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Showing posts with label #melbourneblogger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #melbourneblogger. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 December 2016

Killer Coffee

Killer Coffee


I have been using killer coffee for the last few weeks and the website and Facebook seem to want you to use a Aeropress. I used the aeropress firstly with 2 different metal filters and the coffee was bitter but super strong. I then tried the paper filter which actually helped with the bitterness but I was still not happy with the flavors. I moved onto the pourover and that did the job, the coffee had no bitterness but was still strong but very smooth. I thought while I have this week off I will make a clever dripper. I use the chemex paper instead of the melitta paper filters and I am happy with its results.


First you put the paper in the clever dripper then fill it half way with hot water. Swirl it around the rinse the rest of the paper. I just leave the hot water in there to heat it up.


I used 13grams of coffee. I  empty out the water then grind the coffee.


I put the coffee in the clever dripper and slowly pour in about 60mls of hot water (90 degrees) and put on the timer, give it soft stir then pour in about 80mls give it one more stir.


I fill it up with 300mls of water.


At about 2min 50 I put it on the Hario glass pourer



It was a great coffee and I really enjoy the coffee more with paper filters. I need to start trying different coffees and that was what this blog was about right Coffee :)
Kind E-gards
Dale Stewart

Samwon Gardens

Samwon Gardens

I have not done a food blog in a few months, its not that i haven't gone to new places its just been hard to find time to upload them. The other night we went to a Korean restaurant and it was hidden in a strip of Greek restaurants . It had a mixture of Japanese and Korean dishes but we decided to eat there anyway.


We ordered the Korean dishes because on many occasions when you order dishes from other cultures it can be disappointing. When ordering we always have favourites to try and these are them.

Tteokbokki  is sweet chili dish using vegetables and soft rice cake. Is never is super hot but always juicy and tasty.

Jap Chae is made of sweet potato noodles with vegetalable and either beef or chicken but we always go beef. Its a fun dish to eat with all the noodles as they stick together and it makes it harder to pick up.


Bibbimbap  is a mixed rice dish and normally you get it a ceramic type bowl and the rice gets very crispy. You get a chili sauce to mix in. It  has sliced vegies and a cooked egg on top. You wait a while for the rice to crisp up then add the chili sauce and mix it altogether.


Spicy fried chicken we decided to order the sweet chili chicken and it was deep fried chicken with an amazing sweet chili sauce. The chicken was very tender and juicy. It was not overcooked but just amazing and we will come back for this dish.


For a random Korean restaurant we really enjoyed it and will be back.
Kind E-gards
Dale Stewart
Samwon Garden Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

Monday, 28 November 2016

Black Friday Sales

Black Friday Sales

Black Friday Sales but you are in Australia you say and in the last few years it has become more popular but this year it has been crazy. Probably not as good as the U.S.A but still gives us some better deals. Some furniture stores have been advertising on T.V about the deals for the weekend. I bought a bunch of random stuff for Iris. I went on this website Debenhams and found some amazing deals. I bought 5 items from the U.K for $101Aud with free postage and to buy them here would cost me over $200Aud.


Did you buy anything on Black Friday?
Kind E-gards
Dale Stewart

Sunday, 13 November 2016

House hunting

House hunting

Our friends are currently looking at buying their first house so we have been looking at some with them. They saw a house and really wanted to look at it but knew they would not buy it because its in the most expensive suburb in Melbourne. Its a 4 story house with 6 car spots, I love looking at expensive houses but I have never been in something like this.



I really liked this place was because it had a cigar lounge and home theatre room.



Also the elevator had alligator leather in it.
Have you ever been in a place like this?
Kind E-Gards
Dale

Sunday, 4 September 2016

Fab Food and Great Friends

Fab Food and great friend's

Before the new chapter begins in our life we have been trying to save as much as we can but also catch up with all our friends as the next few months will be hectic. Its not long before our little Burrito enters the world and we need to care for her, but that's part of Kim's story.
 Last month our friends took us out for dinner for Kim's Birthday and we went to a beautiful restaurant called Rosetta. Its an Italian restaurant in the city and it was amazing, I have never had chips and crab that tastes so fab.

 

 





We have not done Fine Dining since Narisawa last august and it was great to do it again. The deserts are fantastic We had the chocolate, peanut and coconut semi-freddo. I would go back for potato and the desserts.
   
That following Sunday we did YumCha with a group of close friends. We have been to about 10 different YumCha places and this one is my favourite as it does the chicken feet so well. Its called Crown palace. The chicken feet have so much flavor. It has a variety of dishes and they are always hot. We also ordered the crispy crab claw balls and they are superb, tender and juicy. If you like Tofu fa you should go to the early session as it had sold out by the second session.

 
 
 
Have you had chicken feet?
Kind E-gards
Dale

Saturday, 13 August 2016

Going Back To My Roots

Going Back To My Roots

What does that mean? "Going back to my roots" From a young age my parents would buy us a type of jerky, a South African jerky called Biltong. You normally use game type meat like Kudu which is a type of Buck or ostrich and even buffalo. I remember our friends parents making it after they would go hunting and it was amazing.  Kim and I decided to make some and kim did the instructions :)

After seeing a friend’s Biltong Box (think ventilated box, light bulb, computer fan and racks to dehydrate meat, fruit etc and you’re there), which conveniently stopped working forcing the friends to find another alternative (who would want to waste delicious seasoned meat) Dale thought to himself “I can do that at home using my oven that I have in my home”. So began another obsession, but I don’t think this will be a passing one.

I have known Dale and his family since maybe 2003 and basically from the start they exhibited a distinct, deep-seeded, strong love of meat. So I cannot even remember when I first tried it, but I’m fairly certain it was the thinly shaved type, not the slices or sticks (ah the variety). Biltong sold in Australia (unless you seek out less commercially produced biltong) seems to be very, very dry and tough enough to clean your dog’s teeth efficiently. We have purchased a Biltong fail in South Australia in a European grocery store in Hahndorf, holy s**t it was too spicy for Dale to eat and he ended up binning most of the strip of meat. Thank goodness I wasn’t able to eat it, although I was a little envious at first. Some of the sticks of biltong can tend to be dentist appointment makers too because they are so thin they just keep drying out fast.

These friends had to resort to using their oven to save the day, but their Biltong Box is salvageable, this being super convenient because it meant there was no need to buy any equipment. They used the hooks their Biltong Box came with and some paperclips. They had proper store bought biltong spice mix too. We didn’t, and you’ve gotta strike while the iron’s hot around our house so we improvised!

After reading lots of blog posts we found great variation in recipes for the spice mix and also very few people used the cheaters method of utilizing your oven (sacrilege to purists but we are not storing meat for 3+ days anywhere or waiting that long to taste the result of our hard work). I say hard work, but it isn’t really.


What you need and how to make Biltong magic happen

A convection oven with a light and a keep warm setting (our oven is gas and this didn’t work for us (too hot) so I just used the oven fan and light)

Hooks, paperclips, skewers, bulldog clips, pegs

Dripping tray to catch any moisture that comes from the meat

Packet of marinade mix

Worcestershire Sauce

Vinegar

Bicarbonate Soda

Chilli Flakes in the marinade and to coat prior to hanging



Dale found several online retailers who sell premixed marinade so we might try one of these next time, or not, we’ll see how this turns out. Plus most of the spice combinations suggested online seem to consist of salt, vinegar, sugar, coriander seeds, chilli flakes in various ratios. But like anything you can add whatever you like unless you’re a purist and have a specific expectation of what the flavor combination should be. Some butchers and specialty grocers sell some super fancy flavoured biltong. Posh.

As you can see in the pic, we cheated and just used a tasty sounding dry meat marinade from the supermarket. It smelt super smoky and sweet so it should be interesting. I added in Worcestershire sauce to make the powder into a lumpy paste. Then probably too much bicarb, we’ll see how it turns out but I think I should have added 1tsp. And vinegar to make the paste easier to spread onto the meat. We referred to several different instructions, some suggest vinegar rinse first, others say rinse in vinegar/water mix after marinating, others still say add it into the marinade. Some suggest using bicarb to inhibit mould others not. We just went for it like usual.


The important thing is to keep everything clean to reduce contamination of the meat because you aren’t using heat to kill all the bacteria, you’re relying on the salt, bicarb and vinegar to do this. How old school. Our packet mix did contain salt, as all such mixes tend to. Since we had such thin slices of meat I knew it wouldn’t take very long to dry them, and that we’d dry them thoroughly for storage or keep them a little less dehydrated for immediate eating.

Because we’re such noobs we went to a butcher and asked what they suggested we use as amateurs. The man who helped us was actually really nice, tattoos, missing teeth, a real meat lover. Anyway, he knew what we wanted to make and even showed us what other South African pro-Biltong makers bought (big chunks of meat, way too much for us should we fail). We settled on yearling topside schnitzel because most of the cutting was done and they were nice and thin so would dry really quickly.

Dale cut them along the grain to create 4cm by 1cm strips, then cut these in half to shorten them to fit our oven’s height. I then mixed the pieces of meat with the marinade and we left them in the fridge overnight.

 

Next morning I rinsed off the marinade with water, in hindsight I should have rinsed them in a water/vinegar mix to keep the bacteria at bay, dried the meat with paper toweling and then used skewers to hang the meat between the rungs of an oven rack placed at the highest position in the oven. For the last skewer I tossed the meat in chilli flakes before hanging them. As you can see I hung the meat in the oven making sure none of the pieces were touching. Also as mentioned earlier our lowest setting for keep warm was a little too warm, you want to dry not cook the meat. Our fan is super strong too so I’m hoping it’ll be efficient enough to dry the meat by the time Dale gets home. Because Rufus is such an asshat I put a chair in front of the oven so he couldn’t break in since the oven wasn’t hot enough to keep him at away.



So we wait 3+ hours, depending on how dry we want the meat to get. But the colour change is a fairly good guide, the meat goes a dark brown colour and the meat loses its’ juicy-squishyness. I’m sure Dale will be more than happy to taste test, Rufus too.

The house smells like a butcher.

I decided to light the oven (switching it to keep warm) every hour-or-so to pump a little warmth into it. But sticking my hand into the oven I feel like the light creates a teeny tiny bit of warmth.

Proper storage suggestions state that using anything other than paper doesn’t allow the meat to breathe and can lead to the meat being ruined. So we threw the biltong into some paper lunch bags and put these in the fridge.

The chilli biltong has a sweet chilli garlic taste and the other one is smoky with a heat that builds up slow. Dale is so happy with how they taste and is now looking where to buy venison or kangaroo but that will happen in the next month or so.

Will you give it a go?
Let me know what you think.
kind E-gards
Dale