Showing posts with label Essendon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essendon. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

New cafe love - Form and Grandpa Joe

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A couple of new cafes for your westside brunching pleasure.  Introducing Form - a gorgeous space that opened in west Essendon last December, barely a stone's throw from the Brunswick border.

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Coffee is by Campos and it is excellent.  The guys behind Form have a connection to Ray's in Brunswick, which by my memory at least was one of Melbourne's first "very Melbourne" cafes (no obvious name, kinda hidden, great coffee, all that good stuff).

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The food is also standout.  The menu has a gentle Scottish lilt, what with "tatties" and a cheese n' onion square.  Somewhat controversially, it's served on paper plates.  Apparently an environmental costing was done and it was more energy efficient/sustainable etc to buy and recycle these than wash plates.

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All plates and food scraps go to the local school or community centre for their garden.  I'm not sure what I think of this - I'm sure it does save water in the long run as they claim but it still feels counter-intuitive to this hippy chick.  Anyway, there wouldn't have been much of this gorgeous, not-too-sweet brioche with ricotta, honey and pistachios to wash up after I was done with it.

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Not far away in Ascot Vale, Grandpa Joe has just opened and it seems this senior cit is a pretty cool customer.

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There's a good range of coffee choices, with a choice of Five Senses or a single origin coming through a shiny silver Synesso, plus aeropress or cold drip filter brews.

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I enjoyed this vegetable piadina, stuffed with goats cheese, rocket and roast veg.

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My friend pronounced his pumpkin and honey soup quite fine - not mindblowing but nice all the same.

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Go have a roam around Union Road when you're done - there's a great greengrocer a few doors down (The Happy Apple) and a proper butcher (Ascot Vale Meat Supply - great rump steaks).  The Brotherhood op shop up on Maribyrnong Road is always good for a rummage.  Last time I was there (a while ago now), they had loads of pseudo-baroque furniture.  Turns out it had come from Tuppence Moran's house!

Form Cafe on Urbanspoon

Grandpa Joe on Urbanspoon

Form Cafe (Facebook)
32 Albion St, Essendon
Phone: 9375 3232

Grandpa Joe (Facebook)
197 Union Road, Ascot Vale
Phone: 9078 0595

Monday, November 1, 2010

A walk through my garden


Isn't spring just the most glorious season?  The first flush of daffodils and cherry blossom heralds a cavalcade of colour from now until late autumn.  Right now all the roses have just burst into bloom and are simply stunning.  I have my favourites all around the neighbourhood - the lilac blooms climbing up the verandah posts of a charming Victorian, as well as a huge apricot rose "tree", an enormous ball of blooms.  Next I have my eye on all the stone fruit trees that artfully overhang fences.  No need to take snacks on a walk when we can gorge ourself on fallen nectarines and peaches, ever so slightly fermented in the summer heat.  Gardening and nature is my twin passion along with food and cooking so I hope you will let me indulge myself and share a little of my second love with you.


This is my favourite rose in my garden - it's an old English style.  I love its soft ruffles and the scent is superb, intensely "rose" with hints of lemon.  Did you know that the rosehip with which you make rosehip tea is actually the fruit of the rose?  Like all fruits, they emerge from the base of the flower after it has died, although many modern cultivars of roses are too tightly petalled to allow the bees access to the stamen at their centre to allow pollination.


Irises!!  I am very attached to my irises.  Their colour is so striking and the ruffles so beautiful.  These grow from a bulb.  I had to stop getting the paper delivered as the delivery driver kept throwing them into the irises and breaking their stems, and I felt like too much of an old biddy to keep ringing up and complaining about "my irises, my irises!"


Rainbow silverbeet.  This is such a wonderful vegetable, both practical and ornamental.  It comes in stems that are cream, yellow, red and lolly pink.  The red ones in particular have such a wonderful contrast between the huge, shiny, fleshy leaves and the red veins underneath.  It grows like a weed and you can continually remove the outer leaves as it grows and it will just keep producing more.  Did you know that silverbeet and beetroot are very closely related - silverbeet has been bred for its leaves while beetroot for its bulbous root?  Next time you buy a beetroot with its leaves still attached, make sure you keep them - you can use them just like spinach.


I am trying my hand this year at garlic as the discrepancy between real, fresh, heritage garlic and cheap Chinese garlic is worlds apart.  I have planted these lettuces in between the garlic - when the lettuces are fully grown, the garlic will be ready to be harvested.  Always choose loose-leafed varieties of lettuce and you will have lettuce for a whole season as you can just keep removing the outside leaves and more will grow.  They are also surprisingly pretty with their leaves in all different shades of green and red, and look gorgeous in a feature pot.


Spuds!  Also the first year for these - two heritage varieties, one blue and one cream.  They are just going nuts.  You simply plant a seed potato that has "chitted" or sprouted from its eyes (if there are multiple sprouts on the same tater, you can cut it in half and plant both pieces to make two separate plants).  I am looking forward to the first baby new potatoes of the season... yum!


I have found that I have good luck with some things while other gardeners have better luck with others.  My tomatoes are always successful.  Here we have some heritage tommies bought from the local primary school's stall at the recent neighbourhood Diwali Festival.  This is a heritage variety called Rouge de Marmande which is good for colder areas.  I have not had much luck with root crops such as carrots, nor parsley which apparently you have to be a witch to grow well.  Explains why my sister's previous parsley patches have been INSANE...


Ah, that great Australian backyard fixture, the lemon tree!  We are never without lemons for hummus, salad dressing, marinades or hot lemon and honey drinks for sore throats.  Did you know you can use lemon leaves to impart a citrus flavour, just as you would use lemongrass and kaffir lime leaves?  You can't eat them but you can just tear them and throw them in the oil before making a curry a la whole bruised sticks of lemongrass.


By far my favourite place to shop for all things garden is Poyntons in Essendon.  It perches high above the Maribyrnong River and is such a delightful place full of every plant you could ever desire.  The staff are extremely knowledgeable and everything I have bought from here has been top quality and worth the higher price tag than, say, Bunnings.


There's a cafe here which has a (somewhat pricey) menu as well as a case of enormous cakes.  The coffee wasn't very good at all, having that disembodied froth that half-dissipates upon stirring.  But then again, you know me and my coffee.


There is an awesome kids' playground here that is open to everyone yet totally secure.  Love it!!  And love husbands that watch the kids while I can browse.  Poyntons is on a hillside and has multiple levels and nooks and crannies of everything from roses, shade-loving plants, groundcovers, natives, succulents, indoor plants, vegies and herbs...


This variety of mint smelled just like after-dinner mints, rich and chocolatey.  Gorgeous!  It would be lovely infused in home-made icecream or pannacotta.  Be careful when planting mint - it's better in a pot or it will take over your whole garden bed.  Or plant the pot in the ground which will prevent it from spreading yet give it the "look" of being in the garden bed.

Thanks for coming on this walk through the garden with me.  Enjoy spring and all the beautiful rain we are having!

Cnr Vida St and the Boulevard, Essendon (map)
Phone:  9337 8111
Hours:  Monday - Friday 8 am - 5.30 pm, Sunday 9 am - 5.30 pm (cafe shuts 30 minutes earlier)

Wheelchair Accessibility
Entry:  Open access from street.  Steep, meandering paths to cafe at the top which has a level entry and an automatic door.
Layout:  Spacious with plenty of room around tables, both indoor and outdoor.
Bathroom:  Not viewed.
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