Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Eling Forest Cellar Door Cafe & Winery





Curiosity after multiple trips back and forth between Sydney and Canberra led us to Eling Forest Cellar Door Café & Winery.
It was a beautiful place that captivated us from the entrance. 
Nectarines
It was only 9.30am so we only ordered the Toby’s Estate coffee. There wasn’t a breakfast menu but they sold tarts and cakes. 
The coffee was a bit disappointing because (a) there was too much milk and (b) the milk was too hot. I usually love Toby’s Estate but this particular cup was a let down. 
cards for table numbers
On the upside, The décor was lovely. The displays and tablecloths gave the place a nice warm country feel while the gardens outside had rows of peach, nectarine and plum trees. 


After the coffee, I walked over to the wine counter and had a taste of the 2005 Botrytis Semillon ($15).
It was golden in colour and rather unremarkable. It smelt sweet like honey and toffee and tasted sweet. Um.. that’s it. It didn’t leave an impression on me unfortunately and I didn’t take any photos either.
 
That’s it! I have to admit, I was more interested/distracted by the surrounds (i.e. the cute magpies, federation style cottages and hens).
 
If you need a stop over, take a walk around Eling Forest café & winery, walk in between the fruit trees, have a coffee but don’t compare it to your normal swish city cafes. 
peach tree heavy with fruit
 

Eling Forest Winery
12587 Hume Highway
Sutton Forest NSW 2577
Phone: 02 4878 9155
Fax: 02 4878 9246
Email: winery@elingforest.com.au



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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Coombe Farm Pinot Gris


view from above. This Pinot Gris looks like my door knob!
Pinot Gris originated from northern France, a cousin of the Pinot Grigio (that originated in northern Italy). This Pinot Gris came from the cool climate Yarra Valley, 45km east of Melbourne and is produced by Coombe Farm in who fermented the grapes in a stainless still barrel (no oak). Pinot Gris is a relatively newer white in Australia having grown in popularity since the early 2000s. I hope it’s one that stays. 

Colour: 
This is one of the ‘darker’ whites… if that makes sense. It’s not just straw coloured, but wet straw coloured and somewhat brassy. It’s quite pretty if you match it with light coloured food. The wine grips to the sides of the glass, leaving a resin-like residue. At this point I actually got excited about tasting this wine, anticipating some sweetness.
you can see the 'legs' of the wine holding to the sides of the glass. The meniscus is high.


Nose:
  It predominantly smells of semi ripe pineapple, not smelling fully ripe because there are hints of citrus in there as well. Breathing deeper, there’s a faint subtle apricot smell as well. Woohoo! No woody/oak smell!

Taste:
  The Coombe Farm Pinot Gris is a semi sweet wine that goes well on its own or with Hainan chicken rice, cheese pizza and cheese platters(I drank it over 3 days). This was quite nice to drink. It tasted of apricots and finished with some citric acidity. When you drink this wine, hold it in your mouth for two seconds, swallow and breath out. There. Did you taste it? There’s one more taste to this wine. It’s savoury! Just like cheese!








If you’re tired of the simple sweet wines or pure dry wines, try the Coombe Farm Pinot Gris 2010 ($17-$25 a bottle). Experience wine that tells a story on your senses

Coombe Farm Pinot Gris 2010. $17-$25 per bottle. 

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Albee's Kitchen, Campsie


I think I’ve mentioned before how quickly my family swoops onto the food at restaurants. You have to move fast!
So the solution? I used the humble iPhone 3GS camera. I refuse to upgrade until my phone dies. And because it’s an apple it’s probably going to take a while before it konks out. That’s right: I said Konk, not Knock.

Tonight’s dinner is held at Albee’s Kitchen, a converted 3 bedroom house to Malaysian Restaurant. As you go in, there’s a room full of tables, then as you walk even further, you enter the kitchen filled with 4-5 chefs. Walk even further through and you’ll come to 2 more rooms filled with larger tables for the larger families. 
Albee’s Kitchen is the place to go to for all those Singaporean and Malaysian expats/students who miss the taste of their local Hokka Centre. I’m not Malaysian so I was there for the good food minus the nostalgia. (“Waaaah…. Da kitchen is so authentic!” cried my KL friend one night as we brought him into the restaurant for the first time)
We didn’t even have to look at the menu to decide what we wanted to order. That was sorted in the car on the way down to Campsie.
3 curry puffs @ $6.50
“I want curry puffs!!!” The first decision was made 10 minutes after leaving the house, 20 minutes to the restaurant. It’s really important to note that these curry puffs are big and filling. They come with half an egg nestled inside a veggie curry filling so If you want to enjoy your dinner, I recommend you go halfsies and share with your buddy. We ordered 3 puffs for $6.50 with ½ left over to pack in a doggie bag.
1/2 a boiled egg inside the curry puff

Next out was the KangKong Sotong ($13.80) which was water spinach with marinated squid in a peanut, sweet, sticky black sauce and dark fried chilli flakes. It was the first time I’ve ever had it so I didn’t know what to expect or what was supposed to be traditional. According to my mother, they had done a good job.
Kankong Sotong $13.80
The spinach stems were crisp tunnels, and the sauce did wonders binding the spinach to the chewy crunchy almost transparent squid.
Left: Kangkong Sotong $13.80. Right: Hainan chicken flavoured rice $2.80
My only criticism is that I would have liked the squid to be cut a little bit finer so it’s the same size as the kangkong stems. But hey- maybe it was more traditional to have larger strips!
big squid pieces in amongst the kangkong

My order, the Beef Rendang ($16.80) came next, along with two bowls of Hainan flavour rice ($2.80 per bowl which portions well for 2 people).  The Beef Rendang was a little on the dry side. They usually give more sauce. The actual pieces of beef, however, were still soft and came apart when prodded with a spoon. It was spicy, curry-like and so so moreish.
Beef Rendang $16.80

Ordering the Hainan chicken was a no-brainer. Soft white chicken sitting on a thin layer of soy sauce with deep pots of chilli sauce and garlic pieces… who could resist? We ordered ½ a chicken at $13.80 for the 5 of us and it was demolished. 
1/2 Hainanese Chicken $13.80. Look! A piece of chicken was lifted away as soon as it was placed on the table!
The pieces were cut well without a trace of red baked blood that you normally get when you buy it from the local chinese chicken shop. It was also taken off the bone so it sped up the chopsticks going to and from the dish.
I looked around and I saw that it was good. And then came 2 noodle dishes from the kitchen! Oh no! I forgot we had ordered so many!
The Char Siew Wanton Kolo Mee KL Style was Tuesday’s dish ($11.00). My KL friend was going to come to Albee’s kitchen just so that he could try their Kolo Mee. He said that it was the most ordered Hokka dish in KL. We didn’t invite him to join us that night so I just sent him a pic. Mean much?
Char Siew Wanton Kolo Mee KL Style. $11. I was too slow. The noodles had already been tossed and wantons had already been eaten.

The Kolo Mee came with a small bowl of salty clear soup with 5 wrinkly wantons floating around in it. The wantons itself were nice and left slightly al dente. (I like them overcooked where the dough is so slippery).
The egg noodles were covered in a black sweet sauce, and presented with kang kong and pieces of BBQ pork on the side of the place. Its sweetness was cut through nicely by thin pieces of pickled chilli. Once you start with your first bite of the Kolo Mee you simply can’t stop. I’m gonna definitely bring my friend here to see if he gives it the authentic KL thumbs up.

I think the last dish has to be my mother’s favourite. She has been ordering the Mi Goreng Mamak every single time we come here. It's a good feed for 2 people at $10. It’s a high mound of round egg noodles fried with prawns, pork, chicken, cabbage, tofu and fried eschallots. It’s a little bit sweet, a tiny tiny bit spicy, and a whole lot tasty.
Mi Goreng Mamak $10.

If had it my way, I would have only ordered 3 dishes maximum for 5 people. We had to take away most of the renddang, most of the Mi Goreng and some of the Kolo Mee. If I had it my way, I would have also saved some space for the Chendol….ah… the Chendol….
Oh well… Next time!

So if you’re Malaysian, get yourself over to Albee’s Kitchen and educate me. Are they as authentic as they say they are?



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Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Rekorderlig Premium Strawberry-Lime Cider



Rekorderlig Sweedish strawberry-lime cider. PREMIUM Cider.


I was first introduced to this drink 3 weeks ago when I went out with a bunch of friends to King O’Malleys Irish Pubdown in Canberra (“You have to try the chicken parmy at KingOs” my friend said to me. I thought that at 10.30pm it would be too big. Instead I ordered the beer battered fish n chips at $18.90 which was stupid. Coz it was a whopping giant delicious 2 fillets on a mountain of chips and salad. I should say I was stupid. Coz it tasted so good I had to finish it. I had to run 2ks and up my weights at 6.20am the morning after).
My friend was the one who ordered the Rekorderlig for approx. $10 for a bottle that came out with a glass full of ice. She filled her glass to the top, got me another schooner of ice which I filled with the cider. And once the drink filled to the top, there was still more to go around.
Unlike the average cider, this strawberry-lime cider has less head that disappears as quickly as your average fizzy drink like lemonade.
It’s pretty, it’s pink, its sweet, fizzy and smells like strawberry and kiwifruit.
On the taste buds, it tastes like strawberry jam ending on a crisp note of lime.
Yum!
At 4% Alcohol content I’m thinking it’s a good substitute for moscato for my friends who are driving. I’m also thinking that at ~$6 for 500ml (bought at Dan Murphy’s) it’s a similar price to the cheaper Moscato bottles out there.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Suhhtan Pizza Bakery, Regents Park


Want to know a secret???
Want to know where to go for good cheap pizza???

In my hungry opinion, the best Lebanese pizza I’ve tasted so far this year is Suhhtan Pizza in Regents Park. Its popular with the locals and you will see groups going in and rattling away their memorised orders like seasoned diners. 
So that’s where I went last Saturday when I got the hungries.
I ordered the garlic chicken pizza, which was essentially creamy garlic sauce, pieces of chicken breast and cheese on a thin crust.
 
They’re the essential components; now let me rave.
The crust! Oh the crust. It was so crispy, with a little bit of stretch in the middle. I ate it at home without any sign of sogginess. It’s basically the size of a Lebanese bread so its suitable for one person. Two people if they’re small eaters.
Super thin crust!
The garlic sauce was amazing. Smooth, white, creamy and pungent. To all those foodies out there: Have you tried the garlic sauce at Habibs in Bankstown? Amazing right? This is just as good. Even better because it’s on pizza.
The chicken was chicken. No complaints. It was normal chicken, but generously sliced and placed. It really balanced with the garlic sauce.
Garlic Chicken Pizza $6
The cheese was definitely a girls dream. The cheese was good abundant and it’s usually stringy but because I brought it home in the car it had lost its elasticity.

Did I mention the price? $6!!!
Za'atar $1.50
I also bought Za’atar (pronounced sar-tar) pizza for $1.50. Za’atar is a mix of herbs and spices (oregano, thyme, sesame seeds and something else I cant quite pick up). 
 
Its mixed with olive oil, generously brushed onto the bread and baked. Instead of presenting it in a pizza box, it comes rolled and wrapped in paper. This stops all the za’atar falling out.  
The Za’atar itself was good but not the best I’ve had. 
Why was it good? The herb mix was generous and the sesame seeds stood out and balanced with the oregano. 
Why was I unimpressed with it? The dough (unlike the pizza base) had a tendency to harden once it cooled down which made it hard to chew through and got messy on the fingers. 




 
It looks dodgy from the outside and the grey tiles and blue walls makes it look old and distasteful but don’t let that turn you off the food. It must be a good place if people are lining up to buy pizza from 8am on Sunday mornings right??

Info:
Suhhtan Pizza Bakery 
10 Amy Street, Regents Park
Ph: 9738 8577

Opening Hours
Mon-Thu: 5.30am-9pm
Fri-Sat: 5.30am-10pm
Sunday: 6am-10pm


 


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