Friday, March 25, 2011

Kazbah

Kazbah

The Promenade, Harbourside Shopping Centre, Darling Harbour, Sydney


Kazbah is a delightful Moroccan eatery nestled in Darling Harbour with generously spiced food (a rare thing in Australia), a truly gorgeous view and an interior epitomising ethnic chic. For a special reason elucidated in the footnote, I had a feast of epic proportions for a mere $25.


Table


Through a narrow walkway, one is transported from a shopping mall’s cacophony into an idyllic North African retreat. The restaurant design seamlessly blended the old-world charm of curvaceous hookahs in cosy corners and elegant ceramic tableware with a minimalist line-kitchen in plain sight. As strange as that might sound, it all came together quite beautifully.


Place Setting


I washed the meal down with Chai Yemeny Sweet Milk Tea, a light and mild spiced tea quite similar to Chai or Massala tea. I just adored my little metal-trimmed glass and dainty little filter.


Chahi Yemen Sweet Milky Tea


Popular choices included Iced Mocha, pictured below…


Iced Chocolate


and of course, Hot Chocolate on what was a particularly chilly and blustery day.


Hot Chocolate


The brunch was communal and we started off with a selection of porridges. My firm favourite was the Warm Rice Pudding with Saffron Poached Pear, Cinnamon and Hazelnuts. Warm, comforting notes of saffron and cinnamon melded with rich nutty accents in the sweet, creamy pudding medium. The urge to lick my bowl was one I just barely resisted.


Rice Pudding


A close second was Date and Banana Porridge with Stewed Rhubarb which was every bit as healthy as it sounds but so much more delicious. That delightful banana character, all sugar and heady perfume; flowed out of generous chunks of the fruit and soaked into the thick, fudgy oats. A quenelle of mashed date perched on top added to the sugar quotient.


Date and Banana Porridge


Rounding out the first course selection was Sweet Couscous with Nuts, Dried Fruit, Stewed Rhubarb and Cardamom Milk. Ever on the lookout for tasty morsels, I filched one of just two pieces of Turkish delight adorning the al dente grains and achieved my first sugar high of the day.


Couscous


To balance all that richness, or to add nuanced spice, one could choose to add some tart rhubarb compote or cardamom milk. A bowl of brown sugar was also on hand for those with a sweet tooth.


Cardamom Milk and Rhubarb


Our plates were swiftly refreshed and I had the pleasure of having a colossal Mixed Grill thrust right in front of me. The massive platter was piled high with seductively spiced Merguez sausage, creamy and mild pan-fried Haloumi cheese, Hash Browns with velvety smooth potato puree beneath that lightly crisp skin, a decadent pile of bacon and a mound of sweet grilled tomatoes just acidic enough to counter all that artery-clogging.


Mixed Grill


An arm’s length away was another platter piled high with the Moroccan take on eggs Benedict, Eggs in Three Ways on Turkish Toast. The scrambled eggs were creamy and fluffy and the fried eggs were gone in a heartbeat but poached eggs will always remain my favourite style. Few things say brunch better than mopping up some oozy, runny yolk with thick slices of well-buttered bread.


Eggs on Turkish Toast


Slipped beneath these platters were a variety of side dishes including Sautéed Mushrooms delicately herbed to bring out their earthy umami and finished with a dash of sweet balsamico.


Sauteed Mushrooms


Also to be found was the Moroccan take on Baked Beans, lima beans in a light sauce of tomatoes, onions and a generous pinch of Cayenne pepper.


Baked Beans


In varying degrees of loosening belts and straining seams, we arrived at the main course. As we were expecting two different Tagines we were quite surprised to be looking at a pair of seemingly identical dishes.


Tagine


The Eureka moment came in a whiff of spice and mouthwatering aromas as our waiter expertly agitated the pile of eggs to uncover the moist mince in our Tagine of Lamb with a mind-boggling ingredients list of Sucuk (a potently-flavoured spiced sausage), feta, spinach, roast capsicum, caramelised onions, roast tomatoes and eggs.


Lamb Tagine


Piled high on warm Turkish bread slathered generously with butter, this was ecstacy. The combination of cumin and sumac in the sausage had bled out, impregnating that beautiful lamb and saturating the juicy vegetables. The layered mouthfeel of mealy meatiness, silky egg and juicy pulpiness was utter bliss as well.


Lamb Tagine Serve


The initial doppleganger, a Vegetable Tagine, was sweet in the way the lamb was savoury. It was certainly breathtaking to look at with its absolute riot of colour.


Pumpkin Tagine


Slipped carefully onto soft Lebanese flatbread, the starchy sweetness of pumpkin resounded off the sharp brine of feta, refreshing spinach herbaceousness, rich egg as well as more sugar from caramelised onions and roasted bell peppers.


Pumpkin Tagine Serve


To finish off, we had a variety of thick semolina pancakes. Miraculously, I managed a thick slice of each despite my rapidly shrinking jeans; it was just that good. First on my plate was Strawberry Pancakes with Maple Syrup and Double Cream. It struck a fine balance between the tartness and sugar of the strawberries and that velvety richness of thick double cream.


Strawberry Pancakes


That was followed by simple but no less pleasurable Banana Pancakes, served in an identical fashion. Once again, that sticky, aromatic sweetness of bananas took centre stage, couched by the mealy fluffiness of pancakes.


Banana Pancakes


I truly left the best for last, unsure if I was worthy to touch the Chocolate and Raspberry Pancakes with Butterscotch Sauce and Chocolate Fudge Ice Cream. Its crowning scoop was really thick and chocolatey enough to be called chocolate sorbet, to my absolute delight. Oozing and soaking into the pancake as it melted, that chocolatiness melded with the buttery caramel of butterscotch sauce for the ultimate decadence. Buried in that fluffy pancake goodness were semi molten chocolate chips and raspberries that simply added to the resplendence of this piece de resistance.


Chocolate Pancakes


Footnote:

How’s this for genius: a club that brings epicureans together so they can have lavish restaurant feasts at a vastly reduced price EVERY WEEK. Until my heart bypass thirty years from now, I cannot help but adore being part of UNSW Foodlovers!


Foodlovers

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Cupcake Bakery

Cupcake Bakery

Shop 2 to 4, Lower Ground 2, Queen Victoria Building, Sydney



When faced with a truckload of assignments and lectures that go at a breakneck pace, the only legal thing that can keep me going is sugar. As such, for an after-class pick-me-up before I dive into my notes, Cupcake Bakery at Queen Victoria Building is a great port of call. Few things banish the college blues (without the price of a hangover) like a breathtaking tablescape of gorgeous cupcakes iced in psychedelic technicolour. Standard cupcakes go for $3.80 each.



Cupcake Bakery



I’ll start with my favourite, guaranteed to leave you with a grin on your face and not a care in the world… except perhaps your traumatized Islets of Langerhans. Sticky Date has a base of mildly salty, solidly dense, date-flavoured cake paying ample homage to the pudding that inspired it. Crowning that thickly is a decadent caramel fudge icing with highlights of coffee granting it seductive depth.



Sticky Date



Gluten-Free Red Velvet is similarly dense if a bit on the dry side with its mild cocoa flavour. Clearly red food colouring is used instead of the traditional beetroot so those looking for punchy oomph will be mildly disappointed. However, the cream cheese frosting is deliciously creamy and surprisingly light; more than enough to satisfy this sugar junkie.



Gluten Free Red Velvet



Finally, those with something more classical in mind should go for Vanilla Strawberry with a layer of thick, sweet and delicately tart strawberry jam oozing at its base as well as a massive, Mount-Everest-sized mound of smooth, vanilla, go-see-your-dentist frosting.



Vanilla Strawberry

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Hurricane’s Bar & Grill Bondi Beach

Hurricane’s Bar & Grill Bondi Beach

Shop 8, 164 Campbell Parade, Bondi Beach, NSW


I cannot stop waxing lyrical about the amazing meat available in Australia. In particular, the ribs here are a world apart from any serratus anterior - porcine or bovine - ever to enter my mouth. My first post as a medical student here will likely disappoint cardiologists but Hurricane’s is home to my personal rib apotheosis and probably the first place I’d bring anyone who comes for a visit. Documented below is an amalgamation of two feasts I’ve had there, one dine-in and one from the adjacent take-way stand.


Shop Front


Only available if you dine in is the Herbed Roll ($4.50) and it alone justifies braving the meandering queue and forking out the service charge. The crunch of the crust as I tore the oven-warm loaf apart seemed composed specifically to make my mouth water and taste buds tingle in sweet anticipation. Next, the smell hit like a knockout punch, a divine combination of thyme and basil doing pirouettes around the base elements of yeast and butter. Finally, placing it in my mouth elicited a shiver of ecstacy at the gorgeous mouthfeel of crunchy crust and pillow-soft interior combined with a robust herbiness and olive oil richness.


Herbed Bread


Now, a visit to Hurricane’s is – by definition – only complete after a Full Rack of Hurricane’s Pork Ribs ($36 dine-in or $29.50 take-away). The meat set the standard for balancing fall-off–the-bone-tender with sink-your-teeth-in meaty bite for that perfect rib texture. However, the magic was in the basting fluid imbuing the meat with a smoky perfume and rich, caramelised sweetness balanced with a hint of tartness that couched the porcine meatiness beautifully.


Pork Rack 1


Against the gastronomical epiphany I just mentioned, the Full Rack of Hurricane’s Beef Ribs ($29.50 take-away) was no contender. On its own, the beef might have been pretty good but next to the pork it came across as chewy, tough and difficult to eat. The bones popped right out of their meaty sheath to leave you with a huge, steaming, man-sized hunk of cow that even plastic cutlery stood no chance against. That – to me – detracted from the quintessential experience of tearing meat off the bone with your teeth.


Beef Rack


You have to get Chips ($3 take-away) to go with your ribs as these lightly salted, thick-cut fries are absolutely perfect to soak up all the delicious drippings. The mealy potato magically absorbs all that meaty character when swirled around vigorously and emerging covered in a sticky, glistening coat of pork juice.


Pork Rack


If – for some inexplicable reason - you don’t want to get your hands messy, the Hurricane’s Beef Burger ($13 take-away) is a good bet. The massive patty weighs in at a quarter-kilogram of solid chuck beef and literally dwarfs the bun, not something you see everyday. It was remarkably moist for such a huge amount of meat and was probably grilled slowly under low heat - by grilling standards anyway - as it was evenly medium despite the considerable thickness.


Hurricane's Beef Burger