Welcome to ange + ky's food journey. We hope you not only enjoy testing our recipes but also enjoying reading about our food experiences and adventures with each one. There are a lot of good and bad recipes out there and we hope to test a whole range of them and rate each one so that you can decide if it's worth making or not. We're not budding chefs or highly experienced ones, we're just two girls that love food! Let us know what you think too... enjoy xx

15 June, 2010

white chocolate mojito cheesecakes


this recipe i found in a delicious magazine and it was a hit with the whole family...

ingredients
20g unsalted butter, melted
150g ginger biscuits crushed in a processor
1/2 cup caster sugar
finely grated zest and juice of 3 limes
100ml rum
1 cup mint leaves
120g white choc, chopped
400g soft cream cheese
1 cup mascarpone
300ml thickened cream

* stir melted butter into biscuit crumbs until well combined. press mixture into 6 serving glasses and pack down well. chill in fridge
* bring sugar and 1/4 cup water to the boil in a pan, stirring to dissolve sugar and simmer over med-low heat for 5 mins until syrupy. set aside to infuse for 20mins
* meanwhile, melt white choc then leave to cool slightly
* add cheeses ti processor and whizz to combine, strain syrup thru a sieve, pressing down to extract as much flavour as possible
* add syrup to processor and whiz to combine
* add white choc and pulse 2 - 3 times until combined.
*spoon into glasses and set for a couple of hours
*when ready to serve, whip cream and put a dollop on each and garnish with mint leaf


level of difficulty: read a few times and make notes before you try
time: flight from sydney to melbourne
end result: hi fives all 'round

09 May, 2010

Thanks Mrs Fulton


Margaret Fulton, now there is a woman with vision. She who played a significant part in introducing 'exotic' (aka anything other than meat and three veg) to hundreds of Australian housewives..... anyway, thanks.. and thanks for this linzertorte recipe. It's fab!! Seems like the perfect afternnon tea cake- i don't do the afternoon tea thing myself, but as an evening treat seemed to work beautifully! Giovanni (aka dad, papa, nonno) was official reviewer on this on, and he does not give his marks away to freely, so when he says it's a 5/5 you know you are on a winner! Enjoy Angexx

Linzertorte
100g butter
1 cup caster sugar
zest 1 lemon or 1/2 tsp vanilla essence
2 eggs
1 1/4cups plain flour
1 tsp cinnamon
pinch salt
1 1/4 cup almond meal
Great quality raspberry jam about 1 cup

preheat oven 160C, grease 23cm springform tin.
cream butter and sugar. Add zest or vanilla (i did bit of both), add eggs one at a time, beat well after each addition. Fold in sifted flour, cinnamon, salt and almond meal till well mixed.
Reserve a third of this mix, spread two thirds onto cake pan. Spread jam on top of mix, leave a 2cm border. pipe the reserved mix around outside edge of cake, also pipe criss cross pattern on top. Bake for 40mins. When cooled a little, sprinkle with some icing sugar. Enjoy either warm or room temp.

Lvl Difficulty- can watch tv at same time
Time - syd to melb flight
Overall - High 5s all round!!

06 May, 2010

food any way...

So there can be no question that the cooking of food is indeed a wonderful, generally happy and often times fulfilling and satisfying activity, both practically and creatively. But there are also times when having the food made for you is just as good, and in some instances much better! And yes i'm talking about the paying instances, the dinning out experiences.
About 6weeks ago i caught up with one of my oldest and dearest friends- we've been friends since year 1!! Yen and I go way back, she's seen me through some of the hardest times in my life, and now we enjoy lots of fun happy times, and for the most part it does involve food. So to this end we decided that we would come up with a list of food places that we wanted to try, now WARNING - This is i fear only the begginings of a list, but we sure are committed to adding to it and seeing it through.. This weekend we will cross off Yum Cha, and in June we get to cross of L'etoile (?).. and not too soon after, before the year end we will have Tetsuya's on the crossed off list.. it's just too exciting! So today, instead of writing up case notes i've decided i'll blog about the list.. any suggestions are most welcome!
Ange
x

Yen and Angela’s Gourmet Culinary adventures.

FOOD PLACE
Max Brenner
L’etoile
Tetsuyas
Italian -
Greek -
Lebanese -
Spanish
Vietnamese
Thai
Chinese
Yum Cha
Malaysian
Seafood
Korean
Steak
South American
Pancakes
German
Mexican
Nepalese
Indonesian
African
Portuguese
Pub Food
Indian
Brazilian
Breakfast

02 May, 2010

get some pork! on your fork...




Ahhh cooler weather, a great excuse to eat more hearty food! that err.. is perhaps not so good for the heart really.... but all that aside, we can't let that stand in the way of a culinary experience. So with that in mind i thought it was high time to have a go at pork belly.. and well what goes well with pork.. apple, so apple pie it is! So people, rug up, arm yourself with your fork and dig in! Cheers, Ange xx

Tuscan Pork Belly - Delicious May 2010
(Serves 6)
2.5kg piece boneless pork belly (skin on)
2 rosemary sprigs, leaves picked
1T fennel seeds
Grated zest 1 lemon
4 garlic cloves
2T olive oil
2 cups dry white wine
2 onions, thinly sliced
2T plain flour
2 cups chicken stock
1/3 cup dry Marsala

Score pork skin and fat in criss-cross pattern. Place pork on rack in sink and pour over kettle of boiling water. Dry well. Crush rosemary, fennel, zest and garlic in mortar and pestle to coarse paste. Stir in oil, rub onto pork skin, cover marinate in fridge min 4hrs or overnight.
Preheat oven 220C, place pork on roasting pan, pour over wine. Rub 2T sea salt into skin, roast 30 mins. Reduce heat 160C, scatter onions in pan, roast for further 1 hour or till skin crisps, juices clear. Remove pork and onions from pan - rest 15mins. Discard all but 2T fat from pan, retain juices. Place pan over heat, stir in flour 1min, whisk in marsala and stock till smooth, strain. Serve over the pork.
Lvl Difficulty- Can watch tv at same time
Time- lazy flight syd-melb
End Result - DROP EVERYTHING MUST TRY THIS NOW!!!

Apple pie -Serves 6 (From an old delicious mag)

30g unsalted butter
1kg peeled, cored, sliced granny smith apples
1 vanilla bean split
100g caster sugar
1 lemon, rind grated, juiced
1T cornflour
1 egg, beaten to brush
Pastry
350g plain flour
175g unsalted butter, chilled
75g icing sugar
1 egg beaten

For pastry - process flour butter and sugar with pinch of salt. Process till resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add egg and 2T chilled water. Process till smooth ball. Divide in 2 portions, cling wrap put in fridge 30mins.
Meanwhile, in pan place butter, apples, vanilla bean and seeds, sugar, lemon rind and juice. Cook over low hear 6-8mins until just starting to soften. Mix cornflour with 2T cold water and stir into apple mix. Cook 1 min. Remove vanilla bean, strain apples, discard juices.
Preheat oven 200C, grease 19cm x 5cm fluted tart pan. Roll larger piece of pastry and line base and sides of pan, place in fridge 30mins. Blind bake 10mins, remove paper bake another 5mins. Remove from oven, cool. Place apples into pastry, cover with 2nd piece of rolled out pastry. Brush with egg, sprinkle with caster sugar bake 25mins.. enjoy!!

Lvl Difficulty - Can watch tv at same time
Time- One way flight
End Result - hi 5's all round!

29 April, 2010

warm winter salads

i hate winter. i really do. i hate rugging up in five layers of clothing before i go out. i hate jumping out of a hot shower into ice cold air. i hate getting into bed and flapping my arms and legs around to warm the bed up. ...

the ONLY thing i love about winter, is the yummy food that warms your tummy up. now, normally for me, this would be hearty soups and casseroles but last night, i thought i would try a warm salad. now, it doesn't bring the same sort of comfort as soup does, but it's a really nice change. i found this one in the latest donna hay mag....


warm potatoes, beetroot, watercress and ocean trout salad

ingredients
*800g chat potatoes
*400g broad beans (blanched and shelled)
* bunch baby beetroot (i just used normal beetroot, peeled them and cut them into chunks)
* bunch watercress (leave picked and washed)
*400g smoked ocean trout, flaked

dressing
*half cup of egg mayonaise
* 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar
* 1 tablespoon horseradish (i left this out as i'm not a horseradish fan)
* 1 cloved garlic - diced/minced
* sea salt and cracked black pepper


*boil potatoes in salted water till tender (15mins)
* put beetroot into bowl and coat with a little olive oil
* when tender, drain and cool slightly, then press each one with back of a spoon to 'smash' them a little
*put 2 tablespoon oil into pan and put into over (220 degrees) for 5 mins
* take pan out and put potatoes and beetroot in it and return to overn for 20min or until beetroot are cooked and potatoes crispy
* in a bowl, put watercress, broad beans, flaked ocean trout
* take potatoes and beetroot out of oven and cool slightly before putting into bowl with rest of stuff
* toss gently, then plate up and drizzle dressing on top


level of difficulty: can watch tv at the same time
time: light from sydney to melbourne
end result:good but more like the back up singers than the main star






24 April, 2010

Fondant that masterchef!!


Now i'm a fan, i really am, of most cooking shows including masterchef - Australia and UK version. But anyone watching either show or a number of other such cooking show could easily be fooled into believing that chocolate fondant is difficult to master and likely to be a disaster! Well fondant to that i say!! This is a myth, similar to the "souffle is difficult to master" myth as well.. (hmm wonder what that is all about??).. well i found a gordon ramsey chocolate fondant recipe- one that is destined for my definately to call upon over and over again section of my extensive recipe collection. This recipe is- even if i say so myself.. to die for!! It's cake like exterior ever so protectively holds inside the yummy chocolatey goodness that spills forth when you break into it... served with vanilla ice cream.. not much else is needed!!

Chocolate Fondant (makes 9)

*50g melted butter *cocoa powder for dusting
*200g good quality dark chocolate chopped small pieces *200g butter, small pieces
*200g golden caster sugar *4eggs and 4 yolks
*200g plain flour.

# Get moulds ready (i used ramekins). Heavily brush moulds with butter, place in fridge/freezer. Take out, brush more melted butter over chilled butter, add spoonful cocoa into mould to coat, tap out any excess.
# Melt butter and chocolate together, stir till smooth, cool for 10mins
#Whisk eggs and yolks together with sugar till thick and pale. Sift flour into eggs, beat together.
#Pour melted chocolate into egg mixture in thirds, beat well between each addition.
#Divide mixture evenly between moulds. Chill for min of 20mins or up to night before.
#Heat oven to 200C. Palce fondants on baking tray, cook 12 mins. Remove from oven and sit 1/2 mins before turning out.
#plate up with ice cream or cream!!

Enjoy! Ange xx

Lvl Difficulty - can watch tv at same time
Time- Flight syd-Melb
End Result - DROP EVERYTHING!!! MUST TRY THIS NOW!!!!!

Nutella Nutella Nutella


Can there be such a thing as too much nutella?.. i think perhaps not. Nutella, it's like a faithful friend, consistent and always just the right thing! Nutella is sacred to the Italians, you find it everywhere you go anywhere in Italy, and really who can blame them. There is always a jar in my cupboard. So you can imagine the delight when i happened across a nutella tart recipe. Yum just the dessert for easter!!

The recipe comes from Pierre Herme.. Thank you Pierre!! Thank you Italia!!

Nutella Tart - The crust

*285g unsalted butter, room temp. *150g sifted confectioner's sugar
*1/2 c almond meal *1/2 tsp salt
*1/2 tsp vanilla extract *2lge eggs, room temp, lightly beaten
*3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour.

Put butter in mixer bowl with paddle attachment. Beat low speed till creamy. Add sugar, almond meal, salt, vanilla, and eggs. On low speed continue to beat ingredients. Add flour in 3/4 batches until mix comes together to form moist dough. Gather it into a ball, divide into 3/4 pieces (3 pieces for 3 26cm tarts..) Wrap in cling film. Allow dough to rest for 4 hours in fridge or up to 2 days, before rolling and baking (you can freeze this dough for one month).

When ready, roll dough out on lightly floured surface 2-4cm thick. Fit dough into tart pan, base and sides. prick dough all over with fork, chill 30mins in fridge. Preheat oven to 180C, blind bake crust 18-20mins, remove paper bake for further 5 mins. Remove from oven and completely cool.

For Filling

*200g nutella *140g good quality chocolate (70%) finely chopped
*200g unsalted butter *1 lge egg rom temp. stirred with fork
*3 lgr egg yolks, room temp, stirred with fork *2T sugar
*1 cup Hazelnuts toasted, skinned chopped in large pieces.

Preheat oven to 190C, spread nutella evenly over bottom of crust and set aside.
Melt chocolate and butter in seperate bowls, allow to cool.
Using small whisk stir egg into chocolate, little by little stir in egg yolks, then the sugar. Finally stir in the melted butter. Pour ganache over nutella in tart shell, scatter hazelnuts on top.
Bake tart for 11mins. Remove from oven, allow to cool... enjoy! Ange xx
Lvl Difficulty - Can watch tv at same time
Time - Aside from dough resting - flight syd-melb
End result - High fives all 'round

gathering of friends... Easter style!! or was it Xmas catch up?...



It's always going to a good night when we gather at Patty and Jeff's place. Their home is so warm and inviting, and the guests present are good friends who enjoy a good laugh with and warmly at each other... So this happened way back in early April.. perhaps even end of March.
Patty took on the main with the assistance fo his first assistant Brendan.. My contribution was an entree- Stuffed mushrooms, and the dessert, carmel cheesecake. Of course there is always room for that wonderful delight of rocky road! To the food..
The mushrooms and cheesecake both came from the delicious magazine (April 2010).

Stuffed mushrooms with gorgonzola dressing
*2T unsalted butter *1/4c olive oil
*1 onion, finely chopped *2 cloves garlic finely chopped
*8 anchovies, roughly chopped *3 cups fresh breadcrumbs
*1 cup grated parmesan * 2T finely chopped parsley
*4 large flat mushrooms *250g roman beans trimmed
* 1 Radicchio, leaves separated

Gorgonzola Dressing
*1 egg yolk *1 garlic clove roughly chopped
*2t hot english mustard *1T white wine vinegar
*1ooml sunflower oil *20g gorgonzola piccante, plus extra
*1T rosemary finely chopped

Preheat oven 200C. For dressing whiz egg yolk, garlic, mustard & vinegar in food processor. With motor running add oil slowly drop by drop first then steady stream til thick. transfer this to bowl. In clean processor, blend gorgonzola and rosemary with 2T lukewarm water until smooth. Fold into egg mix, season, Fridge till needed.

Heat butter and 1T oil in pan medium heat. Add onion, garlic, anchovies, cook, stirring 8 minutes. Onions should be soft, anchovies dissolved. Remove from heat, stir in breadcrumbs, parmesan and parsley, season. Remove stalks from mushrooms, lay flat on oiled baking tray. Fill with crumb mix, drizzle with oil, bake 15min till topping golden.
Meanwhile blanch beans in salted water 1/2 mins. Drain. Divide beans, radicchio, extra cheese amonge plates top with mushrooms. drizzle with dressing.

Note- ok so the first time i made this for this feast, i did use packaged breadcrumbs.. meant it was quite a dry dish.. next time i used day old sourdough, that i put in oven and processed.. much better result!

Lvl Difficulty - Can watch tv at same time
Time - Flight Syd-Melb
End Result- More like back singers at this event, but hi fives second attempt!

Baked dulce de leche cheesecake with toffee shards
*300g digestive biscuits *90g unsalted butter, melted
*750g cream cheese chopped *2T cornflour
*3 eggs *340g caster sugar
*2tsp vanilla extract *2x450g dulce de leche
*600ml sour cream

Preheat oven 200C & grease 23cm springform pan. Finely crush biscuits in food processor, pour in mleted butter, pulse to combine. Press into base of pan. Bake 8mins, remove from oven, reduce oven to 160C. Meanwhile place cream cheese in processor with cornflour, eggs, 100g sugar, 1Tsp vanilla. Process till smooth. Add one jar Dulche de leche, process till smooth. Pour over biscuit base. Bake 45mins. Meanwhile place sour cream in bowl, add 20g sugar and 1tsp vanilla. Beat with wooden spoon to combine. Remove cheesecake from oven. Top with sour cream bake for another 15mins till set. Leave in switched off oven with door ajar till compltely cooled, chill overnight.
To make toffee shards, line tray with foil. Stir 1 cup sugar and 1/4 cup water in pan, low heat till sugar is dissolved. Increase heat to high, cook till golden. Pour onto foil, swirling to spread toffee. Set aside, cool, break into shards.
When ready to serve add, 2/3 T boiling water to dulche de leche till you have smooth sauce consistency. Top cake with shards, drizzle with sauce..Enjoy!!

Lvl Difficulty- Can watch tv at same time
Time - Lord of rings trilogy
End results - Drop everything, must try this now!

19 April, 2010

green tea tiramisu

soooooooo......... on the flight home from japan, gareth's meal came with a green tea tiramisu but because i have the vegetarian meal, i get boring stuff. airlines assume that cause you're a vego it automatically means you're a vegan and that means no dairy and no eggs grrrrr! so, ate half of gareth's green tea tiramisu and was pleasantly surprised at how much i liked. so much so that i came home and googled the recipe!

so, i found this recipe off this woman's blog "http://chezannies.blogspot.com/2007/01/green-tea-ramisu.html" however i didn't find it as easy to make as she had made out but it was still delicious...

ingredients:
1 - 1 1/2 cups of strongly brewed green tea (i used 3 teabags but next time i think i'll use 4)
2 - 3 packets of ladyfinger biscuits depending on whether you want to do the fence
3 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
250g mascarpone cheese
1 cup heavy cream (i didn't know what heavy cream was so i used thickened cream but next time will use 1 1/2 cups instead)
1 tspn vanilla extract
2 tspns matcha (green tea powder)


* beat the egg yolks and sugar in stainless steel bowl over pot of simmering water until the mixture is pale and double in size (now i had a little trouble with this trying to figure out when it was ready)
*cool the mixture in an ice water bath (i didn't do this, i just left it to cool whilst doing the other stuff)
*in a mixer, beat the mascarpone cheese until smooth and creamy
* add the match powder small amounts at a time. mix to blend well but don't over beat
* fold the mascarpone cheese into the egg yolk mixture
* in a seperate bowl, whip the cream till soft peaks form. add vanilla.
* fold the marscarpone mixture into the whipped cream and gently mix.
* dip each ladyfinger quickly into the brewed green tea and line the base of a cheesecake tin (if you want to do the fences, then line the side of the tin with ladyfingers that haven't been dipped)
* spread a layer of the cream over the top and then repeat with soaking and layering the ladyfingers (be careful not to soak them too much, dip them quickly so they get moist but that's it)
* the recipe said 3 layers of biscuits and 3 layers of cream but i only got 2 layers (however that could be cause i used thickened cream or cause i didn't beat the egg yolks enough - who knows)
* refrigerate overnight.

level of difficulty: read a few times and make notes before you try
time: free parking in shopping centre almost up
end result: hi fives all 'round

enjoy! we did!
ky xx





s