Review: Home Ground on Brunswick



Boy oh boy do I love a perfect cup of coffee and you'll find it here at Home Ground.

Miss Eat Me Brisbane is a long black drinker, which can make finding a well bodied perfectly balanced cup of joe hard to find. Not here though and the other coffees looked the goods too. To top it off you also get a complimentary tasty little cookie with your order. Nice touch.

Home ground also caters to the light lunch market with wraps and soup specials. I totally recommend dropping in and enjoying the awesome wall art. I'm very excited that a coffee house with personality has arrived on the Brunswick St strip.

Home Ground on Brunswick on Urbanspoon





Cookbooks: The Good Heart Recipe Book- Jonsi and Alex

This is such a sweet and amusing video. Jonsi and Alex cooking, so not only do they make great music, they are now also cooks. You can peruse their recipes from their website.


Hello Autumn



It feels like Autumn is trying to wash Summer away with the rain this morning. I personally cannot wait for the crisp cool air to waft on in and herald the beginning of the cosy months.

March 1 was strictly speaking the beginning of Autumn , I love changing seasons particularly with regard to cooking as it brings with it a new crop of ingriedients and produce that are at their best. I really believe in seasonal eating it just makes so much sense.

So hello Autumn and hello to your bounty


Beurre Bosc Pears
Quince
Pistachio
Hazelnuts
Almonds
Pomegranate

Red Cabbage and Lettuces
Pumpkin (see recipe below)
Ginger
Sweet potato/potato
Shallots
Fennel
Mushrooms
Leeks
Celery
Olives

What a bounty! So why not celebrate Autumn with this tasty pumpkin salad- recipe and photo from 101 cookbooks.


Roasted Pumpkin Salad

3 cups of pumpkin (or other winter squash), peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes
extra-virgin olive oi
fine grain sea salt

12 tiny red onions or shallots, peeled (OR 3 medium red onions peeled and quartered)
2 cups cooked wild rice*

1/3 cup sunflower seeds
1/3 cup olive oil
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon honey
2 tablespoons warm water
1/2 cup cilantro, finely chopped

Preheat oven to 375 F
Toss the pumpkin in a generous splash of olive oil along with a couple pinches of salt, and turn out onto a baking sheet. At the same time, toss the onions with a bit of olive oil, sprinkle with salt, and turn out onto a separate baking sheet. Roast both for about 45 minutes, or until squash is brown and caramelized. The same goes for the onions, they should be deeply colored, caramelized, and soft throughout by the time they are done roasting. You'll need to flip both the squash and onion pieces once or twice along the way - so it's not just one side that is browning.

In the meantime, make the dressing. With a hand blender or food processor puree the sunflower seeds, olive oil, lemon juice, salt, and honey until creamy. You may need to add a few tablespoons of warm water to thin the dressing a bit. Stir in the cilantro, saving just a bit to garnish the final plate later. Taste and adjust seasonings (or flavors) to your liking - I usually need to add a touch more salt with this dressing.

In a large bowl, toss the wild rice with a large dollop of the dressing. Add the onions, gently toss just once or twice. Turn the rice and onions out onto a platter and top with the roasted squash (I'll very gently toss with my hands here to disperse the pumpkin a bit). Finish with another drizzle of dressing and any remaining chopped cilantro.

Serves 4.

* To cook wild rice: Rinse 1 1/2 cups wild rice. In a medium sauce pan bring the rice and 4 1/2 cups salted water to a boil. Reduce to a simmer. Cook for 40 minutes or until rice is tender and splitting open, stirring occasionally. You'll have enough for this recipe and some leftover.

Food Trends: Would you be an in vitro-tarian?



The times they are a changing! Well maybe. Some very brave new world-esque research may change forever the way we eat. Researchers in Europe in collaboration with PETA are discovering methods of meat creation from a single animal cells as reported in the penultimate science weekly, Nature (http://www.nature.com/news/2010/101208/full/468752a/box/1.html).

The idea is to amplify the animal cell eg a pig cell to create sweet tasty meat wholly in a petri dish. The advantage would be reducing the cost associated with animal farming and would help solve the problem of a resource scarcity. Despite an initially oh hell no reaction to this, it cannot be denied that our current farming and agricultural practices do have a finite limit ie there is only a certain amount of arable land. So as much as lab fresh meat in my mind will never be as satisfying and tasty as paddock grown im glad research into alternative sources of food is under way.

Would you be an in vitro-tarian?