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Valeria Necchio

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

I first spied Valeria Necchio through an insta-friend of an insta-friend (I can say that legitimately in 2016 now can’t I ?!) and her work (and her name – my mother is also a ‘Valeria’) immediately caught my eye. Pure, raw, emotional and vibrant – her food and lifestyle photography is instantly encapsulating, and her recipes – wholesome, seasonal and immensely comforting.

You can always find her procuring the most delightful local produce to cook with, her recipes influenced by her deep Venetian heritage and love for both traditional, yet timeless northern Italian fare.

 

In fact, beyond her recipe journal Life Love Food, Valeria will be sharing this love of Venetian food with the world through her upcoming debut recipe book Veneto, Recipes from an Italian Country Kitchen, filled with dishes largely inspired by the corner of Venetian inland that she is from, in amongst stories, anecdotes, glimpses of daily life (past and present) and portraits of people and places. A food memoir of sorts.

 

My heart already yearns to hold this book in my hands! I can hardly wait, but for now over to Valeria…

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

 

1. Tell us a little about yourself and how you spend your days?

After 5 years working full time in food and communications, I recently started my journey as a freelance food writer, photographer and recipe developer. My everyday routine has changed dramatically: working from home, and without a 9-6 job plus a 2-hour commute, I feel like I am now very much in charge of my own time. It’s a liberating feeling, but it can be also a bit intimidating (and lonely).

 

I am currently working on my first cookbook as well as freelancing for newspapers and working with brands on recipe development, so my days is centered around cooking, shopping and dishwashing. A classic day starts at around 7 pm. I’ll have coffee and breakfast first thing, then I check my phone for messages and reach for my planner and calendar to try and draft a to-do list. There might be some grocery shopping involved, which usually takes up a bit of my time as I don’t have a car. Once home, I am pretty much lost in a whirlwind of cooking, testing, styling, plating, setting up the photography set, snapping, editing photos and so on. I might take a break to share a snap from the day on Instagram, too. Lunch is generally some photography set leftover. In the afternoon, I try to do some writing either for my blog or for other collaborations, and catching up on emails and social media. Writing & admin usually takes up the rest of the day. I generally manage to wrap things up by 7-8pm and dedicate the rest of the evening to some physical activity, dinner with my husband, and a movie or some reading – articles I had bookmarked throughout the day or a few pages of a novel. I’m in bed by 11pm. I still try to take weekends off if I can.

 

 

2. What inspired you to start your food and photography journal Life Love Food

I started Life Love Food in 2010 as soon as I received the news that I got admitted to the sought-after food studies program at the University of Gastronomic Sciences. I wanted the blog to reflect my daily life as a student of all things food and gastronomy, as well as share my culinary experiences, producers’ profiles and a bit of food & travel reportages. I was just starting out as a photographer back then and had a lot to learn still, but I perceived the blog as a journey in itself, and as a way to document my progress in both food writing and photography.

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

Admittedly, I made a lot of mistakes, my English was clumsy, and photos weren’t the most appealing, but I didn’t feel embarrassed. The blogging landscape was very different back then – there was far less pressure to be perfect. The blog evolved into a different beast when I finished the program and moved to London. It became the place where I wrote about how much I missed the food of my roots. I started to share more traditional Italian recipes, particularly from the region I am from, the Veneto. I continued to use it as a journal, documenting my daily living through words and images, talking about topics that felt very personal at times, but that I still felt comfortable putting out there. I never wished the blog to be dry or impersonal, a mere recipe blog; I wanted it to be the kind of space one visits knowing who’s the person behind it all. A digital, ongoing memoir of sorts.

 

I’m not sure where I’ll take it from here. I have just gone through a small facelift – it was time! – which makes me very happy. Content-wise, I have recently been sharing many travel guides. I’d love to explore this route more whilst keeping recipes at the core of the blog. I have a few other ideas I’m working on, including expanding it it to cover more topics and personal interests once I have completed the book and I’ll have more time to dedicate to it.

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

 

3. Who/what inspires your love of food and seasonal, provincial cooking?

If I’m not on a mission or if I’m not testing a specific recipe, I generally let the ingredients a and the seasons determine what I’ll cook on a given day: what looks good at the greengrocer, what I have at home that needs used, and what the weather’s like outside my kitchen window. It might sound trite, but being Italian, cooking simply and seasonally comes fairly instinctually for me – it’s the only way I’ve even known how to cook. Mum is a good cook but also, one who never liked spending hours at the stove. Our meals have often been thrifty and speedy, yet always homemade and flavoursome. I think I inherited a similar approach to daily cooking: I like uncomplicated things that I can stretch to cover multiple meals; and I like food that needs little tending, or little prepping. Minimum effort and maximum result is what I look for on most days. When ingredients are of good quality and at the peak of their season, there is generally very little one needs to do to put together a satisfying meal.

 

The interest in regional and traditional Italian recipes is, in a way, intrinsically bound to where I’m from, but it feeds on nostalgia, too, particularly when I’m away from home. On occasion, I like recreating traditional Venetian recipes, or trying out recipes from other regions I’ve seen in an old book and caught my interest. It doesn’t happen every day, though this is the type of recipes I share most often on the blog.

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

 

4. After living/working/studying abroad in many a European country (and now Australia) what ignites your travel bug? Where to next?

I have always loved traveling, but my feet became itchier than ever after finishing University. During my masters I was in a class of 25 people from all over the world, and hearing their stories and tasting their foods triggered a desire to explore the world. What happened, meanwhile, is that I fell i love with a very well-travelled and wanderlust-driven American. We travelled through America for three months, then got married in Venice and, before we knew it, we were living in London trying to lead an adult life – rent, bills, serious jobs and so on. We loved living in London, though we struggled to admit it sometimes;  we just weren’t ready to settle yet, so when the opportunity to live in Sydney for a while came up, we packed up our stuff and showed up.

 

I’m loving Sydney – the beaches, the lifestyle, the people. I’ll be sad to leave in May, but my homeland has been calling me and I need to go. So that’s where I’m going next – the Veneto. We are still unsure of where it is exactly that we want to live, so this sort of nomadic lifestyle has worked out fine for now. Sure enough, I dream of having all my stuff in one place one day!

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

 

5. Is there a special recipe (that means more than just the ingredients) that you would be willing to share with us? What is the story behind it?

Since autumn is right upon us, I thought to share the recipe for a simple dish called risi e suca. It’s a humble dish of rice and pumpkin that is very traditional to the region I come from. The texture resembles a wet risotto, though it’s still considered a minestra (soup). Mum used to make it all the time. There was always a stash of pumpkin chunks in the freezer – Grandma loved growing pumpkins and always gave us a few to take home. So whenever mum didn’t know what to cook or was in a hurry, she boiled some pumpkin, blended it to make a stock of sorts, and then cooked rice in it. Dinner was on the table in no time and with very little effort. As for me, I loved the sweetness and comforting nature of this dish as a child, and I am still very fond of it to date.

 

The recipe is pretty straightforward, but as we any recipe calling for very few ingredients, quality is key. A sweet, slightly earthy pumpkin and a good variety or risotto rice are wort seeking out. Keep plenty of Parmesan on hand, too: its savoury/umami note will balance the overall sweetness of the dish and make it beautifully creamy, too.

 

Valeria Necchio | The Alimental Sage

 

 

Risi e suca

Serves 4

 

30 g  butter

1 medium golden onion

800 g pumpkin, peeled and cut into small  chunks

1.5 L hot vegetable stock

250 g risotto rice

1 ½ teaspoons fine grain sea salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Grated Parmesan, to taste

Fresh rosemary sprigs, for garnishing

 

Method

 

Heat the butter in a large pot. Add onions and fry gently until soft and glistening, then add the chunks of pumpkin, lower the heat and cook for about 10 minutes, stirring every so often, until the pumpkin has become tender on the outside. At this point, pour in the hot stock and increase the heat to medium-high. Cook the pumpkin until it basically falls apart. Remove from the heat and blend until smooth.

 

Place back over medium heat and add the rice. Continue cooking until the rice has absorbed most of the pumpkin stock, at which point it should be tender but still fairly al dente. Add a bit of hot water if the soup thickens too much; the end result should be something between a soup and a wet risotto. Taste and season with salt and pepper. Serve with grated Parmesan and a bit of rosemary for freshness.

 

Find more of Valeria’s beautiful words and recipes on her online journal blog Life Love Food and keep your eyes peeled for progress on her debut cookbook (and other tidbits!) over on Instagram.

 

Emiko Davies

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies, is half Japanese, half Australian but has spent 2/3 of her life living in other countries. From growing up in Beijing to studying on Rhode Island, she eventually found herself in Florence and never looked back. She currently lives in Tuscany with her Italian husband and three year old daughter, and is surrounded daily by the delights of authentic Florentine cuisine.

A talented cook, food writer and photographer, I found Emiko through her beautiful blog full of heart-warming regional Italian dishes (that immediately reminded me of my own Nonna’s cooking!) and from then on have followed her endeavours via Instagram and beyond. Her recipes and accompanying photos never fail to evoke a sense of warmth and conviviality within me, and I simply want to reach out a take a bite. She also writes regular columns for Food 52 and Italian newspaper Italian newspaper, Corriere della Sera.

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Her first cookbook, Florentine: The True Cuisine of Florence, published by Hardie Grant Books is due for release next week and I couldn’t be more excited to get my hands on a copy. Many of the photos taken below are straight from the book, and if they don’t make you want to book a trip to Florence (RIGHT NOW!) I don’t know what will.

My passport is well and truly at the ready!

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Luckily! A passport is not needed if you would like to meet Emiko as she is currently in Australia on her cookbook tour, so if you are passionate about wholesome Italian food (like me) now’s your chance to join her for a Florentine inspired feast… and then you can give her a big hug too!

Now…it is with the greatest pleasure that I introduce you to Emiko Davies.

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

 

1. Tell us a little about yourself and how you spend your days?

The easiest way to answer this is to say that I cook and write recipes, photograph my food and run around after a three year old, sometimes all at once! Most days I’m testing recipes or writing articles for my blog or my regular columns with Food52 or Corriere della Sera. I’m also researching and working on a second cookbook right now so it’s a busy time which means the oven is always on or a pot is always bubbling away on the stove and I’m always looking for family and friends who are willing to take away all the food that’s pumping out of the kitchen lately!

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

 

2. What inspired you to start blogging and writing about food? How did your passion for regional Italian food (and its roots) come about?

I had been living in Florence for about five years when I decided to start my blog, which has a focus on regional Italian cuisine (with a rather biased curve towards Tuscan food). It was the food habits and traditions of my new home that entirely inspired the blog. What really struck me when I moved to Florence was how the food that Florentines like to eat when they go out is the same food that mamma or nonna serves on Sundays to the whole family (and probably does better) — they don’t go out to try something different, or a different type of cuisine. They go out for their all time favourites. Look at the menus from trattoria to trattoria and they are essentially an identical list of dishes! Then when I discovered the Italian cookbook that has probably the biggest influence on my cooking, Pellegrino Artusi’s Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well, which was written in 1891, I realised that these dishes have also barely changed for centuries. This has (and will continue to) always fascinated me.

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

 

3. Can you share with us a little about ‘Florentine’ and who/what inspired the recipes in your debut cookbook?

Florentine is basically an ode to the city that I consider my second home. When I was approached to write a cookbook and asked to come up with a pitch, it came easily — it had to be about Florence. There are thousands of Tuscan cookbooks out there but barely anything that actually speaks just of Florence — and anyone who knows regional Italian food knows that the dishes and the traditions change from town to town, not only region to region. The book is entirely made up of Florentine recipes, dishes that tell a story of the city or that are inspired by my favourite places to eat in the city, from pastry shops, trattorie and wine bars to gelaterie. Artusi gets mentioned quite a bit there too (although not Florentine, he was from Emilia-Romagna but lived in Florence for many years and wrote his cookbook while living there so it is tinged with Florentine recipes and anecdotes).

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

 

4.  Do you have a current food or ingredient ‘love’?

My current food love is bottarga. We had a 7 month stint living in southern Tuscany on Monte Argentario last year – a beautiful area of hills, sparkling seaside and lagoons. The neighbouring lagoon town of Orbetello is famous for its bottarga, which is still only artisan-made, the same way it’s been made for centuries, from local mullet eggs. It’s a softer style of bottarga compared to Sardinian bottarga, and delicious eaten in thin slices with lemon juice and olive oil as antipasto, or grated over pasta with a squeeze of lemon juice for the fastest dinner ever!

 

5. Is there a special recipe (which means more than just the ingredients) that you would be willing to share with us?

I love this pear and chocolate cake. It’s not exactly one of the most traditional desserts (Tuscans don’t have much of a sweet tooth so this is a newcomer compared to some of the other sweet recipes in the cookbook which are much more rustic), but it is certainly a popular combination that you’ll find in elegant pastry shops. This recipe I particularly love because the base of the cake — the crisp-edged, fudgy, dark chocolate cake — is inspired by one of my all-time favourite cake recipes, a flourless chocolate cake of Elizabeth David’s. I have always been a fan of the pear and chocolate combination, so one day it just seemed quite perfect to simply push some still-firm poached pears into the cake, which help cut the richness of the dark chocolate. I discovered Elizabeth David’s books late; well after I had started my blog and once I found her, I couldn’t get enough. She wrote about Italy in the 50s and most of what she talks about is still spot on and totally relevant today. Her recipes are always unforgivably authentic and to say her writing has been an inspiration is an understatement. They’re the sort of cookbooks I take on holiday to read like novels.

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Torta di Pera e Cioccolato (Pear and Chocolate Cake)

 

For the poached pears:

50 grams sugar

500 ml water

2 pears, peeled, cored and cut into 8

 

For the cake:

150 grams dark chocolate
90 grams unsalted butter, cubed
90 grams caster sugar
90 grams almond meal
3 eggs, separated

butter for greasing
1 teaspoon of cocoa powder for dusting
icing sugar, optional

 

To poach the pears, combine the sugar and water in a saucepan and set over a medium heat. When boiling, poach the pear slices for 10-15 minutes or until tender but not too soft (a knife should easily penetrate the flesh without any resistance). Drain and let the pear cool.

Melt the chocolate over a double broiler. When melted, remove from heat, add butter and stir until the butter has melted. Add the sugar, almond meal, stirring to combine. When the mixture is cool, add the egg yolks.

Preheat the oven to 180ºC. Grease a 22cm cake tin with butter and dust with cocoa powder, tipping out any excess.
In a separate bowl, whisk the egg whites to peaks, then fold in to the chocolate batter. Pour into the prepared tin. Arrange the pear slices on the top of the batter, pushing them slightly in. Bake at 180ºC for 40 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.

When cool, remove cake from cake tin and dust liberally with icing sugar, if desired. Place on a plate and serve in modest slices – this is a rather rich cake.

 

This recipe is an edited extract from Florentine by Emiko Davies published by Hardie Grant Books. Food photography by Lauren Bamford, author portraits by Hana Davies and Lenny Pellico, location photography by Emiko Davies.

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

Emiko Davies | The Alimental Sage

 

 

Martyna Angell

She is the cookbook author, recipe developer, blogger, stylist, photographer and brains behind The Wholesome Cook blog – she is none other than Martyna Angell (or simply ‘Marty’ to many!). Phew! I need to take a breath.

 

Yep. She’s most certainly one very talented and creative lady to whom I’m lucky enough to call a ‘real-life’ foodie friend…AND she’s also just released her debut cookbook, ‘The Wholesome Cook‘. Kicking goals lady!

 

martyna angell

 

Although, we should here-forth refer to it as a cooking ‘bible’, as it’s a one-stop-shop kind of book that will teach you everything from making your own sourdough bread and yoghurt from scratch…to icing and assembling a three-tiered, gold leaf covered, fairy bread flavoured layer cake! Okay, I am kidding about that last bit (it’s late and I am delirious), but you get my drift…the book covers every meal, every occasion PLUS a whole load of tutorial-style basics recipes too (the BASICS chapter is actually ridiculously comprehensive, and by far my favourite section!)

 

Marty’s approach to food and life is rooted in a deep sense of balance…and could be summarised as ‘mostly sensible with a little bit of decadence here and there, BUT always tasty and delicious nonetheless’! I LOVE THAT and it’s one of the reasons that attracted me to The Wholesome Cook all those years ago.

 

Today we are going down the decadent route (the sweet tooth in me is Toyota-jumping!) as she shares with us a wicked recipe for a Chocolate Rocher Cake, which reminds her of her childhood and all things festive fare. Get your drool bibs ready people.

 

Read on for the recipe and more…

 

martyna angell food stylist

Photos above by Michele Froidevaux.

 

1. Tell us a little about yourself and how you spend your days?

I was born and raised in Poland. I grew up in and around Warsaw – the capital, but despite living in the city, real food was always a part of my upbringing, my mum was, and still is, a creative whole food cook that instilled in me the love of cooking and eating seasonally. Food has always been my true passion – the blog, the almost natural interest in food styling and photography followed suit as the creative aspect of what I do now. The book is no different.

 

My days? Each day is like no other before it, I love that about working for myself. They do seem fragmented sometimes, as anyone who wears many hats will attest to – as an author, blogger, stylist, columnist, photographer, busy step-mum with two almost-teen kids, a husband, a full-of-beans-doglet, as well as the primary grocery shopper, cook, chauffeur and laundry lady – I’m seldom bored!

 

My days are busy – sometimes I write, sometimes I shoot for clients, other days I stay up night-owling, editing photos, into the wee hours of the morning. I have no real set schedule, except for Fridays… On Fridays I try to get on top of my emails. Sure, my days might seem a little crazy but I find what I do utterly satisfying, fun and always varied.

 

PS. For a while I didn’t mind doing some work on the weekends, but I found that despite the fact I love what I do, I needed some space. Time off to clear my head, to read, to go outside and enjoy simple moments with my family so that’s what I tend to do now. I think being self-employed carries a lot of reward, but the risk of over-committing and neglecting the other important things in life is the price I am no longer willing to pay.

 

polish gingerbread cake

 

2. What does food mean to you? What’s your food philosophy?

Cooking real food from scratch has always been a big part of my upbringing – it was an integral part of any celebration, family gatherings and the everyday life. It was seasonal, homemade, and eating leftovers for lunch was the norm. The focus on eating real food that’s best for our bodies, with an occasional indulgence, is a philosophy I’ve adopted after completing studies with the Institute for Integrative Nutrition, New York, two years ago. It’s also a philosophy I now live with my family, and share in The Wholesome Cook book. My approach to a healthy and balanced diet is exactly that.

 

I also like the flexibility of the 90/10 rule for eating well 90 percent of the time – avoiding additives, preservatives and excess sugar, and indulging a little. This allows for an occasional indulgence – whether it’s chocolate cake at a party, ice cream after a hot day or enjoying some savouries, like crisps, when you really feel like it or fish and hot chips at the beach.

 

gluten free pastry dough

 

3. Who/what inspires your love of food and cooking?

Since we try to eat a meat-less meal 2-3 times a week, I am always inspired by vegetarian chefs, bloggers and cooks. I absolutely adore how Yotam Ottolenghi has elevated vegetables to a whole new level and have a lot of respect for Emma Galloway for her gluten-free vegetarian recipes, which are incredible. I’ve also loved connecting with Belinda Jeffery on Instagram, she is such a beautiful person and wonderful seasonal cook providing plenty of inspiration.

 

I am also inspired by my mum who instilled in me the passion for cooking from scratch and experimenting with food outside of my own cuisine, with my likes and with ingredients. She used to cook Chinese-style dishes from scratch from travel stories and descriptions my told from his travels to China. And they were so good, once she was asked for her cashew chicken recipe by our Chinese guests!

 

Now, watching my own family actively seeking to be in the kitchen, helping out and experimenting with their own cooking skills and flavours, and being open to trying new things when we travel, is so rewarding. It inspires me even more to keep tasting, cooking and loving all things food.

 

laksa

 

4. Current food or ingredient ‘love’?

Sea bass. On our recent trip to Italy and France I fell in love, head over heels, fork, knife and all, for sea bass. No amount of this beautiful, flakey fish was able to satisfy my appetite for it completely, even though most days I had the whole fish twice a day. So far I’ve found that the texture and flavour of Barramundi is the closest equivalent here in Australia. I also can’t get enough of omega-3 rich mackerel – it is such an underrated fish because everyone is too busy raving about sardines.

 

Don’t worry, I’m not all about fish. I also love dill pickles and share that recipe in the book, raw almonds – soaked in water overnight they become plum and young again, green coconuts – especially the flesh which makes a wonderful yogo-style dessert (that’s in the book) and turmeric. Oh, and chipotle on anything!

 

5. Do you have a special recipe you can share with us? What is the story behind it?

Yes! The Chocolate and Rocher Icing Cake from the book.

 

If you’re after quite an indulgent cake this recipe combines a moist chocolate cake and an irresistibly good rocher-like chocolate and hazelnut butter frosting. A perfect celebration cake and one to impress your dinner quests with. The frosting doubles as, you guessed it, nutella!

 

I think the Rocher Cake is one of my favourites because whole-hazelnut chocolate was always part of our Christmas celebrations when I was a child. Every bit evokes such wonderful and warm memories.

 

Now, we make the cake for most family celebrations…and for neighbours in the form of these cute-as-a-button baked donuts. So versatile!

 

 

WC-Chocolate-and-Rocher-Icing-Cake

 

Chocolate and Rocher Icing Cake

Serves 10-12.

 

1 cup water

1⁄2 cup unrefined demerara sugar or granulated stevia

1⁄2 cup rice malt syrup or honey

120g butter, chopped, or 100g coconut oil

3 tablespoons raw cacao powder

3⁄4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda

2 teaspoons vanilla powder or natural vanilla extract

2 eggs

1 cup wholemeal plain flour or teff flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

 

For the icing

1⁄2 cup hazelnut butter (there’s a recipe for it in the book as well!)

40g dark (70% cocoa) chocolate or dairy-free chocolate, roughly chopped and melted

10 extra hazelnuts, chopped

1 ice cream waffle cone or gluten-free ice cream cone, crushed finely, OR 2 tablespoons buckinis

 

Method

 

Preheat oven to 180°C (160°C fan-forced). Grease and line a 22cm spring-form cake tin with baking paper.

Place water, sugar or stevia, rice malt syrup or honey, butter or coconut oil, cacao powder and bicarbonate of soda in a large saucepan over low heat. Heat, stirring, until butter melts. Increase heat to medium and bring to a simmer – the mixture will rise and double in size. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature.

Once cooled, add vanilla and whisk in eggs. Sift flour and baking powder into a bowl and add to egg mixture, whisking until just combined. Pour batter into prepared tin and bake for 45 minutes, or until a skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean. Remove from oven, place on a wire rack and allow to cool in the tin.

To prepare the icing, combine hazelnut butter with melted chocolate and half of the crushed waffle cone or buckinis. Mix well. Scoop the icing onto the cooled cake, spread gently over the top and top with hazelnuts and crushed waffle cone or buckinis before serving.

Store cake in the fridge, covered, for up to 7 days. You can freeze any remaining slices for up to 1 month.

 

Recipe reprinted with permission from The Wholesome Cook book (Harlequin, 2015).

 

Sarah Coates

Who is Miss Sarah Coates?!

Well, she is none other than the Founder of the ridiculously awesome food blog ‘The Sugar Hit‘…the queen of all cakes cray-cray… and the ultimate wizard of butter, sugar and bright technicolour!

It may sound like I’m describing a unicorn, but yep, Miss Sarah is THAT cool…a rare (and blooming young!) talent – who knows a thing (or a million!) or two about whipping up some seriously ‘bonkers’ food. She also happens to be EVEN COOLER in person (can confirm!) and it  is true that food bloggers really do make for great friends/partners in crime.

 

The Sugar Hit Sarah Coates

 

So, if you’re keen for a bit of food FUN and refuse to stand for ‘beige’ food of any kind, then you are going to want to set up camp on Sarah’s blog. Why not buy her her book (It has a squishy cover!!!) and check out her Instagram while you’re at it too…she might even extend a donut or two to you…or you know, a double-fudge birthday cake popsicle…Say what?!

 

double fudge popsicle

 

In fact, Sarah is THAT kind…she is even sharing a special recipe from her debut cookbook, ‘The Sugar Hit with us today (see further below).

 

Thus, read on comrades and you shall be rewarded with cake…

 

the sugar hit cookbook

 

1. Tell us a little about yourself and how you spend your days?

To use a little Zoolander parlance, I’m a slashie. A food blogger/author/photographer/writer/stylist. It’s a mouthful, and it’s very hard to explain to people, especially if they are over 70. I might settle down more completely into one of those roles one day, but who knows, really? So on any given day I might be shooting a venue, or developing a recipe, or styling a cake, or writing a piece for a client, or doing any one of the above for my blog The Sugar Hit. For a solid stretch I was writing a book! There’s lots of washing up, but other than that I definitely can’t complain. I love my job. The best part about it, other than all the eating opportunities, is being self-employed and able to do so much creative work.

 

2. What does food mean to you? What’s your food philosophy?

HMMMMM! I have to be honest…I don’t have one. Food for me is a creative outlet, an opportunity to have fun, an opportunity to feel good, but I don’t ascribe any weighty meaning to it. I hate to sound like a preachy butthead, but I can’t get over how lucky I am to live in a house with clean running water. So lucky! So I don’t like to take what I eat too seriously, or say that it’s how I show love or anything like that. The fact that I can earn a living effectively playing with a luxury item, is such an amazing, ridiculous bonus, I thank my lucky stars every day. Plus, taste is one of the five ways in which we can sense the world around us. It’s a full fifth of our sensory input. So not taking full advantage of that seems crazy to me! I want to taste ALL THE THINGS!

 

simple lemon loaf

 

3. Who/what inspires your love of food and cooking?

The fun! Have I used the word fun enough in this interview? There’s something so whimsical and awesome about an Andy Bowdy style cake, or a Katherine Sabbath creation. Like, how genius of Christina Tosi to bring the world cereal milk, or Dominique Ansel to create the cronut? Some people are inspired by seeing astronauts on the space station, or athletes breaking records, or…fashion people fashioning (Alexa Chung, I love you). For me? It’s food. People who cook and make something delicious and get joy out of it – that’s what excites me.

 

hot fudge sundae

 

4. Current food or ingredient ‘love’?

Two words: soft serve. I think Australia is primed and ready for a soft serve revolution. Let’s get some cool Japanese-inspired flavours going, black sesame and purple sweet potato. Plus a billion other kooky choices – birthday cake! Jam donut swirl! Red wine and chocolate! Key lime pie! Investors, please contact me.

 

5. Do you have a special recipe you can share with us? What is the story behind it?

The recipe I’m sharing here is from my book The Sugar Hit, and it’s for my Super Soaked Lemon, Almond and Poppyseed Cake. It’s a good example of the kind of baking I love. It’s dense, delicious, packed with almonds and poppyseeds, and absolutely SOAKED in lemon syrup. Plus, it comes with a minor kitchen discovery; to make the syrup, I skip any boiling, and just mix lemon juice with icing sugar – boom, instant syrup. This bad boy is perfect with dark black coffee around mid-morning. Enjoy!

 

lemon almond poppyseed cake

Photo by Chris Middleton, styled by Vicki Valsamis.

 

Super Soaked Lemon, Almond and Poppy Seed Cake

Serves 6–8

 

225 g (8 oz) butter, at room temperature

230 g (8 oz/1 cup) caster (superfine) sugar

zest of 2 lemons

4 eggs

80 g (23/4 oz/1/3 cup) crème fraîche or sour cream

100 g (31/2 oz/1 cup) ground almonds

150 g (51/2 oz/1 cup) plain (all-purpose) flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

40 g (11/2 oz/1/4 cup) poppy seeds

80 g (3 oz/1/2 cup) almonds, chopped

 

Syrup

juice of 4 lemons

250 g (9 oz/2 cups) icing (confectioners’) sugar

 

Method

 

Preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F) and grease and line a 20–23 cm (8–9 in) cake tin.

Beat the butter and sugar together until pale and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add the crème fraîche and beat again until incorporated. Add the almonds, flour, baking powder and poppy seeds, and fold until everything is combined.

Pour the mixture into the lined tin and smooth the top. Sprinkle the chopped almonds over the top of the cake and press them in gently. Bake for 35–40 minutes or until the cake springs back when touched lightly and a skewer comes out clean.

While the cake is baking, stir together the ingredients for the syrup.

When the cake is ready, poke a bunch of holes in the top with a skewer (trying to avoid the almonds) and then spoon the syrup over the cake. It will seem like too much syrup, but that’s the point, so go slowly and keep pouring until all the syrup is absorbed. Let the cake cool completely and then carefully remove from the tin, slice and eat.

 

TIP Check your teeth for poppy seeds after you eat this. That’s not a cooking tip, just some helpful advice.

 

Recipe reprinted with permission from The Sugar Hit! (Hardie Grant 2015)