Epicure Recipe Card #10: Ocean Trout & Potatoes

I often see ocean trout and salmon as being interchangeable, especially with their similar colouring and fattiness. My mother-in-law usually makes sure that we have a fillet of salmon or two in the freezer “just in case”. And although the recipe card stipulated steaming the fish, I’m just not used to steaming fish fillets. I’m Chinese – I’m used to seeing fish steamed whole, with head and tail intact. When I have my hands on a fillet I always think of grilling or pan-frying, which is what I chose to do here.

Roasted some potatoes which had been cut into wedges and served some briefly stir-fried baby bok-choy on the side – kind of a non-fried version of fish and chips. By all means you can throw other vegetables in for roasting with the potato or serve a salad alongside instead of the bok-choy but, you know, there happened to some of that in the refrigerator crisper “just in case” as well.


Grilled salmon with roasted potatoes (serves2)
(adapted from The Age – Epicure 50 Best Recipe Cards, recipe by Jill Dupleix)

Ingredients:
·         approx 200g potatoes, peeled if necessary & cut into wedges
·         1 tbs oil
·         2 skinless salmon fillets, pinboned – size required depends on your appetite

Method:
  1. Preheat oven to 220°C. Toss potato with the oil and season with salt and pepper. Arrange in a roasting dish in a single layer. Pour over 200mL water and roast for 10 minutes.
  2. Turn wedges of potato over and loosen any which may be catching to the bottom of the dish. Roast a further 20 minutes. Turn off oven but leave the door closed to keep the potato warm.
  3. Place a non-stick pan over medium-high heat. Season ‘flat’ side of fillets with salt and pepper before placing seasoned-side down in the pan. Cook for 3-5 minutes then season the other side before turning over and cooking to your liking. Serve with the roasted potatoes and other roasted vegetables, stir-fried vegetables, salad, aioli, mayonnaise and/or bread rolls if desired.
happy cooking!

Monsieur Poisson cooks mushroom risotto!


So it’s become an on-running joke amongst friends that my other half doesn’t cook. In the whole time we’ve been together – 4 years next month – I have never seen him cook. Although on occasion when I’ve not been up to cooking, I know he is capable of throwing some rice into the rice-cooker and steaming a ‘lap cheong’ (臘腸) sausage or two on top. He can also cook instant noodles however I am yet to taste any which have been prepared by him. On the flipside though, he will always do the dishes no matter how many I manage to use and they come out absolutely sparkling clean.

I’ve mentioned before, I’m sure, more than once here the fact of Monsieur Poisson’s culinary aversion. I’m surprised that for someone who enjoys the variety and nuances of food as he does, that he takes absolutely no interest in investigating his own cooking ability. So when I was contacted regarding a cookbook written by Bobby Jewell – a former English swimmer, a chef and owner of Tharen's – aimed at guys, it got me to thinking about whether this could be the nudge to get the husband into the kitchen to do some cooking rather than washing the dishes.

Admittedly I kind of sprung the cooking thing on him one evening. I was sent three recipes – pea and ham soup, mushroom risotto and apple rhubarb crumble – and ruled out the crumble immediately as baking can be quite intimidating for a first-time cook. Between the soup and the risotto, well, we happened to have mushrooms in the fridge so that was the decider.


It was most interesting watching Monsieur Poisson cook as I am so used to tasting and adjusting things along the way when I cook. When making risotto, the variety of rice and how fresh the rice is both affect its liquid absorption qualities. I had to keep reminding him to check on taste and texture whereas when you start out cooking you just want to follow recipes word for word. We actually doubled the amount of rice and stock used as we didn’t feel it would be enough – being Asian, we're used to consuming copious amounts of rice – but ended up finishing it all in the end! (Click on the picture below for the original recipe and quantities.)


Dinner was ready in around 30 minutes from start to finish and it was great to have dinner cooked for me for once, even if it did involve a little supervision. It doesn’t matter that it wasn’t fancy because the dish was wonderfully comforting for more reasons than being a warming bowl of risotto. I wonder whether it’ll happen again anytime soon…?

Mademoiselle Délicieuse was supplied sample recipes from Bobby Jewell’s upcoming cookbook, The Lad’s Chef Cookbook, courtesy of Justine McKell from Roar Publicity. The Lad’s Chef Cookbook is available for purchase Australia-wide from 1 October 2010.

happy cooking!

Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋節), 22 Sept 2010

After Chinese New Year, the next biggest cultural event for the Chinese would have to be Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋節) falling on the 15th day of the eighth month on the lunar calendar. The 15th of each calendar month is always a full moon, hence some calendar years will have 12 months while every now and again there is a ‘leap year’ with 13 months. The eighth month which falls in the middle of autumn for those in the northern hemisphere and, in a time when most people farmed for a living, signals the end of harvest season. The festival celebrates hopefully a plentiful harvest with excess fresh food preserved, dried or pickled to last through the colder months of the year.

The full moon during this month is said to be at its largest and roundest, which signifies completeness and togetherness, and is as good a reason as any for a family gathering. Dinner is followed by the sharing of mooncakes, pastries made traditionally in carved wooden moulds with a chewy pastry shell enclosing a filling most commonly of lotus seed paste and a salted duck egg yolk or yolks. A seemingly strange combination, the contrast of the smooth, sweet and thick lotus seed paste is quite enjoyable against the slightly salty, almost grainy texture of the duck egg yolk.


Mooncakes are not cheap due to the labour involved in making the lotus seed paste – getting the colour and taste right is an artform, as is achieving an evenly thin pastry skin to hold together its contents. I bought a mini mooncake for the husband and myself this year as they are quite rich and we don’t crave them as much as when we were children. There are many locally-produced brands as well as a broad range of imported ones these days. The packaging rarely changes for easier recognition, although generally come in tins as opposed to cardboard boxes like during my mother’s childhood. The ones pictured just happen to be one of the brands I grew up with.


I lived for a few years in Hong Kong when I was a teenager and thoroughly enjoyed celebrating Mid-Autumn Festival there, as I did other Chinese festivals. Mid-Autumn Festival meant stationery and toy stores would have elaborate displays of paper lanterns for purchase as well as, at the time, new-fangled electric versions – these are basically a torch with a toy-shaped cover. Fruit stores would be full of pomelos and starfruit, both in season at this time of year north of the equator. Dinner and mooncakes were followed by a trip to a nearby park to play with pre-purchased paper lanterns. They are lit up by small candles held in place by a small metal clasp within the lantern on the base. This was the only time when we were allowed to play with fire – albeit under adult supervision, of course – and the lanterns would invariably end up catching alight meaning it was time to go home.


Last night we had dinner out with our mothers, Monsieur Poisson’s cousins and a cousin of mine who is back visiting Sydney for the first time since he graduated from university and returned to Hong Kong. We had lobster, crispy chicken, whole steamed barramundi and deep-fried milk amongst other things but the food was actually not the focus for me. This food blogger took a night off from photographing what was being eaten for once – this is a bittersweet time of year for me so I am most grateful to have the company of family around.

Strangely, Monsieur Poisson decided to take photos on his phone instead!

happy mid-autumn festival & happy eating!

Epicure Recipe Card #48: Triple Chocolate Cake with Truffles

The husband requested cake, specifically chocolate cake. A moist sponge with chocolate icing, he mused. Oh, and with chocolate shavings please.

The wife thought it would be a good idea to kill two birds with one stone and bake a chocolate cake from her recipe cards. She was sure she’d seen one in the collection so off she went to have a look. She found the recipe card she was thinking of and at the top of the ingredients list were prunes. Bugger, she thought, for she didn’t have any prunes. On the upside though, she doesn’t actually like prunes and neither does the husband so to be prune-less wasn’t exactly a bad thing.

This meant having to start from scratch and looking for another recipe. Out came all the recipe books (not that many, really) as well as her handwritten recipes collected over the years. The search returned many flourless, near flourless and chocolate mud cakes but with none fitting the husband’s specifications.


She settled for a recipe in a book from where she’d never cooked – a French book which did not have pictures accompanying all its recipes. This recipe had a picture however, but one which showed the cake covered in icing so it was impossible to gauge whether the innards would satisfy the husband’s cake cravings. The recipe didn’t ask for many ingredients so she decided this was the cake to be!

The cake was easy enough to make although the instructions were a little brief and lacking. It was lucky that this was not her first time baking – oh no, far from it. Still, the cake turned out much flatter than she had expected so her plans for splitting it in two layers and filling it with chocolate had to be rethought. She wasn’t going to make another cake, as it would be impossible for them to finish, so she did the next most practical thing: cut the cake in two halves and sandwich one half on top of the other. Aha, crisis averted!


The cake itself was quite crumbly with its texture akin to a torte, although there were no nuts involved, so it wasn’t quite what the husband had requested. However sandwiched and covered with chocolate fudge icing from a particular Domestic Goddess recipe, it just about hit the spot when sprinkled with Lindt hot chocolate flakes – a lazy alternative to chocolate shavings.


Chocolate (half) Cake with Chocolate Fudge Icing
(cake adapted from I Know How to Cook,  recipe by Ginette Mathiot)
(icing adapted from Nigella Bites, recipe by Nigella Lawson)
Please double all ingredients quantities unless you’re planning on making half a cake like me!

Cake ingredients:
·         75g butter
·         140g dark chocolate, chopped (I used 86% cocoa)
·         4 eggs, separated
·         2/3 cup plain flour, sifted
·         ½ cup caster sugar
·         1 tbs Baileys

Method:
  1. Preheat oven to 150°C. Grease and line a round cake tin.
  2. In a saucepan on low heat, melt chocolate with butter. Stir occasionally to ensure smoothness. Set aside to cool slightly then beat in the egg yolks one by one. Add flour and sugar and mix well – you will end up with a stiff, cookie dough-type ‘batter’.
  3. In a separate bowl, whisk eggwhites with the Baileys until stiff peaks form. Mix a quarter to a third of this into the chocolate mixture to lighten it before folding in the rest.
  4. Pour into prepared cake tin and bake around 50 min. Remove from oven and allow to cool prior to icing.

Icing ingredients:
·         90g dark chocolate (I used 70% cocoa)
·         125g unsalted butter, softened
·         1 cup pure icing sugar, sifted
·         1 tbs vanilla extract

Method:
1.     Melt chocolate and allow to cool slightly.
2.     In the meantime, beat butter until it is pale and creamy. Beat in icing sugar until light and fluffy.
3.     Add vanilla and chocolate and mix well until smooth and glossy. Ice cake and decorate as desired. Place cake in fridge for a short period of time if a firmer icing is preferred.

happy cooking!

Birthdays Part 3: Kazbah on Darling & a special vanilla cake, 5 September 2010

Dr King called me one day during my lunch break at work. “Have you got anything planned for Monsieur Poisson’s birthday?” he asked.

I told him I was treating Monsieur Poisson to dinner at Ad Lib. He suggested doing something combined – perhaps brunch – for my husband and his wife, Kiki, on the weekend that falls between their birthdays. He asked if I would help him conspire to a surprise…

Rubbing my hands together with glee, I told him I’d brainstorm for some possible locations. We included Weirdo and Ms Sourdough in our evil plans. Dr King chose Kazbah from my shortlist, put forth a suggestion for cake and the scene was set. I told Monsieur Poisson that we were plotting a surprise birthday brunch for Kiki and not to breathe a word of it to her.

Come surprise plan deployment day, Monsieur Poisson and I are loitering amongst the Sunday morning crowds so often found outside Kazbah. It is a squeeze getting past them to alert staff that we have arrived for our table reservation. We’re told our table is just waiting on a group to finalise their bill when we spot Weirdo and Ms Sourdough coming towards us from across the road.

In the meantime Dr King had parked his car and instructs Kiki to remain inside while he runs an errand – he needs to collect the pre-ordered cake. Kiki definitely smells something fishy going on as she had been told they were off to brunch but Dr King had refused to divulge where or with whom. We see them walking down the road towards us and I wave. Dr King suggests to Kiki that they stop and say hello. Kiki sports a slightly confused expression across her face while we exchange banter, ever mindful of the time for which Dr King had told her they needed to arrive at a mysterious brunch location.

“Um, we’re here... err, surprise!”

Obviously we should stick to our day jobs as we appear much more competent at them.

Our table becomes available after a short wait and we settle ourselves into the menu whilst chatting about how the day’s plans came to be. The cake is taken away to be chilled as Dr King notices it softening slightly. After some deliberation, three of the six of us decide to order the ‘Lamb Breakfast Tagine’ comprising of lamb mince, sucuk, spinach, roast capsicum, roast tomato, caramelised onion, feta and eggs with toasted pide on the side.


We’re asked if we’d prefer individual serves of the tagine or whether we’d like a large combined serve. We go with the individuals for pre-divided laziness and are presented with what doesn’t appear to be much food each. But don’t let appearances fool you – the contents of the tagine if spread across a plate would definitely rival that of a café big breakfast. The dish is saucy and comforting with sense-awakening flavour and fragrance from the range of spices, and is absolutely perfect for dipping into with the bread. No wonder Wifey raved about this dish after she’d eaten here. Ms Sourdough has the vegetarian variant of the tagine which features golden chunks of pumpkin in place of the meat and is incredibly more-ish.

Monsieur Poisson orders the ‘Breakfast Mezze’ mainly to appeal to my love for foods that allow for picking at. A colourful spread of hommos, labne, olives, kasseri, fresh tomato slices adorned with mint, dukkah and za’atar arrives with toasted and untoasted Lebanese bread for dipping.


The plate is offered around the table for tasting and it is the kasseri cheese which has Ms Sourdough and Weirdo divided as usual. “I taste sheep and goat”, she claims.

“I taste grass and farm, mmmm…” says Weirdo.

I taste, well, cheese, although a fairly pungent one at that. The flavour reminds me slightly of parmesan but with a more rubbery texture rather than a crumbly one. The labne is creamy and lightly tart, and the olives come thoughtfully pitted. The dukkah features a healthy amount of crushed hazelnuts. Weirdo, who is Lebanese, wholeheartedly approves of Kazbah’s mezze which reminds him of his childhood breakfasts.

Once our plates are cleared we are asked if we’d like our cake in a roundabout manner by a senior staff member. It was endearing to see him being careful with his words in case the birthday person – in this case, people – hadn’t been aware that there was a cake. Kazbah has a cakeage charge for which we received each serve of cake adorned with pashmak and a side of fruit compote. And the cake? Well…


Yes, it was none other than Adriano Zumbo’s made-infamous-by-Masterchef V8 cake. I have only just read that this cake feeds approximately sixteen people – we had three quarters of it served up between the six of us! No wonder we all found it so rich about halfway into each piece. It’s a delicate, elegant cake showcasing Mr Zumbo’s signature intricacy of layers within, playing on different textures of vanilla. Staff had taken apart the white chocolate flower on top of the cake and placed two or three ‘petals’ on each slice that was served to us, before topping with either pink (rose) or green (pistachio) pashmak. The white chocolate petals and tiles around the outside of the cake is what I found to be the sugary tipping point for me.

The V8 cake requires two days’ notice for pre-ordering and I think Dr King actually ordered it around four days ahead. And collected from Adriano Zumbo’s newly relocated Chocolat Café, it definitely added a special birthday touch to our brunch. Many thanks to the friendly staff at Kazbah who looked after us attentively and who generously showed no signs of booting us out at our agreed finish time for the table booking!

379 Darling St (cnr North St), Balmain NSW
Tel: (02) 9555 7067

Opening Hours:  Mon  CLOSED
                        Tues-Sat  8am-3pm (breakfast)
                                       12pm-3pm (lunch)
                                       6pm til late (dinner)
                        Sun  8am-3pm (breakfast)
                                12pm-3pm (lunch)

Kazbah on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Birthdays Part 2: Ad Lib, 3 September 2010

Last year for Monsieur Poisson’s birthday we didn’t have anything planned. Well, I didn’t have anything planned and neither did I this year. More often than not, his birthdays are a chance for me to get a bit experimental in the kitchen and to try something new. I don’t know why I choose such occasions to boldly take risks when it could potentially make the event disastrous, but luckily he doesn’t mind. And although I had yet to formulate a menu, this was what I was thinking of doing this year.

We had read in a weekend newspaper lift-out that Ad Lib was Dietmar Sawyere’s latest venture following the closure of Forty One Restaurant and were rather excited about it being situated quite close to us. One evening whilst watching television, Monsieur Poisson quite offhandedly commented, “So, have you booked Ad Lib for my birthday yet?” Not surprisingly this was met with my mumbled, “Errr, no…?” before my mind started setting into guilty panic in having not organised anything at all. And this was after finding out that he was taking me to Tetsuya’s for my birthday, oh dear.

Truth of the matter is that neither of our birthdays were the main event for me this year. We had both arranged to take leave from work during the week which falls in between our birthdays and booked to spend a few of those days at the Hunter Valley (posts about that to come soon…ish). This was what I was really looking forward to and everything else didn’t register much on the radar. So the following day I made an online enquiry with Ad Lib whilst at work, with only a week’s notice, and was met with a most helpful response suggesting two dining times – one early and one late. I took the later one but did receive a telephone call on the evening telling us that the table was ready ahead of time. Although Ad Lib was already quite heavily booked, I do like a place which doesn’t shrug off ‘excess’ customers and that has good lines of communication.

And so, after having driven past it on our way up to the Hunter and again on our way back, we finally find ourselves seated in the cosy bistro on the Friday evening that is my husband’s birthday. We’re seated at a table near the doorway which is protected from prying eyes by a bookcase with square alcoves housing many, many bottles of pear liqueur and brandy. Each table setting has a fold-out paper menu and there is crusty sourdough and butter already set in the centre awaiting our arrival.


Everywhere we go both Monsieur Poisson and I have a habit of being suckered in by the specials menu and this particular evening is no different. For entrées, we order the soup of the day – potato, leek and black truffle – as well as the ‘Charcuterie, pickles, sourdough toast’ to share. The soup has that unmistakeable earthy mushroomy aroma that is black truffle emitting from the silky potato soup. It is hot but not scaldingly so but I take care not to have too much of this as I’m sure there’s a lot of cream involved – unfortunately my stomach and cream are not the best of friends.


Cured meats rate highly in my world of food but I’m afraid I can’t remember the individual names of those pictured on the plate above apart from liverwurst. Pickled gherkins always help to cut through the fat and salt of the meats and the sweet onion jam is sticky and mellow. All wonderful piled onto the sourdough toast. The cuboid meat pieces at the front of the plate worryingly remind me of pet chews but rest assured that they are very tasty!

There is a steak on the menu with café de Paris butter but I go against my usual persuasions and order the ‘Roast duck breast, confit leg, calvados and apples’ instead. It arrives and its appearance has us both intrigued – what are these things which resemble spring rolls? Turns out they are the duck leg component and we can only assume that the confit meat has been parcelled up inside. The shredded meat in the rolls is a little gamey in sharp contrast with the breast which is tender with skin which has been liberally seasoned. The celeriac purée, grilled apples and sauce all help to cut through the rich meat. The apple wedges are a particular delight and wouldn’t be out of place in a dessert.


Monsieur Poisson has gone with the special of ‘Braised beef cheeks, potato mash, bacon, mushrooms and eschallots’ which is rather large when it arrives. His dish is about twice the size of mine and proves itself to be extremely good value both in terms of dollars and hunger-satiating potential. The mound of potato mash is flanked by two generous pieces of beef cheek which are soft and fork-apart tender. The sauce has all the components of a bourgignon minus the red wine and, as a result, is much lighter on the palate.


We have greedily ordered a side of cauliflower gratin. Once it arrives, I question myself as to why I agreed to Monsieur Poisson wanting to order it – gratin equates to cream, lots of it, and, as mentioned above, is not good friends with my stomach. I scrape away most of the sauce, which is actually rather thick, and revel in the tender yet still crunchy florets of cauliflower and the crusty, browned cheesy topping.

We take a break before considering dessert, especially after my husband’s epic proportions of a main dish, although we had already both eyed what we wanted from the moment we first perused the menu. We are creatures of habit so it is the ‘Pear tarte tatin, white chocolate ice-cream’ for him and the raspberry soufflé for myself. But not before his usual caffe latte and my pot of Earl Grey tea. The Earl Grey here is quite fragrant and stronger in flavour than most so if it is one of your preferred varieties then I urge you to try it here.


Our after-dinner drinks are presented with a pair of chocolate truffles curiously sitting in a pool of molten chocolate. It takes us some time to work out whether the centres of the chocolates have exploded, whether the shells have been melted or whether they are indeed sitting in extra sauce. Nonetheless they are smooth and very chocolaty, if a little messy to eat!

The tarte tatin arrives resembling a miniature pineapple upside-down cake and is beautifully crusty and flaky. The ice-cream is too sweet for my liking but I find that is often the case with white chocolate. The thin caramel sauce surrounding the tarte is thankfully not overly sugary nor sticky.


But it is the soufflé which steals my heart in all its tall, proud, dusty pink glory. Light as a feather without even a trace of runniness at the bottom, it is enhanced further in berriness by the tart sorbet alongside sitting on a bed of tuille crumbs.


For those wanting a bit of performance to their dessert, order the chocolate mousse. We saw it being brought out in a soup tureen and spooned out to customers. Something for us to keep in mind for future at a place where the service is unpretentious and the food is the focus. They have an extensive wine list which we didn’t indulge in that evening, and have just earned their first Sydney Morning Herald Chef’s Hat to boot.

1047 Pacific Hwy (near cnr Telegraph Rd), Pymble NSW
Tel: 9988 0120

Opening Hours:  Mon-Fri  from 10am for coffee and snacks
                                    12pm-2:30pm (lunch)
                                    5pm-10pm (dinner)
                        Sat  5pm-10pm (dinner only)
                        Sun  CLOSED

Ad Lib Bistro on Urbanspoon

*EDIT*: As at June 2012, Ad Lib Bistro is closed for business.

happy eating!

Birthdays Part 1: Tetsuya’s, 26 August 2010

spoon, fork & chopsticks is one year old! I’m actually a couple of days late (due to such annoying things as allergies and sinusitis) and as there are no special celebrations in store, I’ve decided to share a series of birthday-related meals instead. The husband’s birthday and mine are a mere eight days apart. That combined with multiple friends’ birthdays on the days in between and on either side makes for a lot of gluttony in the name of celebration. I turned much older than the age of this here wee blog a little over two weeks ago and my husband, the ever-thoughtful Monsieur Poisson, had arranged to take me to the world-renowned Sydney institution of culinary experience known as Tetsuya’s. He made the table reservation four months in advance, although we’re not sure that’s actually required given that we were dining on a weeknight. He tells me that he just happened to be thinking of my birthday at the time. Our dinner was not long before the announcement of the loss of a Chef’s Hat but this is likely to have negligible impact for us general eating crowd – the magic of Tetsuya’s will always be Tetsuya’s.

Tetsuya’s has been high on my to-eats list for years. I remember when Ms London left for her overseas sojourn, which has now become a permanent affair, that her first return trip to Sydney involved a meal at Tetsuya’s organised by a lovely friend of hers months prior to the event. I remember seeing photos and being completely mesmerised – she even managed to score a photo with the man himself! Many years have since passed and there have been numerous other photos admired from meals recounted at Tetsuya’s that there is a definite fairy tale aura surrounding this serene, modern restaurant overlooking an internal Japanese garden in the heart of the city.


It is a wild and windy evening in Sydney and we are the first table to arrive in our dining area. We are given a brief introduction to the menu, asked if we have any food allergies or aversions (no, and no), issues with meat cooked medium to medium-rare (no) and asked whether the meal is for a special occasion (my birthday). I enjoy a Perry Street cocktail made of cinnamon vodka, pear and peach juices whilst Monsieur Poisson and I joke about whether we should have mentioned his dislike of cucumber to the waiter. Funnily enough, about half an hour later, when another table arrives and are given the welcoming spiel, we hear the gentleman at the table quite emphatically state that he does not eat cucumber. This caused the husband and I giggles to no end!

We are treated to a suitably wintery amuse bouche of ‘Chestnut soup with roast chestnut cream’. Naturally sweet and nutty, even Monsieur Poisson who’s not a massive fan of chestnuts falls in love with this velvety smooth soup embodied in an espresso cup.


Then it’s a choice of either sourdough or Italian white bread rolls with Tetsuya’s famed truffle butter made with parmiagiano reggiano for added pungency and ricotta for a fluffy lightness. We both choose the sourdough but Monsieur Poisson loves the butter so much that he follows it up with an Italian white roll as well. And what’s not to love about it – the butter is pungent, and earthy, and salty, and smooth, and light and oh-so tasty!

Monsieur Poisson has an added course of oysters for a mere $9 extra only. I give them a miss as, although I do eat oysters, I feel they’re a bit wasted on me at times as I don’t always appreciate their taste and texture. They’re exceptionally good value though, being round and plump and submerged in a delicate broth of ginger and rice vinegar.


The official first course is ‘Hiramasa kingfish with seasoned black bean and orange zest’. Although there’s very little detectable orange zest, with the black bean flavours being also very, very mild, the dominant taste is that of a slightly sweetened soy sauce punctuated by aromas of finely sliced spring onion and micro herbs. We both agree that the soy mixture reminds us of that which accompanies Chinese steamed fish and once we’re done devouring the slices of firm, bouncy kingfish sashimi, we’re left wanting some rice to slurp up the more-ish soy remaining on the plate. And the plates – the subsequent courses are served on white crockery but these first two remind us of the ones used at Koi.


The next course of ‘Scampi tails with jus, curds and goat's cheese’ doesn’t look terribly impressive on the plate. Arranged somewhat like a short terrine, there are sweet scampi tails – scampi being one of Monsieur Poisson’s absolute favourite things – sitting on a bed of the softest, silkiest tofu curds imaginable with the whole lot topped with three small dollops of a very mild goat’s cheese and finished with a jus that tastes like an uncreamy bisque yet still manages to pack a lot of punch. Goat’s cheese is very divisive amongst my friends, I believe mostly due to its pungency. Weirdo loves it because he can ‘taste the farm’ from whence the cheese came, while Ms Sourdough simply claims that it tastes like goat – and not in a flattering way either.


Next we are presented with what is often described as the world’s most photographed dish – ‘Confit petuna ocean trout crusted with konbu and chives, served with apple celery salad and unpasteurised trout roe’. Much in contrast to the previous course, this dish really is something beautiful to look at with the coral hues of the trout and roe contrasting with the crisp green of the apple and celery, and the dark konbu chive ‘crust’ resembling crispy fish skin. Taste and texture-wise there is the salty smokiness of the konbu against the sweetness of the soft trout and the slightly tart crunch of the apple celery salad. Roe always provides fun through salty popping mini-spheres in the mouth. If you’re interested in recreating this masterpiece at home, then you need to take a look at this.


The last of our seafood dishes is the ‘Barramundi with garlic purée and globe artichoke’. The piece of fish is small and delicate and, we deduce, hard to cook well due to its small size. The garlic purée is light and creamy and I greedily want something crispy to dip into it. A side salad of greens was served along with the preceding dish and we are thankful for some refreshing crunch against all the array of flavours provided by these other dishes.


The first of the meat courses, ‘Slow-braised wagyu ox tail with sea cucumber and yuzu’, has Monsieur Poisson a little undecided. He loves slow-cooked beef cheeks and ox tail but has never been a fan of sea cucumber. I, on the other hand, love sea cucumber even when it’s been stewed Chinese-style in oyster sauce so it’s an absolute pleasure to see it at Tetsuya’s as two spongy gelatinous discs perched atop a few chunks of richly-flavoured tender oxtail. The subtle yuzu flavour offers respite from an otherwise rich and sticky dish.


The next meat dish is ‘Slow-roasted duck breast with leeks, onion purée and sansho’. The sansho has been liberally rubbed on the skin and lends a lovely peppery flavour although I do find the flesh a little rarer than what I’m used to with duck. The roasted leek and onion pureée complement each other well.


The final meat course and the last of the dishes before dessert is ‘Grass-fed black angus with swiss brown mushrooms, potato cream and porcini jus’. If only steak and mash with mushroom sauce was always as good as this! Tender beef sitting on a smooth and creamy dollop of potato with mushrooms hidden in between and a mushroomy broth that you just want to mop up with more bread.


And then it’s dessert time! And multiple courses of it too, starting with ‘Pear sorbet with walnut, and Tetsuya's bread and butter pudding’. The pear sorbet is smooth and refreshing, with half in the shot glass topped with walnuts and another quenelle perched atop. The bread and butter pudding is more like a crème brûlée studded with spiced bread bits and sultanas but is thankfully not overly rich.


The next dessert is unusual yet familiar to Asian cultures through its use of beans. Although we’re used to seeing azuki, mung beans and black beans, the cannellini beans in this ‘Sweetened cannellini beans with soy caramel and mascarpone mousse’ are actually quite similar in texture. Monsieur Poisson isn’t sure about them being in a dessert but I quite like their sweet nuttiness and contrast with the smoothness of the light soy caramel and fluffy mascarpone mousse.


Because we mentioned that the dinner is for my birthday, Monsieur Poisson and I receive different desserts. His is the standard menu item of ‘Chocolate pavé with cream cheese ice-cream, chocolate soil and cinnamon twigs’. Although, of course, standard is not apt in describing any of the food here. The chocolate pave is filled with a milk chocolate mousse-type centre sitting on a thin foundation of sponge and topped with a thin layer of cream before being enrobed in a dark chocolate jelly-like layer. From appearance, what we expect to be a rich chocolate ganache outer, turns out to be more like an Asian agar set dessert layer.


For me and so many others also celebrating their birthdays that evening (and yes, it did feel a little odd knowing other people in the same confines shared their birthday with me!), we received the alternate dessert of ‘Chocolate hazelnut fondant’. Soft and gooey, it was decorated with a few salt flakes on top, a couple of slicks of chocolate sauce around it and some cocoa dusted hazelnuts. Oh, and don’t forget the candle.


As if this wasn’t enough food, we round off our meal with a caffe latte for the husband and a pot of Earl Grey tea for myself. A plate of pretty, pastel-hued macarons arrives on the table and a big smile spreads across my face. We start with the pink rosewater ones, move onto the chewier green pistachio ones and finish with the chocolate ones. They are incredibly light, being sandwiched with a cream centre rather than ganache. Actually, the whole meal has us marvelling at how light everything is. As opposed to other meals with rich sauces that leave you happily clutching your belly afterwards, Tetsuya’s achieves a level of satisfaction that doesn’t leave you groaning from over-indulgence.


Our meal lasted around four hours but the courses were very evenly paced with not much of a wait in between. The intervals between the meat courses were a bit longer, possibly due to an influx of coinciding table bookings, but this was quite welcome and gave us time to appreciate as well as digest the food before more appeared. We had a selection of waitstaff looking after our table that evening but all were very well-versed in what was being served and most polite. They were very obliging when it came to taking photographs for diners and mindful of not blinding others with camera flashes in the process. I also received a copy of the menu as a birthday memento.

529 Kent St, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9267 2900

Opening Hours:  Sun & Mon  CLOSED
                        Tues-Fri  dinner from 6pm (dinner only)
Sat  lunch from 12pm
       dinner from 6pm

Tetsuya's on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

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