The Durvillea Diary – Cookies, oh my!

 
 
We Durvillea Girls love. to. bake.
 
Yesterday (Labour Day) was my friend Tim’s 28th birthday. Tim has quite the sweet tooth - so I decided to bake him some world-famous-in-my-family cookies. My mother discovered this recipe several years ago in Bill Granger’s ‘Sydney Food’ cookbook. I highly recommend this recipe to anyone — my friends love me a lot when I make them.
 
 
Please enjoy my ‘Wicked’ notebook…
 
Pre-heat your oven to 180 degrees celcius.
 
Now, being the young independent woman that I now am, starting up my new kitchen, I have yet to purchase an electric beater. So yes, mam - I did it like they did before electricity came about… I creamed that unsalted butter and brown sugar with a wooden spoon! It wasn’t actually too difficult, just make sure your butter is nice and softened first (NB you don’t want to melt your butter at all, as you’ll think you have a nice creamy texture, but then butter will come back up to room temperature and it will be no more).  
 

Creamed them the old school way...

 
 Also starting up my new pantry, I found myself without any vanilla extract! However, luckily I have such well decked-out friendly neighbours… this vanilla bean paste is pure luxury. However, I used about half the quantity of vanilla required as this is more concentrated.  
 

Mmm vanilla - borrowed from friendly neighbour J.T.

I even said “Hi-diddly-ho, Neighbour!” 

After adding the vanilla, I mixed in a lightly beaten Astrolabe Farm fresh egg.

 

Free-range, organic, of course!

 
When you add eggs to creamed butter and sugar, don’t fret if it looks like it is curdling!  Once you add your dry ingredients, it will come right.
 

Adding the lightly beaten egg

 

All whipped, light and fluffy!

 
Now you’re ready to fold in your dry ingredients – at this stage I like to ditch the wooden spoon for a good spatula. 
 
I usually use Swiss Chocolate with this recipe when I’m being a little bit fancy, however, this time I used some good old Cadbury milk chocolate buttons (as this is what I had in my cupboard). I do prefer to use bigger pieces/chunks than chocolate chips.
 

Classic kiwiana Edmonds

 
I start folding in the 1 & 1/2 cups of  chocolate pieces when the dry ingredients are about 3/4 combined, so that way you are working the mixture a bit less.
 

Important not to over-mix

 
At this point, you can also spoon the mixture into glad-wrap or grease-proof paper and create little logs that you can freeze, slice and bake at a moment’s notice! 
 

Working their magic

 
They are best placed in the centre of your oven. I like to take them out when that are starting to get quite toasty brown around the perimeter. I like a bit of crunch – but they should still be soft in the middle. (FYI I would usually line my baking tray with grease-proof paper, however I didn’t have any, so I greased my tray with a little bit of melted butter, just in case!).
   
Baked and ready for cooling

Now, they may not be the neatest looking little cookies – more on the rustic side – but holy moly they are tasty.  

I know what you’re thinking — is that cookie going to fit in that jar? It did.
 
 I even dressed them with a bow.
 
P.S. Hannah (Jules Taylor employee and also Tim’s other-half) made him a pretty epic Bart Simpson birthday cake. I am going to try and secure a photo of it from her, and put it up on our facebook page this week (if she lets me)! 
 
-Genevieve
 
 

The Durvillea Diary – October 13th – “Gimme my Cardonnay”

 

Everyone knows Chardonnay is making a come-back.

Durvillea is eager to annouce that in addition to our Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio and Pinot Noir, our 2011 vintage will also include our new Durvillea Marlborough Chardonnay!

We are thrilled that the 2011 Chardonnay will complete our list of classic varietals in the Durvillea range.

Not on shelves yet, but due for release in early 2012. Get excited!

…Oh, and … “it’s pronounced Chardonnay, Kim.”

 

-Genevieve

The Durvillea Diary – October 12th – Astrolabe Reef

Jason being interviewed for 3 News

 You may have recently heard (or seen on 3 News NZ) about our parent label – Astrolabe – having 3 shipping containers of our wine aboard the “Rena” stranded on the Astrolabe Reef off Tauranga, New Zealand.

As a winery, we live off nature and the land. At Durvillea, we are interested in working towards a more sustainable wine industry. The cartons are made from 100% recycled fibre, the bottle is lighter in weight, and the grapes are sourced from sustainable vineyards. With luck, the environmental impact of losing wine at sea should be negligible; the glass should return back to sand, the wine will dilute. The impact of some of the other cargo on board and the oil leaking from the ship, however, is of real concern. The Durvillea/Astrolabe team is saddened by the damage being caused to our ocean, sealife and shoreline by this ship, and we can only hope the situation does not get worse.

-The Durvillea/Astrolabe Team.

Have Yourself a Merry Little (Midwinter) Christmas

Let your heart be light: Everyone has their traditions – something they eagerly anticipate each year. Today, I would like to share with you mine.

For the past five years, my friends and I have come together once a year to make merry Midwinter Christmas. For those of you in the Northern Hemisphere, Midwinter is a little somethin’ a few of us down below partake in to observe Christmas in all its wintry, frosted glory… with pinecones roasting atop the fire, mulled cider, festively decorated interiors – as so many Christmas songs, stories and traditions are lost on us in our December summer. So, the exact date is not hugely important - what is, however, is spending an overtly festive day together, accompanied by merriment and turkey.

Christmas decorations come up, Judy and Chris Martin blare ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (one after the other, of course)… there is cocktail attire, fairy lights, cranberry-laiden wreaths… there has even been “Pin the Tail on Rudolph”.

This year’s menu included: an organic free-range Turkey (Boris Junior – brined to ensure maximum tenderness and flavour… this is a must) roasted with a pork + cranberry + pinenut stuffing and orange + sage butter, maple-syrup roasted golden kumara + giant yams, potatoes + parsnips par-bolied + then roasted with garlic in duck-fat, blanched brussel sprouts sauteed lightly with lardons and celery heart leaves, and finally little sausages wrapped in bacon.

Dessert consisted of vanilla panna cottas served with citrus-poached tamarillos and sugar-toasted pistachios.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sous chef: This Guy (a Durvillea-aproned Michael).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We had a special champagne toast to our Durvillea Girl Libby to celebrate her engagement to her fiance (I love calling him that!) Peter. My speech was one for the books…

 

I look forward to Midwinter Christmas every year, probably more so than anything else. Sitting down to dinner with my favourite people, it really is magical… oh no, I don’t want to get all Love Actually on you. So, I hope you all enjoy the photos – because, we really did have ourselves a Merry Little Midwinter Christmas.

Hmmm, maybe I will get all Love Actually … so, to finish:

Particularly enjoy the incredible crassness of this moment when I try to squeeze three extra syllables into the fourth line…

… now if you really love Midwinter Christmas, come on and let it snow.

*Dishes inspired by Chirstmas recipes from (of course) Jamie Oliver, Gordon Ramsey, Nigella Lawson etc. etc.