Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Feijoa Relish


I know it's wayyyy past Feijoa season but I recently made a batch of Feijoa Relish from some fruit I prepared and froze this past winter. Feijoas are one of those fruit that you either love or hate; obviously I'm in the latter camp because I like them served any way I can get them. Quite fortunately for me they are an extremely prolific fruit and anyone who has a tree in their backyard can't get rid of the fruit fast enough.

This relish recipe I use is from Alison Holst. It's fabulous on crackers with some tasty cheese.

Feijoa Relish

Ingredients
1 and 1/4 cups white or malt vinegar
1 large onion, chopped finely
1 large apple, chopped finely
8 large feijoas, peeled and cubed
1/2 cup sugar, white or brown
1 tablespoon mixed spice
1 and 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon celery seed (optional)

Method
Bring all the ingredients to the boil and simmer for about an hour, stirring occasionally
When fairly thick, ladle into sterilised jars and seal


I'm participating in New Zealand Blogging by Post hosted by Emma, the Laughing Gastronome and because this is a local exchange with no customs requirements to worry about we have the opportunity to send homemade goodies to our nominated partner. I do hope that the person I'm sending to is a feijoa fan and I guess I'll find out in a few days.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

See you in a few days...

I won't be posting for a while as I'm going away for a long weekend to visit family.


Te Awamutu (translated from Maori it means "end of the navigable river") is known as Rose Town as it has beautiful public rose gardens.


It is also the birthplace of musicians Tim and Neil Finn.


Te Awamutu is located about 30km south of Hamilton City, in the Waikato district of the North Island, New Zealand. Town population - 9,500 and service area population - 39,000. There endeth today's geography lesson. See you soon!

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Blog Party #16 Takeout


Stephanie over at Dispensing Happiness invited me to her latest party. The theme was takeout or in Kiwispeak "takeaways". This is my first blog party and I'm very excited to be here. Hope you like my food.

We often go to a Japanese restaurant called Yatai Japanese Izakaya Restaurant and their food is awesome. The menu is along the style of Japanese bar where you order small dishes of food to share such as sushi, terayaki chicken and itty bitty fried whole shrimp. My husband’s favourite is their gyoza and I make a pretty mean version at home. He even thinks they are better than Yatai’s and that's a compliment. My recipe is courtesy of Simon Holst from his book Fast and Fantastic. Unlike many recipes this one does not have cabbage. The recipe makes LOTS gyoza and you can assemble them and freeze them prior to the pan frying and steaming stage.

The Chinese get credit for the invention of this little dumpling which is essentially the same as the Chinese Jiaozi. The gyoza was not introduced to Japan until the 1940's most likely adapted after the Japanese invasion of China in the late 1930's. Since then the Gyoza has become so popularized that there are Gyoza restaurants and even a Gyoza Stadium located in Osaka, Japan. The Gyoza Stadium has a museum complete with history and explanations of the many varieties of this adopted dish (This information courtesy of Gourmet Sleuth).

Gyoza

Ingredients
Filling:
1 large clove garlic
Freshly grated ginger
4-5 spring onions/green onions, roughly chopped
400g/1 lb pork mince
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons sesame oil
½ teaspoon sugar
½ teaspoon salt
Dumpling wrappers
2-3 teaspoons oil
1-1 ½ hot chicken stock/broth
Dipping sauce to serve

Method
Chop the garlic, ginger and onions
Add the next five ingredients and mix thoroughly


Place a heaped teaspoon of the filling in the middle of a wrapper (don’t be too generous) or you won’t be able to seal the dumpling)


Moisten around the edges and fold the wrapper in half to make a half moon shaped package
Crimp the edges to seal
Sit the dumplings seam side up on a board


Heat about a teaspoon of the oil in a large non stick pan
Add as many of the dumplings as will comfortably fit with a little space between
Cook over medium heat for 2-3 minutes until the bottoms are golden brown
Pour ½ cup of the hot stock into the pan, cover with a close fitting lit and cook for 5-6 minutes until almost all the liquid has gone and the dumplings are cooked through (cut one in half to test)
Place the cooked dumplings on a warmed plate and cover with foil while you cook the remaining dumplings
Serve with dipping sauce – I put out separate dishes of soy sauce and sweet chilli sauce

Makes about 30 dumplings

A nice cold beer goes well with Japanese food but I’m not a big beer drinker unless it’s a stinking hot day and I’m really really thirsty. Occasionally I’ll have a shandy which is beer and lemonade. Before you wrinkle your nose up I mean Sprite or 7-Up, not the homemade kind of lemonade. Proportions are to taste - I like mine about half and half.

Garden Makeover

After 20 years of home ownership I have finally accepted the fact that I hate gardening. It's something that many people are passionate about and I always used to have a slightly guilty feeling when I admitted that gardening wasn't my thing. Now that I have come out about it I feel great.

Our house is about 10 years old and we've owned it for two years. The garden is small but had got to a point where the shrubs were getting woody or diseased and the trees were outgrowing their space. Our neighbours all around us are keen gardeners with manicured lawns and very tidy gardens and I didn't want us to be known as the people with the worst garden in the street. After a little negotiation I managed to persuade my husband to let me have the garden replanted. I pretty much gave my landscaper carte blanche to do whatever he thought would work and my brief was that it needed to be easy care but other than that I didn't have strong views on what I liked or didn't like. The only tree that was to remain was the lemon tree. It's not a pretty tree and is in a really dumb place but it is just so prolific there's no way I could have it dug out.

Here are the before and after photos...

Left hand front of the house - I'm not even sure what plants we had to begin with that's how little I know or care about gardening! I do know the taller plant by the door is a pretty pink camellia.



Right hand front of house. I know the photos don't look much different but they are. The taller shrubs along here are small camellias.



The famous lemon tree.



The tall trees in the before photos are pittosporums and the white blooming shrub is a Mexican orange blossom. Note the tangle of weeds in the corner strangling the last of my freesias. Did I mention I hate gardening?




My landscaper told me that he wasn't the kind of gardener who over planted. He said that our garden area was so small we'd just be pulling stuff out before we knew it. Despite that advice my initial reaction when I got home to see the garden was complete horror at the nudeness of it all. I had the lanscaper come back and put in a whole bunch of pansies to fill in the gaps and now they are flowering the garden looks a whole lot better. The new plants have taken root and some have even come into flower but I need to wait until it stops raining to take some more photos. Stay tuned for a garden update soon.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

What American Accent Do You Have?

My friend Deb lurves her quizzes and she recently issued this challenge: "I'd be curious what the results would be for someone outside the US taking that quiz, since that person obviously wouldn't actually have any American accent. I wonder what kind the quiz maker would think they had based on their responses. Hhhhmmm... Any of my non-US friends game to try it and tell me your result?".

Well here are my results and I am not really surprised at how they've come out. When we lived in the US and my husband was on a business trip to Rochester, New York with some colleagues from Kentucky, the New Yorkers had trouble with the Southern accents but could understand him just fine. Three years away wasn't enought time for me to develop even a hint of a Southern accent which was a great disappointment to me. I guess I didn't try too hard to change because everyone around me thought my Kiwi accent was charming.

What American accent do you have?
Your Result: The Northeast

Judging by how you talk you are probably from north Jersey, New York City, Connecticut or Rhode Island. Chances are, if you are from New York City (and not those other places) people would probably be able to tell if they actually heard you speak.

Philadelphia
The Inland North
The South
The Midland
Boston
The West
North Central
What American accent do you have?
Take More Quizzes

Now it's your all's turn!

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Red Wine and Pizza

Happy Happy Joy Joy Joy - I won a prize!! I received a letter from one of my local supermarkets with a handwritten address on it. I wondered what it might be and thought perhaps I'd left something at the store. Well I most certainly did leave something in the store - an entry form in a competition to win a pizza maker. Taking into consideration that this particular supermarket is not my usual one and the fact that I always have good intentions of filling out competition forms but hardly ever do, it's a miracle that I won. We are not a big pizza eating household but I guess we will be now. I'm thinking I might try Lis's pizza recipe.



The item I purchased to qualify for the draw was a bottle of Rosemount Cabernet Sauvignon which is a cheap and cheerful red from Australia.

New World Supermarket awarded the Rosemount Cabernet Sauvignon a silver medal in its 2006 Wine Awards Under $20 Challenge. It was described as Ultra smooth, with mouthfilling body and fresh, vibrantly fruity flavours of blackcurrant and plums. This Aussie red will make heaps of friends. The Judges' comment was "forget cellaring - this is ready to roll!"