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GADO GADO
Prepare the Sauce:
To do enough for a meal for two:
In a small saucepan heat just enough oil to fry half a chopped onion and one crushed clove of garlic. Don’t overcook it – you need to stay with the pan for the whole process.
Add chilli powder to taste (half a teaspoon say) and juice of good half lemon. Smash an anchovy up and add to the mix. Then stir in crunchy peanut butter (about half a small jar) and a few teaspoons of brown sugar. Stir well and cook on slow heat for a little while. Taste it. When you are ready to have the Gado Gado for dinner, add a very small can of coconut milk to the sauce and mix well. I prefer to serve the sauce warm up.
Gado Gado mix (the food to go with the sauce)
Hard boiled eggs (quartered), lightly blanched beans, raw cucumber pieces, cabbage (cut chunky) and carrots sticks. I think bean curd (tofu) would probably go well with this so add some cubes if you like tofu. I do believe you can use whatever vegetables you prefer including potato and perhaps the stalks of broccoli. Arrange decoratively on an oval plate.
You can either dunk the vegetables in the sauce or pour it over. I prefer dunking. (Dedicated to Gerard)
PEANUT SAUCE FOR SATAYS
Version one: same as for Gado Gado but add 2 tablespoons of tamarind and some sambal badjiak and a couple of splashes of water.
This is to go with beef or pork satay which is marinated in dark sugar, crushed garlic, salt, soy sauce and a little cummin and a little oil. Cooked over charcoal.
Version two: Roast 200g of unsalted raw peanuts for a few minutes, cool a bit and rub off the skins. Blend peanuts in blender and add 3 red chillies, 3 garlic cloves, salt, one chopped onion and a little oil. Mix to a paste and then add enough water to make a workable consistency. Heat mixture in a saucepan, adding a little more water for right consistency. Taste and if desired add more soy sauce and lemon juice, or salt. Serve hot with chicken satay.
Comment re Satay dishes: my favourite one is Malay which I do with lamb and I don’t serve it with any peanut sauce at all as it just doesn’t need it. I’ll give you the recipe another time.
LAMB WITH EGGPLANT AND CAPSICUM
For the vegetables
- One large eggplant cut crosswise into slices 1 cm thick.
- 75 mls olive oil
- 2 large red capsicums halved lengthwise.
- 2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh oregano
- 1 fresh red chillli, seeded and chopped (or use chilli powder)
- salt and pepper – grounded – to taste.
For the Lamb and sauce
- Splosh or two of virgin olive oil
- Cut lamb rump from the leg into four or so thick slices looking like backstraps
- ground salt and pepper
- 80mls of dry red wine
- 4 – 8 teaspoons of cranberry jelly
- half cup of chicken stock.
To cook vegs – brush eggplant with little oil and grill both sides. Cool and cut into long strips. Do the same with capsicums but remove skin and then cut into long strips.
In a heavy frying pan heat a little oil and add vegies and herbs and chilli and stir until well mixed and almost falling apart, then season to taste and keep warm on a separate plate. Add a little more oil and sear the lamb, season and cook to your liking for a few minutes. Remove to a plate and keep warm. (Handy if your oven has a warming tray.)
With the remaining juices in the pan, heat and stir and get all bits nicely mixed and add wine and jelly, stirring until melted, then add stock and reduce till saucy consistency. Taste and adjust seasoning. I often add more jelly.
To serve, cut lamb at an angle and arrange on serving plate. Add vegies and sauce and serve at once.
SMOKED TROUT SERVED WITH PICKLED WATERMELON RIND
To Make the ‘Pickled’ Watermelon Rind
You need watermelon with a thick white rind. Slice off the green skin and make sure that no red melon is left on the rind. Slice it up into pieces about 1cm by 3cm. Simmer the pieces in pot of water until just a little soft. Drain. Prepare a ‘pickling syrup’ of a little white vinegar (a good dash), cup of hot water, about 3 teaspoons of sugar, 6 slivers of lemon skin and about 4 cloves.
This is cheap to make as you get to eat the watermelon and have a byproduct. I store in a large well cleaned empty vegemite jar. One cup of syrup will do about two jars worth. Put syrup in jar and add the pieces of rind. Okay to eat the next day but better after a few days. The rind should taste a bit sweet.
I first had this with smoked trout 30 years ago at a wine and food group’s outing beside a river up the mountains. It was totally glorious.
The Smoked Trout
First catch your trout …… ha ha. Seriously though – where I live you can catch and smoke your own and right now the fishing in Lake Hume and the rivers is so good. But, better still is the fact we have the best smoked trout available at Butts Smokehouse – you can buy it whole or skinned and filleted. Arrange trout on a platter with little bowls of the watermelon rind and those little crunchy bread squares or water biscuits. This is a great starter to a casual lunch party picnic and goes so well with a crisp white wine.



A few patritotic suggestions from the Sydney Morning Herald today*:
Filipino adobe style locusts: Half a kilo of locusts, legs and wings removed. Cook slowly in a casserole dish with soy sauce, vinegar, crushed garlic, bay leaf, and black peppercorns. Best browned in the oven or pan-fried afterwards to get the desirable crisped edges. This dish originates from the northern region of the Philippines and usually features pork or chicken.
Locust tacos: Great for the kids. Roast 40 locusts for 10 minutes at 180 degrees, then remove the wings, legs and heads and toss with the juice of one lemon, two cloves of garlic and salt to taste. Mash two avocados and spread on six tortillas. Sprinkle with locust torsos and enjoy.
*The DPI is concerned locusts caught for food may contain residual chemicals from spraying. Crops hit with chemicals are withheld from the harvest for up to two weeks until the active ingredients lose their toxicity. You could keep your locusts alive in an aquarium for two weeks, and fatten them with lawn clippings. If they die first, they’re still usable as they dry out – like chillies.
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Thanks for that – I believe they taste like fried shrimp. There are locusts about halfway between here and Melbourne and I still have some stuck to my car. Got most off at the carwash yesterday and am hoping Julia will peck at the remaining bits. Should be a treat for her.
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Well I am am back and I am rather knackered. Had a terrrific five days in Melbourne. Metallica was bloody fantastic.
Had BBQ Korean twice and am now hooked on the stuff. Can’t get it here – no Korean restaurant of any kind this part of the world. Will now embark on Korean homecooking – in due course.
One discovery – new ways of operating taps in public places: push a thing with your knee; wave hand and water comes out automatically; flick a thing up or down; no basin at all – everything happens by magic.
Good to be home of course – Lola very relieved.
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I went to Melbourne. Funny thing is I stared at the gleaming stainless steel ‘Boiling Hot’ Water tap that initially seemed it was nothing other than an ultra-dangerous hot water tap with that info (implied) engraved thereon…until I read the clear instruction on the wall plaque I was to hold down a Safety Switch. This tap was for my coffee and tea! It serviced the instant noodles of a procession of young men and made instant packets of soup into garnished croutoned bowls of consomme! 🙂
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Yes, Vivienne. I had encounters with taps. 🙂
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Viv, our Gado Gado recipe originates from our Indonesian cooking bible, ‘Cooking the Indonesian Way’ by Alec Robeau. It’s old and tattered; I gave lots of our cookbooks away, butI could not depart with this one.
The dirtiest page is number 85, where the intricasies of Opor Ajam are explained, red wine , soya sauce, peanut oil, laos, serai, all mixed together and making patterns like maps of places…even some lumps resembling mountains..,.
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I too have ‘dirty’ pages and some with the children’s doodles in them as well. I have only given a couple of books to my
daughters apart from the many I have bought for them. In recent years I have either typed or photocopied their favourite recipes and emailed them. But now I have one daughter back in the nest and recently the other’s bloke is ‘boarding’ here as has new job back ‘home’. Daughter in Brisbane will be returning early in the New Year. I have a full house and willing hands to do
tasks better done by young and very fit people – it is rather good.
Re Red the movie – see it if you like great acting from people you admire and at the same time like senseless shoot-em-up stuff. Really a lot of fun but not the kind of movie you want or need to see again.
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Some years ago, while renting a lovely stone cottage in Belarga, south of France, we almost lived on nothing but fresh trout and crispy baquettes. It was during the wine making period. The streets were awash with red wine must. The Languedoc area produces more red wine than the rest of the world. Indeed, at times, especially driving through some lower areas, we had to wear snorkels.
The trout we barbequed and drank wine in copeous quantities. Amazingly, some years later, we met up with some old friends. It turned out they had stayed in the very same cottage and had read our entry in the guest book.
Your lovely food articles are a delight to savour. It is only 7 am but you have made me want to open a can of smoked spratts. I’ll surprise Helvi with toast and the smoked Latvian spratts in bed, and coffee of course. (No red wine yet.)
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Top of the morning to you, Gez. I can’t imagine what it must be like to be able to walk to the pantry and whip out a tin of smoked sprats for breakfast. Oh Dear !
….. or lunch or dinner, now that I come to think about it
I’m OK about unthinkable things, though. 🙂
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One sprat, two spratts, three sprattt.
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Vivienne, if you ever need a ‘taste-test’ volunteer, please remember that I was the first to apply for the position!
🙂
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I doubt that T2.
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Well… the first piglet, anyway!
😉
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I have a daughter who claimed that job when she was about two years old. She is back home and frequently takes total command of the kitchen – something which I find very satisfying in many ways. Sometimes we do duets.
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Viv, amazing , first you write about the Raan, now Gado Gado, what’s going on here , are you a mind-reader, these are the Oosties’ favourite foods…
The old Malaya was our original favourite eating place… are you an Oostie Doppelganger or what.
We have been away, so I’ll comment on the food tomorrow…have a good time at the Metallica concert, by the way, what is your opinion of the film Red?
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HELLO EVERYONE – I happen to have just made/prepared the gado gado and sauce and discovered that I missed out on one ingredient in the sauce – a slosh of Soy Sauce is also required. And piri piri flakes are okay instead of chilli, if that takes your fancy.
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PS to all – I am away for five days – to see Metallica concert.
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Wow ! What a long concert – or does that include the post-concert recovery ?
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Pre and post concert goings on – just me and my two daughters let loose on the CBD. I’m especially hanging out for a Korean BBQ dinner or lunch. We also have a 320 km drive down (tomorrow) and of course back plus diversions to airport for one of them.
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Nothing like a great opening line, Viv.
“Prepare the sauce” indeed.
There was a time many years ago when a group of freelance musicians calling themselves The Bachelors would meet every Saturday lunch at The Malaya when it was still in Mount Street, Nth. Sydney.
We were always served by a tiny little Vietnamese woman called Ha who had been one of the original boat people back in 75. There’s a whole other story there.
But my point is that they used to make a fantastic Gado Gado and we loved it so much that now Sche makes it for us from time to time. It’s one of my favourite dishes, yummy!
And that lamb and eggplant sounds great too. Puts me in mind of the Moroccan Lamb served at The Telegraph Hotel in Molong.
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Went to the same Malayan restaurant years ago on my annual trek to the Labor Women’s Conference. Totally fabulous food.
We could have been eating there at the same time!
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Waz and Viv, I used to love going to the Malaya – first in Broadway as a student. Best king prawn laksa in the universe. Later in North Sydney – until it burnt down or went bust if memory serves. It just disappeared……
Of course you can get laksa just about anywhere these days, but not like those ones…
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That laksa – I had it everytime there and it was so so so so gooooooood. Never had anything as good as again.
Just realised that I have mislead Warrigal – I only went to the Broadway site as was within walking distance of Town
Hall. One year I was there with a dreadful cold and ordered the hottest curry they had (for lunch) – by about 5 pm
the cold had gone. Very fond memories.
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