I did a linguine and garlic prawns a few weeks ago. Tonight, I thought I’d do something with an Asian bent.
Ingredients
Raw prawns (large banana prawns)
Tomato sauce
Soy sauce
Sweet chilli sauce
Garlic (sliced with a mandolin)
Ginger (grated)
Chilli flakes
Chilli (cut in strips)
Spring onion
White onion
Whole black peppercorns (freshly ground)
Rice
Broccoli florets
Instructions
Marinate the raw prawns (with the shell on) in a bowl of tomato sauce, sweet chilli sauce, soy sauce, garlic, ginger, and chilli flakes.
Leave the prawns in the marinade in the refrigerator for a couple of hours.
Cook the rice however you please.
Heat a wok until it’s smoking hot.
Add in some high vapour point oil, e.g., Queensland nut oil.
Fry off some garlic, ginger, spring onions and white onions and then add in the prawns and marinade.
Cook the prawns by stir-frying them until they turn red.
Add in the broccoli florets and mix everything until the broccoli florets soften a little.
Serve in a bowl and eat with the rice using chopsticks.
Some people will want to eat the prawns by sucking them off and then breaking the head off and sucking its head. The next step is peeling the prawns and eating the chilli-flavoured hot flesh.
I do it differently; I hold the prawn with my chopsticks and suck the juice off it and then eat the whole prawn, including the shell, head, and legs.
If I was cooking this for someone else, I would peel the prawns and remove the alimentary canal first because I know most people would prefer it that way.
During the week, a work friend, viz., MH, mentioned that she cooked two legs of lamb for 10 hours each for Christmas dinner. MH has a large family who all live in rural Victoria.
I’m quite fond of lamb, but I prefer the forequarter rather than a hind leg (also known as the shoulder). I am aware a lot of people aren’t keen on lamb meat. The odour from cooking and cooked lamb is distinct, and some people are put off by it. One of my daughters isn’t keen on lamb meat. Part of her distaste is that she eschews all animal fat and lamb can be quite fat. I like eating breakfast with this daughter because she cuts off all her bacon fat. Guess who gets the discarded bacon fat?
Stolen rosemary with garlic and white onion.
My anatomical preference for lamb is in contrast to my taste for chicken. For chicken, I am a thigh lover over the breasts and wings.
As I was thinking about this meal, I thought I’d try to get things started in the slow cooker at about 6 am so I’d have the meat ready well before my 6 pm dinner deadline.
Lamb shoulder after browning in a frying pan.
The day didn’t start as planned. Oddly for me, I slept in and didn’t start the preparation until about 6.30 am.
Last night, I went for a walk and foraged (stole or acquired) a large amount of rosemary from a few bushes on the footpath outside a local hotel.
I browned the fat and muscle meat in a large frying pan over high heat to prepare the lamb.
Halfway point in a 10 hour slow cook lamb shoulder.
I added all the rosemary in the slow cooker after I scrunched it up and rubbed it vigorously in my hands to break down the leaves a little to release the natural oils. I also cut a knob of garlic in half, sliced one white onion and put it into the cooking vessel.
Add about ¼ cup of dry oregano leaves and a cup of stock.
I then put the lamb into the slow cooker and discovered it was slightly too big. I had to get a knife and cut away some muscle bundles to get the lid to seal correctly.
A wedge of Kent pumpkin rubbed with olive oil, black pepper, iodised salt, chilli flakes and sugar. Ready for the oven.
After ten hours, I opened the slow cooker and removed the shoulder. The fat and muscle meat were coming away from the bones, making the transfer to a tray in one piece difficult. The meat’s tenderness wasn’t a problem because I wanted to pull the muscle bundles off than carve away large cuts from the bone.
Most of the lamb meat is now in an airtight container and refrigerated. Lamb will be a feature of lunches and dinners this week.
Lamb shoulder bones
If you’re wondering what I did with the cooking juices, well wonder no more. I filtered out the rosemary, garlic, and onion and used the liquid to make a gravy.
I made a roux with a little flour and butter in a saucier pan and cooked it for about 3 minutes. I added the meat juices and cooking liquid and stirred it until a gravy consistency developed.
To accompany tonight’s lamb shoulder roast, I roasted a wedge of Kent pumpkin as well as some broccolini.
I coated the pumpkin with black peppercorns, iodised salt crystals, hot chilli flakes and refined white sugar which I ground in a mortar with a pestle. I like adding a little sugar to help with the caramelisation of the pumpkin. I cooked the pumpkin in an oven at 180 °C for about 45 minutes.
I gently rubbed the broccolini with some olive oil and cooked it with the pumpkin for the 20 minutes of the cooking period.
10 hour slow cook shoulder of lamb with lamb flavoured gravy, roast Kent pumpkin and broccolini.
10 hour slow cook shoulder of lamb with lamb flavoured gravy, roast Kent pumpkin and broccolini.
10 hour slow cook shoulder of lamb with lamb flavoured gravy, roast Kent pumpkin and broccolini.
10 hour slow cook shoulder of lamb with lamb flavoured gravy, roast Kent pumpkin and broccolini.
10 hour slow cook shoulder of lamb with lamb flavoured gravy, roast Kent pumpkin and broccolini.
MH and another workmate, viz., AP, gave me a cultured butter gift on Thursday. I see lamb and gravy rolls on buttered bread being a thing next week.
I have the best workmates who really know me. Cultured butter, biscuits and a microorganism!
Prawns and linguine in a tomato, chilli and garlic sauce
Prawns and linguine in a tomato, chilli and garlic sauce
Background
Prawns with spaghetti, chilli and garlic were suggested by GC after I asked how she would combine prawns and pasta. I spied some “fresh”* linguine at the supermarket and chose that instead of the spaghetti I had in the pantry.
Ingredients
150 g “fresh” linguine
2 tablespoons olive oil
2–3 garlic cloves, finely sliced
1 fresh red chilli*, finely sliced
210 g chopped tomatoes (I use Mutti™ brand tinned tomatoes)
2 tablespoons of lime* juice
250 g peeled cooked prawns
1 tablespoon flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
Iodised salt flakes
Whole black peppercorns, crushed with a pestle in a mortar
Prawns and linguine in a tomato, chilli and garlic sauce
Instructions
Hone your knives on a honing rod.
Prepare everything ahead of time.
Boil some salted water and add the prawn heads to add a little extra flavour to the water.
Boil the prawn heads for about five minutes to extract the flavour from them. After five minutes, remove the prawn heads with a strainer or whatever tool you have that works.
With the water in a rolling* boil, empty the packet of “fresh” linguine into the boiling water and cook according to the maker’s instructions for use.
Heat the oil in a non-stick skillet or wok and add the garlic and chilli.
Cook the garlic and chilli for about a minute then add the lime juice and tomatoes.
Cook for about 5 minutes on high heat until the sauce begins to bubble and has reduced slightly.
Add in the prawns and heat them through, this should only take about 30 seconds. Don’t ruin them by overcooking them because that would be a tragedy of epic proportions.
After the instructed cooking time, drain the spaghetti, add it to the tomato and prawn sauce, and then add some parsley. Toss everything together over low heat combining the spaghetti with the sauce.
Transfer everything to a bowl and garnish with more parsley as well as some salt and pepper.
The question that beckons is how to eat this meal. When I look at it, it looks like a noodle stir fry so do I grab a pair of chopsticks? In deference to Italian friends though, I went with a fork and a spoon.
Floss and brush your teeth multiple times because I went with three cloves of garlic.
Flat-leaf parsley, whole black peppercorns, iodised salt flakes, Mutti tomatoes, garlic, limes and chilliHalved limes, ground pepper and salt, sliced and diced chilli, Mutti tomatoes and sliced garlicCooked prawnsPeeled prawns and prawn headsFresh linguine
Optional extra lobster meat
I was keen on a Moreton Bay bug (slipper lobster) but ended up with a small lobster tail. This tail had been frozen and was thawing when I bought it. I completed the thawing and then cooked it in some salted water for about 4 minutes. To stop overcooking the lobster meat, I plunged the cooked lobster tail into ice water.
I could have sliced the tail and combined it with the prawns, however, I chose to keep the lobster meat separate and ate it along with the meal adding a forkful of pasta and prawns to a slice of lobster meat.
Raw lobster tailCooked lobster tail in a saucepanCooked lobster tail on kitchen paperCooked lobster tail on ice
If you’re thinking, “How can Gary afford this?” it comes down to the trade problems Australia is currently experiencing with China. China is refusing to import products like lobsters so there is a glut and lobster meat is cheaper than normal.
Final thoughts
This was a good meal.
Everything came together well.
I think this is the first time I used tomatoes and didn’t add any cream or cheese of any nature.
If you make this please let me know in the comments. Thanks.
Notes
“Fresh” in this situation with the packet refrigerated linguine means not dry.
Rolling or roiling boil? Roiling is an old word, so it’s suited to old farts rather than young people.
Lime juice or lemon juice? I know many recipes suggest lemon juice, but I like the freshness of lime juice.
Should you remove the seeds from the chilli? It’s really up to you. Last Saturday night, I ate a very hot chilli with my brother and his daughter on a dare. We all suffered. Our eyes watered. It felt like the mucosa in our buccal cavities was sloughing off. I was producing copious volumes of saliva. The pain lasted for about 30 minutes.
I need to clean out my freezer and refrigerator of bits and pieces.
I had some speck, some baby green peas, some onions, mushrooms, and a handful of cherry tomatoes on the cusp of blooming some mould.
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
Speck is smokey bacon and sold as a block rather than rashers. I had an open packet after I’d used some speck a few weeks ago for some other dish.
I also have some frozen baby green peas in the freezer because frozen peas are so versatile. When I make mushy peas, I use sour cream, and I had a little left after having it with avocado during the week.
Because I ate a sweet lunch on Friday rather than my usual caramelised onion and mushrooms on Italian bread I had some brown mushrooms getting a little dry in a paper bag in the refrigerator.
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
Ingredients
Speck
Onion
Cloves
Chicken stock
Baby green peas
Sour cream
Butter
Cherry tomatoes
Onions
Mushrooms
Claire’s whiskey Seville marmalade
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
Golden syrup
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
Instructions
Speck and caramelised onions
Cut the speck into thick slices. When I write thick, I’m thinking, at least 1 cm thick. You want to be able to bite into the smoked bacon and experience the smokiness as your teeth cut through and the fatty meat juices burst from the moist, tender flesh over your tongue.
Quarter a brown onion with a sharp knife. I use a Chinese-style meat cleaver which I like to hone with a cook’s steel each time I use it. I love the sound of iron on iron.
Put the speck, onions and some cloves into a saucepan and pour over enough chicken stock to cover the meat.
Bring the chicken stock to a simmering boil and cook for about 40 minutes.
The idea is to get the speck soft and floppy.
After 40 minutes, take the saucepan off the hob and allow it to rest off the heat.
With a mandolin, slice a couple of white onions and remove the stalks from the mushrooms.
Begin to caramelise the onions in some olive oil over low, slow heat. Add in the mushroom caps and stalks and put a lid on the frying pan.
When the onions and mushrooms soften and begin to take some colour, add in a little balsamic vinegar and continue to cook slowly. For some extra kick add a dessert spoon of Claire’s whiskey Seville marmalade. Watch the onions and mushrooms because you want them caramelised and not burnt.
Towards the end, add in some golden syrup for a little extra sweetness. Adding the golden syrup is an optional step.
When the onions and mushrooms are ready, take the frying pan off the heat and transfer the caramelised onion and mushrooms to a bowl.
Remove the pieces of speck from the saucepan. Dry the surfaces of the meat and fat with a towel.
In the frying pan used for the onions and mushrooms, fry off the speck along with the cherry tomatoes. Fry the meat until it takes on some colour and a little crispiness.
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
Mushy peas
Put the frozen baby green peas into a silicon mixing jug with a little water and cook using microwave radiation. Cook the peas until they just become soft.
Drain out the excess water and add in a nudge of butter and a dessert spoon of sour cream.
Blend with a stick blender.
The sour cream keeps the peas bright and green.
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
Serve the food
Put everything on a dinner plate.
Shoot a photograph.
Sit down and eat with a knife and fork.
Speck with caramelised onions and mushrooms with mushy peas and cherry tomatoes
What have I done this week?
I’ve been out twice. I know, right? What a gadabout. I like the description of gadabout in the British Engish Thesaurus (see below).
On Monday evening I went out with some pathologists (specialist microbiologists, as a colony) to XO in Narabundah and we enjoyed the Christmas menu.
On Wednesday evening, I went out with some work friends to Tipsy Bull in Braddon and enjoyed a collection of vegetarian tasting plates.
What have I watched this week?
I watched the food show Ugly Delicious produced and starring US-based celebrity chef, David Chang. David is of Korean heritage, and this is important to know when watching the program.
David spent the series highlighting the differences between the sophisticated Italian and French cuisines against the messy and ugly south-east Asian and Indian cuisines. The premise being there is inherent racism because Asian food is quick and looks sloppy, and the service is often curt. In contrast, Italian and French food is refined and sophisticated with the food elements and plating being elegant, and the service is polite and courteous.
I could see his perspective, but I don’t see it as racism. Eating at a fine dining restaurant with attractive looking food and courteous service is enjoyable with the right company. Likewise going for cheap eats in an Asian restaurant with cheap tables and chairs, newspaper for table covering, and disposable chopsticks can be just as enjoyable with the same company.
Final thoughts
Have a good week. Let me know what you think in the comments section.
Dear Reader, this post is formatted differently from the usual way I write here. Please bear with me. I’ll get to the sandwich a bit later.
Three Mills Orange and Raisin Sourdough with Lurpak butter, Claire’s whiskey marmalade, and Mayver’s peanut paste
This year has been a roller coaster ride for many, and in some circumstances, sadly, it’s been a fatal crash ending.
Bushfires
In Australia, 2020 began in the midst of what many are calling the worst bushfire season in living memory. So much was destroyed, so many people were affected physically and mentally. Some people died. We lost vast amounts of fauna and flora. The economic cost was huge to many communities. Some families have not recovered and remain in a state of poverty.
COVID-19
By the end of January 2020, we were staring into a public health incident of international concern. We have spent most of 2020 in pandemic response mode because of COVID-19. On some days, when there is just so much work, and it’s stressful to get through it all, time feels like it stands still, but overall, this year has sped past.
I know so many people who have been affected by the pandemic in very profound ways. I’m fortunate that I don’t have a personal connection with anyone who has died, but when I look at the figures around the world, I’m aghast at how some countries have fared.
We can speculate about the quality of political leadership and the quality of medical expertise. Praise God, in Australia, despite what many people think of our leaders and decision-makers; the overall outcome has been good. Australia benefits in being an island continent with strong governance in biosecurity. It also benefits from having good health and medical expertise and leadership. This is all based on a foundation of people working in policy roles who aim every day to make Australia safe. Health protection is their vision and mission for their working lives.
How does any of this relate to a sandwich?
Well, while I spend time pondering the suffering of others, I feel guilty in a small portion for thinking this has been the best year of my existence.
While others have lost employment (including my daughters and brothers), I’ve never been busier. Working from home has been forced on some; yet, I’ve always had options. I’m able to do four days in an office building working with others while I spend the other days working from home.
Being able to see people physically has been good. Having good friends who are happy to communicate digitally has been soul-saving, and faith restoring.
I’ve been working with three teams of extraordinary policy officers. Each person is gifted, and it’s a joyful experience working with them.
Now we come to the sandwich.
Claire is in one of the teams I work with every day. Claire makes marmalade for her family and friends. Claire gave me some of her whiskey Seville marmalade, which she made last year. Surprisingly, Claire dislikes marmalade. I love the stuff.
Fridays are my working from home day. I have a series of teleconferences and videoconferences each Friday, and I can do that easily from home. My first meeting on a Friday usually starts at 9 am which meant I had some time to buy a coffee at Atlas on Hibberson and then wander over to Le Bon Mélange and buy the orange and raisin sourdough bread.
Atlas on Hibberson Flat white coffee. This coffee is very good. It’s rich and deep in flavour. Clearly made with love.
When I was on Hibberson Street, it made me feel like I was in a country town in Queensland. It just had a nice feel to it.
When I got to LBM, I thought that I might buy another pecan, apple and custard tart too for morning tea. When I walked inside LBM, however, there were none 😞
The pecan tarts looked good, but the lemon and lime white chocolate cheesecake caught my eye, and I had to have one.
Le Bon Mélange Café Lemon Lime White chocolate Cheesecake
In a time not that long ago
When GC mentioned fruit loaf, it stimulated memories of when I used to travel a lot for work, and I’d have breakfast at the airport in an airline lounge. There was always some fruit loaf to toast plus packets of butter, orange marmalade and peanut paste (albeit smooth and never crunchy).
My favourite breakfast was two pieces of toasted fruit loaf, lashings of butter and lots of marmalade and peanut paste. And, there would always be coffee.
Resident medical officer life
This habit is similar to when I was a resident. In the doctors and nurses lounge in the hospital, I trained in, between surgical cases, I’d always have a peanut paste and marmalade sandwich on the fresh thick-sliced white sandwich loaf. The only thing which kept the weight off in those days was the frenetic pace of resident life. I lived on sandwiches, hot chips and late-night pizza in the wards with the unit’s other house officers.
The sandwich
The connection with work and this sandwich goes a little further. GC works in one of the teams, and she recommended not only the bread but also the Mayver’s peanut paste.
Then there is the butter, in the third team is MH. MH grew up on a dairy farm, and on most days at work, we comment to each other about our profound fondness for butter as a food group. Her family farm’s milk only goes to milk and cheese and not butter, but she only buys Lurpak.
Rather than just spread the butter on dry toasted orange and raisin sourdough bread, I pan-fried the bread in Lurpak butter. The sugars in the fruit and bread caramelised beautifully.
Three Mills Orange and Raisin Sourdough with Lurpak butter, Claire’s whiskey marmalade, and Mayver’s peanut paste
Claire’s whiskey Seville marmalade has a strong whiskey flavour but enough citrusy tartness to make my tongue sing. This is nothing like the marmalade you’d buy in a supermarket.
Three Mills Orange and Raisin Sourdough bread fried in Lurpak butter and topped with Claire’s homemade whiskey marmalade and Mayver’s dark roasted peanut pasteThree Mills Orange and Raisin Sourdough bread fried in Lurpak butter and topped with Claire’s homemade whiskey marmalade and Mayver’s dark roasted peanut paste
While I do like peanut paste and marmalade, and the slice I had with both was good, I think for the rest of the loaf (now frozen) and the rest of the jar of marmalade, I’ll exclude the peanut paste. It’s an unnecessary accompaniment.
Three Mills Orange and Raisin Sourdough ready for freezing
Lemon and lime white chocolate cheesecake from LBM
Here’s my description in one sentence.
Beautiful thin and firm shortcrust pastry lined with a delicate and friable biscuit crumb encasing a tarty sweet lemon and lime white chocolate cheesecake with visible flecks of lime zest.
Truly delightful.
Le Bon Mélange Café Lemon Lime White chocolate Cheesecake Atlas coffee Caffettiera with Atlas coffeeLe Bon Mélange Café Lemon Lime White chocolate Cheesecake Atlas coffee Caffettiera with Atlas coffee
Weight chart
Weight chart Saturday 2020-12-05
Surprisingly, I’m still managing to keep within the 73.5–74.5 kilogram weight range. Next year, I may be able to realise two goals which I thought were out of reach. That is a healthy weight range Body Mass Index (BMI) and a scaphoid abdomen.
With Christmas coming up though, I also have a desire to eat tubs of ice cream, custard, and pudding most days between Christmas day and new year’s day. That may have an impact. There will also be affogato.
Tonight’s dinner
Reverse seared New York strip steak with caramelised onions and mushrooms with asparagus, broccolini and sugar snap peas.
Dry brining a New York strip steak
I made the caramelised onions and mushrooms yesterday for my Friday pizza.
The steak was dry brined and then cooked in a warm oven until the internal temperature reached 45 °C. I then seared the steak in a cast-iron skillet with Queensland nut oil and butter.
Resting reverse seared New York strip steak
The greens were par boiled to enhance the green colour, cold shocked in ice water and then finished in the burnt butter after the steak had been seared.
The packet (McCain’s) sweet potato chips where cooked in a hot oven for 30 minutes.
Resting reverse-seared New York strip steak with sweet potato chips, caramelised onion and mushrooms, plus sugar snap peas, asparagus and broccolini
A book to read
A blogger friend, Jules has written a book about her experience caring for her son who has bipolar disorder. Jules wants to establish an education centre to help others.
I hope to read this book over the next few weeks.
Julie Strickland’s “The walls are breathing” with an Atlas coffee
Final thoughts
Dear Reader, this post has been a little different and given I’m seriously contemplating retiring the diary blog, future posts maybe like this one.
Please leave a comment and let me know how you feel about this change. Thanks for visiting Yummy Lummy.
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