Eat My Street Online Cooking Club

Eat My Street Online Cooking Club


Eat My Street Online Cooking Club

For years I have wanted to start my own cooking club.

I have a vision of a group of people all turning up somewhere simple and cosy bearing pots of pasta, crunchy bread and dishes of bubbling casserole. Everyone would share what they had already made before joining in the final preparations together.

My recent reading of Marlena De Blasi’s Umbrian Supper Club only made this desire more potent. If you haven’t read it, you should. I lingered slowly over each page, willing the story to go on for longer and pausing every few days to try out something new in my own kitchen. Continue reading

Tour the Jamaica Blue Coffee Roastery with Eat My Street

We’re all going on a coffee hunt.

I’m not scared.

What a beautiful day.

Jamaica blue coffeeI was invited to attend a tour of the Jamaica Blue Roastery here in Melbourne. Led by World latte Judge Jeremy Regan. Jeremy has been traveling the world sourcing and selling coffee on behalf of Jamaica Blue for more than 18 years. To use his own words, he discovered early on in his career that he had “rather a good palate” when it came to coffee. He also has quite a passion for it and it was a delight to hear him talk about the why he thinks coffee holds a rather important place in our lives as a way to draw people together through ritual and community.Jeremy Regan word latter judge

To an old man a cup of coffee is like the door post of an old house — it sustains and strengthens him.

Here in Australian we drink more than 3kg of coffee per person per year. For many of us it is part of our personal ritual and it helps create important daily moments of reflection and indulgence. The day never looks so promising as when we sit with that first hot cup of creamy coffee in our hands.

Jeremy took us on a tour of the Jamaica Blue coffee roastery and we saw the process the humble little coffee beans get through from when it first hits out shores, to when it arrives at a Jamaica Blue cafe.

Sort, clean, cupp, roast, degas, package, rest.

And they’re off.

An essential part of the coffee roasting process is patience and rest as the little brown bean  needs time to degas. If time is not allowed for this then the end product  will be too sour and it will not work well with the milk used to accompany it.

Rest little bean, rest.

Jamaica Blue sources their coffee beans from farmers in 6 different regions including East Timor and Brazil and Jeremy travels regularly to meet with farmers and owners of these co ops.

We also had the privilege of being involved in a mini barista class.

It was interesting to hear that often when tasting the beans at a co-op, the coffee is often roasted simply in a pan over an open fire and is served with lots and lots of sugar in order to sweeten up that coffee taste that we tend to love here in Melbourne.

So much of what we find to be a “good coffee” or good taste in general comes to us not just through our taste buds but also through our memories, our culture and our history.

So it is that in inner city Melbourne your coffee will come to you served less than scorchingly hot, in order to preserve the flavor of the milk.

But however you like your morning brew (I prefer to let my AeroPress work its magic, Jeremy likes his V60) there were still some great tips that I picked up on.

  • Keep your milk at around 60-65 degrees celsius to ensure you don’t burn it.
  • The texture of well-heated milk  will be like glossy paint
  • When frothing the milk with a espresso machine, the attachment should be “pecking the milk and not French kissing.”
  • Ligh,t air, moisture and heat are enemies of fresh coffee so don’t store it in the freezer!

This month is caffeine appreciation month so show your coffee some love and maybe indulge in an extra cup or two to celebrate.

To find out more, visit www.jamaicablue.com.au

21 Great Australian food bloggers creating recipes online

21 Great Australian food bloggers

recipes from Australian food bloggers

It can be difficult  to find a food blogger who is publishing beautiful  written recipes and content online that will help an inspire you as you cook in your own kitchen.

But lucky me, I have been privileged enough to meet some really wonderful, dedicated food writers and bloggers. I love reading a lot of what they write too.

So here are some of my favourite bloggers from Australia who are writing about food and creating recipes online for us all to use.

If you know of an Australian food blogger who creates recipes on their own website then let me know and I can add them to my list.

21 great Australian food bloggers to follow online.

Veggie Mama

Simple recipes and everyday tales from the homestead of a vegetarian here in Melbourne.

Lambs Ears and Honey

A food and travel blog about good food. Amanda is based in Adelaide.

Recipe Tin Eats

A food blog with hundreds of tried and tested dinner recipes that taste as good as they look.

Nagi is the Queen of Australian food blogging.

Not Quite Nigella

Restaurants, travel stories and recipes.

Lorraine has also published her own book.

Bake Play Smile

Quick and easy sweet and savoury recipes to suit every taste and budget with Lucy.

The Spice Adventuress

Rediscover the pleasure of adding a splash of spice to your life in Melbourne.

Love Swah

A Sydney food, travel and design blog by Sarah.

Chewtown

One of the first food bloggers I ever discovered, Amanda creates simple recipes with bold flavours.

Create Bake Make

Easy family and thermomix recipes with Lauren.

Bizzy Lizzy’s Good Things

Liz Posmyk shares her collection of recipes, recollections and reviews.

She also has her own book, The Barber from Budapest.

Belly Rumbles

A Sydney based culinary blog by Sarah McCleary.

Foodies Hut

Bengali cuisine and Indian cuisine with Shyamali Sinha.

Cook Republic

A cook book author and food and lifestyle photographer from Sydney.

Fig Jam and Lime Cordial

Making as much food as possible from scratch and living a “quasi sustainable” life.

The Annoyed Thyroid

Sydney based blogger Sam bakes, eats, runs explore  and look on the bright side of life.

Becs Table

Not technically food blogger but Bec does share a lot of great recipes from her Bake Club and cooking school in the South East of Melbourne.

What Katie Ate

A site relating to all things food and photography in Sydney Australia.

Katie also has her own book and writes and shoots for Delicious. What talent!

My darling lemon thyme

Writer, photographer and recipe develop Emma shares her gluten-free and vegetarian recipes as well as tips for organic gardening.

Cafe Delites.

Waist line friendly recipes that are full of flavour with Karina.

Eat My Street

Good food for a good life in Melbourne and beyond.

Dani creates recipes, posts reviews are writes about living well.

Stone Soup

Good food and simple living with Jules the food scientist in country NSW.

Jules also runs a couple of courses online and has published her own book.


So there they are, 21 great Australian food bloggers to follow online.

Who is your favourite?

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The best accounts by Melbourne foodies on Instagram.

 

Awkward Jeffrey Cafe Daylesford 

Awkward Jeffrey Cafe Daylesford 

Awkward Jeffrey CafeA recent family camping trip to Daylesford provided me with the glorious opportunity to check out a few new cafes.

Daylesford has long been one of my favorite spots in Victoria. I dream of moving there and writing books in the back room of my old farmhouse in between cooking generous Country style dinners for visiting family and friends.

I guess I would occasionally need to pop out for company and caffeine and when I did,  I think I would visit Awkward Jeffrey.

Housed in a gorgeous, timber window framed, narrow, two story building Jeffrey’s charms include a black spiral staircase, an open fireplace, a gorgeous mural and many house plants.

The  Espresso syndicate coffee was very good and food from the small, thoughtful menu was delicious and included a selection of local produce. La Madre vine fruit sourdough bread , cultured butter, Dele Foodstore jam ($7) or buckwheat pancakes, ricotta, chai custard, orange jelly, almond, mint ($16).

I ordered the luscious orange cake that was on display on the countertop  and it was cake-y perfection.

cake at Awkward Jeffrey Cafecoffee at Awkward Jeffrey Cafe

Housed in a heritage building Awkward Jeffrey is a cosy and very visually beautiful cafe to dine in. I enjoyed the gazing out the window into the Daylesford streetscape beyond as much as I enjoyed the array of house plants and art work creating an inviting space inside.

Awkward Jeffrey Cafe

If you are visiting beautiful Daylesford, and why would you not, then be sure to pop into Awkward Jeffreys for a meal.

Happy Eating

Dani xx


Awkward Jeffrey Cafe

117 Vincent St, Daylesford VIC

Hours:
Wednesday to Monday 8am–3:30pm
Tuesday Closed
Suggest an edit
Phone: (03) 5348 1798

Awkward Jeffery Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato


Dani B is a food and lifestyle blogger from Melbourne. She posts recipes, reviews and tips for living mindfully. You can follow along on Facebook or Instagram.