Everything was so intensely flavoured and so amazingly delicious. ‘Free range pork, walnut and leek’ was a knockout combination, and the pork and walnut sauce had me wondering if all those prize pigs in Spain that eat acorns might be better off munching on walnuts. Imagine that!
The final savoury course, ‘milk fed veal, oxtail and celeriac’ was a brilliant combination of puree of smoked celeriac, urenika potato chips, some hearty braised oxtail, tender veal and coriander puree. How does Sid think of all this? With every course we had thoughtfully matched wines, and took a wine trail around the world to Italy, France, Marlborough, Portugal, South Africa, Waipara and Perigord, France. What a trip.
To conclude, two refreshing and never cloying desserts. ‘White chocolate and raspberry’ is a divine experience, a white chocolate bavarois, orange segments drenched in sauternes, freeze dried raspberries and a little coil of snap frozen raspberry puree. We were still eager eaters at this stage as everything had been perfectly portioned so we loved the finale, ‘licorice, chamomile and five spice’ licorice in a frozen parfait with freeze dried rhubarb, Italian meringue, five spice marshmallow and ta daa! some amazing chamomile ‘spaghetti’.
One of the BEST meals of my life. Sid Sahrawat is one exceptional chef, innovative with a sense of amazing balance in every dish. Everything on the plate made perfect sense, making for magical and totally enchanting eating. I know there are a couple of places left for tonight’s repeat performance. I may even be tempted to return myself!
Sidart, Three Lamps Plaza, 283 Ponsonby Rd, Ponsonby T 09 360 2122
14 August 2012
I don't envy the windy weather,the southerly gales or the old houses that cling to the cliffs in Wellington. But there is a unity in the food scene, evident this week at Wellington on a Plate if I am to beleive the programme. There are lots of exciting things I would give my right hand for. Next year, maybe?
I was in the capital city last week and managed, in between cloud bursts to visit a few really nifty innovative guys around the town.
Moore Wilson's is better than ever. Love that rotisserie wagon parked in their carpark with about 90 hot tasty chickens rolling out every 45 minutes, the amazing cheese section, the variety of great breads, the fresh-as-fresh produce and so much more.
Zany Zeus Cheese and icecream cafe at 129 Randwick Rd Moera, Lower Hutt is a do not miss. Organic milk, amazing Cypriot style fresh cheeses, terrific ice cream and coffee. Love that new smoked Brinza and the smoked yogurt is AMAZING.
On Trays, 38 Fitzherbert St, Petone is a veritable treasure cave of amazing imported foods. Everything from a well chosen cheese selection to cured meats, wine and even caviar, no less if you can afford it.
Six Barrel Soda Company cafe, cnr Eva and Dixon sts. Very cool little intimate cafe anad some amazing artisan soda syrups brewing away in the kitchen. Brought home the lime syrup for my gin.
Floyd's 130 The Parade Island Bay is a friendly local cafe where the children are welcome and happy, and the food and coffee are superb. I lust for their malted milk shakes!
And to eat; reports coming soon. Portlander in the Rydges hotel for sensational steak. (see below)
Foxglove, at 33 Queens Wharf with a great harbour views and beautifully styled food.
Matterhorn, Cuba Mall. Hasn't missed a beat. Dave Verheul's food is a cut above most I have eaten this year. And cocktails matched to the degustation menu; now that's class!
Wellington; I'll be back. Soon I hope.
12 August 2012
I had tried sake before, usually warmed and proabably very ordinary, but last night sake came alive for me. Mr Daisuke Kinoshita flew in from his family's Amabuki Shuzo sake brewery in Saga, Japan to share his sake over a degustation dinner at Cocoro.
Cocoro's Chef Makoto is a brilliant and inventive master of degustation meals. He may be one of our city's best chefs, and we're lucky Cocoro's owner Ricky Lee has set him such a stylish and sleek space to showcase such amazingly inventive food.
We had seven courses through the evening, each masterfully matched to different sakes. Now I know much more; The Amabuki sakes, brewed from specially grown sake rice and made with flower yeasts, range in flavour and colour from bone dry, crisp clear light styles to warming, mouth filling rich flavours, and can be crystal clear liquids with not a hint of colour, through to pinky hues that are pretty in the glass.
Chef Makoto's food was outstanding. Pre dinner, to accompany a surprising sparkling sake Mr Kinoshita had brought with him that very day, there were Bluff oysters bathed in ponzu, some crisp light seasonal vegies in frothy tempura, and the masterpiece, cubes of sweet jumbo tiger prawn in light-as-air spun filo pastry.
The presentation of Cocoro's food is always startingly good, with tastes and flavours that live up to the promise of the plate. I loved the little chawanmushi with whitebait, salmon caviar and baby paua served as our starter, which was followed by a seafood 'box' of sashimi and sushi. The box is like magic, opening out to a feast for both the eyes and mouth. Especially wonderful were the crisp Northland ocotpus slices, and the best tuna nigiri I have ever tasted. Sliced from the belly of the farmed blue fin tuna pictured above, it had been specially flown in from Osaka and was totally delicious and delicate. (Freshly grated wasabi from Canterbury with this course was spicy and really fresh.)
We also dined on grilled miso marinated toothfish and Akaroa salmon that had been cooked confit style and accompanied by a special umami booster of miso, sake and shoyu, matched with a clear "Marigold' sake with warm tones. The spicy grilled crayfish tail was slightly crunchy, rich, perfectly cooked and matched to a super-dry style of sake that totally enhanced the experience.
Next, a meltingly tasty duck breast, slow roasted, finished over charcoal with a sweeter sake that had hints of strawberry flowers. To round the evening's feast, a garden turned up on my dessert plate. I love the way Japanese chefs extol the seasons, and Makoto did exactly this with a winter garden of fruit with spiced Valrhona chocolate fondue, juxtaposed with the clean flavours of green tea icecream, and another wonderful Amabuki extraordinary rich sake made from 55% polished rice. A wonderful night!
Cocoro, 56 Brown St, Ponsonby T 09 360 0927
12 August 2012
Just when I had bemoaned the lack of steak restaurants, The Portlander threw its doors open to lucky Wellington this week. What we grow best of all in New Zealand is grass, and all those lush pastures provide fodder for terrific cattle and sheep. We're so proud of our amazing lamb and beef. And the Exec chef, Kit Foe, at Rydges Hotel has gone to great lengths to assemble a stunning menu of beefy treats, supplemented by the finest fare for his menu at The Portander.
It doesn't matter how comfortable a hotel is (and the Rydges' rooms are lovely with spacious bathrooms which is something I always seek), it's actually good food that will draw people back. The recent revamp and rebranding of the street level restaurant, and accompanying foyer bar is clever. Every night during the week, there's sizzle and meaty scents in the foyer, as steaks are cooked on a little grill and chunks passed around for guests and people popping in for a drink. Masterful!
The restaurant, although somewhat functional in appearance, is now going to become really popular. There's a great menu that includes grass and grainfed steaks (all with the provenance proudly announced) and a selection of light entrees, fresh fish and seafood treats (loved the meaty paua fritters, tasty pork, and more.) There are are at least seven burgers to try at lunch time and the dessert menu is fantastic - I'm chasing the chef for the apple crumble recipe, as it so original and divinely delicious.
Love the witty marketing like the card above; and the one that says, "You don't have to sleep with us to eat with us."
The Portlander at Rydges Hotel, 75 Featherstone St, Wellington T 04 499 8686
12 August 2012
I have heard people described as 'national treasures', (on one memorable occasion a friend even claimed that about herself!) and in this golden Olympic week there's no doubt we do have people who are admired by the whole nation. But it's a big call.
Recently I was in Taupo and where two of our country's real treasures came together for a perfect occasion. Fleur Sullivan and Huka Lodge. Ta daa!
Most New Zealanders will never have the chance to stay at Huka Lodge, but nevertheless it is the most perfect place that we should all be proud of. I recall my friend Darina Allen,(who herself is a national treasure of Ireland, and that's beyond dispute) travelling the country in a campervan I'd arranged for her and Timmy, her husband. They called into Huka, parked the van in the carpark and were so captivated by the tranquility and majesty of Huka Lodge they booked a room immediately. Darina loved their night there so much she returned to Huka three days later.
Every detail has been thought out well , from the warm welcome and the attention from the staff through to the large comfortable rooms overlooking the fast flowing Waikato river which speeds up to leap over the Huka Falls a stone's throw away. The lodge is fastidiously maintained and Chef Michel Louw's food is stylish, well balanced and beautifully presented. The most important thing is that nothing is ever too much trouble at the lodge.
Fleur was there to speak at a luncheon, and she is one amazing woman. Fleur has an eponymous restaurant on the ocean's edge at Moeraki, and single-handedly has made it the most talked about and loved destination seafood place to eat freshly caught seafood in all
Aotearoa. She shared stories from her life while we ate her Moeraki seafood chowder, a lovely blue cod main course and the wonderful Whitestone cheese from Oamaru which Fleur had specially carried north.
Special events such as this at Huka are one of life's special occasions. I loved every minute.