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Monday, January 6, 2003
Parra City Cafe & Takeaway I had a spare minute this morning, so I took a walk in search of a random cafe to have breakfast in. Randomly enough, I ended up in front of this place and decided I didn't feel like walking any more, so in I went. The setup of the place is more takeaway than cafe, though the staff are quite willing to let you pay later if you've ordered non-takeaway coffee. There's a really nice aura to it, and the staff are really friendly and efficient. I ordered a raisin toast and cappucino and it arrived pretty darn quickly! The cappuccino was way better than I expected, and I was expecting pretty decent coffee in the first place. The raisin toast was nice and warm, and went with the coffee perfectly - and all for $3.50. For comparison, your average city or Starbucks (bleah) coffee costs that much alone. It was a quick breakfast, but I enjoyed it a lot... I'll be going back there for sure.
Posted by Pirotess @ 08:54 PM AEST [Entry and Comments] Sunday, January 5, 2003
Japanese Cooking [link] I was picking up sushi on the way from work to the AnimeUNSW screening on Friday, and two doors down from said sushi is an ongoing book sale place. I walked in there because it felt like a good thing to do, found two wonderful Japanese cookbooks and walked out with them. This is the better of the two books I picked up, and it's practically an encyclopaedia of Japanese cooking info - the actual recipes start on page 124. That's because the preceding pages are a great educational section dedicated to traditions, history, cookware and ingredients. The recipes themselves vary a great deal, covering every possible course, situation and season. I hate books that "adapt" Japanese cooking to more conservative tastes or regular supermarket ingredients, and thankfully this isn't one of them. The one downside to this book is some of the terminology used - for example, mangetout (snow peas) and skipjack tuna (bonito). Such terms are supposedly the UK ingredient names, with US names in brackets... but sheesh, all I've ever called them has been snow peas! To balance that out, there's a short and sweet shopping guide in the back of the book covering America, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. Now to try making some of the recipes... I need a daikon grater. ;_;
Posted by Pirotess @ 10:22 PM AEST [Entry and Comments] |
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