Thursday, July 26, 2012

New Winter menu at Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre

My good mate, the ever-talented Executive Chef [pictured above] at the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre, Uwe Habermehl, has created a sensational seasonal menu for chilly months. All the dishes focus on utilising top quality produce from local, New South Wales suppliers.  From Orange, Mandagery Creek Venison is a name that particularly resonated with me.  The  owners Tim and Sophie Hansen are good friends and I’ve been able to visit and see the beautiful deer they rear which is free-range, pasture-fed as well as antibiotic, stimulant and growth hormone free. The richly coloured meat is lean with a subtle, delicate flavour.

Similarly, Uwe has cleverly incorporated many indigenous ingredients – from Wattleseed to Kangaroo – by giving them a modern twist.  Old favourites have also been given a makeover – Caramelised apple tarte tatin is paired with liquorice and white chocolate ice-cream.

The Centre take food and wine matching very seriously. Master Sommelier, William Wilson has hand-picked several stunning wines to complement Uwe’s winter menu, including the bold Hope Estate Shiraz from the Hunter Valley.
Master Sommelier William Wilson with me

The Sydney Exhibition and Convention Centre is host to a huge array of events – Motor Show, Good Food and Wine Show, gala dinners, school formals, graduations, corporate conferences – the list goes on. Such diversity offers a significant hurdle for the catering team; who must be able to switch tempos, menus and styles with alacrity. Therefore, I thought it was important for me to bring to attention the latest example of Uwe and his team’s talent – his delicious Winter seasonal menu, which I highly recommend you taste.
For more information visit the Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre website.

Monday, July 9, 2012

High Tea in the Globe Bar, Observatory Hotel

When you think of afternoon tea, a world of dainty sandwich fingers, squares of soft-crumbed cake and fruit-jewelled tarts is unleashed. This meal, neatly sandwiched (pardon the pun) between lunch and supper, is normally overlooked on the grounds of over-indulgence and extravagance. The Duchess of Bedford is credited with inventing the afternoon tea, and if portraits of her are accurate, this should come as no surprise. In fairness, the traditional gap between lunch and dinner is purported to have yawned for around eight hours, thereby warranting an afternoon pit-stop. However, I very much doubt that anyone from that time would recognise either the foods or the size that a modern afternoon tea has bloomed to. Not that I’m complaining.

Last week, I took a colleague (herself English, so she should know!) to a full-blown high tea at the Observatory Hotel. We felt like the Duchess of Bedford as soon as we walked through the entrance hall; it gleamed with the cool marble tiles, smooth swooping banisters and glinting chandeliers. After wafting his way between the perfectly laid tables and crisply folded newspapers, we were greeted by a smiling waiter who settled us into comfortable bachelor-green leather armchairs with the exciting prospect of champagne. A sign of good things to come.

Neat triangles of crustless bread filled with a variety of egg mayonnaise, ham and cheese, smoked salmon and, of course, cucumber were arranged neatly on the lowest tier of our china cake stand. Our eyes swiftly climbed up to the next level of our cakey pyramid: the scone layer, featuring four freshly baked miniature scones accompanied by dinky jars of clotted cream and strawberry jam which emanated a sweet, summery fragrance. More often than not hotel scones are claggy, insipid and fridge-cold, so it made these - sweet, raisin studded and misted with a haze of icing sugar - irresistible. The menu goes on, with miniature ramekins of crème brulee, cones of chocolate mousse, powder-pink macarons and fruit tarts. Not all of it was as fresh as the scones as tiny squares of cheesecake tasted of fridge,  but overall the glorious array of afternoon treats  didn’t just plug the hole between lunch and dinner, but substituted both.

It couldn’t be called afternoon tea without at least a pot of freshly-brewed foliage. The Observatory boasts an impressive list; from the familiar Ceylon, Darjeeling and Lapsang Souchong, to the more intriguing and exotic Dragon Eyes Jasmine, Warm Spice and Sencha First Flush. Served in mismatching teapots, each prettily patterned, was a welcome change the customary institution-white was.
It’s a shame that afternoon tea isn’t more popular. In this era of carrot-crunching health professionals advising to eat five (albeit small) meals per day, perhaps it will make a comeback, and the Observatory Hotel would be a spectacular place to return to when the time comes.

The details
Observatory Hotel
89-113 Kent Street, The Rocks, Sydney NSW 2000
Click here for high tea bookings