Easy Chocolate Cake

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The world’s cookbooks (and the internet) are awash with recipes for complicated cakes that look stunning and will take a good couple of hours to put together.

Those cakes are fantastic for events where you might want to showcase some baking talent but they won’t do if you want a slice of cake to take for lunch, or if you need to whip up a cake quickly without a trip to the supermarket.

This cake fills that slot perfectly.  It’s quick and if you cook or bake regularly you should have the ingredients to hand.  The recipe comes from a friend of my grandmother and this was the first cake I ever made ‘on my own’.   It is my contribution to this month’s Family Recipes hosted by the Life and Loves of Grumpy’s Honeybunch.

I always bake the cake in a kugelhopf tin but I’m sure a 20cm springform tin would do just as well.

Preheat the oven to 180C bake and grease your tin well.

Cream 50g of butter and 1 cup of caster sugar.  When well combined, add 2 eggs and beat well.  Then add 1 1/2 cups of self raising flour and 2 tbsp of cocoa.  The mixture will be quite stiff.  Mix 1/2 tsp of baking powder (or bicarb) with 1/2 cup of milk and add to the batter.  Beat until combined and finish by beating in 2 tbsp of boiling water.

Pour into your cake tin and bake for about half an hour – the cake should be well risen and a skewer should come out clean.

Leave the cake to cool in the tin for 5 or so minutes before tipping out on a rack.  When the cake is completely cool ice with your favourite icing or just dust with icing sugar.

If you’re lazy (like me!) and use a food processor like a Magimix the whole process, including the cleaning up, will take under an hour.  To me, that is the perfect emergency cake!

Spicy Pork Salad

Larp moo

This is my interpretation of the Thai dish, larp (or larb, or laab) moo.  Larps are minced meat salads, often fearsomely spicy and one of my favourite things to eat.  They are very easy to cook and they are fantastic in summer, as they offer something more substantial to eat than a salad but they are not heavy or stodgy.

I originally came across this ‘recipe’ in a local free newspaper.  The scrap of paper has long since disappeared and the dish is now produced by gut feeling alone.  My dad swears that a mixture of pork and turkey minces (50-50) is essential, but I quite like 100% pork.  Chicken also works well.  But, as with so much of this dish, you should choose what you fancy …

Begin by finely chopping a large onion (use a red onion if you prefer a milder flavour) and placing it in your serving bowl.

Heat some oil in a wok and fry your mince:  add the mince to the oil in small batches so you can make sure it’s cooked thoroughly and break up any clumps easily.  As the mince is cooking, add finely chopped garlic (to taste – to 500g of pork mince I use about 3-4 cloves of garlic), finely chopped ginger (about a thumb sized piece).

Once you’ve got all the pork in the wok and cooking is well underway, add chilli flakes to taste (for a mild, building heat I find that a generous teaspoon does the trick), finely sliced lemongrass (about a tablespoon, maybe a little more) and finish with a good splash of fish sauce.  If you had kaffir lime leaves to hand they would, finely sliced, make an excellent addition.  Taste the mixture – you may find you need to add some salt … or some more chilli!

Tip the hot pork on to to the onion and stir well.  When you’re ready to eat, mix through a ton of finely chopped fresh coriander.  Again, here you might like to use some combination of coriander, basil or even some mint.

This should all take about the time it takes to cook some rice – so the timing works out nicely.

Serve the larp with plain rice and perhaps some salad:  a little cucumber and lettuce offsets the spiciness well.

<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/azp74/4127922366/” title=”Larp moo by azp74, on Flickr”><img src=”http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2778/4127922366_5f4ba7e769_m.jpg” width=”240″ height=”180″ alt=”Larp moo” /></a>

Mantra

 

MANTRA HAS CLOSED. THE SAME BUILDING IS NOW FARAJA

date of visit:  Saturday 14 November 2009

As 12 of us sat down to dinner at Mantra on Saturday evening, our host (the birthday boy) turned to me and said “so, will I read about this on Eating Adelaide?”.

This is a tricky question.  Someone else has chosen the restaurant and organised the evening.  If the dinner is chaos and I write about it, how does that person feel – particularly if they don’t share my point of view?  If I only write about places I enjoy, then my silence on others speaks volumes.  So, as a rule, I don’t write about venues that have been a part of a group outing.

And then, occasionally, I do.

Mantra is at the Goodwood end of King William Road – away from the stretch full of bars and restaurants and situated on a corner which is almost suburban.  The exterior is dominated by a huge door (which, rather spookily, swung open, as if by magic, when we approached) and the restaurant shares its space with a large bar as well as sofas and a coffee table.  For larger groups, there’s a comfortable space (not quite a private dining room) at the rear – which is where we were seated.

The food at Mantra was good (and I will expand on that) but the truly remarkable thing was the considerate nature of the service.  Our reservation was for 7, yet the party was not complete before half 7:  not a murmur.  Andy had left his cigarette lighter at home and one was found for him without hesitation.  There were some complicated food orders that were accommodated.  We wanted a side door unlocked so a pram could be ushered into and out of the restaurant when a (generally well behaved) six month old baby had a grizzle.  I suspect we were the type of party that, were we not unfailingly polite (!), give staff a headache.

While terrible service is enough to put me off returning to a venue, good service alone won’t guarantee that I’ll be back.   So, what was the food like?  Well, there was no garlic bread for the guest of honour, but we started with some good bread and olive oil and followed that with a selection of entrées. At Mantra, entrées are done tapas style so we ordered 10 plates between the 12 of us. Hummous crusted liver excited comment (the most excited from those who hadn’t realised it was liver), the carpaccio was excellent, I missed out on trying the scallops with Spanish blood pudding and the mussels, the sardines stuffed with feta and wrapped in prosciutto were lovely, and we also enjoyed crab cakes, chipolatas, something involving beetroot and goat’s cheese …

With a large group I could really only focus on my own main course, which was veal with sweetbreads (ooooh, one of my favourite things) served with a saffron, deep fried gnocchi. The gnocchi were odd – not in a bad way as they were tasty, but not what you’d expect from gnocchi, and both Andy and I found the sauce a little salty, and I thought my sweetbreads a little over cooked but … it was a lovely dish. The veal was perfect, the portion the right size … I also had a taste of someone else’s duck which was just as good.

No one was hungry enough to order dessert although a few of us wrapped up with coffees. With a small tip it worked out at $60 a head. This covered generous shared entrées and mains, beers and a couple of bottles of wine. That’s probably not the cheapest night out and I’m sure Andy and I could spend more money there if we tried.

And, do you know what? I’m pretty confident we will. I rate a restaurant where the food is good, where casual doesn’t mean sloppy, where offal appears on the menu and where the menu on the website is representative, rather than the week in, week out, fixed in stone offering.

Mantra on King William on Urbanspoon

Confident, delicious Modern Australian

Rating:4.0 stars