Macaron a lHuile d Olive et Vanille {Olive Oil Macaron}

I know, my first reaction was eekkk, really?

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Well, no surprise, olive oil works in desserts as well. Remember the olive oil chocolate cake? it kinda works somehow or rather. But with this macaron, I must say its quite peculiar as there arent other strong flavours, apart from white chocolate and the almond shell itself. Vanilla was used in the ganache but it was overpowered by the olive oil. But peculiar in a good way. Somewhat fruity and sweet. I gave some away for my colleagues to try (of course my family too) and its well accepted.

Who knew, that extra virgin olive oil, white chocolate in a macaron would be a good fit? Oh right, monsieur Pierre Herme does.

This is another Pierre Herme recipe. And also because of this, I went all out to buy Valrhona Ivoire (note that Valrhona chocolate is quite a luxury here, priced at about RM100/kg. You can buy it from Gourmandines. Felchins milk chocolate is pretty good too, I wonder how their white fares. Anyways

For the olive oil ganache, its better to use first cold pressed extra virgin olive oil, with a sweet floral note. PHs recipe also includes olive strips, honestly, Im not a big fan of green olives. Black ones are! better for me. But I didnt put any in. If you wish to, you may sandwich them in between the shells.

Macaron a lHuile d Olive et Vanille

adapted from Pierre Herms Macaron
(makes about 45)

Olive Oil Ganache

60 g whipping cream
1/4 vanilla pod
90 g extra virgin olive oil
135 g Valrhona Ivoire couverture (white chocolate)

1. Melt the couverture in the microwave. Bring the cream to a boil with the split and scraped vanilla pod.

2. Remove the pod and gradually pour the cream into the chocolate. Stir so it emulsifies with a rubber spatula. Pour the olive oil at when the ganache is at 40C . Stir till it combines (takes a while).

3. Cover with a cling wrap and leave to crystallise at room temperature. Set aside till its harden.

Now you have to refrain yourself from eating this straight from the bowl.

Macaron

200 g ground almond meal
200 g icing sugar
75 g liquefied egg whites
1 g green food coloring

200 g caster sugar
50 g water
75 g liquefied egg whites
1.5 grams egg white powder

2. Sift almond meal, icing sugar in a wide bowl. Add in the egg white and colouring and mix well. Do this only when youre ready to cook the sugar, otherwise it gets hard.

3. In a medium sized pot, pour in caster sugar and water. Bring to a boil and to 118 C. Which means that yes you need a candy thermometer. When the sugar syrup reaches 108 C, in a mixing bowl, whisk egg whites and ! egg whit e powder (Ive tried without it, its alright) It should be somewhat medium peaks when the sugar syrup reaches 118 C.

4. While the mixer is still whisking (about medium speed), gradually pour in the sugar syrup. (To wash the pot, add in water and bring to a boil, its easier to wash) Then turn up the speed of the mixer for about 2 minutes till it turns glossy. Reduce the speed to medium and let it whisk till its stiffer. It should be somewhat stiff, but not so stiff.

5. Now, add in 1/4 of the meringue into the almond mixture from step 1. Whack it till its well incorporated. At this first step, I usually literally do it un-TLC-ly just to get some air out from the meringue and to lighten the almond mix.With the remaining 3/4 of meringue, add into the almond mix and fold it in. This time, a little more TLC until it becomes lava like. Separate batter into 2 and fold in colouring. Which also means that you should undermix the initial colourless mixture so when you mix in the colour, its just nice.

6. Im using a 10mm nozzle. Fit into a piping bag and scoop the batter into the bag. Pipe onto a tray lined with parchment paper or silpat. Lightly tap the tray on a table top. Let it rest for about 10 minutes then bake at 150 C for 14 minutes.

7. When its cooked, remove from the oven and let it cool on a rack. Once its completely cool, it should be able to peel off easily.

8. When the ganache has reached pipable consistency, fill one shell with a nice dollop of ganache, top with another macaron, making sure to assemble 2 shells of the same size.

9. Store in refrigerator for at least 24 hours before consuming. Take out of refrigerator, 1/2 hour before consumption. Or if your place is hot and humid, dont take the macs out for too long before serving otherwise the ganache becomes oily and sticky.

Christmas this weekend!!

Incase I dont blog till then, Merry Christmas and have a good celebration!!


In the Philippines, Yemas for Christmas

David_hagerman_yemas

A few years ago we spent Christmas in a small rural town in Pampanga, Philippines for Saveur magazine. It was one of most memorable, Christmas-y Christmases ever with lots of good cheer and heaps of good eats. Let's just say that that those Filipinos who celebrate the holiday really know how to do Christmas.

One of the many things I learned to make that Christmas week was yemas, milky candies scented with lime rind. They require few ingredients and are a fun diversion from Christmas cookies. And look at that photo -- don't they look festive in their cellophane wraps? A yemas recipe and how-to slideshow are our latest contribution to food and wine website Zester Daily -- find them here.

You can read our Saveur Philippines Christmas feature, with recipes, here. And over the last few years I've posted a couple more recipes from that trip on this blog: over-the-top giant prawns simmered in coconut milk and green papaya fritters with black pepper vinegar.


Decent Japanese Restaurants off the Vegas Strip @ Osaka Japanese Restaurant, Las Vegas

After our heavy dinner at "The Cheesecake Factory" we decided on something light the following night by having some Japanese Food at Osaka Japanese Restaurant. It is one of a very few Japanese Restaurants off the strip that serves up some decent Japanese Food.

Osaka Japanese Bistro

Miso Soup
Miso Soup


California Hand Roll
California Hand Roll


Sashimi Moriawase
Sashimi Moriawase
Surprisingly the Sashimi was really fresh particularly the Salmon. We really enjoyed it.


Screaming Orgasm
Screaming Orgasm
Basically Tuna Sashimi with a Mayo mix Thousand Island and Tobiko Sauce. The Sauce went really well with the fresh Blue Fin Tuna.


Agedeshi Tofu
Agedeshi Tofu
The Tofu was deep fried perfectly maintaining a nice light crust. However the Tofu they used was Chinese Tofu which wasn't as soft and silky as Japanese Tofu.


Beef Roll with Spring Onion
Beef Roll with Spring Onion
The Beef Roll was pretty good with some pieces very tender and some a little chewy from being overcooked.


Grilled Chicken Wings
Grilled Chicken Wings
The Chicken Wings were not grilled but deep-fried. It was quite bland.


Katsudon
Katsudon
Brandon's main course. The Pork they used had the right amount of fat making it very tender and juicy. The egg on top was also really good and the rice wasn't too soggy from the Katsu Sauce that was poured on top.


Cold Soba Noodles
Cold Soba Noodles


Hamachi Kama Shioyaki
Ham!  achi Kam a Shioyaki
The Hamachi was grilled just right and was not overly salted.


Ebi Fry
Ebi Fry
The Prawns were fresh and the batter was crispy. It was so good we had two orders of it.


Fried Ice Cream
Fried Ice Cream
This was bad. The Tempura Batter was not completely cooked through leaving the inside very doughy.


Pineapple Sorbet
Pineapple Sorbet
This was the best dessert we had among the desserts we ordered. The Pineapple flavor was quite pronounced but the Sorbet was a little too icy.


Molten Chocolate Cake
Molten Chocolate Cake
This was really bad. It tasted like it came out from a packaged dessert. The Cake was very dry and too sweet.

Our supposedly light meal did not turn out so light after everything we ordered. Most of the dishes we had were good except for their Desserts.


Food: 3.5/5
Service: 4/5
Ambiance: 3.5/5
Price: $$$$ (Approximately USD $40 per person)

Contact Information
4205 West Sahara Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89102
Phone: (702) 876-4988
Web: www.lasvegas-sushi.com/html/contact.html
Map:

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Every Wine Tells A Story

Every Wine Tells A Story

Just time to sneak in a stocking filler recommendation before Christmas hits us with seasonal jollity, horrid knitted jumpers and an over indulgence of chocolate.

Amazing what wine does really. In this instance it manages to link Winston Churchill, Peter Ustinov, Anthony Hopkins, a vivacious Keira Knightley, Grace Kelly and a Sun god! Add in Jennifer Aniston, Bob Dylan in a particularly relaxed and profound mood, Hillary Clinton, James Bond at his smoothest, Banksy doing only what Banksy can do and Cary Grant. Galadriel played by Cate Blanchett plays a part too,as does Eric Cantona. I happened to misread that Barry White was also involved. He isnt.

But Im under instructions not to reveal more. I may have already said too much. You are just going to have to purchase a copy of Every Wine Tells a Story A collection of the most memorable, provocative and emotive wines as experienced by 39 international wine lovers to discover the full details yourself!

Every Wine Tells A Story compiled by Tara Devon OLeary is just 8.99.



Spittoon.biz - A UK Wine Blog - We Spit... So You Can Swallow



Singapore Dec 2011-2


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Orchard Rd was busy and merry as usual. Two new malls have sprung up since my last visit. Ion and 313@Somerset. I found Ion more pleasant. A couple of restaurants looked really tempting, one of them a ramen place that had people queuing even at 3 pm.

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This was theend of the queue at Starbucks in one of the Orchard malls and we were incredulous that Singaporeans were so crazy about Starbucks coffee. A couple from Finland stood near us and wondered at the same thing too. Starbucks is kaput in Australia I heard but Singaporeans can't get enough of it.

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I was with a friend in the Isetan Supermarket when she spotted this pretty young thing and made me take a photo with her. Turned out that she's Fiona Xie, a Singaporean actress.I was so unnerved I forgot to take a shot of hermile-long legs. Remember AngelaBaby whom I saw in Hong Kong?

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A resting place for tired shoppers somewhere in Ion. Apparently tired shoppers not only eat and nap, they pet too. Remember the Singapore Fine City T-shirts? Plenty of rules in Singapore and they are very good at enforcing them.

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Abercrombie & Fitch had a week-long promotion of their about-to-open store on Orchard Rd and flew in some dishy hunks who stood outside the store half-naked. The women bystanders went crazy, their bfs or hubs fidgeting and sucking their bellies in. Someone pushed me forward and I end up looking stupid with a bunch of hunks less than half my age.

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These boys kept their shirts on but I bet they have abs too. Hey, second one from right, you're cute.

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The cakes at Antoinette looked SO good but we just had a big lunch and my guys didn't want any dessert. I tell myself that next time, I will make a trip to Singapore with my girlfriends and we will sit down for tea.

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At Tangs, I met up with my son Ming who had flown in from Melbourne via KL and Hub who had flown in from Penang and the first thing Ming ate was chicken rice and choy sum. This was in one of the food courts on Orchard and Ming said it was 6/10.

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If you've never been to Marina Bay Sands the casino, go. From far the buildings look ridiculous, like a ship is marooned on top of two buildings but close up the grandeur of the whole project is just awing. The casino is HUGE and classy and there are lots of restaurants and shops if gambling is not your thing.

We were wearing jeans, so we chose to eat dinner at Mario Batali's Osteria Mozza. The dang thing about the place is you have to decide whether you want pizza or pasta at the entrance. Pizza diners go right, pasta lovers go left. You can't have both, isn't that silly. Hard decision but I chose pizza.

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House salad, about S$10++. The dressing was pH 4 maybe, so acidic I couldn't finish it.

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An appetiser of calamari with beans, S$10++. Ex! pensive and not a bit impressive.

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The main course of the day was braised lamb shank, S$36++. It was good, tender yet still attached to the bone. Yum with the thin pieces of crisp bread.

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This was worth the wait (they said 45 minutes but this came in 20 minutes). Fennel and sausage pizza, about S$28++ I think. I've never tasted a similar pizza, not even in Italy. The crust was thin, puffed and crisp and the fennel and sausage were so good together. I would surmise that the oven temperature was over 400 C? Awesome.

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3-mushroom pizza, another awesome creation.

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The pizza crust was made even more crispy by a coating of semolina.

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The caramel ice cream with peanuts, about S$15++, was a disappointment because it was too sweet and ordinary. Really those pizzas were a hard act to! follow. I wished I had ordered the ice cream with olive oil. Next time.

We stepped out of the building and faced the Louis Vuitton store with the Singapore river and city skyline as back drop. People were dining al fresco and the cool night air blew through giant palms, making the place seem so laid back and beautiful. This part of Singapore reminded me of Sydney Harbour but Sydney Harbor seems so tired and old in comparison.

Turkish Road Food

Amasya bufe

From bufe

Arugala

to plate.

We never road trip in Turkey without packing plates, bowls and a few basic utensils. That bountiful corner store and bakery in Amasya (top shot) and plate of gorgeous arugala are just two reasons.

For the last two weeks of December the authoritative Istanbul Eats (your dining go-to if you're heading to Istanbul) is running a series called "Best Bites of 2011". We're honored to kick it off with the story of a couple of stupendous sandwiches we ate on the road somewhere in Anatolia.

Read our post here. And if you're heading to Turkey, consider renting a car. It's the most delicious way to travel.