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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Sussex Centre Food Court

Sussex Centre food court in Chinatown is a great place for quick, cheap Asian food. What more could you want?

Bibimbub from Woree BBQ

Gyoza from Mr Don

Spring rolls from Saigon Pho

Goi coun (rice paper rolls) from Saigon Pho

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Friday, March 23, 2007

Cumin

It wasn't easy chosing which Indian restaurant to eat at in Crows Nest. After walking past several Indian restaurants, we finally settled on Cumin. The thing that attracted us to this restaurant was the aroma of curries wafting down the street as we wandered along, trying to decide where to eat.

The dishes we ordered were all relatively mild in heat but rich in flavour. The Kesar Kasturi Murg was a dish of juicy chicken pieces in a saffron and sundried fenugreek leaf marinade served with mint yoghurt.

Kesar Kasturi Murg

Being huge fans of butter chicken, we could not go past the Murg Makhani, smoked marinated chicken cooked in a rich creamy tomato sauce subtly flavoured with fenugreek leaves. For a veggie dish, we ordered the Palak Paneer, a curry of cottage cheese cubes tossed in spinach, finished with garlic and cumin.

Murg Makhani and Palak Paneer

To accompany the curries, we ordered butter and garlic naan, Pudina Paratha (a wholemeal bread flavoured with mint) and rice. These were all perfect for mopping up the thick curry sauces from the Murg Makhani and Palak Paneer.

Garlic Naan

For a restaurant we accidentally stumbled upon, this place was definitely a winner and I'm looking forward to going back.

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The Apprentice

It's always sad to farewell someone who you've been working with for a while but the silver lining is that it's a good excuse have a 2 1/2 hour lunch.

For our most recent farewell outing we went to The Apprentice, a restaurant run by the students at Ultimo TAFE. Upon arrival at the restaurant, we were greeted by some very timid looking students and shown to our tables.

The menu was quite varied with items ranging from kangaroo to quail to rabbit. The Caponata and Provolone Tarlet with baby salad leaves was probably the best of the entrees sampled with a sweet oniony flavour and a tang imparted by the balsamic dressing. The Pork Rillettes with cornichons and lavoche bread had the texture of tinned tuna and was rather uninteresting (i.e. bland).

Caponata and Provolone Tartlets

Pork Rillettes

French Onion Soup

The presentation of the mains were quite impressive: Suateed Boudin Noir Stuffed Rabbit served with rabbit jus, braised red cabbage and parnip puree; Roast Quail Stuffed with Pistachio with game jus, sauteed mushrooms and potato dauphinoise; Char-grilled Scotch Fillet with red wine jus, buttered English spinach and soft polenta; Pan-fried Bream Grenobloise with braised fennel and sauteed potatoes. I had the rabbit which was a little dry but the flavour of the dish was great, a little spicy from the black pudding and tangy from the red cabbage.

Sauteed Boudin Noir Stuffed Rabbit

Roast Quail Stuffed with Pistachio

Char-grilled Scotch Fillet

Pan-fried Bream Grenobloise

The dessert was the highlight of the meal (as always). Unfortunately the Quince Souffle didn't quite make it and continued to collapse as the rest of the desserts arrived. The Chocolate Fondant Cake with Passionfruit cream was lovely and chocolately with a bit of bitterness from the cocoa. The figs and ice-cream was the clear winner, fresh juicy figs with a sugary crust accompanied by creamy ice-cream with a hint of ginger.

Quince Souffle and Lime Sorbet

Muscat-Poached Beurre Bosc Pears

Chocolate Fondant Cake with Passionfruit Cream

Pan-fried Figs with Brandy and Ginger Ice-cream

At $20 for a three course meal (lunch) plus a welcome drink and tea/coffee, this is place provides swish food at prices povo students can afford. The major disappointment with the meal was having to go back to uni afterwards. Bummer!

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