About Me

My photo
Wellington, New Zealand
Food lover. Food talker. Now food writer.

Sunday, 23 October 2011

Celebratory All Black Cake (with Beer)


I discovered that being an All Black fan (which I have been for about 4 days now) can combine delightfully with baking! A few weeks ago I stumbled on Nigella Lawson's Guinness Chocolate Cake via Twitter and I liked the look of it. Then with the ABs doing pretty well, I thought that could be a fun celebratory cake for the World Cup Final. So I adapted Nigella's cake to make this!
Nigella uses white sugar in her cake, but I wanted to give this cake as much chance as possible of being black, so I used dark muscovado sugar. It turned out pretty well, but it did get a bit burned around the very edges, possibly because of the advanced caramel in the sugar. I just trimmed those bits off, turned the cake over so I had a nice flat bottom to decorate and no problem!

Although made with beer, it doesn't taste like beer, just a bit maltier than your average cake.

Here's the recipe.

All Black Beery Chocolate Cake

First butter (or spray with non-stick non-flavoured oil, which is what I do) and then line a 20-23cm cake tin with baking paper. Heat the oven to 180C.

Start with the following
  • 250mL of porter beer – if this is to be an All Black celebratory cake, then best you use a porter from New Zealand. Likely brewers include Three Boys or Tuatara or Renaissance (who make a chocolate stout which I am sure it worth trying in this!)
  • 250g unsalted butter
Heat the above together in a big saucepan until the butter is melted. Take it off the heat.

Whisk into the beer:
  • 75g cocoa
  • 400g dark muscovado sugar (presumably this works with white sugar (Nigella calls for caster), but I used dark)
In a separate bowl beat together
  • 150mL sour cream
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 T vanilla essence
and then stir that into the beer mixture

Then whisk
  • 275g of plain flour
  • 2.5 t baking soda
into the mixture until all nicely mixed together.

Pour into the prepared cake tin and bake for 45 minutes to an hour until the skewer test shows it's cooked. For me the cake went from not cooked (gunk still stuck to the skewer) to cooked (nice clean skewer) quickly, so keep an eye on it towards the end. I also had to cover it with a bit of tin foil for the about 10 minutes or so of the cooking as the top was cooking faster than the middle.

Cool in tin on rack before turning out on its top (so that the bottom, which is the flat bit, is available for dressing).

I made a stencil out of the ABs' fern and logo with a stanley knife and some patience. Then I sprinkled icing sugar through the stencil just before serving. Be very careful as you remove the stencil. Serve with cream or yoghurt if you want (I didn't).

Enjoy! Preferable after a magnificent All Black victory. 

Congratulations to the 2011 All Blacks – the 6th NZ rugby team to win a World Cup: 1987 (Men's, NZ), 1998 (Women's, Netherlands), 2002 (Women's, Spain), 2006 (Women's, Canada), 2010 (Women's, UK) and 2011 (Men's, NZ).

Now, time to focus on that election thingy and the rest of NZ culture!

Saturday, 15 October 2011

Birthday Thai

Hard as it is to imagine, I get older every year. This year was no exception. By tradition, Pav and I gather our friends together to celebrate our birthdays (his is shortly before mine) in an interesting way. Last year Samoa (sort of), the year before lawn bowls, this year – Thai food and wine matching.

PhuThai Esarn is one of a handful of great Thai places in Wellington. We sorted out a varied set menu for 12 and asked our friend Rebecca Taylor who writes a wine column for the Capital Times (Wine Press) to think up some interesting wine matches for us. And she came up trumps. 
Grilled squid
Our chosen menu included a good mix of spice, heat and milder flavours. Consensus says that the top dishes were the Nam-tok Beef (grilled beef with fresh herbs and lime juice), the Larb Pork (pork salad, with lime juice, chilli and red onion) and the Kang Phed Ped Yang (red duck curry). That last being a sweet, creamy mix with pineapple and duck. The fresh spring rolls are a personal favourite of mine.

Being Thai, it's all a fine balance between spicy (chilli), salty (usually fish sauce), sweet (brown sugar or similar) and sour (lemons, limes, kaffir lime leaves...). Matching wine with that's a fun game as any one of those can fight with some wines. 
 The wines that Rebecca came up with were spot on. She texted tasting notes as she was running a bit late, so we did as instructed and started with the Black Estate Riesling 2010 as an aperitif. This is a Waipara wine from a family owned vineyard and was a smooth start to the night. But it came into its own when the entrees arrived. The fruitiness of the wine was fun to roll around the mouth with the various degrees of flavour and spice in the fish cakes, fresh spring rolls, deep fried goodies and, particularly, the Meuk Yang grilled squid with a chilli dressing. No nasty sauvignon-chilli clash here thank you very much. 
Red duck curry
As mains arrived we slid gently into the Seifried Würzer 2008, another South Island number – Nelson this time. Würzer is a rare German variety with only about 100 hectares planted around the world. Seifried says it has NZ's only Würzer plantings. The founders of Seifried have German heritage, so it's not outrageous that they might give this a go. The grape is a cross between Gewurztraminer and Muller-Thurgau (don't let that last put you off) and goes beautifully with the prickly heat and saltiness of Thai food, as we discovered. The tasting notes say elderflower, peach, apricot and sherbet flavours, which is fair enough. The sweetness which might be annoying in other food matches works wonderfully here. This was everyone's favourite wine of the evening.
The third bottle was a 12,000 Miles Pinot Noir 2010 from Gladstone out in the Wairarapa. I didn't get much of this as I had been enjoying the whites so much (and briefly forgetting my obligations to you, dear reader), but the little I did have was also well matched with the spice. That's interesting because I wouldn't think to order red wine with spicy food usually – I guess it's the spicy food = hot country = cooling white wines linkage in my head. Just goes to show that we should all check our assumptions every so often.

You too should check out PhuThai Esarn in the middle of Cambridge Tce, or its sister PhuThai Lanna on the corner of Vivian and Tory Sts. And take some risks in your wine matches. Hunt down a Würzer!

PhuThai Esarn
35-38 Cambridge Tce
Wellington
04 801 5006

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Rugby, Pizza and Pig's Head

The Oval Ball Global Challenge continues unabated which means that I have now watched more rugby in 2 weeks that in probably the last 20 years (that's about 2 games). And what does rugby mean in terms of food? It means pizza and spicy nuts.

I've been experimenting with coatings for nuts and working with the base of 3 cups of nuts to 1 beaten egg, plus salt and spices. Our favourite so far is:

3 cups of raw mixed nuts
1 egg white (don't use a big one, otherwise this could end up LA omletty)
2 T chopped fresh rosemary
½ t freshly ground salt
½ t ground paprika (you can use more if you want to )
1 t brown sugar (I used dark muscovado, but it's not necessary)

Heat oven to 180 degrees. Beat the egg white until sloppily beaten. Stir remainder of ingredients except nuts in to the egg white. Then stir in the nuts. Spread nuts on a baking tray lined with baking paper and roast for 13 minutes or so until the egg white is dry and the nuts roasted (shake the nuts about half way through). Let them cool before serving so that the egg white and salt can go crispy. Don't worry, they don't taste sweet, the sugar just adds to the crunch and helps carry the spice.

Other combos include salt, finely grated lemon zest and chilli. And a Moroccan-inspired mix of salt, nutmeg, chilli, cumin and ground coriander seeds. Try your own and let me know if you hit on a good combo of your own.
Our pizza this week was ricotta spread on the base, proscuitto, canned artichokes, Kapiti's fresh mozzarella and basil (added after the pizza is cooked). I used Annabel Langbein's pizza base recipe from Smart Food for Busy People (an old favourite, with some great early 90s period crockery!). The pizza came out better off than the pizza 'stone' (which was actually an untreated tile that we bought for this very purpose).  Clearly it didn't like that 270 degrees of the oven this time. Coward!
Ex-pizza stone in 3 pieces!
New pizza stone ahoy!

And a couple of weeks ago, I made a pilgrimage to West Auckland to check out The Tasting Shed which an old TV colleague has opened with her husband in an old cider shed on the grounds of Cooper's Creek vineyard. It's a quicker than you imagine 20 minute drive down the spanking new extension to SH16. No more dog leg, just straight through to Kumeu.
You should take the road too and check out the great venue, food and wine on offer from Jo and Ganesh Raj.

The food options are on blackboards around the room and (as the name would suggest) are designed to be shared. Each that we had was a plate of well thought out and creative cooking. The rolled pig's head which was served with kohlrabi remoulade was a firm suggestion from Jo and she was spot on. That and the filo 'cigar' filled with duck confit served with orange salad and red cabbage were highlights of the savory selections. One small criticism: the fish had one too many flavours on it, but that's a small criticism of an otherwise excellent spread.

Our wine match (suggested by Jo, and again spot on) was the Coopers Creek Single Vinyard Arneis 2010 from Gisborne. Dessert was matched with Alvear Pedro Ximenez (that's the grape variety) 2008 from Montilla Moriles (in the Andalucia area of Spain). That's sherry country, but this wasn't a sherry but of a smokey, raisiny, caramely dessert wine. It was very easy to drink with both the Churros con Chocolate and the Brioche French Toast with honey and fig ice cream.
French Toast with Ice Cream and Honey
You should make the trip, either from Auckland, or if you're from further afield, next time you're in the 09. Get out of the city and try The Tasting Shed. Easier to get to than Parnell and way easier to park in than Ponsonby, and chances are the owner will serve you so you know it will be friendly.
Ceiling Lamps at The Tasting Shed
Lasting impressions:
food: surprising and delighting and to share
service: we were spoiled because we know the owner, but I reckon you'll be to
drive out: no hassle at all and parking's a dream
time to go: we were there at night, but it looks like it would be a great sunny day or summer's evening trip (they have an 'dog box' for private functions, which looks like a goodie for a loud laugh without disturbing your dinner neighbours)
also: there's a courtesy van, so you can be delivered home after imbibing
décor: upgrade to an old cider shed and it's sympathetic with a few sweet touches (lovely lamps on the ceiling and apple box shelving)

The Tasting Shed
609 State Highway 16
Kumeu
09 412 6454