Saturday, February 17, 2007

 
Eat Food

Gengy's, Newmarket

So a friend was up in Auckland for the weekend, having recently made the shift to become a Wellingtonian. Being a recent entrant to the workforce, best thought was a meal of something cheap and cheerful. When you think cheap and cheerful, around here, you head straight for the Asian restaurants. Except for Grand Harbour and Sunshine, while they are still not expensive places to eat (compared to mid-top end fusion style places), they're still more expensive than your dinky local Asian place.

Having heard various decent reviews about Gengy's, I thought that this was the perfect opportunity to go try it out. I knew it vaguely as Mongolian barbeque - what exactly is Mongolian barbeque? Well, at Gengy's, it was a round, circular metal stovetop where three or four chefs worked at lightning speed. According to the tabletop information, this stove goes at 400 degrees Celsius. You pick your own sliced meat (plain or marinated, chicken, beef, lamb or pork) and then add some vegetables (everything from sprouts to pineapple), then ladle on some oil (garlic oil, chilli oil, peanut oil... list goes forever) and sauces (soy, teriyaki, curry, so many of them) and then add your choice of seasonings. You then give your bowl of ingredients to the chefs and they pop the bowl's contents onto the fiery hot stove, dicing and turning until the dish is cooked. Which takes all of literally 30 seconds. Can you imagine how the preparation of each day's meals might just go so much faster if that's how long it takes to cook?! (Not considering the amount of time it must take to do the prep work of slicing the meat and vegies etc.)

Well, it tastes great. Assuming you've put all the ingredients together well, that is. You really are responsible for your own flavours, entirely your own fault if you've gone too heavy handed on the chilli oil. Gengy's is a great take on the buffet, because at dinner it's all you can eat for $24.95. Take care that your eyes aren't bigger than your stomach, because there's really far too much to choose from for one sitting. There's also a salad bar and a range of carb items to go with your freshly cooked dish like fried rice and noodles.

Next time you need a cheap and cheerful, go to Gengy's. It's good fun. But don't go if anyone has any particular food allergies, because everyone's meals get cooked straight after each others, so there'll definitely be peanut traces and so forth.

Gengy's has three locations in Auckland - Newmarket, Henderson and Manukau. They have a listing on eatout.co.nz here http://www.eatout.co.nz/customers/cust.104697.html.




Saturday, February 03, 2007

 
Eat Food

La Zeppa, Freemans Bay

Tapa places have taken off in Auckland over the last year or so. I love them myself - I always get jealous of other people's orders if they turn out better than mine! Not that it's stopped me from plate-sharing or swapping halfway (gasp!). But tapas - this is the perfect way to have your cake and eat it too. Food sharing is such a great way to interact with others as well - nothing like bonding over a tasty morsel or eight.

La Zeppa is a great place to do some serious bonding. I went midweek for dinner to celebrate the upcoming wedding of a colleague and friend. 10 of us women, all raring for a decent drink and delicious food after a hard day's slog. La Zeppa is the perfect place for this - midweek and it was packed, and that's saying something, especially when La Zeppa is a pretty big place.

Each of us ordered a couple of dishes to share - so we had LOADS of food all over the table. Heaven I tell you. There was squid, chicken twists things, mushroom empanadas, risotto balls, veal, kumara bites, peking duck, toulouse sausage, prawns - the list goes on. I really can't remember what else we had, because we had so many. It was the best thing, going with a group of people - otherwise there's no way you could taste so many different dishes.

All very well accompanied by a few bottles of Spy Valley Pinot Gris.

And dessert...we were already quite full, but of course, a table full of females - we're not passing up dessert. You really shouldn't at La Zeppa. The list is just delectable - you'll get hungry just reading them. Once again, we all picked one dish (exception of one particular sweet-toothed lady who picked quite a few! Much appreciated though). There were little meringues with cream and berry coulis, these delicious Valhrona chocolate truffles in wafer cases (huge and SOOO chocolatey-evil), Eton Mess, ginger creme brulee, cheeses - honestly, it was incredible. And all so delicious.

Good value too, La Zeppa - you won't go hungry, that's for sure. I thoroughly recommend this place - if you're with a big group, do make sure you book a table, as it's popular!

I'm hungry just remembering that great meal.

La Zeppa is at 33 Drake St, Freemans Bay, Auckland (just behind Victoria Park Markets).


Wednesday, January 17, 2007

 
Make Food

Pork dumplings

I love dumplings. Or wontons. Depends on how precise you're being. But I love them. I love how they're flavour packed, and taste great either steamed or in a soup with egg noodles, or when your arteries can handle it, shallow-fried. Of course you could deep-fry, but really - leave that to those with a real deep fryer. Yuk - the mess otherwise!

Anyway, over the last year or so, I've slowly developed my own recipe for dumplings. Recipes are never set in stone - experimentation always recommended - never know what gold might be discovered!

You can get wonton wrappers of varying density in Asian grocery shops like Tai Ping and the Tofu Shop in their refrigerated goods sections. For the hoisin sauce and oyster sauce, I like the Lee Kum Kee range.

Ingredients:

400g pork mince
2 tbsp hoisin sauce
1 tbsp oyster sauce
1/2 tsp chinese five spice
1cm fresh ginger, finely chopped
freshly cracked black pepper

Wonton pastry

Method

Place pork mince in a bowl with all the other ingredients and mix until well combined. Take a piece of wonton pastry and moisten all four edges with water. Place approx one teaspoonful of the pork mince mixture in the middle of the wrapper. Fold the pastry firstly in half to form a rectangular shape, carefully sealing all the space around the filling so that there are no air pockets left in the dumpling. Moisten the long edge of the pastry with water (the side where the edges meet), and fold down once to seal the edge. Moisten the two short side edges and fold both side edges to the middle, overlapping slightly. The end result will look something like an old-fashioned nurses' hat.

Depending on the thickness of the pastry you have, you might even like to create dumplings that resemble the Thai moneybags pastries- the above is just one way of making them.

To cook - boil for about 10 minutes in beef stock with a stick of celery, and serve with egg noodles. You can also steam the dumplings for about 20 minutes, or lightly pan-fry over a medium heat for about 20 minutes or so.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

 

Make Food

Meat thermometers

Whiling away a little bit of time before Christmas, Westie Boy and I had discussed various odd topics - including a conversation about meat thermometers. We'd managed to cook a fair number of roasts over the last year, ranging from the ready-to-roast Tegel ones that you get at the supermarket (sort of cheating, I know - but those tender-basted chooks are really so tasty) to a full loin of roast pork and an attempt at crackling. My crackling really isn't very good - I've tried a few times, and once, thought I'd set the oven on fire. Luckily it turned out I hadn't set the oven on fire - just the crackling itself. Don't you just hate it when that happens, especially when you've followed the recipe to a T.

Anyway, back to meat thermometers. We didn't have one of these nifty little gadgets, but had talked about it a few times, just pondering it - are they really that good? Just follow the instructions in your Edmonds cookbook regarding the cooking times, and you should be sweet! It's always been fine, but curiosity got the better of me, so I purchased a little meat thermometer from the Home Store. It was a Cuisena Meat Thermometer Dial - one of those ones that you stick into the meat and it can go in the oven for the entire roasting time. Of course, having bought this, we then needed a roast. So the next supermarket visit included a lamb roast. Mmm. Lamb.

So, after the oven heats up to the appropriate temperature, just before the roast goes in, you stick in the thermometer at least 5cm deep into the thickest part of the meat. Then it all goes in the oven till the dial pointer shows you the desired temperature for your roast (given that I like my lamb a little bit pink in the middle, 77 degrees celsius). Then out comes the roast for a little rest (as Westie Boy's dad once said, so that the roast isn't stressed - ah so Auckland), and then it's time to see if it worked.

Well bless my cotton softs, because it turned out to be the best roast lamb I've made yet. Perfectly moist and tender, and tasty to boot (though that was probably the honey-soy-garlic-cracked black pepper marinade and sprig of rosemary tucked in the middle). I'm keeping this little gadget. It was $17.50, not pricey, and just proved its worth. There are other thermometers about that are digital, but me being a little lazy, preferred to have something that could go in the oven and stay there during the whole cooking time (NOT recommended for the digi ones I tell you!).

Don't forget the kumara and potatoes! I know it's summer, but hey, new kitchen gadget had to be tried out, right?

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

 
Eating out is a 360 degrees experience

The pleasure of eating out is not only made up of the food that one ingests - the surroundings and the service you receive will either enhance your experience or greatly diminish it. Funnily enough, even the journey of getting to the eatery can have an impact. When you're ratty and exhausted from trying to navigate the impossibly narrow streets (probably facing off a big f**k-off 4WD) or the equally draining experience of trying to find a car park, sometimes, the service and the meal needs to be just that extra bit more special to help soothe that furrowed brow (if you've stayed away from the botox, that is).

And sometimes, when you've arrived at your eating destination with no cares in the world, your dining experience can be rather depressing. My recent dining experience, unfortunately, has triggered this particular diatribe. So bad was this place (for what they were charging) that I'm even going to split this review into food, then into service. Yep, this is a bit of a rant - sorry! Blame the eatery!

Eat Food

Cats Tango, Onetangi Beach, Waiheke Island

Westie Boy and I happened to be having a relaxing overnighter at the gorgeous Onetangi Beach, Waiheke Island. This place is stunning. Funnily enough, I can clearly remember reading a restaurant review, think it might have been by Peter Calder, where they said that many places that have priceless views often suffer from being too lax about their food - as though they could get by with so-so food, because their views are brilliant.

Cats Tango suffers from exactly this lethargy. Not only that, Cats Tango is the only restaurant within walking distance of Onetangi Beach, so they have a bit of a monopoly on the diners in the immediate vicinity.

So, having checked out the small but perfectly acceptable menu, we trooped inside. Our cheerful waiter led us to a table for two, and we three all stood there for perhaps half a minute until the waiter realised that while there were indeed two settings on the table, there was only one chair. Brushing that aside, we sat down (with two chairs) and perused the wine list. Another young waiter came over for our beverage order and I asked for a glass of the local riesling (Waiheke produces some pretty good wine). "Ohh, that one's not available I'm sorry". Humph. Surely you should let people know immediately what, if anything, isn't available?

Anyway, moving on. As mentioned, food menu was small but had some promising-sounding choices. Given that it's the period right after the Christmas indulgence, I was keen not to let my eyes be bigger than my stomach and decided to skip over entrees, even though I liked the sound of the scallops. I settled for the garlic prawns on penne pasta with alfredo sauce, while Westie Boy plumped for the chargrilled tuna on jasmine rice. Meanwhile, our drinks hadn't arrived - and another table who placed their order after us seemed to have their drinks already. Hmm.


A third waiter came to take our food orders, and my order was greeted with "Didn't tell you what wasn't available?" No, they didn't. This is getting worse by the minute. In fact, it transpired that two of the six mains weren't available, my prawns being one of them, and also, there was just one serving of the gnocchi left. Right then. I picked the roast chicken with garden vegetables instead, then "what about drinks?" Well, we've already ordered and they haven't arrived yet.

Drinks arrived after that reminder, and then our food. As I write this blog, what really drags a derisive laugh from me is that I see Cats Tango has a website and describes themselves as 'fine dining'. Tell me, does fine dining mean overcooked chicken? My half roast chicken was dry as a bone, the carrots were undercooked and the pastry basket was simply a piece of puff pastry that lay under the chicken. Poor Westie Boy, a huge fan of tuna, found his tuna to be cooked through and covered with burnt sesame seeds. His comment sums the dish up perfectly - "I've had better from a can." Are the chefs away on holiday?

Sadly, we mourned the state of what could have been a perfectly good piece of tuna. I'd finished with my dry chicken, knife and fork in the 'finished' position, but Westie Boy was still eating. Up pops the waiter who takes away my plate, while Westie Boy was still eating. Fine dining? Cats Tango, if you aspire to be fine dining - take some food and service lessons from Sails Restaurant. You need it.

Oh - we couldn't face dessert. Not after the mains.

Food Service


Before anyone tells me that I'm being harsh, I need to walk a mile in their shoes etc - I have. I've been a waiter and I know how hard it can be, still smiling and efficient after six hours straight of rushing around on your feet, plates that weigh a ton stacking eight high on one arm and wine knife threatening to topple from your apron pocket into the eating tray of the toddler at a table. But I also know that it's not hard to get the basics pat, and all the more worth it to polish these basics until good service becomes second nature.

When I reflect on it, the service at Cats Tango wasn't downright terrible - it's not like anyone was rude, in fact, quite the opposite. But coupled with the food disasters, the whole dining experience just went down like a lead balloon. So here goes a few notes:


  • If you don't have items on your menu (food or drink) available for that sitting, then let your patrons know as soon as they are seated, not after they've made their choices and are just waiting for you to take their orders.

  • Don't carry drinks without using a drinks tray. Maybe that's fine when you're just the local cafe, but seeing that you are self proclaiming 'fine dining' - then use the tray. Oh yeah - it's easier to carry a drinks tray if you balance it in the middle on your palm, not holding onto the edge for dear life.

  • Don't clear the table before the entire table has finished eating. This applies to everyone unless you're a buffet restaurant.

So that's my wee rant. Somehow I think perhaps that no-one was even teaching the waiters service - as though all waitering is simply the mechanism of getting of food/drink orders and then the safe delivery of said items. One last thing - just a bit of an odd one - why were there linen tablecloths on all the tables, but paper serviettes on top? If you're going to the trouble of linen tablecloths, surely you'e add in the linen napkins too?


Still interested? Cats Tango have a website http://www.catstango.co.nz/


Wednesday, January 03, 2007

 
Eat Food

Sushi Train, downtown Auckland

There definitely isn't a shortage of Japanese eateries in Auckland. It's great! They do vary in quality, so ask around for people's recommendations. Sushi Train is a place opened in the Sebel Hotel building not too long ago, and they are definitely worth a visit. Not a large place, but given what you're eating, it's not really designed for people to linger. As the name suggests, a sushi train runs in a rectangle, around which patrons are seated. The sushi chefs are in the middle, preparing all the exquisite, delicate parcels that, very quickly, are parading in front of you in colour-dishes. Each colour dish indicates how much that plate will cost. So you can eat as much as you like or as little as you like. It's a well priced place, thoroughly recommend it for those times when you just want a light bite of sorts but not sure where to go... I love it! There isn't just your average St Pierre salmon and avocado here (tasty but boring) - they've got hot items as well like kaarage chicken, and some really interesting things like 'volcano sushi' and scallop sashimi. I thought I'd eaten a fair variation of sashimi till I got here - scallops eaten raw was a novel experience. They were good - but me being me I think I prefer them panfried with a little garlic-infused olive oil.

Anyway, this place is one to check out if you're into Japanese food - the quick kind, not the intricate meals. They do take out too - same pricing system, just wander up to the train, transfer your picks into the provided boxes, then they'll just ring it up at the counter. Sushi Train also does a range of udon and ramen noodle dishes that can be ordered from the friendly staff. Nothing like hearing all the staff call out a welcome in Japanese as soon as you set foot inside! (And calling out thank you when you leave as well - guaranteed smile).

Where can you find Sushi Train? 85 - 89 Customs St West, downtown Auckland. Ph 09 358 3434.

 
Eat Food

Sails Restaurant

There is only one word for this place - impeccable. I went there for a birthday dinner, and these guys are seriously smooth. Each and every single staff member we encountered knew their stuff, everything from pulling out your chairs and tucking you in, flicking out your napkin, even topping up your wine glass everytime your glass dipped dangerously towards half full. They even whisk away empty glasses (once your bottle's run out, that is) without you noticing - not a pause, not nothing, just whoosh - blink and you'll miss it. Service - so many restaurants ought to send their staff to Sails for a meal just to get some education on what good service is.

Oh yes, the food. The food is divine. The salt and pepper squid isn't quite as good as the French Cafe's, but the dipping sauce (made in house) is amazing. I just couldn't resist having the steak - cooked in a non-revolutionary way, but so juicy and tender (and the best cut possible). Also on the table were scallops... these were just sensational. Big and juicy, panfried, served with a funny dumpling thing - not quite sure exactly what it was, but delicious anyway. Hey, gotta try it all, don't you?!! Other main was kingfish. Sails offer you the option of having the fish of the day done in three ways - think this one was done with fennel and something else. Everything beautifully arranged, great food, great atmosphere, great view.

What's really very nice about Sails (as if I haven't said enough already) is their table arrangements. The restaurant seats perhaps 100, but the tables are well spaced, so you don't have to overhear your neighbour's conversation if you don't want to. And let's not forget the view - Sails is perched in Westhaven, right next to the marina - watching the sky darken and the lights of the harbour bridge blaze is really a fantastic backdrop to the fantastic meal you're sure to have.

Make sure you book! Have a look at the (seafood lovers will like it) menu here: http://www.sailsrestaurant.co.nz/site/menu.asp

Friday, November 17, 2006

 
See food

Food markets are the best. Actually markets in general are the best. I love the Sunday morning market in Takapuna, where you can get fresh fruits and vegies at great prices, fresh bread from various bakers, all sorts of goodies. In fact, there's a guy there who has the most delicious Turkish bread and tasty-looking baklava (not terribly into baklava so I'm not sure if it's good, but judging by how other people buy it, I assume it's pretty good!), a lovely couple who sell home-cured bacon and sausage etc, all sorts. The bacon is fantastic - better than supermarket stock, just as good as the stuff from the gourmet butchers in Ponsonby.

So on that topic - I thought I saw that Auckland City is starting a farmers' market on Saturdays. Can't quite remember, but think it's on around Britomart somewhere, from 8:30am. I hope it's a success - there's nothing like being able to get fresh food straight from the producers. And we've got such great produce in NZ, shame not to appreciate it!!

Another market I'm eager to visit - Devonport's farmers market. I think they're quite sporadic, but the next one is Sunday 26 November on King Edward Parade. Website here http://www.devonportfarmersmarket.co.nz/index.html. Devonport's so lovely as well in the summertime - especially the great woodfired pizza place Manuka. YUM. I recommend the Mediterranean pizza - sundried tomatoes, feta cheese, olives, basil. Simple but just so incredibly tasty. Check out their menu here http://www.manukarestaurant.co.nz/. Be warned - this place is POPULAR, so make sure you allow some time!!

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