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PLEASE NOTE: The chat content is edited to contain only information regarding the topic AUSSIE FOOD
Betsy, NY (9:14:24 pm) : Tonight Chef Pete will be hosting an Aussie Food chat Chef Pete, please tell us a little about yourself
chef pete (9:19:34 pm) : Betsy o.k. .......... i was born in england and started to work in a pub when i was still at school (cleaning toilet's) went to a catering college in my home town. however i did not do that well there.having too much fun doing other things. then i worked on passenger ship's for a few year's as a waiter and assistant head waiter.. this is where i met my wife hence my move to australia. we are just about to celebrate our tenth birthday with our own catering company and cafe
Cookie, NH (9:20:59 pm) : Sounds like you've had an exciting life chef pete. :)
chef pete (9:22:09 pm) : we are based in the city (sydney) when we started my catering exstended to assorted sandwiches, cheese and fruit and marinated chicken legs...... bit by bit (mistake by mistake) we took off
chef pete (9:23:03 pm) : is anyone here familiar with an australian cuisine??????
Cookie, NH (9:23:46 pm) : Sorry Pete I'm a New Englander.
Vicki,La (9:23:48 pm) : not here
SueA, CA (9:23:49 pm) : chef Pete; I'm not at all.
chef pete (9:25:00 pm) : ok maybe i should tell you something about how it has evolved to where it is today.
chef pete (9:27:15 pm) : for 40,000 years there was an indiginous diet of the aboriginal people.they where a hunter gatherer population eating bush foods that they would move to through the seasons
chef pete (9:29:30 pm) : 210 years ago england came to australia to use it as a prison colony, so the diet of the english arrived... (i some times wonder how food would have developed had the french arrived first)
chef pete (9:31:39 pm) : it was not untill this century, that the influences of other countries started to make any influence
Betsy, NY (9:33:34 pm) : That's interesting Chef Pete - are there any dishes from the Aborigines that have been carried down?
Judi, TX (9:34:00 pm) : Did the penal colonies not have any influence over the foods until the 1900's? That seems an awfully long time for them to have kept out of the diet.
chef pete (9:36:14 pm) : when the first italian restaurants started here after the second world war by newly arrived imigrants.... australians did not take to them straight away.....took a few years for an australian public to get used to going out and eating an octopus.... they where used to useing them for fish bait not eating...
Judi, TX (9:37:38 pm) : You're wondering what would have happened to the foods had the French been their first, is an interesting thought. Texas was French for a short while but they left little influence on our foods.
chef pete (9:39:01 pm) : Betsy ......only in the last few years have australian chefs been looking at aboriginal bush foods and some technics such as baking on hot stones with food wrapped in paper bark and leaves
Judi, TX (9:39:46 pm) : Chef Pete - You mention wrapping foods in bark for baking. How much flavor does the bark impart to the foods?
chef pete (9:45:02 pm) : judy .. depending on the bark the bark is often soaked in water first so you actually steam the food, but some melaluca tree bark can add a slightly smoked mushroom flavour
Judi, TX (9:46:01 pm) : Chef Pete - Are there any particularly different methods of cooking done by the Aboriginal tribes that are not done by other cultures. I realize that the ingredients would be different, as not many US Plain's Indians had kangaroo to eat, but I was thinking of the cooking methods.
That melaluca tree bark sounds delicious.
chef pete (9:48:29 pm) : today we have a heavy asian influence...... Judi..... i do not think so....they did not really make use of pot's or pans.. just an open fire or hot rock's under the ground
Judi, TX (9:50:22 pm) : The reason that I asked is that being an island continent, you were so isolated. Most cultures use some sort of wrapping of foods, like our tamales and the the use of banana leaves. With corn husks, there is not flavor transfer, but I believe that's because the husks are dried, but then one puts corn into them, so maybe there is, I just never noticed it.
Judi, TX (9:51:33 pm) : Does the aboriginal culute make use of chiles or are they not native to Australia?
chef pete (9:54:45 pm) : no native chillies here but there are native peppers "Dorrigo pepper, Tasmanian mountain pepper."
Judi, TX (9:55:42 pm) : Are those hot peppers or mild ones?
Judi, TX (9:57:07 pm) : We may be going to Australia this coming fall. What kinds of foods should I look for in order to taste some of the aboriginal foods?
chef pete (9:57:14 pm) : in the early eighties some inovative chefs here started to use asian flavours with western cooking technics judy they are a mild pepper
Judi, TX (9:58:00 pm) : We have that Asian influence here a lot. I believe they are not calling it infusion.
Judi, TX (9:59:00 pm) : I find it interesting that I get a lot of questions about our Mexican or Tex-Mex foods from Australians. Is there a big interest there or is it a fad that's going on now?
chef pete (10:01:21 pm) : there has always been a liking of tacos and such dishes here... but people are becoming more adventuraous towards mex food
chef pete (10:03:05 pm) : i will post to the message board in the next few days a few site addresses relating to aussie restaurants,food
Judi, TX (10:03:06 pm) : What about the heat factor. Are the Australians taking to the hotter chiles and foods? Where do they get the ingredients for them?
chef pete (10:04:11 pm) : Judi.....yes people are becoming more and used to the chillie factor
chef pete (10:06:32 pm) : in our cafe we only trade mon - fr 7:30 am - 4:00pm toasted focaccia , fresh salads, gourmet sandwiches but our catering is where i get to be creative
Judi, TX (10:07:23 pm) : Chef Pete, I know I missed this, but where is your cafe?
chef pete (10:09:49 pm) : judi sydney in the city we mainly service corporate clients with our catering service. cocktail parties , board room lunches, buffet's, dinners, event catering..
Betsy, NY (10:10:07 pm) : Chef Pete - what is the most popular dish you serve at your cafe?
chef pete (10:12:36 pm) : in the cafe it would be marinated artichoke, pesto sauce, roast capsicum and baked ricotta...toasted focaccia
chef pete (10:13:44 pm) : for our catering service cocktail parties and board room lunches would be our most popular
Betsy, NY (10:13:51 pm) : Is that all one dish Pete?
chef pete (10:14:39 pm) : Betsy yes like a thick toasted sandwich
Betsy, NY (10:15:45 pm) : That sounds heavenly
SueA, CA (10:16:33 pm) : chef pete> Does Australia have very distinctive regional differences in cooking like we do in the US?
chef pete (10:19:16 pm) : boardroom menu i have to do tomorrow entree Angel hair pasta with smoked salmon & dill main course poached Gippsland lamb fillet with tomato butter and fresh horse radish
chef pete (10:22:39 pm) : SueA......not so distinctive........more like subtle influences in tasmania, an island southern most point of australia there is a strong dairy industry cheeses that are beating the worlds best in compertitions
chef pete (10:25:48 pm) : in adelaide and south australia there has been a long established wine region, developed first my germans end of last century...they now discover that olives grow very well too after greeks planted some when they first came out 50-70 years ago just for personal use
SueA, CA (10:26:34 pm) : I've had some Australian wine..it was pretty good.
SueA, CA (10:25:30 pm) : Pete: To what extent has American fast food affected your country? Are you overrun with McDonald and Kentucky Fried Chicken?
chef pete (10:26:53 pm) : SueA ....yes but dont get me started or i wont stop..lol..coca cola taste buds
SueA, CA (10:27:57 pm) : Are you familiar with the Outback Restaurant chain here in the US purveyors of Australian Food?
chef pete (10:29:26 pm) : SueA Outback Restaurant..no - are they on the web?
SueA, CA (10:30:25 pm) : I don't know but recipe requests for some of their specialties appear often.
Judi, TX (10:30:44 pm) : Chef Pete - Do you have to have your smoked salmon flown in from Scotland?
SueA, CA (10:31:29 pm) : Outbacks are a pretty nice steak house type place but I doubt very Australian in reality.
chef pete (10:33:58 pm) : judi...... no we are producing some of the best smoked salmon here in australia tasmania again is the largest area but some is starting to appear on restaurant menus that have been caught by hand in rivers in victoria
Judi, TX (10:35:08 pm) : I wasn't aware that you had salmon at all in Australia. It's got to be such a neat country and continent.
chef pete (10:38:43 pm) : we are selling alot into asia now yellow fin tuna abalone all kinds of seafood from unpolluted waters we have devloped methods to export fish alive so that the restaurants around the world can have australian seafood alive in their tanks
Judi, TX (10:39:50 pm) : Do you export to the US? It sounds wonderful! I love seafood of all kinds.
Judi, TX (10:42:26 pm) : Is most of your fish exporting done via air? I assume it has to be. I can't even fathom how long a slow boat would take.
chef pete (10:42:33 pm) : i am going to adelaide in south australia about 3 hours flying time in october to a "tasting australia festival" i will be attending a couple of days of master class cooking courses wine tastings, food and wine writers festival and a gala dinner 7 of this countries best chefs each doing 1 course 7 courses and 7 wines
Judi, TX (10:43:24 pm) : Oh, Chef Pete, that sounds like a wonderful seminar. I envy you.
chef pete (10:43:31 pm) : Judi yes the fish can be caught here and on a plate in tokyo in under 24 hours
Betsy, NY (10:43:32 pm) : Pete: Outback Steakhouse Menu and Locations http://www.outbackbowl.com/outback/
SueA, CA (10:43:43 pm) : That sounds wonderful.
chef pete (10:45:32 pm) : my wife and i are planning to put our business up for sale..... and then i would like to get into sourcing our finest ingredients and exporting them
Judi, TX (10:45:59 pm) : I have a question about lamb and beef in Australia. I know that in Europe, what we refer to as lamb is not what they refer to as lamb. Their's is milk fed, much like our veal. Is it the same way in Australia? Also, many, many years ago, 30+ to be almsot exact, I was in the Orient for 6 months and most of the beef we got was Australian but it had a strange taste to it. At least strange to me.
Judi, TX (10:46:55 pm) : What sorts of things would you class as your "finest" ingredients?
SueA, CA (10:47:26 pm) : I think you should write a cookbook. Collectors of cookbook would love to have an Australian Cookbook to add to their collection.
Judi, TX (10:48:37 pm) : I know that I, for one, would love to have a good Australian cookbook. I know so little about the food and would really like to know more.
chef pete (10:49:41 pm) : Judi.....people are just starting to develop milk fed lamb and veal here asians can find our lamb too strong and the smell alone can turn them off but our beef is the melt in the mouth variety
Judi, TX (10:51:06 pm) : Your lamb must be more like ours then. I personally love it, but I could really see the difference in ours and European lamb.
Betsy, NY (10:55:10 pm) : Cooking the Australian Way - Elizabeth. Germaine http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0822509237/thekitchenlinkA
Here's the book you referred to earlier Pete: A Taste of Australia : The Bathers Pavilion Cookbook - Victoria Alexander http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0898157560/thekitchenlinkA
SueA, CA (10:57:10 pm) : Betsy, you have found some Australian cookbooks. I' ll have to tell my husband who is looking for birthday ideas.
SueA, CA (10:58:09 pm) : Chef Pete what would be, if any, the Australian version of a fast food?
chef pete (10:58:10 pm) : finest ingredients: yabby- larger than a prawn marron- larger than a yabby like a small lobster but much sweeter not with that nutty taste that you can get.. our topical fruits our cheeses
Betsy, NY (10:58:20 pm) : Are you familiar with either of the books Pete?
Judi, TX (10:59:14 pm) : Those shrimp sound wonderful. I dearly love shrimp and lobster of all kinds. Thank you for the information.
chef pete (11:00:33 pm) : yes "a taste of australia" she has a wonderfull restaurant on sydney harbour
SueA, CA (11:04:04 pm) : I think this question got buried in conversation earlier: Pete is there an Australian fast food that is typical?
chef pete (11:04:36 pm) : judi if there is one book to have it would have to be...... "the cooks companion.....by stephanie alexander
chef pete (11:06:44 pm) : someone metioned earlier that they were comming to australia. who was it?
Judi, TX (11:07:43 pm) : That was me. There may be a rice grower's/millers convention in Thailand and if we go, we'll go via Australia. No point in getting that far East without getting to Australia.
chef pete (11:09:24 pm) : judi well if you come to australia you wil have to visit our rice growing area too......we have just broken into the japenese market
chef pete (11:09:58 pm) : SueA it would have to be a meat pie
Judi, TX (11:10:33 pm) : If we come, we will be visiting your rice growing area, I can assure you of that. "we have just broken into the japanese market" -sob- Make my jealous, that's OK. -GG-
SueA, CA (11:11:00 pm) : Similar to a pasty in England?
chef pete (11:12:47 pm) : the rice industry here is not the most popular ......using too much water from the east coasts main river supply
SueA yes like a pasty do you know how pasties came about?
chef pete : SueA......they came from cornwall the tin miners used to take them down into the mines for lunch..... they made them with the crust so they could hold them with there filthy hands and not put any dirt in there mouth's
Betsy, NY (11:12:55 pm) : Thank you so much for joining us Chef Pete, we really appreciate you sharing your time and knowledge with us.
END OF CHAT
AUSTRALIAN RECIPES:
Betsy, NY (9:40:29 pm) : Australian/US Food Substitution Chart
Copha = Hard vegetable shortening (made from coconut). Corn Flour = Corn starch Caster sugar = Regular sugar (actually slightly finer than regular US sugar, but not much) Golden Syrup = Dark Corn Syrup Icing sugar = Confectioner's sugar
Betsy, NY (10:00:14 pm) : Australian Stuffed Pumpkin
1 stalk Celery, chopped finely 1 1/2 cups Water 1 tsp Paprika 1 Tbsp Grated Parmensan Cheese 2 Tbsp Dill 100g Mushroom (Cups/Buttons), sliced 1 1/2 cups Chicken Stock 1 Bay Leaf 1 slice Wholemeal Bread, crumbled 3/4 cup Cottage Cheese 1/2 cup Rice (Brown) 1/2 cup Lentils (Brown) 4 Pumpkins (Baby Nugget)
If desired - soak lentils in 1 1/2 cups of water for 1 hour. Drain, rinse and drain again. Place lentils, rice, chicken stock and bay leaf in saucepan, bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 30-35 minutes (water should be absorbed). Remove bay leaf. While lentils are cooking, pierce pumpkins in several places with a sharp skewer and bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes. Remove from oven, cut lid from top and scoop out seeds. Combine cooked lentils, mushrooms,celery, dill and cottage cheese. Use this mixture to fill pumpkins. Combine breadcrumbs, cheese and paprika, sprinkle on top of pumpkins. Bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes. Serve with green salad or steamed green vegetables.
Betsy, NY (10:04:31 pm) : Australian Cheese and Sage Damper
2 cups Flour (Wholemeal Self Raising) 3/4 cup Cheese (Low Fat Cheddar) 1/2 tsp Paprika 1/4 tsp Pepper (Black) 1 tsp Sage Leaves (Dried) 40g Butter (low fat/low salt) or margarine 1 cup Skim Milk (Evaporated) 3 tsp Milk 2 tsp Parmensan Cheese, grated 2 tsp Poppy Seed
Using a food processor, grate cheese. Mix in flour, paprika, pepper and sage. Add butter, or margarine, and process until crumbly. Add evaporated milk and mix to a soft dough. On a lightly floured surface, knead dough and shape into a 20cm round shape. Using a sharp knife, cut almost through the dough into 8 wedges. Brush top with milk and sprinkle with Parmesan and poppy seeds. Bake at 180 C for 25-30 minutes. When slightly cooled, cut into wedges and serve.
Betsy, NY (10:06:13 pm) : Australian Sticky Toffee Pudding
Recipe By : Jill Dupleix Serving Size : 6 Preparation Time :0:00 Categories : Desserts
1 cup dates (180g) -- pitted and chopped 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda 1 cup boiling water 2 TBSP butter 1 cup soft brown sugar (150 g) 2 eggs. 1 1/2 cups self-raising flour (180 g) -- sifted
Toffee Sauce: 1 cup soft brown sugar (150 g) 3/4 cup light whipping cream. 1/2 tsp vanilla 2 TBSP butter
Mix dates and baking soda in a heat-proof bowl. Pour boiling water on top and leave to stand. Cream butter and sugar until pale, then add eggs one at a time, heating well after each addition. Gently fold in sifted flour, stir in the date mixture, and pour into a lightly buttered 18cm or 7" square or round cake tin. Bake in a preheated oven (180 C) for 30-40 minutes, until an inserted skewer comes clean. Combine sugar, cream, vanilla essence and butter in a saucepan, bring to the boil, stirring, and simmer for five minutes. Set aside until ready to serve, then quickly reheat when needed. Cut pudding into squares and place each square in the centre of a warm dinner plate. Pour hot toffee sauce over each square and serve with fresh cream.
SueA, CA (10:06:36 pm) : Australian Lamingtons This was in my file. Thought I'ld throw it in. Probably an American version of something. 3/4 cup sugar 1/2 cup butter 2 large eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla 1/4 cup milk 1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 2 1/2 cups sweetened flacked coconut Cocoa Icing (recipe follows) In a large bowl, beat sugar and butter until creamy. Add eggs, 1 at a time, and beat well. Mix in vanilla and milk. Stir together flour and baking powder, then beat into egg mixture until blended. Butter and flour-dust an 8-inch square pan; spread batter evely in bottom. Bake in a 350ƒ oven until a slender wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean, about 25 minutes. Let cook in pan on rack for 10 minutes, then turn our of pan onto rack and let cool. Cut cake into 9 equal squares. Place coconut in a bowl. Dip cakes pieces, 1 at a time, in icing, then turn in coconut to coat. Place on a rack until icing is firm to touch, about 10 minutes. Serve, or store airtight up to 2 days.. Makes 9 servings. Cocoa Icing In a bowl, beat 3 tablespoons butter or margarine. Sift in 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa and 2 1/4 cups powdered sugar. Add 1 teaspoon vanilla and 1/3 cup hot water. Beat until smooth; use warm.
From Sunset Annual 1989 They may look like fuzzy lambs but supposedly named after Lord Lamington.
Betsy, NY (10:26:40 pm) : Australian Dairy Foods Advisory Board http://www.adc.aust.com/dfab/dfabhome.htm
Betsy, NY (10:55:10 pm) : Cooking the Australian Way Elizabeth. Germaine http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0822509237/thekitchenlinkA
Here's the book you referred to earlier Pete: A Taste of Australia : The Bathers Pavilion Cookbook Victoria Alexander http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0898157560/thekitchenlinkA
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