cheese

 

We’d been wanting to go to the Schnitzelhaus after riding past on the bus a few weeks or a month ago while doing our Project Spiral expedition.

Today we got to go there.  This week’s restaurant visit was supposed to be pub food.  The Schnitzelhaus isn’t a pub, but their food is close enough to pub food as far as I am concerned. :-)

I haven’t had good German food for a good while now, and it soon becomes evident how the other, more touristy, beer and German food restaurants in Sydney are lacking compared to this place.

The restaurant is in a beautiful old sandstone building that would be almost invisible from the road if it wasn’t for the large sign.

They even have a cute postbox!

It seems like a really homely restaurant, and I imagine in winter they have a roaring fire going in a fireplace, although I do admit I didn’t see a fireplace.

Old style Christmas deccos are up, and the place reminds me of the mountain hotels that we have visited in South Africa in the past.

We place our drinks order while we mull over the menu.  Caro has a lemon, lime & bitters ($3.90), while I have an Almdudler ($4.10), a wildly popular (in Austria) Austrian lemonade.  It’s nice.  Very subtle and not too sweet.

For starters Caroline has a pretzel ($3.50).  Lovely and warm from the oven, and nice and salty.

I decide to have the camembert ($9.90).  It’s a cheese that I have not had in a very long time. The semi-circles of crumbed cheese are not at all oily and offer no hint of the ooziness of the cheese within.  They were perhaps a little thinner than I’m used to, but they tasted very good, especially with the traditional cranberry sauce.  I called them cheese schnitzels.

We shared two main courses.  The first was the ‘Haus schnitzel’ ($27.90), a schnitzel so large that you can’t fit it and the chips on the plate without piling them on top of each other.  I know someone who would complain that this causes a heat trap and makes the chips all soggy, but they actually were not soggy.  I was impressed.  The schnitzel was lovely and tender, tasty and the crumbing was lovely and again no excess oil.  We also had it with a mushroom sauce that was very nice, although perhaps a little on the garlicky side for me personally.

The other main we had was the chicken Cordon Bleu ($23.00).  Perhaps not specifically Austrian, but it was crumbed.  It could be considered a schnitzel. :-)  I was very happy with it as you see from the next photo.

Yum yum, look at all that lovely Swiss cheese.  I’ve loved Cordon Bleu for as long as I can remember, even from the days of visiting Caroline’s first workplace where they had a subsidised canteen and restaurant, where on the menu you could find an item called “Gordon Bleu” ;-)  I might even go as far as saying that Cordon Bleu ranks as one of my all time favourite dishes.

The obligatory, but token vegetables ($5.50) were also ordered.  Not bad, but nothing amazing either.

For dessert we had the strudel platter for two ($16.90).  There were three type of strudel, apple, cherry & cheese and apricot & cheese, and they were served with cream and ice-cream.  Nice.

They also have a schnitzel challenge where for $55 you can get a 1kg schnitzel with chips and a 1 litre beer.  If you finish within an hour, you get a t-shirt, your name and photo on the wall of “Champions” and on their website.  However there’s a $50 charge if you can’t hold that all down and, let’s say, dispose of it somewhere and they have to clean up! If you want to beat the record, you’ll have to down all that in under 14 minutes!

We had a really good time there.  My only criticism is that it got very loud later in the evening, and service did slow down considerably once they were busier, but that said, at the beginning of our meal service was unbelievably fast.

Curiously, in Australia people seem to almost uniformly pronounce schnitzel as ‘snitsle’.  It’s strange because I would have thought the pronunciation would be obvious.  Maybe it’s just too difficult to get the ‘shn’ sound right?  That said, I do like the term ‘snitty’ when referring to a schnitzel.

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This was our last full day in Cape Town. :-(

We booked our last night in the Boulders Beach Lodge. It’s a hotel that we enjoy, and they have a restaurant that we’ve enjoyed before too. But the real reason that we come to Boulders Beach is the penguins. We try to always visit Boulders when we are in Cape Town.

We left Sea Point in the morning and headed towards Hout Bay, where we would then go around the mountain on Chapman’s Peak Drive, a stunningly scenic road that winds it’s way around the mountain, right on the edge. Don’t drive off the road because if you do there’s a very long drop to the ocean!

On a previous trip to Hout Bay we noticed that Harrie’s Pancakes had opened a shop there. We had also noticed that their long standing shop at the V&A Waterfront was no longer there, so perhaps they moved? We’ve been to Harrie’s many times before for their wonderful range of pancakes with savoury or sweet fillings. We decided to stop for breakfast.

Caroline had the Dutch apple pancake, which came with ice cream. That’s very nice. I’ve had it before and can certainly vouch for it!

I had the breakfast pancake. Sausage and mushrooms and a pancake filled with cheese. The pancake itself has bacon bits incorporated in the batter!

Here you can see the fluffy pancake with the bacon bits and the cheese.

Harrie’s Pancakes

Shop 2, Fisherman’s World

Main Road

Hout Bay

Tel: 021-790-2472

Web: www.harriespancakes.com


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Lunch was at the Boulders Beach Lodge restaurant. We had lunch out on the deck and Caroline had the gypsy ham open sandwich with salad and potato wedges (hiding in the background).

I had the fish and chips. Mmm…

Dinner was also at the lodge restaurant, but this time we were sat indoors. We were both not feeling incredibly hungry and just wanted something light. I felt like calamari and saw that it was listed on their menu as a starter. I asked if I could have the same meal as a main course but was told that the chef would not do that. If I wanted a double portion I would have to order two starters. I really don’t know why chefs get all poncy like that. If the customer wants a double portion just give it to them. In the end we each ordered a calamari starter and decided that if we wanted more we could always just order another one. Although it looked amazing I wasn’t all that impressed with it. The calamari itself was nicely cooked, but the sauces that were drizzled over it were too strong and detracted from the pleasure of the dish. We didn’t order another serving, instead opting to move on to dessert!

The dessert arrived and looked wonderful. We dug in and commented that this isn’t exactly what was advertised on the menu. We interpreted the dish to be deep fried coconut ice cream. What this was was deep fried vanilla ice cream with coconut as part of the batter. It’s petty sure. Coconut was involved and it did indeed taste good, but it wasn’t exactly what we were expecting.

Don’t be put off though. This is a good restaurant – when we’ve been here before we’ve had flawless meals and the other patrons in the restaurant with us seemed to all be thoroughly enjoying their meals.

Boulders Beach Lodge

4 Boulders Place

Boulders Beach

Simon’s Town

Tel: 021-786-1758

Fax: 021-786-1825

Web: www.bouldersbeachlodge.com

Email: boulders@iafrica.com


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While in Cape Town we walked along the promenade next to the ocean most days. One of these days we found a café that was open early enough for breakfast. Café Neo is right next to the Green Point lighthouse in Cape Town and they serve very nice food and coffee.

This is the meal that I had. Fried eggs, bacon, mushrooms, halloumi, tomato and a slice of toasted turkish bread.

Caroline had the oats with berries. How healthy is she?! :-) Disgusting!

Café Neo

129 Beach Road

Green Point

Cape Town

Tel: 021-433-0849


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In the afternoon we decided to take a drive out to Franschhoek. We didn’t really have any place in mind for lunch so we stopped at a place called BICCCS.

BICCCS is short for Bread, Ice-cream, Cake, Croissant, Coffee and Sandwiches.

Caro had the panino of the day. Mozzarella, Tomato & Basil.

I had the pie of the day, which turned out to be a beef pie. It was oddly shaped, but it tasted good. Although it did have sufficient meat inside, and there was gravy, the odd shape of the pie meant that you don’t get as much or the same type of gravy that you’d get in a normal pie. Still, it was nice.

We also had some awesome ice cream while we were there, and admired the range of Kitchen Aid mixers and fancy coffee machines!

BICCCS

29 Huguenot Road

Franschhoek

Tel: 021-876-3333


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The week before last we needed to go to Rosebank to have our passports evidenced. That means that while our Australian visas were authorised, they were not printed into our passports. This isn’t strictly necessary, but knowing how bureaucrats work we would rather have the proof right there in our passports so that no one can argue. We also needed to take the car in for a service so we took the opportunity to use our new found public transport system. While it’s a great step forward, it is still quite limited in where it goes, but fortunately we were able to get everywhere we needed to go using only public transport.

We dropped off the car at the service place, and caught the bus to the train station. From there we caught the Gautrain to Sandton, and then a bus from there to Rosebank. We did our business with the visa place and then headed to The Zone, which is a nearby shopping centre. It was still early when we arrived so we decided to have breakfast. One of the only places open at the time, and a good choice at that was Primi Piatti. We’ve been to different branches of Primi many times, but never for breakfast. We were keen to try them out.

Primi Piatti’s Latte Macchiato (R25). Served in a giant cup!

This is their ‘Bacon Cheese Melt” breakfast (R33 including egg; R28 without). It’s a hashbrown and cheese stack on top of a few rashers of bacon, and some cherry tomatoes scattered around the plate. I had mine with a fried egg on top which is optional. A very nice breakfast indeed!

Primi Piatti

Shop FF20A

The Zone Shopping Centre

Oxford Road

Rosebank

Johannesburg

Tel: 011-447-0300

Fax: 011-447-6316

Email: thezone@primi-piatti.com

Web: www.primi-world.com


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Next we went to walk around another nearby mall, and eventually headed back to Sandton.

When we got to Sandton we did a bit of clothes shopping and by this time it was lunchtime so we wandered around looking for somewhere to have lunch. We decided on a place called ‘The Butcher Shop and Grill’. We had heard positive things about this restaurant so we thought we’d give it a try. In some ways it was a good choice, and in some ways not.

One of the nice touches that we experienced here was a free side-starter of boerewors. They were some of the tastiest ‘wors that I have had – very fine textured and very very little visible fat and gristle as some ‘wors can tend to have.

Next up was the complimentary bread. What are these freebies actually called? Is there a name for this course? It’s not really a starter or appetiser as these come next. Well, not for us. We were so stuffed with boerewors and bread that we skipped the starter course and went straight to mains.

With the main course we ordered a side order of creamed spinach, and boy was that good. Sometimes it can be made so watery and insipid, but not here, it was perfect.

We opted for steak for our main course. This is where things went wrong – to a degree. Let me explain. I do not like a bloody steak. I used to opt for well done steak because more often than not it would appear with visibly red juices leaking out of the meat. The problem with well done meat is that while some restaurants err on the side of medium, some restaurants present you with a piece of charcoal – and of course they indemnify themselves on the menu by saying that they’re not responsible for well done steaks.

As a result, at some stage I started asking for “medium-well” steaks to try and avoid the charcoal, and this has worked well most of the time. But not here. I ordered medium-well, but what I received was probably more like medium-rare. Now call me silly, but a restaurant that is supposedly famed for it’s steaks should be able to get all levels of ‘doneness’ right without needing a disclaimer, and without customers having to send their food back.

I didn’t send my food back, and this is probably where I went wrong – I should have. There is some method to my madness though, as the steaks served here are quite lengthily aged and I wanted to see if an aged steak would be any better at this level of doneness than a non-aged steak. In a way it was better as there was no sign of blood even though the meat inside was clearly not cooked well enough for my liking. However even without the blood I did not at all like the texture of the rarer meat inside. I’m like that with tuna too – I know, to a connoisseur I’m a heathen. (Of course why can’t I be a connoisseur in my own style?)

Now don’t get me wrong – if you like your steak rare, this would probably have been one amazing steak. Indeed, the portions of the steak that were cooked though were very very tasty, and the light basting and chargrill marks were very nice. We chose fillet, which is both our favourite cut. I had mine with mash, which was also very nice, and Caroline had hers with a baked potato. If I remember correctly their smallest size is 260g which is quite large, but you can request any size larger than that if you want. Unfortunately I can’t remember the price, but it was not particularly cheap, and on their online menu it is SQ.

Dessert, which I still can’t believe we had as we were so very full, was an Apple & Berry Crumble (R50) that we shared. It was very nice however I do think that the name is pushing the boundaries of ‘crumble”, and I think they need to mention on the menu that it contains nuts. I don’t have a nut allergy, but many do. I just don’t like most nuts, but fortunately these were almonds which along with macadamias are my least hated nuts, so all was ok. The dessert was served with ice-cream (or cream if you wish) and a thin wafer. (Wafer thin mint? Go on you know you want to… :-) ).

The Butcher Shop and Grill

Nelson Mandela Square

Sandton

Johannesburg

Tel: 011-784-8676

Fax: 011-784-8677

Email: reservations@butchershop.co.za

Web: www.thebutchershop.co.za


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Homemade Pizza!

by Craig on November 1, 2010 · 4 comments

in Lunch

Our new (and temporary) home in Johannesburg has a pizza oven! I think this might have actually been one of the deciding factors for Caroline when it came to renting this place! :-)

Yesterday we decided to give it a go and see what we could come up with. We bought wood and firelighters. We could have bought dough from a nearby supermarket, but Caroline decided to make her own.

This is the oven, with the fire going inside. I have never lit a fire in a pizza oven before so I had no clue as to what to do. I placed the wood at the back of the oven, but there was no easy way to stack the wood nicely. I added the firelighters around the wood and filled up the first half of the oven with crumpled up newspaper, then I lit it.

All was going well for a while, but eventually the newspaper burnt out and a little later so did the firelighters. The only problem was that the wood was not burning well. It was smouldering, but in a pizza oven you really need a flame to get the heat required for cooking, unless I’m doing something wrong of course. We added more firelighters (now a whole pack!), and more newspaper, and decided after a little while to add the first pizza.

We didn’t want to add it too soon because we didn’t want the pizza to taste like paraffin from the firelighters, but at the same time we needed to add it before all the flames had died again.

This is the first pizza on the peel that Caroline’s Dad made for us. It is a ham, mushroom & caramelised onion pizza.  And yes, that is my foot in the photo too!

Unfortunately, during the cooking it was clear that the pizza was cooking unevenly and that it would need to be turned to get the other side to brown. I put the peel back in and tried to slip it under the pizza to pull it out, turn it and put it back in again, however I managed to push the pizza into the fire and some of the firelighter remnants and ash fell onto the pizza. Much cursing was done and eventually we got it out and turned it. In the end it was still a very nice pizza. We just had to throw away the bits that were burnt or dirty.

We stoked the fire again and removed a log, replacing it vertically on top of the other smouldering wood. We added more newspaper and the fire took off. Fortunately this time the logs started burning properly and we had a flame for the whole cooking process of the second pizza. Unfortunately I managed to push the pizza into the ash again which is why it looks a bit dirty on the one side. We learn from our mistakes, I hope!

This was also a ham, mushroom and onion pizza.

This is the finished product all cut up and ready to go. It looks yummy and it was!

We’ll use this experience with the oven to do a few things differently next time, like placing the wood in the oven in a different location where it is easier to manipulate the wood so that it burns better.

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Breakfast this morning was a bowl of rice crispies.

Lunch was a cheese toasted sandwiches with BBQ sauce inside.   YUMMY and OOZY cheese!

For dinner we went to a great restaurant in Umhlanga called Verde.  They’ve been featured in our “Damn Fine Food” section before, and they’re still going strong.  For starter Caroline and I both had the calamari.  It was very tasty and tender and it is served with two pieces of lightly toasted bread so that you can mop up all the tasty juices that are left behind once you’ve gobbled up all the calamari!

For main course Caroline had the half chicken peri peri, which was quite firey.  I tasted some of the chicken (and the chips) and it was indeed quite hot and it tasted wonderful.  It was a “special” which usually should not be assumed to mean cheaper, but we were surprised when we looked at the bill and it was only R50.

My meal was not so cheap!  I had the six king prawns, which were magnificent.  I’m not really a big garlic eater, mainly because I’m always afriad of garlic breath the next day, but these were wonderfully garlicky and sweet.  These prawns were big.  Much bigger than what is normally termed as LM or Mozambique prawns, which is what contributed to the cost.  At R180 they were quite expensive, but I have no idea what prawns of this size normally go for.

We both wanted to have the upside down apple crumble for dessert, but were informed that it wasn’t at it’s best today due to a change in supplier.  It was still available, but they were not happy with it and recommended that we rather try something else.  We were disappointed for sure, but sometimes that’s the push you need to try something else from the menu!   We both decided to have the rice pudding.  The photo really doesn’t do it any justice (again it’s too dark for good photos), but it really was nice with chunks of fruit throughout and a sweet, velvety creamy sauce.

Verde

Granada Centre

Chartwell Drive

Umhlanga Rocks

Tel: 031-561-7849


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1 May: The Day's Food

by Craig May 4, 2010 Breakfast

Breakfast today was cornflakes. The first of May is Open Day for the North Durban Honorary Officers’ of Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife.  We used to be members of this organisation but recently left as we are in the process of moving to Australia.  This was our first visit to their Open Day as visitors, and as [...]

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Oh Meat You Are So Nice

by Craig April 26, 2010 Breakfast

Breakfast this morning was at the gym.  Caroline had the breadbasket with anchovette (fishpaste). While I had the chicken melt.  Actually it doesn’t look that great in the photo, but it really is nice.  And after a week of no meat or dairy, chicken and cheese for breakfast was wonderful! Lunch was back to being [...]

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Breakfast: Hot Cross Buns

by Craig April 17, 2010 Breakfast

This morning we had some hot cross buns with Kiri and Laughing Cow cheeses.  We’re stocking up on wheaty goodness before the next wheat free week next week!

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Breaky at Kauai

by Craig April 15, 2010 Breakfast

Breakfast this morning was at Kauai at the gym. Caroline had the bread basket with Anchovette, and I had the Chicken Melt.  The Chicken Melt is chicken pieces with mayo and spring onion and melted cheese in a wholewheat roll.  It was heavenly after being limited last week!  And look, chicken for breakfast!  That’s not [...]

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