Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Fortnightly round-up (23 May): Melbourne Gastronome 5th birthday edition

Former milk bar detail

I'm afraid to report that life (and a trip to Sydney) got in the way over the past few weeks, so I decided to skip the previous scheduled fortnightly round-up and pick things up again this week. Today is the day Melbourne Gastronome turns five years old! I've jotted some fifth anniversary reflections at the end of this post.

Post-it note art mural

Who needs meat on the BBQ when the mushrooms taste so freaking good? Every Saturday, from about 9:30am until they sell out (generally around 2pm), Market Lane Prahran sells a mushroom burger to end all mushroom burgers. It was created by "Mr Barbecue" Bob Hart, costs $8 and comes with chipotle mayonnaise, Parmigiano-Reggiano 18, finely sliced salad onions, herb butter and a Damian Pike-sourced portobello mushroom in a Dench bun.

MushroooomMushroom burger

Speaking of delicious mushrooms, at a family dinner the other week we had a sensational wild mushroom ragu with wet polenta, mascarpone and thyme (adapted from an old Karen Martini recipe).

Wild mushroom ragu w wet polenta and mascarpone

Although L'atelier de Monsieur Truffe is best known for the chocolatier's sweet skills, it does a great sideline in savoury too. One of the brunch specials the other week was truffled eggs, potatoes and chives served in a jar (about $14, methinks). Dipping the toasted corners of bread into that gooey richness was a real treat.

Truffe

And even more obscenely decadent is Truffe's tartine au chocolat ($7): slices of brioche topped with house-made chocolate chips and toasted so that the chips go all melty. Chocolate-wise, it's your choice between milk 38%, dark 52% or dark 70%, and of course it tastes best with a lil' pinch of the sea salt served alongside. If eating more than one piece defeats you (as it did me), ask one of the many attractive men who work there to box up the rest of it, then scoff it at home at 2am after a night of LuWow dancing.

Tartine

Since my trip to Japan in January I've embarked on a (mostly fruitless) search for great ramen in Melbourne. It's a curious blind spot in Melbourne's otherwise shining culinary landscape, it grieves me to say (Sydney claims to do much better ramen - of course they do - and I've been meaning to check out Gumshara Ramen up there for ages). Ramen Ya, Menya and Ajisen have been variously recommended to me as dishing up Melbourne's best, but I find them all to be wildly inconsistent - usually falling short in the broth department. The most consistent place I've found in Melbourne is newcomer Kokoro Ramen and at $9, their lunch special is also cheaper than most. The noodles are handmade, the ajitama (flavoured soft boiled eggs) are delicious and you get to choose from four different stocks, all of which are MSG-free (but none of which are vegetarian): tonkotsu shio, tonkotsu shoyu, tonkotsu miso and Tokyo (pure chicken and seafood). After trying all four on four consecutive visits, using pork as a control substance, shio is my preferred stock.

Kokoro Ramen

But the Japanese cafe that's really swept me off my feet this month is Purple Peanuts, right down at the Southern Cross end of Collins Street. I seem to be the last food blogger in Melbourne to have heard about this spunky little cafe, but everything about it is just perfect. Dishes I've tried and loved so far are the tsuke don (sashimi marinated in sake, sesame and soy and served with a salad on vinegared rice, $10.90) and the char-grilled chicken kare don ($9.20, or pay an extra dollar and get it with brown rice).

Purple Peanuts
Tsuke donMiso
Bat-manga!Chicken kare don

And finally if it's high end Japanese you're wanting, I can strongly recommend the recently opened Akachochin, one of the suite of restaurants in the beautifully restored heritage cargo sheds at South Wharf Promenade, hugging the Yarra just past Jeff's Shed and the Polly Woodside. I attended as a guest, part of a journos and bloggers progressive dinner thing, and I'm going to head back there soon under my own steam so that I can properly explore the interesting menu by Head Chef Kengo Hiromatsu (previously Head Sushi Chef at Nobu). But even on this initial visit, the sashimi, hiramasa namerou (Japanese tartare with delicate rice crackers), stuffed chicken wing dumplings and seared wagyu with mushrooms all impressed.

Akachochin
Seared sashimiHiramasa Namerou
Chicken wing dumplingsSeared wagyu, king oyster mushroom

Links of Note:

- Last year I was one of the guest judges in the Sommeliers Australia 'Best Sommelier of Australia' grand final (noted in a previous fortnightly round-up). Last week Sydney's Franck Moreau from the Merivale Group and Melbourne's Mark Protheroe, head sommelier of the Grossi Group, travelled to South Korea for the Best Sommelier of Asia-Oceania Competition: read Somms Australia president Ben Edwards' write up of how they fared on The Wine Guide.

- Lauren from the Footscray Food Blog has found the best breakfast in Footscray (hint: it doesn't involve smashed avocado, poached eggs, pulled pork or ricotta hotcakes).

- From French for Foodies, a list of the best places in Paris for coffee and cheese.

- From yellowtrace: a cookbook you can read, bake AND eat as lasagne!

- A great list of Michelin starred restaurants in the UK, ordered by affordability of their set lunch menus.

- In the US, FTC guidelines on endorsements are getting more specific: the FTC can fine both the blogger and the company for not disclosing an arrangement where the company compensates the blogger for a review, positive mention, or sponsored post.

- It seems like old news now, but Stephanie Wood's article gave a neat summary of the Matt Moran "cash for tweet" brouhaha.

- Excellent article in the NYT on Craig Claiborne and the birth of modern restaurant criticism.

- The Big Fat Undertaking: one blogger's attempt to cook all the recipes in Heston Blumental's The Big Fat Duck Cookbook.

- Winter is coming... to Ned Stark cakes (WARNING: CONTAINS MAJOR 'GAME OF THRONES' SEASON ONE SPOILERS).

Poppy's 6th birthday

As the fifth anniversary of writing Melbourne Gastronome has rolled around, I've been thinking a lot about the evolving food blog landscape. Both of the food blogs I wrote about in my first post in 2007 and wished to emulate have long since stopped writing. Recent well-intentioned emails from fledgling food bloggers in their early 20s telling me that they've been reading Melbourne Gastronome since they were in high school make me feel ancient (even though I know some other blogs have been around even longer). When I started blogging in my corner of the internet half a decade ago, nobody had heard of Twitter, nobody used Facebook beyond their immediate friendship group, and no PR agency would ever DREAM of emailing a food blogger. Life events coupled with the inevitable ebb and flow of writing means that at times over the years my motivation to keep blogging has waned, but for now I'm keen to continue. There's just so much to write about in this great city of ours!

Anyway, to those of you still reading... I just wanted to say thank you for reading.

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Besito brings Colombia to West Footscray

Besito
590A Barkly Street, West Footscray (map)
9689 0586
Open Tuesday-Sunday 8am-4pm
website


Besito wall

The lovely Lauren first alerted me to the existence of Besito in February, shortly after it opened. A cafe serving up a little slice of Colombia in West Footscray, just a suburb over from Los Latinos (another place I've been meaning to visit for ages)... colour me keen.

Huevos rancherosCalentao

A group of us visited one Saturday morning and ordered a range of dishes. Highlights included the huevos rancheros (fried eggs on a corn tortilla with salsa verde and cheese, $12.50), the calentao (a hearty bowlful of beans, rice and avocado served with mini-arepa 'arepitas', $10.50) and the snacky fried green plantains ($3) which we ordered with a side serve of char grilled corn and pimentos salsa ($4.50). The Colombian favourites, arepas, are also excellent at Besito: prick them while they're still hot with your knife or the tines of your fork, apply butter liberally so that it can melt down through the holes, add pink sea salt and eat. Both the white corn arepas and the tortillas are gluten free, and made by hand.

Plantains

Traditional Colombian hot chocolate - containing cheese, that's right you heard me - is on offer for $4. Unlike the version at Sonido where the queso comes in a solid block, this traditional hot chocolate comes with the queso pre-blended. It's delicious. Besito also serves 5 Senses coffee (Dark Horse blend and a rotating single origin) with golden unrefined panela on the side as a healthy sweetener.

A small range of sauces and other Colombian produce is also available for purchase.

Hot chocolateAmazon sauces

The cafe is a brightly painted gem, and owner Andres and his bubbly front of house staff are only too happy to guide you through some of the more unfamiliar menu items. In addition to breakfast items there are salads and other lunchier dishes also available, and a liquor licence is hopefully on its way. Definitely worth a visit to the westside.

BesitoBesito coffee

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Fortnightly round-up (25 April)

Post-it note art mural detail

Good news: the famous Borek shop in the Deli Hall at Queen Victoria Market (where a mere $2.50 will still buy you one of the best quick lunches in town) is about to open an additional outlet in the city, at 481 Elizabeth Street. I chatted to the formidably efficient Borek Lady and she confirmed that it should open in about four weeks - and that due to the increased kitchen space they'll be offering a wider range of delicious and cheap Turkish snacks in the new outlet, including gözleme. Yesssss.

Borek ladyNew borek shop

Another month, ANOTHER two new Mexican restaurants opening in Melbourne. As one chef joked on Twitter, he's thinking of opening a Mexican restaurant called Bandwagon. I haven't been to either yet, but you'll find Radio Mexico Taquería & Bar at 11 Carlisle Street, St Kilda, and Chingón Cantina y Taquería at 413 Swan Street, Richmond (a few minutes down the road from Fonda).

Last week I was invited along to a blogger dinner at Touché Hombre (one of the two Mexican restaurants that opened last month, as mentioned in one of my previous round-ups). While being treated to samples from their menu - the morcilla and breakfast tacos are their best in my opinion, and the ice cream sandwiches pictured below are a highlight - I took the opportunity to grill owner Davis Yu (who at the age of 21 re-opened the restaurant formerly known as Lynch's as the Millswyn in 2010) about the next restaurant he has in the pipeline.

Provisionally named Claremont Tonic, Yu's third restaurant will be dishing up Thai and Japanese flavours on a menu focussed on share plates. It's scheduled to open in June around the corner from MamaBaba in South Yarra, and Yu intends for it to be the "less grungy sister of Touché Hombre".

Touche HombreIce cream sangas

May 12 to May 19 is Good Beer Week! The festival celebrating good beer has 100 events scheduled at venues across Melbourne and Victoria, including breweries, bars, pubs, restaurants, cocktail bars and chocolatiers. A highlight will be the Masterclass of Champions which sees the brewers from Nøgne Ø (Norway) and Moylan's (US) come together at Hargreaves Hill's brewery in the Yarra Valley to create a one-off brew, hold an intimate beer masterclass then join guests for a three-course degustation prepared by a team drawn from the Stokehouse and Auction Rooms by The 36 Collective. The whole program for Good Beer Week can be browsed day-by-day here.

Local Taphouse

In addition to hosting several events for Good Beer Week, the Local Taphouse serves a damn fine Southern fried chicken in a bucket, with coleslaw, mash and gravy. I just thought you should know.

Southern Fried Chicken

And speaking of Southern food, my friend Ev and I booked tickets and went along to the final You don't mess with Texas dinner held last week at St Ali by our friend Jess Pryles (aka Burger Mary) and the boys from Red River BBQ. We loved the pickle chips, the jalapeños stuffed with cream cheese and wrapped in bacon, the amaaaazing mac 'n cheese, and the peach cobbler for dessert. Ditto the excellent pulled pork and the Texas cut brisket that had been smoked for 16 hours. Jess even coaxed several dinner guests (yours truly included) to join her in the street outside to learn how to line-dance. Thank y'all for a fun night out.

Texas BBQTexas BBQ Mac n cheeseTexas BBQ

On Fridays, both the Prahran Market and Queen Victoria Market branches of Market Lane Coffee sell $4 Portuguese custard tarts made by Angie Locharden. They are the BEST Portuguese custard tarts I've tasted in Melbourne.

Market Lane coffee

Finally, I loved my initial visit last week to Casa Ciuccio, the new Gertrude Street restaurant from Matt McConnell, Jo Gamvros and the rest of the Bar Lourinhã team. Highlights included veal rib (a coal pit daily special, at market price) and the green tomatoes served with wonderful buffalo milk queso fresco ($16). When you visit be sure to order the chargrilled octopus tentacle (sold by weight), as well as at least one item slow cooked for a minimum of three hours over the coals.

Veal ribGreen tomatoes and buffalo queso fresco

Links of Note:

- A great interview on The Design Files (by Lee Tran Lam, one of Sydney's best food bloggers) with Rachel Luchetti and Stuart Krelle of Luchetti Krelle, the design studio behind some of Sydney's hot new restaurants.

- David Chang shared his five favourite Sydney restaurants with the Wall Street Journal.

- Chef Sandwich blogger rants: why is there so much lazy, self-indulgent, pompous drivel in food writing?

- Words of wisdom from former New York Times food writer and editor Amanda Hesser: it’s nearly impossible to make a living as a food writer, and it’s only going to get worse.

- Fresh back from their Argentinean adventure (more about which you'll hear soon), Ben Edwards and Dan Sims from The Wine Guide have posted a new entry in The Sommelier Diaries, their excellent series of in-depth interviews with the best sommeliers in Australia and beyond. The latest interview is with Kim Bickley, from Luke Mangan's Glass Brasserie, and I recommend reading the previous 13 interviews too.

- Saveur announces its Best Food Blog Awards finalists in the Best Food Humor Blog, Best Food Photography and Best Celebrity Food Blog categories.

- A gorgeous post on Cook Republic showing how to make hung yogurt.

- At first I thought folks on Twitter were taking the piss, but it turns out that René Redzepi really will run a Noma pop-up at Claridge's during the London Olympics, for £195 per head.

- The Atlantic presents six rules for dining out, from a frugal economist.

- Fascinating article on food wastage by Lorraine from Not Quite Nigella, looking behind the scenes at Food Bank.

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Fortnightly round-up (11 April)

Salad

There has been a spate of food stores adjoining cafes/restaurants opening in the last few months: think Albert Street Food & Wine, and the Mini Marche at Hardware Societe. Now Southern Thai cafe Middle Fish has also started stocking Thai ingredients that they use in their dishes for you to take home (I was particularly taken with the Police Dog Brand tins). Bubbly proprietor Pla is only too happy to explain to you how the products are best used.

Police dog brandMiddle Fish

Speaking of Middle Fish, their kang tai pla (Southern style anchovy curry, $15.50) is the breakfast of champions.

Middle Fish curry

Coming soon to a blog near you: an article about lots and lots of different small batch gins and tonics (here's a sneak preview). It's taken a long while, but I've nearly finished it. I've been reading some gin literature as part of my research, and have particularly enjoyed The Bartender's Gin Compendium by Gaz Regan, and Craze: Gin and Debauchery in an Age of Reason by Jessica Warner.

Mass gin tasting

The organic bento at Kappaya Japanese Soul Food Cafe at Abbotsford Convent. Strongly recommended.

Kappaya bento

Some happy snaps of Easter culinary highlights: Mum's hot cross buns, served at our traditional Good Friday Champagne Breakfast;

Hot cross buns

Paola's chicken brodo with handmade agnolotti (stuffed with crispy pancetta and roasted peas), served at Sunday lunch;

Paola's brodo

céleri rémoulade (quite possibly my favourite salad of all time. OF ALL TIME!);

Celeri remoulade

and a rather scary looking flourless chocolate cake. Who needs Easter eggs?

Flourless chocolate cake


Links of Note:

- Mel wrote a great post about the ethics of restaurant food blogging on Fooderati. I really wish all bloggers would abide by these principles - the bad apples that don't give the rest of us a bad name. I like too that Mel included some advice for restaurants as well: don't encourage bad behaviour by courting it!

- Food blog ethics aren't just confined to the "dining out" blogs: the vexed issue of recipe copyright keeps cropping up on "dining in" blogs. Local bloggers Green Gourmet Giraffe and Confessions of a Food Nazi have written about it, noting that the author of Lambs' Ears and Honey has posted a follow up post to the original one that sparked the controversy.

- Squid Ink, L.A. Weekly's food blog, posted a neat Venn diagram showing L.A.'s idea of Mexican food vs what Mexicans really eat.

- To score [wine] or not to score: that is the question, writes Tom Hogan on I Love Riesling.

- Keen to relive the MFWF? Dining Nirvana wrote a wrap-up of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival, including a handy list of blog posts by other bloggers reviewing MFWF events: part one, part two.

- Gorgeous post on Fox's Lane about a community cider pressing day.

- DineSmart 2011 raises $352,328 to fund 91 Community Projects. Bravo to all who donated/fundraised, especially to Chin Chin for their Victorian champion fundraising effort!

- BOOKMARK: Eater's The 38 Essential New York Restaurants, April '12.

- Peruvian food in Surry Hills? Yes please. From A Table for Two.

- Also drooling over photos of new Sydney restaurant Sixpenny on The Unbearable Lightness of Being Hungry. I'm heading up to Sydney next month: now taking suggestions on where I should eat and drink...