Monthly Archives: July 2010

meat pie

australia is a strange place. strange for many, many reasons. for one, the internet is slow and expensive. for a first world nation i find this very strange, and occasionally downright irritating. however, that’s not why this site exists- it’s all about the food. yes, they have food in australia, and yes, it is strange.

a couple of weeks ago, in my usual haste to get to work, i forgot to make myself lunch. i realized my folly by the time i got to the train station, and by then it was too late to do anything about it. i decided to bite the bullet and get something on campus.

when lunchtime rolled around i made my way to the cafeteria and looked for something that wasn’t over $5. that’s quite hard to do here. most prepared meals are pretty expensive; meat pies are not. i saw them sitting in their little glass-encased warmer, and at $4.00 I couldn’t pass them up. i had my choice of pepper steak or chicken and vegetables. i like my veggies, so i went with the latter.

a very standard lunch item in australia

i took my little pie to the quad (or court, as they call it here) and realized i had no utensils. but then i thought the thing was so small it seemed kind of dumb to cut it, so i just took a bite.

a very standard lunch item in australia...

that was underwhelming to say the least. tons of boring gravy, hardly any vegetables to speak of, at least crust was very flaky.

$4 wasted… i knew i could do better. and i did:

now that's a chicken and vegetable pot pie!

how’d i do it, you ask? let me tell you

chicken pot pie

crust

125g cold butter, cut into pieces

245g ap flour

1 tbsp sugar

1/2 tsp salt

1/2c ice water

chicken velouté (or gravy, if you will)

2 tbsp butter

1 medium onion, diced

1 celery stalk, diced

56g (1/4c) butter

35g (1/4c) ap flour

2 cups warm chicken stock (use the low sodium version, or better yet homemade)

1/2 cup warm milk

salt and freshly cracked pepper, to taste

filling

1 large cooked and seasoned (any way you like) chicken breast, or any other chicken pieces you desire, chopped

~4 cups raw (frozen is okay) veggies. i used broccoli, carrots, corn, peas, and green beans

1 egg lightly beaten with 2 tbsp milk.

assembly

heat the oven to 350F

crust

mix the flour, salt and sugar. using a pastry blender, or your hands (which is what i do), or if you are lucky enough to not have recently moved 12000 miles- a food processor to cut the butter into the flour until pea-sized bits of butter are mixed in with the flour. add 1/4cup of the water and mix. then slowly add the rest of the water until the dough just comes together. press into a disc and roll out on a well-floured surface.

** the pie crust above is only enough for the top. if you desire a bottom crust, then double the recipe

filling

sauté the onions and celery in 2tbsp butter, in a saucepan, until softened. add the 1/4 cup of butter and flour to the pan and continuously stir for about 2 minutes. add the stock and milk and whisk until the mixture is boiling and thick. season with salt and pepper.

mix the veggies, chicken and gravy in a pie pan. place the crust on top. brush with egg wash.

place the pie pan on a foil-lined cookie sheet and bake for about 1 hour, or until the crust is completely golden brown.

let stand 10 minutes before serving.

sour-doh!

i’m on winter break right now. i’ve been cooking. a lot. unfortunately there have been some problems:

1. cooking disasters (curry failures, rice catastrophes, cake debacles, and so on. it’s been a bad month for dorian’s cooking)

2. bad lighting- my house has some pretty horrible lighting. and it’s winter here. so natural light, when it does appear (and look good), is fleeting. (i need some real lights…)

3. laziness. no explanation needed.

however, to prove i have been cooking i will give you this:

it sure is pretty, and chewy, and soft.

it’s sourdough. well, it’s supposed to be sourdough. it isn’t sour. sometimes it’s barely sour, which isn’t enough. so i toil away day and night. there are two sourdough starters on my computer desk right now. they’re active and happy. i just don’t know if they are cut out for the job. if not that’s weeks down the drain. that would fucking suck.

the good thing is i’m learning a lot about bread making. i’ve got plans to redo the ciabatta, and maybe the focaccia. i’ll be attempting baguettes sometime before the end of this month. whole wheat is perfection is doesn’t need changing.

as far as the sourdough, i believe i’m on loaf 8 or 10; i can’t remember. i’m hoping it’s just a matter of ratios and rise times. assuming i get it, which i think i will, it will be here.

i do have a new soup recipe, but again, the problem is the lighting. i’m not giving a recipe without a good pic. i’m here. i’m alive. and australia is alright.