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Fran and Nige do the globe » Everything I ate:

Category Archives: Everything I ate

Sydney Christmas Menu

Christmas 25-12-2009

Newtown Sydney

Roasted vegetables ravioli

Salmon and tuna sashimi with shrimp

Tatziki and hummus

* * *

Marinaded rump steak, pork and leek sausage

Grilled haloumi, gormet veggie sausages and burgers

Cold ham and sliced turkey

Baked vegetables and roast potatoes

* * *

Traditional english christmas pudding

Chocolate brownies

* * *

Selection of international cheeses with Tasmanian pickles:

English stilton, Australian gouda, French brie, Spanich Manchigo

Wine list (Hunter Valley NSW)

McLeish estate sparkling semillon

Tyrells Lost Block semillon ’09

Iron Gate Estate oaked semillon ’05

Iron Gate Estate unwooded chardonnay ’06

* * *

Black Label (McGuigan) sparkling syrah

Tyrells pinot noir ’08

Saddlers Creek 3 Wheels shiraz cabernet merlot ’04

McLeish Estate shiraz ’07

Iron Gate sweet shiraz ’07

* * *

McGuigan Tempranillo ’07

Christmas dinner

Christmas dinner

Sashimi and shrimps

Sashimi and shrimps

Argentine food

YUM! SLURP!

A wine drinking carnivore’s paradise. Massive top quality sirloin steaks at five pounds a pop accompanied by some great big red wines for even less.

It’s not on overstatement to say that vegetarians would not fit in here. The choice on most menus is not what type of food to eat, but rather what cut of beef to eat (or part of cow for that matter). Parrillas can be found on most street corners – the meat eating equivalent of a Bavarian beer hall. Communal steak fest.

Parilla

The kitchen of a parilla steakhouse

Typical dishes would be:

Parrilla – A mini bbq at your table with beef, chicken, blood sausage (morcilla), local pork sausage (chorizo) and some gubbins like intestine or pancreas (collectively mondongo – my new favourite Spanish word)

Bife de chorizo – not to be confused with chorizo – the paprika spiced sausage you’re used to at home, the bife de chorizo is the headliner of most menus. A whopping great sirloin. Nothing else.

Lomo – Fillet – more tender, but arguably less tasty than the chorizo.

Other parts we didn’t try so often or at all are skirt, rump, kidneys, testicals.

Mondongo - pancreas I think - tastes a bit like hot pork scratching

Mondongo - pancreas I think - tastes a bit like hot pork scratching

Other national delights: EmpeƱadas – kind of like mini pies. Usually carne - cornish pasty esque or jamon y queso – ham and cheese.

Coffee culture is big, and a common accompaniment is an alfajor – a biscuit sandwich of dulce de leche - a caramel style goo. It’s a bit like a posh Wagon Wheel, if you remember those. You can get milk, dark, white chocolate, different fillings, good, bad, dry, sugary, double, triple (I’ve not seen a quad yet) -there’s a whole world of alfajors!

The alfajor

The alfajor

What more… Mate is a local drink / culture – a tea like brew made from various different leaves. I never tried it, but you will find most people with their mate contraptions and hot water thermos flasks in their bags.

The Italian influence in Argentina resulted in an ice cream culture. Almost as common place as steak restaurants, you are never too far away from an ice cream parlour, with flavours such as “dulce de leche with cookies” or even “vanilla with malbec”.

Icecream galore! Notice the Mendoza infuenced "Vanilla with Malbec..."

Icecream galore! Notice the Mendoza infuenced "Vanilla with Malbec..."

Good foods to be had in Argentina and definately a place for steak lovers!

Bolivian Food

Hmm… not sure there’s much to write home Food in Bolivia exists really only out of necessity than for people to enjoy and savour. I may not be doing the local cuisine any justice, but then think about it – how many Bolivian restaurants do you see back at home??? Even as I write this post in Santiago, Chile, within three blocks have restaurants: Italian, Indian, Chinese, Peruvian, Ecuadorian, Mexican, Croation, Greek. It’s not a surprise that there’s no Bolivian.

There was the odd occasion to sample local cuisine. The north hosts Lake Titicaca which is used to farm trout. Scattered along the shores are networks of what appear to be trout nets. So trucha is a common dish in these areas, and very fresh and tasty.

Less food was available on the busses in Bolivia – people generally stuck to chewing coca leaves to relieve them of the effects of altitude. I tried coca leaves but after about 6 of them, five minutes later the bitter taste was too much. Bus drivers seem to live on the stuff though!

City food was back to the chicken and chips for locals, while tourists had a range of relatively expensive restaurants of curries, pizzas, pies and other homely fayre. (See the photo of the menu from “Olivers travels” English pub on the Bolivia travel blog)

Uyuni had little to offer but pizza. Oh, except an alpaca steak in what was supposed to be a French restaurant. The pizzas though were gross. As they are 90% of the time in South America.

Even more reason to look forward to Argentina!