Sugar Hit: Guylian Café, 22 Oct & Number One Wine Bar, 23 Oct 2010

Sugar Hits are coming to an end for another year and this year has been my most prolific effort in sampling what’s on offer. With the previous record being eight Sugar Hits, this year has seen that tally rise to ten which I doubt that Monsieur Poisson and I are ever likely to achieve again.

That is, unless some unplanned outing occurs this weekend…

Guylian Café

An impromptu visit to Guylian Café, post-birthday dinner for Idol, leads us to Sugar Hit #9. Their ‘Grand Forest’ is described as a “chocolate cake layered with Grand Marnier strawberries, kirsch dark cherries and crème patisserie”.


The cake is perched on its side and balanced on a salted gingery piece of shortbread via a small amount of chocolate ganache. Surrounded by cocoa-dusted walnut ‘rocks’, there is also a square of strawberry chocolate and a chocolate ‘twig’. We don’t notice any cherries within the cake but do come across quite a few strawberry pieces which are thankfully only soft but not squishy from being flavoured with Grand Marnier. The accompanying glass of Brown Brothers Cienna & Cabernet helps to enhance the berry flavours.

Monsieur Poisson also orders a dark hot chocolate for $7, which provides roughly two cups’ worth in a stainless steel jug and a Guylian seashell to pour over and melt into the drink.



Number One Wine Bar
Sugar Hit #10 was enjoyed at Tony Bilson’s Number One Wine Bar. Surrounded by French touches to the interior and songs sung and performed live by a piano player provided a most relaxing touch to a Saturday night.


The crème caramel is quite sweet with its golden caramel sauce but it works surprisingly well with the strawberry champagne jelly alongside. Caramel, tart berries and light jelly are not what spring to mind when I think of complementary flavours but it most definitely works. The crème caramel is beautifully silken without being overly rich and puts to shame the oddly textured panna cottas of other Sugar Hits to shame.


There are two nights remaining to enjoy some Sugar Hit fun. It’s either now or you’ll have to wait until October next year!

91 George St (cnr Argyle St), The Rocks, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 8274 7500
Goldfield’s House, 1 Alfred St, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 8252 9296

*EDIT*: As at October 2011, Number One Wine Bar has gone into voluntary administration and is no longer open for business.

happy eating!

Gourmet Traveller Wine & Magshop

This post is sponsored by Nuffnang.

When dining out I often like to have a glass of wine with my meal and it’s always interesting to learn more about how to pair it with food. Wine is a foreign concept to me, having grown up in a typical Cantonese household where we drink before or after our meals – never during – and most definitely not alcohol. We never even had any bottles of wine at home, let alone a liquor cabinet! Drinking wine is something I’ve had to discover for myself as an adult and my wine knowledge is still pretty much non-existent. Just as I’ve learnt a lot about food and ingredients through reading cookbooks and magazines, I was looking forward to learning a little bit more about wine through the latest issue of Gourmet Traveller Wine magazine offered to me by the kind people at Nuffnang.

Gourmet Traveller Wine Magazine

Like sister publication Gourmet Traveller, Gourmet Traveller Wine has beautiful photography and its articles cover such topics as wine trends, cellaring recommendations, wine regions and, of course, food and wine matching. No surprises then that my favourite article was about pairing wines with foods, in particular Italian nibbly-style food matched with Italian grape wines.

Gourmet Traveller Wine Magazine - Stuzzichini

As opposed to recipe articles in food magazines which feature wine recommendations with a short sentence or two for explanation, what I enjoyed about this article (apart from the recipes!) was that it delved into more detail about why a wine was chosen to match a certain food. The characteristics of the wines were described and discussed in conjunction with how they complemented the flavour make-up of each recipe. For wine novices like myself, such reasoning behind food-wine matching is easy to follow without the sometimes overwhelming wine jargon.


So for the wine lover, wine novice or perhaps even yourself, Gourmet Traveller Wine magazine subscriptions are available through the online convenience of Magshop. A great idea for birthdays or the ever-lurking-closer Christmas, I’ve always enjoyed opening my letterbox to find a new magazine inside rather than the usual junk mail or bills, as well as not having to remember to physically pick up the latest issue from somewhere. Should wine not be your drink of choice, visit Magshop – Australia’s leading online magazine shop – to check out other titles such as Donna Hay, Australian GoodFood and Australian Good Taste.

happy reading, cooking & responsible drinking!

Sugar Hit: Radisson Suites, 19 Oct 2010

This is the Sugar Hit venue which resulted in a mix-up of locations that led us to the Intercontinental for Sugar Hit instead. So, take two, and we find ourselves in the right place for ‘Chocolate affair: Chocolate truffle delight accompanied with white chocolate panna cotta laced with mixed berries’.

Monsieur Poisson and I decide to share just the one serve between the two of us when we see how big the Sugar Hit is when being brought out to neighbouring tables. Essentially two desserts sharing the space of one plate, this Sugar Hit is paired with Brown Brothers Moscato Rosa – a delightfully pink and girly drop with light berry flavours and a hint of fizz.


The toffee shard is a little difficult to eat but I do have fun bashing it with the spoon to try and crack it into smaller pieces. Nothing like a bit of brutal violence on a weeknight! The ‘chocolate truffle’ is adequately chocolaty without being overly sweet, nor overly creamy, and is thicker in texture than a mousse but softer than ice-cream. The panna cotta unfortunately is not my cup of tea for multiple reasons – it is too firm and bouncy, its texture is a little grainy and it has a distinct flavour and aroma which takes us a while to identify… It is of rosewater! The panna cotta actually tastes so much of rosewater that there is hardly any of that milky sugary flavour for which white chocolate is. And for something as noticeable as rosewater, I’m surprised that this element of the dessert doesn’t receive headline billing of its own.

72 Liverpool St (near cnr of Sussex St), Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 8268 8888

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: Old Sydney Holiday Inn, 18 Oct 2010

When the urge hit to venture out for yet another impromptu Sugar Hit the easiest option, we thought, would be to head to a hotel which would be more likely able to accommodate us without a booking than a restaurant or café with lesser seating. We drove down to The Rocks and managed to find parking quite easily across the road from the Park Hyatt and I was ready to settle into the romantic interior and beautiful view when we were politely informed that bookings for Sugar Hit there were a must, and that there were only two sessions available – 9pm and 9:45pm.

So much for our theory. Hrmph.


Out comes our trusty copy of the Sydney International Food Festival program and, for somewhere nearby, we head to the Old Sydney Holiday Inn to try our luck. It is a hotel I’d never set foot in, despite walking past its entrance many-a-time; mostly when on the way to Pancakes at the Rocks during my younger years I must admit. We are seated in the ground floor lounge of the hotel atrium which allows a view of all the open balcony hallways housing the hotel rooms. By the flicker of alien green faux candlelight, the waiter tells us there is only one serve of their Sugar Hit remaining for the evening. Monsieur Poisson and I agree to share it between us, and are secretly grateful as the month’s sugar intake is taking its toll on us.


Old Sydney Holiday Inn’s ‘Orange on The Rocks: white and dark chocolate mousse, honeycomb pieces, chocolate ganache, orange segments highlighted with Cointreau and woven caramel nest’ is served with a Brown Brothers Orange Muscat & Flora that is more watery and less sweet than we’ve had elsewhere. It is poured from a smaller bottle but we’re uncertain as to whether this has anything to do with it. The wine complements the orange flavours of the dessert well but the chunks of honeycomb are sweet enough without it, or the pool of chocolate ganache on which it sits.


The described ‘woven caramel nest’ is far from being a nest, but instead are strands of spun sugar laid across the orange segments. The mousses are interestingly piped into either end of a rolled tuille biscuit, giving rise to an appearance similar to cannoli. The dark chocolate mousse is a particular delight especially with its occasional hidden chocolate chips and when eaten with a broken shard of tuille in lieu of a spoon.

55 George St, The Rocks, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9255 1871

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: Sheraton on the Park, 16 Oct 2010

“A table for two, please.”

“Certainly. You’re here for Sugar Hit?”

“Errr, yes…”

Surely our intentions weren’t that obviously written on our faces, was it?

Monsieur Poisson and I rock up to Sheraton’s doorstep around 10:15pm only having decided around 20 minutes prior that we wanted to do a Sugar Hit that evening. Surprisingly there aren’t many people in the lobby lounge for a Saturday evening, nor the crowds we’d witnessed for Sugar Hit from previous years. Served with a Brown Brothers Orange Muscat & Flora, Sheraton’s ‘Tropical tonka bean panna cotta on boysenberry and finger lime-infused compote served with a crispy chocolate almond biscotti’ has me a little worried with its mention of panna cotta. With me not being a big fan of panna cotta to begin with, I am worried of it being a repeat of that at Shangri-La.


Instead we are each presented with two rectangular slices of layer cake – one upright and the other on its side – which are the colour of vanilla ice-cream. The upright slice is topped with a row of three raspberries and is sitting adjacent to a stripe of slightly tart berry compote highlighted by a few nubbins of gold-dusted almonds. The slice laying on its side acts as a base for the choc-almond biscotti decorated with a mint leaf. The biscotti is slightly chewy instead of being crispy as described but the surprise lies with the panna cotta which is delicately sitting in two layers sandwiched amongst feather-light layers of sponge. The light flavours and texture remind us of cakes from Asian bakeries or perhaps that of Japanese cheesecake. It is one of the standouts of this year’s Sugar Hits and is a light alternative to many of the more sugary or chocolate-centric affairs.


Sometimes spontaneity can lead to the most pleasant outcomes.

161 Elizabeth St, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9286 6000

happy eating!

Let’s do brunch: Thelma & Louise Café, 16 Oct 2010

It’s a wonder how there are some places so close to home yet you know nothing about them.

In Neutral Bay, down the end of a cul-de-sac, overlooking the water is such a place in Thelma & Louise Café. Nestled in a stretch of a few eateries and a hairdresser’s in an otherwise residential area, this cosy café is just past a narrow stairway which leads down to a small beach. The ocean blue interior is entirely apt for its location and there is a vintage play car hanging from the ceiling befitting the getaway of the café’s namesake characters. A display of garden gnomes, including a particular ‘cheeky’ female one, lines the shelves behind the counter of sweets where we spot some from a certain Mr Zumbo… Score a table out on the wood plank balcony under the yellow canopy – or book ahead like we did to secure one – and you’ll be treated to relaxing views of Neutral Bay dotted with yachts and the aforementioned beach.


With my professed love of brunch and with Sydney International Food Festival introducing Let’s do brunch deals this year, you know that Monsieur Poisson and I aren’t going to stop with just Café Ish. We find ourselves at Thelma & Louise Café this blustery Saturday morning not only for brunch, but also to celebrate our first wedding anniversary. And although the SIFF program has the brunch deal listed as ‘Rustic breakfast… with freshly squeezed juice and organic tea or coffee’, we are kindly informed that there is also the choice of their ‘Salmon Benedict’ as well as something else that I simply cannot remember – sorry!


We start with coffees – Monsieur Poisson with his usual caffe latte and me with my flat white. We’ve ordered one ‘Rustic Breakfast’ which comes with bacon, eggs cooked to your liking, a sausage split down the middle, grilled tomato segments and two slices of thick-cut toast – one white and the other wholemeal. This is one seriously hunger-stemming breakfast with the first thing we notice being the generous amount of bacon! The eggs are perfectly poached and there is ample toast to soak up all their flowing golden yolkiness.

Our other choice is the ‘Salmon Benedict’. The magical combination of smoked salmon, poached eggs and Hollandaise is a big weakness of mine and the version here is served with one slice each of white and wholemeal toast as with the ‘Rustic Breakfast’. It comparatively appears only half as filling as the ‘Rustic Breakfast’ but looks can be oh-so deceiving! There is a thick blanket of Hollandaise which is rich, creamy and very, very buttery. Definitely not for the faint-hearted (or those with heart problems), the sauce is without even a tinge of tartness and possibly the best I have ever tried.


When we’ve finally worked our way through our mega-brunches, we round things off with a freshly squeezed orange juice for myself and, upon recommendation, an orange, apple and ginger blend for Monsieur Poisson. The ginger is not at all overpowering, being more like a warming note at the end of each sip. The juices are sizeable but most welcome in cleansing the palate after our belly-popping brunch.

The Let’s do brunch offer is available at Thelma & Louise Café for $25 per person on weekends only during the month of October, from 7am-12pm. There are two weekends still to take advantage of this deal! Bookings are recommended, especially for coveted seating overlooking the water.

Shop 1, 1 Hayes St (right down the end of the cul-de-sac), Neutral Bay NSW
Tel: (02) 9953 7794

Opening Hours:  7 days  7am-5pm

happy eating!

Mamak Chatswood, 10 Oct 2010

It’s finally open!

Mamak, rumoured to be opening a second outlet for many months in locations “somewhere up north” such as Manly and Neutral Bay, recently opened in the revamped complex adjacent to the Chatswood train station. More than a year in the planning, the opening of a sister outlet has been highly anticipated for this Malaysian eatery which began life as a stall at the Friday night Chinatown markets followed by a move into a narrow shop space on Goulburn Street before acquiring the space next door. All this, and the place still has people queuing before it opens for dinner each evening following a brief closure in the afternoon.


I’m a sucker for teh ais, the cold version of teh tarik – that pulled tea made with condensed milk which has a frothy top. We are here on opening night with Gingerbreadman, Dr King, Kiki and friend. With multiple people, of course we are going to sample a selection of Mamak’s famed freshly-made roti. I think I end up with half the fluffy roti canai to myself as everyone else’s focus is distracted by the more hearty murtabak (parcelled up with lamb, cabbage, egg and onion) and the egg-filled roti telur.


Rotis aside, we have a nasi lemak to share with its coconut rice, cuttlefish, hard-boiled egg, peanuts, sambal, ikan bilis and that thing which neither Dr King nor Monsieur Poisson enjoy eating – cucumber. No one has any issues with the dozen smoky chicken satay sticks and their spicy sweet peanut sauce however.


We have a few dishes to share as well with rice. Kangkung belacan is something which I’ve only grown to like in adult years, previously being a purist for water spinach to be stir-fried with fermented bean curd, even though both offer salty chilli flavours against the crunchy vegetable. Kari ayam (curry chicken) is ordered because Mamak has run out of ayam goreng (fried chicken) from the previous day’s soft opening for friends and family. I discover that Dr King doesn’t eat chicken skin unless it’s fried and crispy, which may or may not have led to someone scouring the bottom of the bowl for rejected pieces. Mee goreng (stir-fried noodles) has good ‘breath of wok’ and is not oily while sambal udang has prawns with plenty of heat but are addictively good with spoonfuls of rice.


And we end with what we start with – a roti. But it is the paper-thin roti tisu crisp and sprinkled with sugar, best eaten pulled apart with fingers, with a scoop of ice-cream on the side for dessert.


There are no queues forming at Chatswood. Yet. The food is identically as good as that of the original city store so make sure you visit soon, as word is spreading quickly!

PS. Mamak is now also offering a catering service. Amongst other things, there are 10 litre drinks kegs with taps! Give them a call to find out more.
Shop P9, 1-5 Railway St, Chatswood NSW
Tel: (02) 9411 4411

Opening Hours:  7 days  11:30am-2:30pm (lunch)
                                    6:00pm-9:30pm (dinner)

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: Shangri-La, 15 Oct 2010

I am old enough to remember fashion, hair, make-up and most definitely music from the 80s. The decade was about success, excess and not being afraid to show it across parts of the world which were in economic boom. There has been an obvious revival of that decade’s trends in recent years and the 80s was the first thing that sprung to mind upon being presented with Shangri-La’s Sugar Hit for 2010, replete with miniature gold foil umbrella.


Almost every drink was served with a paper umbrella (one of my favourite kitschy items) back then – from alcoholic cocktails to soft drinks for kids – in a myriad of bright garish colours. So it is fitting that Shangri-La’s interpretation of black forest cake, a most popular dessert choice in the day, in cocktail form be adorned with one and a shiny gold one at that. We were excited to see Brown Brothers Cienna & Cabernet make an appearance again, as we had learnt from Glass’ Sugar Hit that its berry flavours match rather well with chocolate.


The ‘Black Forest cocktail’ itself is made up of a ‘vanilla panna cotta’ at the bottom with visible vanilla seeds. Its taste however is not all that vanilla-y and is not set how I expect a panna cotta to be, with a texture more akin to a whipped thickened cream. There’s also an artificial-tasting flavour which I can’t identify that could be a liqueur of some sort? On top of this sits a thin round of ‘cocoa sponge’ which is on the dry side and a disc of tempered dark chocolate. Balanced atop these layers is a lacy dark chocolate ring which holds a mousse-like ‘chocolate cream, cherries in kirsch and chocolate bonbon’. The cherries are quite intense in their alcoholic flavour while the bonbon has a soft chocolate ganache centre. Spiked into this basket of chocolate cream are three tempered dark chocolate “legs” as well as that umbrella.

The tempered chocolate is a standout with a distinct crack when broken into with a spoon, however it is also this characteristic which makes it a little hard to eat when not on a plate and with soft foundations underneath. The panna cotta leaves us confused with its texture and flavour, but this dessert cocktail’s other components are definitely true to that of a black forest cake.

176 Cumberland St, The Rocks, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9250 6123

happy eating!

Let’s do brunch: Café Ish, 10 Oct 2010

To my knowledge this is the first year that Sydney International Food Festival has featured set-brunch deals adjunct to its well-established Let’s do lunch. Almost all places participating in this weekday lunch event are located in or close to the CBD, which has precluded me from taking advantage of them due to my not working in the area. So with my well-documented love of brunch it was pretty much a given that I would try out at least one of the Let’s do brunch deals, and where better to start than at Café Ish.

This cosy corner café is situated only a short walk from Central train station and offers a native Australian-Japanese fusion menu reflective of owner-chef Josh Nicholls and his cute-as partner Ai. Monsieur Poisson and I turn up early for our reservation due to having allowed extra travel time to account for traffic diversions in place for Breakfast on the Bridge. We are seated at a table by the window and are soon served the first part of the brunch offer – ‘Breakfast trifle of “lush yoghurt”, native berry compote and housemade muesli’.


Presented in irregularly ridged glasses, a base of thick, creamy, tangy yoghurt is overlayed with the capturing red of a native berry compote (Ai patiently explained to us what berries were contained but I’m afraid my mind lacked the concentration to remember due to lack of sleep – sorry Ai!) along with a hibiscus. I’ve only ever seen these sold in jars with syrup and served topped with sparkling wine. The flower is crunchier than I expect, providing a contrast to the yoghurt, along with fresh-tasting crunchy, toasted muesli. I say ‘fresh-tasting’ because it is nothing like the store-bought muesli I have at home, which is usually chewier in texture than this.

Café Ish’s signature ‘coffee’, the wattle macca-cino, is brought out next artfully decorated with a fern for the husband and a love heart for myself. Awww…


Latte art aside, this caffeine-free drink tastes remarkably like a mocha and my husband with the known sweet-tooth doesn’t even need to add sugar! No doubt the sweetness being attained from the nutty flavour characteristics of both the wattleseeds and macadamias used.

The pièce de resistance, which Josh confesses he has never eaten himself despite cooking countless plates of them, is the ‘Kara-age soft shell crab omelette with garlic, chilli, soy-vinegar dressing, avocado, shallot and lemon myrtle’. A trio of salts is served alongside – Murray River pink, green tea and chilli flavours – which I find are not needed as far as seasoning is concerned, but are fun to play around with and try regardless.


A crispy, deep-fried soft-shell crab is encased in a thin egg crêpe along with creamy avocado and chopped spring onions. A small pile of watercress alongside provides crunch with a barely-there bitterness. The segment of lime is not there for aesthetic purposes – squeeze it over the omelette for a refreshing zing as well as an added dimension to the salty-sweet dressing. Fried but not greasy, this is the type of wake-up brunch you want to indulge in to nurse a hangover (not that I had one) with its sense-awakening flavours.

All items featured as part of the Let’s do brunch menu at Café Ish are available on their standard menu. The soft-shell crab omelette is normally $23 itself, making the $25 per head Let’s do brunch offer exceptional value. Food-blogger or not, remember to ask nicely beforehand if you plan on taking photos and, depending on where you’re sitting, you may catch a glimpse of Josh working solo in the kitchen alcove preparing your food with utmost efficiency.

The Let’s do brunch offer is available at Café Ish on weekends only during the month of October, from 9am-2:30pm. That leaves three weekends to try out this value-for-money deal! Bookings are highly recommended to avoid disappointment.

82 Campbell St (cnr Foster St), Surry Hills NSW
Tel: (02) 9281 1688

Opening Hours:  Mon-Tues  7am-4pm
                        Wed-Fri  7am-10pm
Sat  9am-10pm
Sun  9am-2:30pm

Cafe Ish on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: InterContinental, 8 Oct 2010

Finding ourselves at The InterContinental for Sugar Hit was rather accidental. We had actually made a reservation for Radisson but turned up at the wrong one. Yes, there are two Radisson hotels in Sydney – Radisson Plaza and Radisson Suites – and of course we turned up at the one where Bilson’s is and where Sugar Hit was not being served! You’ve been warned.

Radisson staff lightly let us know we were not at the correct hotel, trying to preserve our pride and minimise embarrassment. Once outside we decide to cancel our reservation as we would have been terribly late plus we would have had to play the finding-a-parking-spot game all over again. So we take a short stroll over to The InterContinental instead, and find quite a few people enjoying Sugar Hits already. As in years past, the hotel is a popular choice for Sugar Hit goers. The dessert plates are brought out in no time and feature the multi-component Sugar Hits for which InterContinental has become known. Monsieur Poisson’s request to have the paired Brown Brothers Orange Muscat & Flora swapped for a coffee are turned down, so he orders a caffe latte afterwards instead.


A white rectangular plate is the canvas for ‘Homemade amarena cherry triple-chocolate gâteau with orange homeycomb and Baileys macaroons [sic]’. I always like to taste individual components before trying them together for different taste sensations. A word of advice: do not try one of these cherries on its own unless you enjoy the flavour of cherry-flavoured cough medicine. I bit enthusiastically into one and childhood memories of being bedridden came rushing back at me in full force! However when a small bite of cherry is eaten in conjunction with a mouthful of the six-layer Zumbo-esque gâteau – cream, fudge, dense cake and gelée layers – the result is akin to a luxurious black forest cake topped with slightly sticky pieces of bubbly honeycomb.


And don’t forget the Baileys macaron perched on its side sitting on a splodge of chocolate ganache. Its discs are soft and chewy with a light creamy centre. This Sugar Hit definitely doesn’t disappoint and is the best of the ones we have tried thus far.

117 Macquarie St (entrance cnr of Bridge St & Phillip St), Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9240 1396

happy eating!

Spain meets Japan with Izakaya Dining: Japaz, 5 Oct 2010

The month-long Sydney International Food Festival features many dining events as well as cooking classes, food tours and street fairs, but over the years Monsieur Poisson and I seem to have only ever partaken in Sugar Hits and the Night Noodle Markets. So when we were presented with a hugely discounted offer to dine at Japaz as food-blogging friends of one hungry.digital.elf, we promptly seized the chance to try out this restaurant specialising in Japanese-Spanish fusion cuisine located within our local vicinity.

Tucked just around the corner from traffic-heavy Military Road, Japaz is a small restaurant with a warm, rustic interior of dark wood notes and exposed brick walls. We walk in to find we are seated next to Penguin Says Feed Me! and Sir D for the evening as well as being in close proximity of other food-photo-taking individuals. These shenanigans seem to have the couple at the table on our other side quite bemused and I catch their gaze constantly being thrown in our direction. At one stage I even hear the gentleman at the table say, “Oh, they can’t eat yet until they’ve taken their photos!” Quite a correct observation indeed.

On the menu is an eight-course meal created especially for this event accompanied by five matching sakes. However upon consulting the printed menu provided, we discover there are actually six sakes on offer with one making two appearances – served cold then hot – including a cloudy variety which has been used in a sake sangria.


The sangria served in flute glasses is light and fizzy from the addition of lemonade with green apple and orange bits floating about as well as what appears to be shredded basil. It’s sweet and girly and makes the perfect summer cocktail. This has been paired with the ‘Gaspacho with Soumen Noodle’, which sees a twirl of thin slippery noodles covered with refreshing raw tomato soup anointed with a drizzle of herb oil and a clove of black garlic. The garlic is earthy and sweet, although a little hard to mash up with the small fork in the martini glass, and adds a mellow garlic flavour without the usual edge.


This is followed up by ‘Sashimi of lobster with crushed Spanish Gordal olives & tomato seed dressing’. A base of lobster sashimi is topped with chopped mild green olives and topped with a chopped tomato and shaved onion salad. The onion appears to have been soused in something beforehand as its usual in-your-face bite has been completely mellowed but its texture retained to contrast that of the lobster. My only complaint? More lobster please!


The lobster is paired with a sake that I describe to Monsieur Poisson as tasting like ‘man’ as it seems quite oaky and musty to me. Around this time some sourdough bread appears alongside some grassy green olive oil for dipping, and I take some to mop up the dressing from the lobster. The next course of ‘Pâté de foie gras with roasted beetroot & orange dressed with 12 year Spanish muscatel vinegar on pan con tomate’ comes with its own baton of toasted bread replete with diagonal charred grill marks resting on several cubes of beetroot sweet and mellow from their roasting. A pod of broad beans sits alongside.


The accompanying sake for the pâté I find tastes like a strong spirit on its own, however it does help to cut through the fattiness of the pâté. The next sake paired with the ‘Twice-cooked pork belly with jamon Iberico, truffle sand & asparagus, warm melon sauce’ I like much better with its apple-y spicy flavours. The fruitiness of the sake ties in with the sweet nubbins of rockmelon in the dish which taste quite sweet on their own, but are a perfect match for the pork belly ‘sandwich’ with salty jamon and truffle filling.


The sourdough bread comes in handy for soaking up some of the melon sauce and pork belly juices before we are presented with the ‘Roast duck breast with escalivada, ginger miso sauce’. Sliced perfectly pink duck breast sits on a bed of grilled capsicum and eggplant (aubergine!) before being enrobed in a thick ginger miso sauce. It is pleasantly not as salty as I expect but a bit heavy on the ginger, although I may be biased here as I’m not a big fan of strong ginger flavours.


Our final meat course is ‘Grilled Wagyu beef, reduction of Pedro Ximnez and ponzu sauce’. The meat is soft and cooked to a medium while being surrounded by a thick, sweet and sticky, spicy glaze. What it is sitting on causes a bit of confusion – we are variously told it is ponzu (perhaps they meant yuzu?) or daikon mixed with seaweed and chilli. It has a mildly tart taste with a hint of spiciness with the texture of citrus pulp. The accompanying sake is a warmed version of the one paired with the lobster and the change in temperature makes its flavours much bolder.


Before dessert is served there is a cheese platter of ‘Cabra Rulo & Manchego’ with sliced pear and dates. The former is a goat’s cheese which has been grilled. It is crumbly in texture and quite strong for my uninitiated palate. The Manchego is a slightly rubbery sheep’s milk cheese much milder in flavour, but I struggle to finish either as I find cheese to be quite filling, especially at the end of a meal.


We come full circle with the presentation of dessert in martini glasses. It is described to us as ‘Liquid biscuit with strawberry coulis and brandy ice-cream’. The layered dessert has a quenelle of ice-cream in a pool of coulis which is sitting atop a base of what we assume is the ‘liquid biscuit’ component. It tastes like a mildy-spiced biscuit which has been blitzed then liquefied but there is no way we would have picked this had we not been told beforehand! Monsieur Poisson rounds of his meal with a caffe latte served in a most retro-style cup along with irregular cubes of white sugar.



I have very little experience with consuming sake, so it was a great chance to get to try different varieties in the one evening. Apart from being able to compare and contrast the sakes, it was also of course an enjoyable evening of Spanish food served with a Japanese twist. Thank you to Chef Hiro for his kindly discounted offer and hospitality, as well as his generous gift of a bottle of sweet muscat vinegar at the end of the evening. We will be returning soon to sample the standard menu.

165 Wycombe Rd (near cnr Military Rd), Neutral Bay NSW
Tel: (02) 9904 0688

Opening Hours:  Mon-Sat  6pm til late (dinner only)
                        Sunday  CLOSED

Japaz on Urbanspoon

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: The Westin, 3 Oct 2010

The Westin has featured in the Sugar Hit line-up for many years but for some reason Monsieur Poisson and I have never been. With the aim of better organising ourselves, I emailed a week ahead of time to request a reservation for two but received a reply saying they do not take reservations for Sugar Hit. No worries, I thought, we’ll just turn up at 9pm on the evening we decide to go and move on to another place should they be too busy.

Having forgotten the details of the Sugar Hit once we arrived, having issues with mobile internet reception and there being a lack of introduction when served, meant that we had no idea what we were eating and were left to the devices of our palates to decipher the dessert presented in front of us. Paired with a Brown Brothers Orange Muscat & Flora, The Westin replaced this with a caffe latte at Monsieur Poisson’s request.


When the Sugar Hits are set down on the table there is an unfortunate overwhelming aroma of chocolate syrup from the squiggles decorating the plates. I start off by picking the dried fruit pieces off the top of the dessert glass but can only identify pineapple. The other two resemble mango and lychee in appearance but are spongier in texture than their usual dried variants. The dessert, upon checking when we get home, is ‘Dark chocolate Tanzanie cream, honey macadamia nuts, an espresso biscuit and pineapple and mango bavarois’. The chocolate is more milk than dark in both flavour and appearance, and the pineapple-mango centre layer tastes like a pineapple-banana hybrid to me. Studded with honey macadamias throughout, there is also a hidden disc of sponge within the fruity layer. I finish off with the white chocolate thin although I’m rather amused at it sporting leopard print! Overall I find it confusing with the differing flavours and textures all vying for attention, whereas Monsieur Poisson doesn’t mind so much. I also wanted the creamy layers to either be airier or firmer, rather than the in-between slight runniness which it has.

And it was just as well that we arrived around 9pm as by 9:45pm their Sugar Hits had sold out for the evening! There was a group of seventeen who’d been seated around 9:30pm who must have exhausted the last of the prepared desserts, resulting in a few later groups being turned away. From this we deduced that The Westin allows for perhaps 30-35 Sugar Hits per evening, so if you’re keen to try theirs make sure you turn up early or try for a weekday to avoid disappointment.

No. 1 Martin Place (GPO Building), Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 8223 1197

happy eating!

Sugar Hit: Glass Brasserie & Azuma Kushiyaki, 1 Oct 2010

October means for Monsieur Poisson and I what used to be known as Good Food Month. For the past couple of years revamped as Sydney International Food Festival, it remains our favourite way to indulge our sweet tooths in special Sugar Hit dessert menus and it also happens to be how we started dating. Our shared love of food is one of the things which brought us together and, well, when first dating you don’t have to worry about not having anything to say if you’re simultaneously stuffing your faces with food!

As per previous years, Sugar Hit desserts are offered at participating venues throughout October with a glass of dessert wine for $20 from 9-11pm. This year’s program sees the disappearance of quite a few hotels which have featured in the past, which is a shame because it’s always nice to sit in a hotel and indulge in the pretend notion that you’re away on holidays.

Worried about missing out, we jump in early this year and book last year’s two most popular venues – Glass Brasserie and Azuma Kushiyaki – as our starting point.

Glass Brasserie
We are running half an hour late whilst trying to secure parking in the vicinity of Hilton Hotel in which Glass is located. Monsieur Poisson is getting irritated (something which almost never happens) and I decide to cancel the reservation out of courtesy and so as not to run late for our next stop at Azuma Kushiyaki. Of course as soon as I do this we all manage to find parking spaces and score a table at Glass post-cancellation. Such is the cruel conspiracy of nature.


Described simply as ‘Alcazar chocolate and coffee cake’, we are presented with a rich multilayered cake with texture somewhere between mud cake and fudge. The cake is sitting on a slick of melted chocolate – not chocolate sauce as per our initial impressions – with a small pile of pistachio crumbs at the opposite end of the rectangular plate. There is an after-note of bitterness which we attribute to the darkness of the chocolate rather than the coffee which is not very obvious at all. Paired with a slightly sticky Brown Brothers Cienna & Cabernet, you get a wonderful chocolate berry flavour – the husband likens the wine to an alcoholic Ribena! And for those shying away from alcohol, Glass will happily swap this for coffee, tea or hot chocolate.

Azuma Kushiyaki
Due to our delayed start at Glass, we call Azuma Kushiyaki to push back our reservation and are very kindly accommodated. Their Sugar Hit last year was booked out by mid-month and was extended to run into November on accord of its popularity. Sharing its name with last year’s Sugar Hit, the ‘East meets West – Dessert Tasting Plate’ is a neatly-presented affair comprised of several components.


Monsieur Poisson chooses the Brown Brothers Orange Muscat & Flora which has featured heavily in Sugar Hits past, while I go for a cleansing cup of green tea. There is also Hennessy XO on offer for those a little more hardcore, or perhaps with more refined tastes.

The dessert tasting plate is brought out in two stacked Japanese-style boxes. In one there is ‘Vanilla Panna Cotta with Strawberry Coulis’ and ‘Belgian Chocolate Mousse Cake with Raspberry Coulis centre & freeze-dried Raspberry Flakes’ in the other. I start with the smooth soft-set panna cotta flecked with the occasional vanilla seed with tart berry coulis on top – it reminds me of strawberries and cream but requires no chewing. I move onto the other box of goodies before finishing with the chocolate mousse which has a tiny hidden sponge and berry coulis centre, but the highlight for me is the fluffy berry mousse layer on top and the dried berry bits. And I’m not even a person who normally enjoys eating mousse!


The other box is a bit heavier with a ‘Green Tea Ganache Tart’, ‘Petit Almond Financier’, ‘Wasabi Ganache Tart’ and ‘macaroon’ [sic]. The flavours of the macarons change daily and are decorated with different smiley face expressions – a cute Japanese touch to your dessert. There is only one macaron per dessert plate but we receive two flavours between us – orange with an orange zesty filling, and coconut (I think) with a yuzu-like centre. These and the financier are polished off quite easily while the tarts have me defeated. I was going into sugar overload by this point and with both tarts being crust heavy, although a buttery crumbly one at that, it means there is more shortbread-like pastry than filling. The matcha tart is obvious in flavour while the wasabi ganache has us divided – at least three of us can’t taste the wasabi and I was really hoping for an after-kick as you do with chilli chocolate.

Overall a fun and very sugar-filled evening, but I’m afraid attempting two Sugar Hits is no longer recommended for this small Asian female!

Level 2, Hilton Hotel, 488 George St, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9265 6068

Ground floor of Regent Place, 501 George St, Sydney NSW
Tel: (02) 9267 7775

happy eating!

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