Archive | March, 2011

Winery Tour: The Mornington Peninsula Edition

29 Mar

During my time in Australia I’ve been on many, many winery tours.

Another one can’t hurt right?

This time, all the Queeners, dressed in their finest tweed, hopped on a bus to the Mornington Peninsula to enjoy two wineries and a classy cheese and wine filled ferry ride in between.

The first vineyard was Michelton.

Uno.

Dos.

Tres.

Most of the wines I sampled here were very tasty.

Mostly on the sweeter side though, and not too many fuller bodied wines.

After a couple good hours of tasting it was time to board the boat.

It was a gorgeous day for it too!

On the ferry, there was copious amounts of wine and cheese consumed.

I bought a bottle of the Moscato after being advised against the red since it doesn’t pair as well with cheese.

The Moscato was fine for the first few sips but tasted more and more like apple juice after that.

Lots of cheesing. Lots of dippage.

Fun Boat Times

The ferry may have been my favorite part. Between the hot sun, cool breeze, wine cheese, and perfect company, I could have easily spent another hour up on the top deck.

Alas it was off to the next winery: Tahbilk.

We hit Tahbilk on a great day. There was live music and acres of land primed for afternoon napping.

Nothing like a good wine induced snooze.

Then it was time for more tastings:

I was a bit over tasting at this stage, but nothing really impressed me here besides the tawny and ports.

Everything else seemed a bit watery.

Overall another winery success.

Don’t tell Mornington Peninsula, but Yarra Valley still has my heart.

Well, my Google Reader is calling, and it is in danger of becoming more daunting then my mail inbox.

Gotta jump back on this blogging horse!

Casey

Kitchen Invader

27 Mar

I was so close to reaching my goal of posting three times a week whilst in Australia.

Alas, the construction workers cut through a cable and I was internet-less for a little while.

I think I may give up coffee before I could ever give up the luxury that is Email.

Instead I got a few days to recover from my food coma so that I could post about it!

I was faced with a foodie challenge. Cooking for three other people with all different food preferences.

I don’t eat meat, one doesn’t like fish or mushrooms and claims they are adamantly against Vego…..ahem, Oscar.

I kind of just bought a bunch of ingredients and created a three course meal on the fly.

Caprese Dip to start

So simple: tomatoes, mozzarella, basil, oven.

Topped with toasted pine nuts.

Is it just me or do pine nuts make everything better?

Language barriers are still kicking. I asked if they had tomato sauce when we were buying ingredients at the grocery store.

Yep realized I shoulda referred to that as “pasta sauce” when I was handed the “ketchup” in their abode.

That’s the beautiful thing about improvising though.

Couscous “on-the-fly”

  • Couscous
  • Tomato Paste
  • Chopped Tomatoes
  • Spinach
  • Mozzarella
  • Garlic
  • Basil
  • Toasted Pine Nuts

  1. Cook couscous with a 1:2 ratio of couscous to water
  2. Once the couscous begins to absorb most of the water add all ingredients except pine nuts and spinach
  3. Slowly add spinach  and mozzarella until it cooks well into the couscous
  4. Remove from heat and add toasted pine nuts
  5. CONSUME

Dessert was a new one for my Australian friends. Apparently Bread Pudding is a European or English dessert.

They were a bit skeptical about using stale bread. Though we ended up using fresh crusty bread anyways.

Apple Raisin Bread Pudding

  • Half a loaf of bread
  • Mixed dried fruit
  • 2 apples
  • Milk
  • 2 eggs
  • Sugar
  • Heaps of cinnamon
  1. Combine milk, eggs, sugar and cinnamon over medium heat.
  2. Meanwhile chop bread and apples into large cubes and put in a baking dish along with dried fruit
  3. Once the milk/egg mixture starts to thicken, remove from heat on combine with bread/fruit mixture
  4. Bake at 180 C  until bread begins to brown

I topped it with vanilla ice cream.

Aaaand….stuffed.

I thoroughly enjoyed my little food coma that night.

And the vego meal was a complete success. I may have even begun to recruit a few over to the dark side ;)

Thank you friends for letting me invade your kitchen and cook vego food for avid meat eaters.

Do you eyeball things more depending on if you’re cooking for yourself or for others?

I definitely don’t measure that much when I’m cooking for a group.

 

Casey

Grill’d and Stuffed

22 Mar

With Field Hockey and Soccer taking over the majority of my mornings, I know there one thing I can always rely on…

Coffee…lots and lots of coffee.

Coffee dates, coffee’s on the way to Uni, coffee on the way back from Uni.

Short MacchiatosCappuccinosMochasAll of them gorgeous and delicious in their own way.

I’m limiting myself to no more than two a day. I don’t want to get the McTwitches (Supersize Me reference anyone?)

I kind of overdid the training and my quad locked up yesterday. Good thing the finals for field hockey aren’t until Monday!

I’m thinking yoga is going to be my savior. That and rest.

At least it’s kick started my appetite, which is roaring.

Solution: Grill’d

One of the best burger chains in Australia. They have some pretty decent Vego options and their ingredients are very fresh.

I got the Bombay Classic: A Chickpea Pattie with Roasted Red Peppers and Tzatziki.

Warning: If you want to successfully eat a Grill’d burger, keep that massive toothpick thingo in!

It’s gonna be messy no matter what (have you seen the size of this thing?) so maybe not the best date locale ;) Eamonn could hardly contain his excitement for his Grill’d burger.Bitten:Satisfied Customers:

Demolished:

You can also always rely on leaving Grill’d absolutely full.

I have a few cooking/dinner dates planned for the weekend and about a million recipes floating around in my head.

Only a lucky few will make the cut ;)

Stay tuned…

 

Casey

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