Last Week's Menu

12 February 2010 | 11:44 - By Matthew Evans

It’s like this. I set myself the goal of trying to rear and grow as much of my own food as possible. And I failed, particularly during the early months in the garden, and over the hungry part at the end of winter when nothing grows. I still wonder about my credibility as someone trying to eat food I’ve grown, or grown by someone I know. I shop for lots of things locally that I can’t grow myself, including at either of the two supermarkets in Cygnet.

So this is what I’ve eaten in the last week.

Thursday
Pasta with kale from the garden. I learnt that kale, unlike spinach or broccoli or silverbeet, isn’t that good with pasta unless it’s really young leaves that you choose. The pasta, an excellent one, is from Italy.

For dinner it’s a tortilla of home grown pink eyes with sage and lettuce from the garden.

Friday
As usual breakfast is made from Elgaar organic oats, walnuts from mate Jen Owens’ tree and other bits from much further afield. For dinner I braised the last of my onions with purple and yellow carrots and baby up-to-date potatoes from the garden in a little water with Penna olive oil sold by the growers at the farmer’s market. On the side was a dish of homegrown broccoli with bought chilli, garlic from the plot, and some sorrel that I thought was perennial spinach.

Saturday

At the market. A lamb wrap from a stall. Dinner of chips, nuts, beer and whisky (I went to a poker night). Threw in a ginger beer as well.

Sunday
Coffee. More coffee. Hey, I needed it. Lunch of pork dumplings of unknown origin at a very good Shanghainese restaurant called Written on Tea in Hobart. Dinner; sirloin steak. Hereford/friesian cross from the organic farm in Nichols Rivulet. Salad from George and Hillary at the market. Mustard made by my mate Ross and some of Gil’s homegrown horseradish I’d grated last season and jarred.

Monday

Pancakes with my own blueberries. Maggie’s yoghurt. Mascarpone from Elgaar dairy. Black currant syrup made from currants grown by the family of Richard Clark. Preserved greengage plums from last summer, which I picked myself. (I also put Canadian maple syrup on the table, but don’t use it.) The same farmer that sold the beef gives me a half boot load of broad beans. I freeze some – the others are blanched, double peeled and tossed with Tongola goat’s cheese from the other side of the valley. Penna olive oil and Hillary’s tomatoes. For dinner it’s snow peas from the garden of Joanne and Mike (Mike is an AFI award winning sound engineer who did the sound for the series and lives up the valley a bit), along with their cucumber, and scarlet runner beans.

Tuesday

Small potatoes, some the size of a child’s thumb, from the garden are boiled and tossed with my own bacon and its fat after frying. On the side there’s a broad bean and tomato salad. The tomatoes come, while I wit for mine to ripen, from the farmer’s market, too. Two Metre Tall Huon cider, a stunning drop.

Wednesday
Chargrilled home baked sourdough with olive oil and a salad of scarlet runner beans, broad beans, snow peas and Tongola cheese. On the side are a few slices of my own prosciutto, and some radishes from Yorktown Organics, who are based in the north of the state.

Dinner of ten-hour bacon baked beans that I had saved from the market stall, poured hot over chargrilled sourdough, and topped with a poached egg. Salad on the side; leaves from Hillary and George, broad beans from Gerard.

So there you go. Maybe it was a good week. The vegie garden is full of weeds, but there’s plenty for a small household to find to eat, or at least add to the meals. I’m not eating much meat, which is a good thing, and come the cooler months – when there’s little fruit and less leafy greens in the garden, it may mean I have to source things from much further afield.

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Comments (19)

   
21 Aug 2010 09:26 AEST
From Glengarry
The bacon and potatoes recipe with beans on the side is making my mouth water. I also think you're being hard on yourself. It's ok not to grow everything. Oliver (the man trying to buy your pigs, who is also my Other Half) now grows plenty of veg for us, we've got eggs too and will be branching out into Barnefelders soon. And then there's the pigs although it'll be a while before we're eating our own bacon, and the prosciutto - shows like your s have a lot to answer for...

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06 May 2010 06:24 AEST
lsl
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10 Mar 2010 10:46 AEST
alyson
When it comes to killing animals you will always have bad feedback. Stick to your guns home kill done right is always better than the meat off foam trays from supermarkets. Your living my dream so enjoy it for me.

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06 Mar 2010 01:20 AEST
Anne
mmm - those ten hour bacon baked beans sound fabulous. Can't find the recipe on the site though - are you able to share it? My 6 year old son would love them particularly topped with poached egg as described! Thanks for great show!

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05 Mar 2010 10:22 AEST
Elisa
From Wamboin, NSW
I agree with George's comment about the kale. I live in the hills near your home town Canberra Matthew and in the middle of winter there is always sweet and tender kale in the garden under the frost. Good for a pasta sauce with pecorino or with poached eggs and shaved local truffles on Silo sourdough. On a different note I can't believe you haven't seen any of the River Cottage series - you even sound a bit like Hugh, especially when you are about the kill and eat something!!

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22 Feb 2010 10:04 AEST
From Malabar
Dear Mathew I have been where you are at the moment on a farm a few acres of land and what the hell do I do with it! You really made me laugh as I really know what you are going through with slaughtering animals but I am a bit disturbed by your killing method with the chooks the way you are doing it is so cruel and not humane at all please distroy it! I f you want to kill any feathered beast get a very very sharpe axe with a heavy head for a start with a wooden chopping block it is over in a

I disagree that the chook killing was cruel. We go from the back of the neck, pushing back feathers to get a clean cut, and so the spinal cord is broken before the windpipe. I’ve now been party to killing chooks with an axe, and the razor sharp knife and cone method is foolproof, quick, and the chook is calm by comparison.

- Matthew Evans

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21 Feb 2010 04:18 AEST
Brad
From Perth
why have a comment title in the form, if it doesn't get shown? my prev post was about ugni or chilean guava

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21 Feb 2010 03:05 AEST
From St. Lucia, Brisbane
I think your 30 minute program is superb. Plenty of variety, conquering life as a farmer, yet still the great cook. It is a shame we cannot experience your products. SBS and you are to be congratulated on a wonderful show.

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21 Feb 2010 09:19 AEST
John Huckerby
From PETCHEYS BAY
Attention: Matthew Evans I live about 15 minutes from your house, at Petcheys Bay, having relocated from Sydney in July, 2008. We thoroughly enjoy your Gourmet Farmer TV show. There is a personality in our area who I feel would be of real interest to you for a future show. If you would like to consider him, and there is no certainty that he would agree to go on the show, just send me an email to john.huckerby@phoenixsearch.com.au and advise how I can contact you to discuss.

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20 Feb 2010 09:47 AEST
Rosemary
From Gippsland
Lorraine's comment is very common among people I know, even well educated people who do realise that meat comes from animals! Vegans take this as a reason we should all stop eating meat, but I take the opposite view - that this is a reason we should be more familiar with the whole food-growing and -raising process. Especially from a younger age (Matthew, if you had grown up on a farm, I don't think you would be quite so squeamish!!) So this show is really filling a gap.

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19 Feb 2010 08:15 AEST
Sue
From Perth
Hello Matthew. I really enjoy your show, but did you know that Manjimup WA 'grows' many more truffles than are found in Tassie, in fact they are exported to Europe as well as a lot of other destinations. Thought you should know that as the comments that Tassie is the only place in Australia where these are produced is very very wrong!! ps I know WA is not really part of Australia according to some Eastern 'wise men' but hey we hear some very funny things about Tasmania!! Only joking, sort of!

Yes, I did know WA grows the lion’s share of Australian truffles and very good they are too. It’s just that I’m based here, and wanted to source local produce. I don’t actually say that Tassie is the only place on the show so I’m sorry you got that impression. They’re now grown near where I grew up in Canberra, near Orange in NSW and in parts of Victoria, too.

- Matthew Evans

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18 Feb 2010 07:47 AEST
lorraine
From lindisfarne
i am sorry i dont like your show there is too much killing of animals I realise we have to eat but personally i do not want to know about it. I live in Tasmania and i think the idea was great but only if you had stuck to the vegetable growing and showing the surroundings and the way of life. sorry leave my husband to it, i stuck out to night till you shot the deer/

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17 Feb 2010 07:52 AEST
diana
From south hobart
Pasta from italy doesn't sound very local Matt! You're a chef, why don't you make your own? if your chooks aren't laying, use local free range eggs.

Geeze, you’re hard on me! I do make my own pasta, quite often. But sometimes I just need to eat and fall in a heap. I could’ve told you I made my own pasta that night, but I didn’t. To be honest, I was surprised, when I worked it out, just how much of my own food I’m eating each week. And I’m not afraid to admit when I don’t. The point is to try, and sometimes fail, rather than not try at all.

- Matthew Evans

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15 Feb 2010 01:29 AEST
Peter Nicholls
From Chinderah
Hi Matthew, Can you please tell me exactly where the farm on last Thurs program is, and it's name. really enjoying your show. Pete ps No I've got no connection with Nicholls Rivulet!

Elgaar farm is not far from Deloraine in the state’s north. The contact details can be found under the ‘producers’ tab near the top of the Gourmet Farmer page.

- Matthew Evans

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14 Feb 2010 07:44 AEST
From Birregurra
Kale unlike some veg is best when big, and better in the middle of winter. Cook it for a long time the flavour develops and the texture is also great when cooked into next week. I use vinaigrette and water cooked till the water evaporates. You are at the beginning of a very exciting journey Matt It gets better and better.

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13 Feb 2010 12:17 AEST
Liz
From Bairnsdale, Vic
Sure you are not being too hard on yourself saying you have failed. I have been growing food for the family for a long time and still haven't managed to achieve full self-suffiency. This last year in particular has been dreadful with almost no rain. It has made me wonder just what it must have been like for our forbears when the seasons were bad and they couldn't fall back on supermarkets. You have achieved - and learnt such a lot in the time you have been on your farm.

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13 Feb 2010 09:38 AEST
Angela
Cooking home grown is such a buzz! I raided my friend's garden at Hamilton last week and came home with garlic, damson plums, cabbage, zucchini and rhubarb and almost 2 litres of home made plum sauce! I made the most delicious plum chutney with the damsons. We have a white nectarine growing in our little back yard and some blackberries peeking over the fence so we also made a huge pot of plum, blackberry and nectarine puree! Delicious!

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12 Feb 2010 02:23 AEST
Brad
I've been trying to get some of these to fruit in Perth (they're still young), but they prefer your climate. They're relatively little known little round berries that grow on plants a bit like box. The taste is described as a mix of different berries (strawberries, cranberries) but sweet and acid - I've seen it described as sherbet bombs. I reckon if you can find them, you'll have fun with it. PS sorry if this comment doesn't suit here, but I can't see a way to email you

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12 Feb 2010 02:23 AEST
Brad
I've been trying to get some of these to fruit in Perth (they're still young), but they prefer your climate. They're relatively little known little round berries that grow on plants a bit like box. The taste is described as a mix of different berries (strawberries, cranberries) but sweet and acid - I've seen it described as sherbet bombs. I reckon if you can find them, you'll have fun with it. PS sorry if this comment doesn't suit here, but I can't see a way to email you

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