Archive for the 'Edible' Category

A cure for cold mornings

Townsville is currently in the depths of winter, and although it’s warm and sunny outside, Queenslander houses are built to stay cool! The nights are freezing, and getting out of bed in the morning is very, very difficult! I’ve been tempting myself out of the duvet with Bill Granger’s recipe for Banana Maple Porridge. When Rich and I were in Sydney we had an amazing brunch at Bills in Surrey Hills. I’ve since had success with a few of his recipes - they’re easy, taste great and even look like they do in the pictures! I love that Bill pays lots of attention to breakfast… I think breakfast is often overlooked and it’s probably my favourite meal. Here’s the recipe… 



Banana Maple Porridge


Place oats and boiling water in a medium saucepan and stir to combine.Let oats sit for 10 minutes. Add the remaining ingredients to oats in the saucepan and stir again. Bring slowly to the boil over medium heat. Reduce the heat, to bring the mixture to simmer. Cook for 10 minutes, stirring often. The banana should almost dissolve. Remove from heat and let the porridge stand, covered, for 2-3 minutes before serving. Bill serves his porridge topped with buttered apples and extra maple syrup, with a jug of warm milk. I haven’t had time to try the apples yet, but I might at the weekend! Enjoy!

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How to organise recipes

Moleskine recipesI was very excited to see the fantastic food blog Delicious Days discussing how to turn a moleskine notebook into a recipe book. Moleskines are like an addiction for me. I’ve been using one to stash favourite recipes for a couple of years now and it’s holding up well despite splatters and soakings! Of course, now I want to make a beautifully tabbed one! I think one of the pocket info books would work wonders.


Links: Moleskinerie, Delicious Days.

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Kangaroo Island

KangaI loved, loved, loved Kangaroo Island! It’s like a tiny chunk of the outback has been torn off and thrown out to sea… big expanses of remote nothingness, red dirt roads and heaps of wildlife. The island has a pretty impressive history too!

The first non-Aboriginal people to live on Kangaroo Island were sealers, escaped convicts and runaway sailors, who sought refuge here in the early 1800s. Why the Aboriginal people abandoned Kangaroo Island, or when they last lived here, remains a mystery. 

KI roadsApart from one main road that loops around the island, all of the roads are unsealed, which makes for some entertaining driving! We were pretty careful though, and only had a couple of sliding sideways moments. You have to keep a keen eye out for animals too… we frequently had to stop for wallabies, roos and possums, less often for echidnas and goannas, and once for a huge black snake, which we thought was dead… until we went over for a closer look and it moved! Sadly we didn’t see a wild koala, apart from a couple of squashed ones. One of the cafes had a “Roadkill Recipes” book for sale! For a while we didn’t realise that the tracks we’d been driving past were actually the main roads marked on our map, and we drove right through Parndana, which is the largest settlement in the heartland of KI without realising it! Following the directions I’d been given, we eventually made it out to our accommodation - Gum Valley Retreat. It’s a lovely farmhouse-type building with a few motel rooms, being run by a couple of ladies from Canberra and Adelaide who come over to KI for the holiday season. We were spoilt with fantastic home-cooked three course meals and an open fire, and at night we had wallabies playing right outside the window.Emu RidgeUnfortunately the wind was blowing too strong for us to get out diving, which was a bit of a disappointment, and meant we had to change our plans around a bit and go exploring first. Kangaroo Island has some fantastic local produce, and we made it our mission to sample all of it. We bought wild cranberry jam and olive oil made from wild olives, ate honey ice cream at Cliffords Honey Farm, did a tour of Emu Ridge eucalyptus distillery, shared a seafood platter with KI marron and bought an esky full of cheeses (halloumi to die for!) from the amazing Island Pure Sheep Dairy - where the sheep line up all on their own and file in to their favourite spot for milking twice a day! Oh, and we sampled plenty of the local wine!On the second day we drove along the south coast, taking windswept beaches complete with seals, underground cave systems and the amazing ‘little sahara’ Pelicans- huge white sand dunes that spring up out of nowhere! Whilst the seals were very cool, they were completely outclassed by the pelicans, which arrive at the jetty in Kingscote at 5pm prompt every evening, when they know that an eccentric guy called John arrives with a bucket full of fish. We got up really close and were right in the thick of feathers and beaks fighting over their tea! Great fun.More Kangaroo Island photos

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Sydney

Opera house with stormy skiesSydney was really cool… freezing in fact! I can’t believe how much I’ve acclimatised to living in North Queensland. We must have looked very funny, as Rich was sweating in shorts and a t-shirt and I was shivering in my jeans and a jumper!So, we could hardly go to Sydney without doing the tourist thing. We decided not to climb the bridge… it costs a fortune, and they don’t let you take your camera! For about $15 you can climb the ‘South East pylon’ and get great views of the harbour from there, so we did that instead, which I think was a good choice. We then went for a closer look at the Opera House, which really is an impressive building. Up close it’s all tiled, which I don’t think was what I was expecting! We also took a ferry across the harbour to Taronga Zoo, which was lots of fun. We liked the fishing cat and platypus best. We did stop short of having photos taken cuddling koalas though. Continue reading ‘Sydney’

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Saving the reef… one beer at a time

beeramundiTownsville’s beer lovers can now help save the Reef while they’re at the bar, by diving into a new brew called Beeramundi. The new beer was named as part of a competition held in partnership between Reef Check Australia and the Townsville Brewing Company. Read more here.I haven’t had any yet, but I’ll definitely have to look out for it next time I’m in town!I’m also going to try to get involved with Reef Check this year (a resolution, if you like). I’ll have to save up for the training courses, but it would all be good knowledge and experience for me to have, and the best part is, once you’re trained you get to go on free dive trips!

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