Archive for the ‘Laura from Hungry & Frozen’ Category

Wellington On A Plate review: Hippopotamus

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

I have to say, for all that I was wildly enthused about Wellington on a Plate, the fact that it was largely based around lunch deals made it difficult for me, an office worker, to participate. In the end I had to take a sneaky midweek long lunch and turn my phone off, a nice thing to do admittedly, but it would have been even more lovely to have been able to relax more with a $35 dinner. Perhaps this is something we can work on for next year?

Anyway I felt as though after all this talk about Wellington on a Plate I really should take the plunge and so booked a table for two for a set lunch at Hippopotamus, located just opposite Te Papa and down from New World. The day was brutally windy – anyone from Wellington will surely know that the weather has been particularly vicious this week – and I was buffetted along like Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz as I made my way there. Once inside the Museum Hotel, home of Hippopotamus, I felt as conspicuous as Dorothy when she landed in Munchkinland. My Chuck Taylors, wind-tangled hair and jeans weren’t exactly congruent with the plush carpet, paintings and many chandeliers within the opulent lobby. However my partner (equally large of hair and casual of footwear) and I were treated as though we were Rick Stein and his wife dropping in for lunch. Coats quietly whipped away, thick, heavy linen upon the tables, beautiful glasses never ignored by the waiter - the very idea that we should pour our own water was a foreign concept to the wait staff at Hippopotamus.

We were seated with a glorious view over the darkened, windswept waterfront (except I’ve been watching Season 2 of The Wire and can’t see shipping containers without making unfortunate associations) and presented with the set menu, which offered a choice of starters, mains and desserts, of which we were to choose two. Although the starters looked tempting I’m really a dessert gal so opted for that and a main. Unfortunately the polenta and some kind of shank from I forget which animal was off the menu – I do love polenta - but in its place a cassoulet of duck and pork belly. I love duck and it was cassoulet kind of weather, plus our waiter pronounced it so charmingly in his French accent that we both chose it.

The cassoulet was exquisite – generously filled with meat so tender and juicy it near on dissolved in my mouth. The beans were perfect - if they were out of a can it they didn’t taste so. The portion was enormous – I’m a huge eater but struggled to finish it and the simple heartiness was the perfect antidote to the weather outside. We were offered a selection of wines, of which we both chose the pinot noir which was everything the waiter described it as. I can’t pretend I drink a lot of good wine so it is such a revelation when I do have it.

For dessert I had vanilla panna cotta and my partner the chocolate tart. Desserts are one of the things I really judge a restaurant on – so often they are bought in, served without care and overpriced. The desserts we were offered at Hippopotamus were, luckily, marvelous, if they hadn’t been made from scratch backstage they did a very good job of hiding it. Panna cotta is all about texture and mine was perfect, just utterly, utterly smooth and carefully occupying that place between solid and liquid. It also came with a panna cotta buddy of coffee cream and some deliciously spiced prunes. My partner’s chocolate tart was also beautiful – layered with excellent pastry, smooth chocolate and caramel, with an ascerbic dollop of orange cream on top.

The whole experience was an absolute joy and I wished I could have stayed longer and lingered over a doubtless excellent coffee, but the inbox and spreadsheets were calling me. I was heavily reluctant to leave the warm quiet interior of the restaurant for the bitter outside world, but was thankful for Wellington on a Plate for providing the opportunity for me to see this world at all. Hippopotamus is incredible but very expensive and I’m quite sure I never would have gone there had they not had this set lunch option. To be honest I’ll probably not go back unless I win the lottery BUT would have no problem recommending it to anyone with lots of money. If you go to Logan Brown regularly and don’t flinch at their prices then this is most definitely the place for you. If, like me, you read about Logan Brown in Cuisine magazine and can only dream of going there, why not add Hippopotamus to your list of places to daydream about?

Hippopotamus

90 Cable Street
Museum Hotel (opposite Te Papa)
Wellington City

04 802 8935

If you’re reading this and thinking “I’m picking up on what she’s putting down” why not jump on over and see what’s happening on my food blog, Hungry and Frozen. As recommended by the Sunday Star-Times.

Wellington On A Plate

Saturday, August 15th, 2009
As I was saying to the lovely Angela Moriarty of wellingtonnz.com, it doesn’t, in fact, seem like this is the inaugural launch of Wellington on a Plate. It is such a natural fit for this city of endless excellent dining choices, that it feels as though this initiative has been happening for years. But no, this is our first time, and I was fortunate enough to attend the launch on Wednesday evening at Harbour City Shopping Centre on behalf of Menumania, who have a goodly slice of the event’s sponsorship pie.

Wellington on a Plate gives punters the opportunity to savour a set menu at a stunningly bargain price from a huge list of dining establishments around the city. For many, this could be one of the few chances they get to eat at the Logan Brown, for others it may mean they are prompted to try out a new restaurant that they might have hitherto never noticed. There’s also all manner of other engaging activities going on – coffee tastings, a beer festival, market tours with Richard Till…

The launch boasted many exciting guests – I spotted Martin Bosley right away but unfortunately couldn’t work out the best way to go introduce myself. Wellington’s mayor Kerry Prendergast made a stirring speech although some of the effect was a little lost on me – I was standing off to the side of the crowd and in my line of sight there was a large amp blocking where her head should have been. It made her appear like some kind of fabulous electro-android.

I’m not sure that I mingled as aggressively as I could have but hopefully managed to represent the good name of Menumania to the degree they deserve. There is something about being in a room full of strangers that makes you grab the nearest person you have vague acquaintance with and persist in small talk. I know, I did it myself. I’m not saying there should have been anything as vile as team-building exercises or getting-to-know-you games but something to get people introduced to each other would have been appreciated by someone like me who is so relatively inconsequential in terms of Wellington food and wine movers and shakers. For now.

The food was both exquisite and, naturally, in painstakingly miniature form. Of particular joy were the goats cheese with caramelized walnuts, and the gingerbread with blue cheese and quince paste. The wine was plentiful and from the Wairarapa, where they know what they’re doing. I ended up exclusively quaffing Waipipi Sauvignon Blanc all night. By good fortune I then ended up talking to one of the lovely representatives of the Waipipi vineyard and was honestly able to tell him how much I enjoyed his product and how I shall look out for it next time I’m a business exec wooing clients over a long lunch.

I also managed to clumsily put my own blog out onto people’s radars, although whether I told anyone who actually cares is dubious. I certainly would have liked to have talked to more people – I saw someone from Cuisine who left before I was able to flag them down and bore them with how much I adore that magazine – and there were lots of people who looked like they might have been good value but got lost in the crowd. However I thoroughly enjoyed meeting everyone I talked to and the night was a fine example of local food and wine. I will definitely be trying to secure myself a booking for a restaurant participating in Wellington on a Plate, but where? I feel Logan Brown is a bit obvious…Martin Bosley’s would be nice…I really have my eye on a night at Matterhorn.

Are you planning on taking advantage of any of these amazing opportunities? See the Wellington On A Plate website for inspiration and details. And if inspiration and details are your idea of a good time, why not also read my food blog Hungry and Frozen? It got a glowing reference in last week’s Sunday Star Times, so if that isn’t the push you need to click over and read it I don’t know what will.

lentils: sexier than they look, sound and taste

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

I realise lentils aren’t the coolest member of the food kingdom, but the way they combine being laughably cheap with disproportionately astounding health benefits means they’ll always have a secure place in my heart at least.

Lentils come in a few different varieties and if you really want the history of each you know where Wikipedia is. But your basic guide runs thusly: Brown lentils hold their shape when cooked and have a pleasant, earthy, slightly nutty flavour. They are ideal for forming into burger patties and for adding to, or being the main body of, soups and stews. Red lentils are small and bright orangey-red and dissolve into a yellow, slightly grainy mush when boiled in water. This property makes them perfect for mixing in with minced meat to stretch it further and add goodness, as well as making them a useful ingredient in thick soups.

Puy lentils are dark, dark green and have a savoury earthy flavour. They too hold their shape when cooked and tend to be more expensive than your regular lentils, which makes them useful for when you want to impress someone with your cooking. A favourite dish of mine is puy lentils, peas, and copious amounts of feta cheese, dressed with olive oil and red wine vinegar and served at room temperature. Who said lentils weren’t sexy? Then there’s the yellow and green lentils which are also known as split peas, because they are in fact, dried peas, not lentils. But they perform much the same tasks as lentils: providing nutrients and bulk to a meal, scaring away small children.

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An obvious, but delicious, thing to do with lentils is make dhal. There’s no one way to make it but this is what I did the other night, inspired by a recipe on CrazyBakingGirl’s blog, and it turned out pretty flipping delicious.

Dhal 

2 Tbs olive oil
1 red onion, finely sliced
2.5 cm piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
3 garlic cloves finely sliced
1 large green chilli, finely chipped
1 tsp sea salt
1 tsp ground cumin
250g (1 cup) red lentils. I used a mix of what I had in the cupboard – yellow and green split peas and red lentils.
1 tbs lime juice

Method

Heat a heavy-based saucepan over medium heat and add the olive oil.

  1. When hot, add the onion, ginger, garlic, chilli, salt and cumin and cook for 10 min, stirring occasionally, until the onion is soft.
  2. Add the lentils and 750ml (3 cups) of water and cook, stirring occasionally, for 20min until the lentils have dissolved.
  3. Remove from the heat and stir through the lime juice.
  4. Top with coriander leaves and serve with naan.

The mix of lentils that I used produced a lovely texture, but really use whatever you have, bearing in mind that lentils can sometimes take what seems like forever to cook. Just keep them at a low heat, stir often, and taste occasionally. I bought some naan bread from the Indian takeaway down the road and served the dhal over rice with a dollop of cool, creamy yoghurt on top. It was a perfect winter meal, not to mention inexpensive, very healthy, and – sans yoghurt – could suit a vegan (although let’s face it, your vegan friends probably already have a definitive recipe for dhal.)

Enjoy! And if you like what you read here – and even if you don’t, I’m not that fussy – feel free to read more of my delightful exploits over at my blog, Hungry and Frozen. I’ve just updated it today so there’s one fresh from the oven for you.

Wellington Food Show 2009

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

I’ll be honest with you – the Food Show is one of the highlights of my year, one of the most hotly anticipated dates on my calendar. This year was my fourth consecutive visit and over the years I’d honed my techniques, which included bringing a backpack and staying to the very end on Sunday to maximise last-minute price slashes on purchases that would already have been a bargain.

Some highlights from this year include:

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Kohu Road Ice Cream: Normally I’m quite a snob when it comes to ice cream, I much prefer to make my own and lean towards thinking that no bought ice cream can compare to the flavour of home-made. Kohu Road’s incredible range made me question my commitment to this opinion. Their ice cream comes in beautiful flavours like golden syrup, bergamot, and strawberry, and I visited and revisited their stand several times to sample them all.

Contact: [email protected]

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Wright Sprouts: These are the sprout lover’s sprouts. I admire the Wright Sprout company for taking something that isn’t necessarily an instantly desirable sounding product, then sticking with it, and doing it well. These organic sprouts are deliciously crunchy and nutty and perfect for strewing through salads or just munching out of the bag when snacking is required but you don’t want to end up absorbing a trillion calories.

Contact the lovely Katrina at: [email protected]

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Canaan Cheese: There’s not much I can say about this company’s products because I’ll be too busy drooling to talk. Simply the very, very best yoghurt I’ve ever tasted – and I’ve tasted yoghurt all over the world – plus faint-makingly delicious halloumi, which was fried and offered to us by the delightful people running the stand. I ended up buying about four containers of yoghurt plus a slab of halloumi, and I wish now that I’d bought more. Words cloud the issue, just go out, find this stuff – you won’t look back.

Contact: [email protected]

For more products and information, plus more sycophantic raving over the Canaan Cheese, please read the post I did on my own blog, Hungry and Frozen, by clicking —-> HERE.

For those of you lucky enough to attend the Auckland Food Festival, I hope you enjoy it – I hear it’s usually the biggest one in the country. If any readers went to the Wellington Food Show I’d love to hear your thoughts – what was the best thing you ate on the day?

Peace,

Laura

http://www.hungryandfrozen.blogspot.com

Italian Comfort Food: Easy Tomato Soup

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Over the Easter weekend I ducked up to Auckland to see The Winter’s Tale, one of the plays being staged by the Bridge Project currently touring the world. With time to spare beforehand I ended up in Borders, and it must be said, the Auckland branch of this bookselling juggernaut has the most bewildering layout. I found myself going round and round in circles trying to get out of the childrens’ section – which I have no idea how I got into anyway – and into the open air.

Serendipitously though, quietly tucked behind the childrens’ section was a veritable goldmine of sale-priced cookbooks. It was here that I found, for $10, Italian Comfort Food by the Scotto family, who run Fresco by Scotto in New York. I normally avoid American cookbooks as the measurements and different names for ingredients are annoying to get my head around. Like measuring butter in sticks and cups. Also not many have appealed to me (apart from the delicious Barefoot Contessa). But this book is gorgeous – a complete bargain at such a price. I’ve already made several recipes from it, including this amazing soup…

Papa Pomodoro

This is a simple but hearty tomato soup, perfect for the increasingly bitter weather we are experiencing lately.

  • olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • 1 leek, finely diced
  • 2x 400g can crushed tomatoes
  • 750mls good chicken or vegetable stock
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1/2 a loaf stale, good bread, diced small
  • handful fresh basil

In a good sized pot, saute the garlic in the olive oil for 2 minutes. Add the leeks and continue to saute till the mixture is soft. Add the tomatoes and their juice. If you feel like you have particularly bland canned tomatoes you may want to add a spoon or two of tomato paste to oomph up the flavour. Add the stock and simmer for 30 minutes, or until you see the soup start to thicken a little.

At the honey, bread, and chopped basil. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Let the soup rest for half an hour before serving. This is important for the texture and to allow the flavours to develop. Quickly reheat and serve.

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It’s easy, cheap, healthy comfort food, the sort of thing the Italians do so well and which we could do well to learn from!

Laura Vincent

Come visit me at my stupedous blog Hungry and Frozen for more food-related hijinks…

choose your own adventure

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Kia ora everyone – I’m Laura, the latest addition to the Menumania blog writers’ guild. When I’m not posting here I enjoy absolutely zero fame and fortune through my own cooking blog, Hungry and Frozen, which I started two years ago as a penniless student. These days I’ve finished my degree in English Lit and Media and work full time. I am passionate to the point of delusion about cooking and baking and will scissor kick anyone who dares to use margarine instead of butter in my kitchen. I guess that says plenty about what I’m like as a person so I’ll choose this moment to segue into my first post for Menumania.

For many people making dinner is not so much a pleasure as an endless cycle of nightly struggle. I hope I don’t sound too smug when I say it is actually one of the things I look forward to most in the day. This doesn’t necessarily mean I always know what I want to cook, which is why I based this post on mood. Here are two recipes, one for when you are wanting to actively cook, slicing things finely and stirring attentively and never straying from the bubbling pan of food. Then there is a recipe that lets you bung everything in the oven, then go away to admire Taye Diggs in Private Practise or bathe the children or write your thesis or whatever it is that you would have been doing had you not been shackled to the kitchen, cooking dinner. It’s time for you to choose your own adventure.

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Zucchini, Pea and Spinach Risotto with Feta Cheese

This is the more involved recipe. Although it is a pleasing thing to stand at the stove, stirring serenely and constantly for 25 minutes, if you’ve had a bad day it will feel torturously miserable and the rice will seemingly take forever to absorb its liquid. Consider yourself warned.

  • 1 small onion, finely diced
  • 4 fat cloves of garlic, peeled and finely diced
  • A knob of butter
  • 100g risotto rice (arborio is cheapest)
  • A splash of Vermouth or other white wine
  • Good vegetable stock, about 750mls or so
  • 2 zucchini
  • 1 cup frozen peas
  • A handful of spinach leaves, chopped roughly
  • 100g feta

In a wide, heavy based pan, soften the onion and garlic in the butter without letting them brown. Add the rice – and I should point out here that I spent an obscene amount on a bag of carnaroli, which was indeed lovely, but don’t go feeling like a culinary pariah if all you have is arborio from the supermarket – and stir it through the buttery onion and garlic for a minute. Pour in the wine – about 1/4 cup – and stir everything quickly together. It should smell quite heavenly at this point!  Slice the zucchini into rounds and add to the pan, stirring all the while. Get used to seeing the word stir round here.

From here, add the stock slowly (I use a ladleful at a time) stirring till it’s absorbed before adding the next measure. This will take more or less forever. Once the risotto is thick and the beads of rice have swollen and softened, stir in some more butter if you like (and I do!) then stir in the peas and spinach. Serve with the feta crumbled over.

Serves 2.

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A good risotto can be comforting and elegant at the same time, and this one seems to tick both boxes. The gentle flavour of the zuchinni with the texture of the peas and more robust taste of spinach marries nicely with the generous sprinkling of creamy, tangy feta.

The next recipe requires considerably less effort, for those days when you are worn out but want something with a bit more dazzle than toast or takeaways.

Spaghetti with Roasted Vegetable Sauce

This could accompany golden roast chicken portions, or simply be eaten by the plateful on its own.

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  • Half a butternut squash (they are normally sold in halves)
  • 1 red capsicum (or orange, but please not green)
  • 1 bulb garlic
  • 4 plump tomatoes
  • A pinch of sweet smoked paprika
  • Handful of chopped basil
  • 200g spaghetti (or linguini, or anything at all really)

Set the oven to 200 C. Halve the tomatoes and capsicum,  scooping out the white seeds of the latter. Slice the butternut into small chunks, cutting off the skin as you go. Wrap the bulb of garlic (yes, a whole bulb, don’t be scared now, it mellows out in the oven) in tinfoil. Put everything on an oven tray lined with baking paper and place it in the oven. Leave it there for about an hour and a half.

When this time is up, remove the vegetables from the oven. Cook the pasta in boiling salted water till done. Meanwhile, throw all the vegetables into a food processor (you’ll need to squeeze the softened garlic cloves out of their papery skins which is, admittedly, a little fiddly) along with the basil and paprika and whizz to a smoothish sauce, adding about 1/3 cup of water and any juices left on the tray.

Mix the drained spaghetti and the sauce together, and serve sprinkled with chopped mint, almonds and feta (can you tell I’m attached to the stuff?) if desired.

Serves 2

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The texture of the butternut (and you could use pumpkin of course) adds a delicious richness, while roasting really enhances the flavour of the other vegetables, making even the anemic looking tomatoes that you see so often these days taste utterly luscious, especially when paired with basil.

I’d love to hear back from anyone who happens to make these recipes, or even just anyone who feels like saying hi. Hopefully you’ll see more of me round the place as I become a regular fixture here!

Feel free to check out more of my ramblings at my blog Hungry and Frozen. It is, quite honestly, pretty fantastic. I mean, I really like it, so you might also.