oh and I found myself listening.

Where I Stand
Missy Higgins

wow. what a night. I don’t think I could ever get sick of hearing her voice live, it has this whole extra level that you don’t get on the CDs or radio, it is the level that wraps itself round you and makes you feel the music in your little toe. There were so many times I turned round to face Andrea and we both had this look of enchantment on our faces.

Missy Higgins

More photos to come later of course and some better writing. For now though, listen.

Elliott Smith, TV and the Bowls Club

At the moment I am listening to Confusion, a collection of unreleased live songs by Elliott Smith. It is a really great collection of his songs which have never been released and the sound quality is amazing. Pure Elliott. I hope to get the new album New Moon when I go to work on Saturday, I have listened to a few songs off it on various MP3 blogs and the album’s myspace and I am very much waiting to listen to the 2 CDs through.

I watched two really great TV shows in the past week (both on the ABC of course) , the first was Wildlife in a Warzone which looked at how wildlife numbers are coping in Sierra Leone as well a curious first trip home in fifteen years for the “host” Sanjayan Muttulingam. All in all very interesting, especially finding out that since the end of the civil war in 2002 personal ownership of guns has been banned in SL, which has had a secondary effect of reducing the number of protected animals that were been hunted. The other was of course Bastard Boys, a dramatised telling of the 1998 waterfront dispute, I felt that it was really well put together and can see it picking up a few awards this year. Of course it caused a lot of debate round the net, in the papers, on the radio etc as to if it was Howard Bashing and free advertising for Labor or using it as an example of the bias in the ABC it went on and on.

I went for a walk to Aldi today and took this photo on the way there. It is the Chermside Bowls Club that is just round the corner from our house and in a couple of week we are having a barefoot bowls day there for work, which will be heaps of fun πŸ™‚
Chermisde Bowls Club

Julie Le Clerc, cafe@home

I first noticed Julie Le Clerc when I was in NZ back in February, her books were seemingly everywhere I looked. The other week when I was browsing the library shelves to see if there was any new cookery books that I hadn’t looked at before I saw Julie’s cafe@home on the shelf and without having a flick through I grabbed it off the shelf. I have really enjoyed reading it and plan to make some more things from the book yet.

On Sunday, I had a quick panic when I thought it was my turn to cook morning tea for work on Monday so after a quick flip through the book I settled on the Coconut Cream Loaf, it was only after I had baked the cake did I realise that I was a week early. Oh well I now have slices of cake tucked away in the freezer to be taken as morning/afternoon tea when needed.

Lemon Coconut Cake

Lemon Coconut Loaf with Pink Icing
(adapted from Coconut Cream Loaf with Pink Icing, p. 162)

125g softened butter
1C sugar
2 eggs
165ml coconut milk
1.5C self raising flour
3/4C desicated coconut
juice of 2 lemons

Preheat oven to 180, grease and flour a 21cm loaf tin.
Cream the butter and sugar. Then add eggs one at a time. Add the coconut milk and lemon juice. Stir in the flour and coconut. Pour into loaf tin and bake for 40 minutes or until cooked. Ice with simple icing sugar icing and decorate with some more coconut.

I have really enjoyed this cake warmed up in the microwave for a few seconds as it really brings out the coconut flavours.

Blueberry Brioche Scrolls

Blueberry Brioche Scrolls
(adapted from Blueberry Scroll Buns, p. 62)

Julie’s brioche method is quite simplified compared to the others I have seen round the traps in that the dough is not cool risen but warm risen like you would traditionally do for a normal loaf of bread. This means the time between the beginning and completion is severely reduced.. A basic brioche dough is given and then a number of variations are given, the Blueberry scrolls are one of them.

Plain Brioches
1/4C warm water
2tsp active dried yeast
2tbsp sugar
4C plain flour/strong flour
1tsp salt
1C warm milk
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
150g softened butter
1 lightly beaten egg to glaze

1. Place the warm water in a small bowl and sprinkle in the yeast and sugar, leave the yeast to activate for a little while.
2. In a small cup lightly beat the 2 eggs and 2 egg yolks together. In a large bowl combine the flour and salt. Then add the yeast mixture, eggs, softened butter and milk, mix to combine.
3. Turn out on to a floured bench top and knead till smooth and glossy (I needed to work into a moderate amount of extra flour as I found the dough to be rather wet. Place kneaded dough into a lightly oiled bowl, cover with cling wrap and leave in a warm place to rise until doubled in volume, about 1hr or so. Lightly press back the dough, turn out on to the bench top and give it a light knead.
4. Preheat oven to 190. Form dough into to desired shapes either a loaf or 12 mini loaves, place in oiled bakeware and leave to rise for 20 minutes or so.
5. Glaze with beaten egg and bake for 15-20 minutes or until golden and with a firm crust.

Blueberry Brioche Scrolls.

1 basic brioche dough prepared to step 3
1/2C soft brown sugar
1C Blueberries (fresh or frozen)

1. Roll brioche dough into a 25cmx40cm rectangle, sprinkle with brown sugar and blueberries.
2. Roll up into a log and cut log into 2-4cm portions (This all depends on what size your largest muffin pans are and what size you want your cooked buns. I cut mine at about 3cm and cooked them in a standard 12 hole large muffin pan and think they are just the right size).
3. Place spirals into greased muffin pans. Preheat oven to 190 and leave to rise for 20 minutes or so.
4. Glaze with the beaten egg from the basic brioche dough and bake for 15-20 minutes or until golden and with a firm crust.

Julies’s notes say that the blueberries will melt into the brown sugar becoming jam like and will cling to the spirals of the dough. I don’t know if I used too many blueberries (you think I actually measured them?) or not enough sugar but I ended up with most of my scrolls oozing blueberry syrup out of the bottom. The recipe says it will make 12 but I only used half of the original dough to make these and ended up with 9 scrolls.

These are so yummy, however next time I am either going to make them with raspberries or chocolate as Matthew doesn’t like blueberries which means that I will be eating these by myself for the days to come.

On the Street

On the Street

A determined boy on a scooter, a younger brother moving as fast as he can, a mother watching her two boys with pride and a wee bit of concern.

On Friday, Leanne and I made a trip to a scrapbooking shop that was having 30% off to celebrate their second birthday. I came home with a nice little stack of Bazzill and some lettering. After a play in the playground at Maccas, it was home time for little boys to nap and for Helen to go home and have her own nap before going to work that night. Just as we arrived back at the house, Ethan begged to show me his scooter skills and the speed at which he can ride his scooter. Luckily they live on a pretty quiet street which meant that Ethan was able to race up and down the street, whilst I rolled round on the bitumen having a ball taking photos. Joshua was more than happy to to race up and down the street following Ethan as fast as his hands and knees can take him. Leanne got to act as mother and shepard Joshua from not racing too far away πŸ™‚