Tuesday, September 06, 2022

Air New Zealand, NZ 104, SYD-AKL, Business Premier (February 2018, July 2018, February 2019, March 2019, October 2019 Flights)

In 2018-2020, I traveled frequently to Sydney for business (yay!), and as such, I've flown the exact route many times.  This review covers my 2018 trips in February and July, my 2019 trips (February, March, October), and, my return finally in August 2022.

NZ 104, August 2022

Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled) 12:23pm (actual)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: 787-900
  • Seat: 2A
I've reviewed this route and flight many times (below), so I'll leave off all the generic details.  Same seat, reasonable flight crew, etc.  Our departure was a bit late due to delayed boarding due to some kind of catering issue.
Menu.
The menu was the same format as always: choice of two starters, three mains, two desserts (or cheese).  If you are vegetarian, you must pre-order as the mains do not include a generic pasta option like most airlines.

To Begin

  • Manuka smoked free range chicken, freekah, and cranberry tabouli, walnut aioli.
  • Marinated bocconcini with cherry tomato salsa and capers
From the Bakery
  • Turkish loaf, ancient grain rolls, garlic bread offered with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
Mains
  • Balsamic braised lamb with cannellini beans, carrots thyme and orange, black olive dressing.
  • Pan fried snapper with lemon butter, New Zealand asparagus and new potato with pesto, rocket.
  • Roasted chicken breast with smoked tomato sauce, rosemary fried potatoes, spinach.
To Finish
  • Vanilla bean ice cream with coconut brittle crumble, and blackberry compote.
  • Caramel panna cotta with sesame crumble, macerated strawberries.
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and cracker selection.
I usually love the starters on Air New Zealand flights, usually featuring smoked fish, but this time, they had smoked chicken, and the other was just mozzarella cheese.  Meh.  Starters as always were served from the cart once underway, along with the bread basket.

My choice of main was easy though, as I hate both lamb and chicken, and do like seafood.  Snapper, it was.  Orders for mains were taken before we took off.

The dessert though ... now this was hard.  I generally really quite enjoy their ice cream, a brand that is quite good, and usually an interesting flavor.  However, just plain vanilla?  It did have great sounding toppings though, so I was still excited for it.  But ... the other option, panna cotta!  I love a good panna cotta (hence the label on my blog for it!), and I loved the sound of the toppings on this too.  I hoped they'd let me have both (which, they did, and even proactively suggested I do when I said I loved both panna cotta and ice cream).

I wish I could say it was a good meal, but, it really wasn't.
Pinot Noir, Cashews.
Orders for our first drink were taken before we took off, and I opted for the pinot noir, along with sparkling water.  I was happy they gave me a full bottle of sparkling water on the side so I could refill as needed.

The pinot noir was good, likely the same I had on my previous flight.  Perhaps a bit grapey, but not much acid or tannin.  I enjoyed a little with my meal, but given that it was lunchtime, I wasn't going to drink much - I had a long day ahead of me still, with a 3 hour layover, and then looong flight over to the US.

Drinks came with a small dish of warm cashews.  Just cashews, but, points for being warm.
To Begin: Chicken.
"Manuka smoked free range chicken, freekah, and cranberry tabouli, walnut aioli."

I still planned to get the bocconcini with cherry tomato salsa and capers, as I really don't like chicken at all, but, it really looked quite sad ... just a few balls of cheese with a tiny, tiny, tiny bit of salsa on the plate.  I was glad starters are served from the cart, and she actually just showed me both before asking what I'd like.  And thus, the chicken it was.  I selected it really just so I could perhaps enjoy the tabouli/freekah with my first, and try the aioli.  I had no intension of eating the chicken, just the rest of it.

The freekah tabouli was not good.  Very dry, grains I didn't really care for, and meh, dried cranberries.  The walnut aioli was actually quite tasty, and I used it with my fish.  There was also a red condiment, perhaps red pepper spread?  It was fine.  And I didn't try the chicken.

I really wished they had some kind of salad option, particularly as it was lunch time, and I generally eat big salads at lunch, and this was just very lackluster. *.
Main: Snapper.
"Pan fried snapper with lemon butter, New Zealand asparagus and new potato with pesto, rocket."

Mains were delivered one by one later, starting with all the fish, then all the lamb, and then all chicken.  It was not quite as described, as, well, there was no asparagus anywhere in this dish.  It was delivered piping hot, like, crazy hot.  I had to wait to eat it for it to cool down.

The potatoes were soft, not something I really ever want.  The pesto was quite light, but a nice flavor.  **.

The snapper was a very sizable portion, really quite a thick filet.  It was ... fine?  Not fishy, but, didn't quite taste like anything itself really.  It is hard to say if it was dry or moist, as it was smothered in the sauce, which I guess was the lemon butter.  It was a creamy sauce, very rich, although I guess it didn't really seem like cream exactly, so, I guess it was some kind of butter emulsion.  I didn't taste lemon, but what I did taste was salt.  Way, way, way too much salt.  I use a lot of salt with my food, and like aggressive salting, but, this was just far too much.  There was no escaping it.  The very small bit of fish that was not smothered in the sauce I enjoyed with the walnut aioli.  I always like fish and aioli.

And finally, whatever those greens were.  They were bitter.  Complete mush.  Definitely not the asparagus I was expecting.  Normally I can be into bitter greens, particularly with a tasty sauce, and if that lemon butter wasn't so insanely salty, I would have been into that.  But, the mushy meh greens and that awful sauce, just, no good.

So this was pretty much a fail of a meal.  I salvaged a bit of the snapper, with the aioli, and set about digging out a savory scone from my bag, which I was glad I had.  Really though, I wanted some vegetables!

**.
To Finish: Ice Cream.
"Vanilla bean ice cream with coconut brittle crumble, and blackberry compote."

The ice cream was a mixed bag.  The ice cream itself wasn't great - just vanilla, not particularly great vanilla.  And, although served at a decent temperature, lightly melty, it had fairly large ice bits inside it.  Clearly it had not be stored properly.  Sadness.  So, fairly eh ice cream.

Then, the toppings.  The blackberry compote was far too sweet.  Cloying.  Not good.

But the coconut brittle crumble?  Now THAT was delicious.  Crispy, caramelized, crunchy, coconut-y, a big hunk ... I really enjoyed it.

This had the making of a good dessert, such potential with what I know is usually a quality ice cream brand, a fruity topping, and crunchy element, but, improper ice cream storage and unbalanced compote let this down.  That crumble though ... I wanted more!  ****+ crumble, **+ ice cream, * compote.
To Finish: Panna Cotta.
"Caramel panna cotta with sesame crumble, macerated strawberries."

The panna cotta totally made up for the ice cream though.  The texture and consistency were perfect - well set, but not gelatinous.  Very nicely done.  Sweet but not too sweet, light caramel flavor.  Above average, particularly for airline catering.

The macerated strawberries fared much better than the blackberry compote.  Yes, they were sweet, and soft stewed berries, but they were quite flavorful, and I really enjoyed them.  I bet they'd go great on top of shortcake too.  The sesame crumble was also tasty, a different style than the crumble from the ice cream, more of a "soil",  nice sesame flavor.

This dessert was really quite good, every element on its own tasty, and together it ate quite nicely.

****+.

NZ 104, February 2018

Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: 77W
  • Seat: 10K
Service was really friendly, but didn't seem very experienced.

I had an issue with my power outlet (it didn't work), and the staff didn't understand the red light vs normal green light indicators, and kept saying it was because I didn't have an adaptor (?).  It is the same outlet as every other flight I've taken, and every other seat had a green light showing.  This was never resolved.

Next, our meals were served *before* offering drinks.  I've never had that happen before.  How could I want warm bread, when I was parched, before getting a drink?  It was really quite odd.  

And finally, they took meal orders, then didn't honor them.  I know sometimes they run out of certain choices, but this seemed a bit random, and no explanations were given.

Again, they were kind enough, just, not a smooth service.
Lunch.
The flight was nicely timed for lunch, taking off just before noon.  Our meal somehow really did take the entire 2.5 hour flight though, as it was a full hour until our starter was served, 20 more minutes before the main, and agonizingly long before dessert.  Nothing was great.
Wrong Menu.
The FA's also distributed the wrong menus, these had dinner listed, rather than the lunch menu we were actually offered.  Too bad, because dinner had a tasty sounding gnocchi, and we had instead had a salad.

The (correct) menu:

To Begin

  • Tea smoked Marlborough salmon with new potato, tarragon and dill salad with citrus creme fraiche
  • New Zealand smoked venison with roasted beetroot, Fiddler's Hill goat cheese, apple syrup, orange and horseradish cream
From the Bakery
  • Kumara sourdough loaf, flaxseed loaf, oatmeal rolls, garlic bread
Mains
  • North Island snapper with parmesan crusted potatoes, green beans, crispy buckwheat and salsa rossa
  • Dijon mustard baked chicken breast with pumpkin, lentils, Swiss chard and lemon tarragon jus
  • Garlic roasted beef sirloin salad with rocket, red peppers, kumara, cherry tomatoes and red onion caper dressing
To Finish
  • Gourmet blackcurrant and blackberry ice cream with passion fruit sauce and crushed meringue
  • Mocha panna cotta with cherry compote
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and cracker selection
Our orders for the main were taken before we took off, although our selections were basically ignored.

I actually strongly considered skipping the meal, as I was truly not hungry in any way, after my final breakfast at the Sheraton on the Park Executive Lounge (waffle day!), and after eating second breakfast in the Air New Zealand Lounge at the Sydney Airport (seriously, soooo good).  I wasn't hungry, and Air New Zealand in-flight food doesn't generally impress.  I think I ordered mostly out of boredom.

In retrospect, I really should plan to just skip this meal, have dessert only, unless I really, really want it, particularly as the flight is just 2.5 hours, and I have lounge access in Aukland right after, with another full meal, and then 2 more meals on the next leg ...

I do appreciate the focus on the New Zealand products though they clearly have a lot of country pride.
Sauvignon Blanc.
Once offered, I opted for a small amount of sauvignon blanc, since I was in the mood for white wine and had tried the chardonnay previously (and the riesling was a sweet dessert wine).

It was fine, fairly fruity and quite sweet though.
Starter: Smoked Salmon.
"Tea smoked Marlborough salmon with new potato, tarragon and dill salad with citrus creme fraiche."

Starters were offered from a cart, and I appreciated that they actually showed us visually each of them before serving.  That said, there was no way I wanted the other option since it had goat cheese and beets.

The dish looked decent, but was ... meh.  If I was hungry, sure, I'd eat it, but, it wasn't particularly good.

The base was a dense hearty bread thing.  Looking around, no one ate this.  It wasn't listed on the menu.  On top was the smoked salmon, it had a nice smoky flavor, but was very oily, in a way that coated your lips and stuck with you.  Not that appealing.  Interestingly, my next flight had very similar looking salmon, but it was much, much tastier.  Different caterer?

The potato salad didn't really deliver in any way.  There were visible herbs, but you couldn't taste them.  I didn't taste the citrus creme fraiche either, there was some small amount of cream though.  The potatoes were cooked fine.

Overall, very meh, not worth eating.

The bread basket was presented along with the starters, which I skipped.
Main: Beef.
"Garlic roasted beef sirloin salad with rocket, red peppers, kumara, cherry tomatoes and red onion caper dressing."

As I said, our main orders were taken before we took off.  And yet, a while after the starters were cleared, we were each approached asking if we'd like a hot meal.  I was confused, thinking they must have ran out of the salad I ordered, until I realized they were asking ... everyone.  Even those who had picked the hot meal.  The woman in front of me ordered the chicken in advance, only to find that they had given it all away by the time they reached her.

Like I said, service was very odd.

I picked the salad because I really didn't want a meal anyway, and this seemed like the light option, plus, some vegetables never hurt (and also, meh to chicken and when is fish ever good on a flight?)

It was truly awful.

The beef was crazy chewy.  I had to quickly move it aside to try to uncover the rest of the salad.  I guess points for a generous protein serving?

The cream on top was really tasty though, I think horseradish?  I tasted some zing. It wasn't listed on the menu, but, horseradish cream was included with the venison starter, so, likely that is what it was here too?
"Salad": Under the beef.
Tomatoes should never be refrigerated, and particularly not sliced and refrigerated.  So mushy.  There were a ton of different colors and sizes of sweet potato chunk, some orange, some yellow, some white, and they were all cooked quite differently, some very very mushy.  None great.  I had one piece of red pepper, it was actually decent, marinated and flavorful.  The arugula was more bitter than normal.  "Red onion caper dressing" ... it was just oily.

So, yeah, this was really not good.

Feeling like I should eat something savory though before moving on to dessert (although, really, why?  I had plenty of food in the lounge ... ) I pulled out my savory muffin and scone I snagged from the lounge.  I know you aren't *supposed* to do this, but, I was hedging my bets, and I'm glad I did.  Plus, otherwise, I would have just eaten it in the lounge.  I loved both of them.  Best. Move. Ever.

So, note to self; seriously, skip the meal on this flight.  Get a savory scone and muffin in the lounge to bring on board.  Have a lighter hotel breakfast.  Go nuts on the yogurts in the lounge.  Success!
Dessert.
"Mocha panna cotta with cherry compote."

Desserts have never been great on Air New Zealand flights.  The signature thing is ice cream, but I often find it icy.  I wasn't excited about the blackberry flavor.  Nor the passion fruit sauce or crushed meringue.  Plus, since it was daytime, I could pick the mocha based panna cotta.  You know how much I love panna cotta!

Desserts were offered once our meals were cleared away, which took a very long time, like, everything on this flight.  Also, continuing the super strange service, the FA approached each person and asked, "Would you like ice cream?".  He didn't ask if you wanted dessert.  He didn't offer the cheese platter nor the panna cotta.  "Oh, do you not have the panna cotta?", I enquired.  "We do", he said.  Wat?  And then continued to offer everyone else only ice cream.  One of my neighbors got the ice cream, but then saw I had a chocolate dessert, and wondered how I did that.

I'll just get this over with.  A panna cotta this was not.  Mocha it was not.  But it wasn't awful.

It wasn't fluffy like a mousse, so I guess in that way it was a panna cotta, but besides that, it didn't resemble a panna cotta.  It was very dense and thick, didn't jiggle at all.  And, like I said, not mocha.  I tasted zero coffee element.

But it was a very rich creamy chocolate dessert.  That isn't a bad thing.
Dessert, Upgraded.
It came with just the cherry compote on the side though.  This was fine, but also very sweet.  I wanted something to cut the richness.

So, uh, I added my own whipped cream.  You can pretend to be surprised that I had whipped cream with me, but, really, you aren't right?  Of course I put whipped cream in my mug in the lounge, to go with my dessert.  I plan ahead!  (Ok, yes, I'm a bit crazy, I realize this).  But you know what?  It made me enjoy the dessert.

Rich, thick, creamy, intensely chocolate pudding with whipped cream?  I was satisfied.
Decaf Coffee & Chocolate.
I also opted for decaf coffee to go with my dessert, as I like to do.  It was instant, and not great, but, it did the job.  It came with a Whitaker's milk chocolate on the side too.  Score.

NZ 104, July 2018


Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled), 12:30pm (actual)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: Boeing 787-9
  • Seat: 2A
Six months later, I was back on the same flight.  This one was much, much better.
Incredible Starter, Wine, and Ice Cream.
Air New Zealand continues to stun on the meal and wine quality, and some truly amazing flight attendants (super friendly, personable, attentive, and, when I asked for a little blanket, also offered to increase the cabin temperature, gave me a full bottle of sparkling without me asking, etc).
Seat 2A.
This seat was the same as all previous Air New Zealand flights I've taken, really not comfortable to sit in, which was unfortunate for a day flight.
Dreamliner Cabin.
But ... the cabin was great!  My first time on their Dreamliner, and the configuration was fantastic, 1-1-1.  I was on the left hand side (2A), which was crazy private, as the middle rows wall faced us.  I'd love this for a sleeping flight.

It also meant the meal service in our aisle was a bit faster, since he FA was serving only one side (although the other row had two servers).  Service was back to front though, making me basically last.
Lunch Menu.
The meal served is lunch service, with a choice of starter (fish or chicken), main (beef, chicken, fish), and dessert (ice cream, cheese, parfait).  Note that if you are vegetarian, you must pre-order, there is no vegetarian starter nor main on the menu.

To Begin:
  • Sweetcorn and thyme tart with beetroot relish, radish, and Fiddler's hill goat's cheese cream. 
  • North Island smoked blue warehou salad, tomatoes, feta, hazelnuts and lemon aioli.
From the Bakery:
  • Traditional sourdough loaf, dark rye loaf, garlic bread, purple grain roll.
  • Served with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
Mains:
  • New Zealand beef fillet, crushed herb potatoes, leeks, green beans, and mushroom cream sauce. 
  • Paprika chicken breast salad with orzo pasta, baby spinach, red peppers, balsamic tomatoes, and Kalamata olive tapanade.
  • New Zealand hapuka with salsa dragoncello, cannellini beans, spinach, and roasted fennel
To Finish:
  • White chocolate and raspberry ice cream with red currant rose sauce, toasted coconut. 
  • Feijoa mascarpone parfait with blackberry and apple sauce, raspberry meringue.
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and cracker selection.
Since I had breakfast #1 at my hotel earlier in the morning, breakfast #2 in the incredible Sydney Air New Zealand lounge, and had a stash of goodies from the lounge with me, I opted to skip the main.  Eh to all of them anyway.

But I really did want both starters, and both desserts.  I wished they'd let me have it all.
Starter & Beverage Cart.
Meal service did not begin in the standard way with a drink and nuts, instead, it started right away with the cart coming through the aisle with just waters (at least they had sparkling!) and wine, plus our starters and bakery.  If you wanted a different beverage, you could order it.  The lady in front of me ordered a gin & tonic, and our FA was funny, he called over to the other, "Oh, bartender, a G&T please!"

I liked the extra casual and fun feel of the crew.
Sauvignon Blanc / Sparkling Water.
I opted for a little Sauvignon Blanc, since it was good enough last time.  It turns out, these were actually totally different wines.

It was actually fabulous.  I asked for a small pour, since I had a long day of travel and many wine filled meals ahead, but I could easily consume tons of this.  Not too sweet, not too acidic, just, lovely.
From the Bakery: Purple Grain Roll / Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
"Traditional sourdough loaf, dark rye loaf, garlic bread, purple grain roll served with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil."

I don't normally get the bread, but, people have been raving about it, and I remember liking both the purple grain roll and dark rye before.  

So, I opted for the dark rye "from the carb department", from my FA.  Like I said, fun touches.  He was awesome.

It was fine, a hearty warm roll.
To Begin: Smoked Blue Warehou Salad.
"North Island smoked blue warehou salad, tomatoes, feta, hazelnuts and lemon aioli."

I eventually settled on the blue warehou salad, but it was a hard choice.  The corn tart did have a pastry crust, not a hard one, so that sounded awesome too, but, I was worried about the goat cheese.

My choice was an excellent one.  I really truly loved this dish.  Air New Zealand does some fabulous smoked seafood.

The fish was mild white fish, beautifully smoky.  I loved how smoky it was.  Great flavor, great texture, decent sized serve.  Wonderful.

The tomatoes, halves of cherry tomato, were even good.  I did *NOT* expect that at all, since refrigerated tomatoes are usually awful, but, these somehow were flavorful and juicy.  I loved them too, particularly as they were slathered in aioli.

The aioli was creamy, plentiful, and a key aspect of the dish (you know me and mayo sauces!), although I didn't taste the lemon.

The feta was an interesting component, feta and smoked fish?  It seemed odd, but actually, it worked.  A soft texture to pair with the firm fish, and very mild feta.  I enjoyed it.

And lastly, hazelnuts.  They added crunch and another fun texture.  I liked them too.

I liked everything about this "salad".  Great ingredients, nice flavors, contrasting textures.  Highly recommended.

When I told my FA how much I enjoyed it, he offered me another, which I declined.
To Finish: Feijoa Mascarpone Parfait.
"Feijoa mascarpone parfait with blackberry and apple sauce, raspberry meringue."

I actually did ask for both desserts, but was told there was an ice cream shortage, so, the parfait it was.  I wasn't quite sure what to expect.

The answer ... not what I was expecting.  Certainly, not what I think of as a "parfait" - I expected something in a cup, layered, and not with a cake base?  And ... that tasted like mascarpone?  And, uh, had meringue?

This had a soggy plain cake base, and then mostly was just a (beautiful looking) flavorless thick panna cotta like thing.  It really tasted like nothing.  Certainly not like mascarpone.  The texture was firm, obviously, as you can see from the plating.  I did not find anything redeeming about it.

The sauce at the base was a bit of blackberry/apple jam, both things I don't care that much for.  It was sweet, and did taste like blackberry and apple, and had nice texture, but, eh.  

The raspberry meringue was missing.

This was a very sad dessert.  I sat there, hoping they'd have leftover ice cream.  To every person who said "yes" to ice cream, I had a sad moment.  To every one who said "ooh cheese!", I rejoiced.
Decaf Coffee.
I was cold and kinda grumpy, so I asked for decaf coffee to drink alongside all my companions who were drinking lovely smelling coffee and eating ice cream.  I glared at them all.  I really wanted ice cream.

It actually was nice coffee, I don't think it was instant.  It had no funk, and was much better than the lounge coffee, which was made to order by a barista even.  It didn't have strange sediment in the bottom.
To Finish: Ice Cream!
"White chocolate and raspberry ice cream with red currant rose sauce, toasted coconut."

I finally got my ice cream, when I asked the FA running the kitchen, "so, uh, how's that ice cream supply looking?"  She offered me one then.  I believe this is Kapiti brand, from New Zealand.  Air New Zealand always served it topped with a sauce and garnish, this time a red currant rose sauce, and toasted coconut.
"Rich and creamy ice cream blended with white chocolate and a swirl of terrifically tart raspberry coulis." -- Kapiti
The ice cream was REALLY REALLY good.  Because I was so late in service, it was also perfectly melty.

The ice cream was creamy, and not too icy (often a problem on flights).  A lovely sweet flavor, from the white chocolate base.  It had little chunks of white chocolate in it, which gave great texture.  I didn't taste the raspberry, or see it really, but, I didn't care.  This was really fabulous ice cream.  

On top was the very generous serving of red currant rose sauce.  Now that ... was a bit much.  Partially because I didn't really like it (eh, currants).  Very sweet, and well, rose flavored.  Rose is an acquired taste that I don't always embrace.  There was also some shredded coconut, more texture.

Overall, this was absolutely lovely, and I adored it.  So glad I got it.
=======

NZ 104, February 2019


Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: Boeing 
  • Seat: 7K
Another 6 months, another experience on the same flight!
Dining Overview.
My flight was fine, on time, friendly staff, standard Business Premier seat.  I made a new discovery (the port!), which far surpassed the white wines on board, and had a fabulous dessert.
Lunch Menu.
The meal served is lunch service, with a choice of starter (veggie or fish), main (beef, chicken, fish), and dessert (ice cream, cheese, cake).  Note that if you are vegetarian, you must pre-order, there is no vegetarian main on the menu.

To Begin:
  • Beetroot and goat cheese salad with balsamic and beet gel and toasted hazelnut crumble.
  • Smoked salmon with tomato gazpacho jelly, cucumber, herb creme fraiche, and Kalamata olive tapenade.
From the Bakery:
  • Spelt sourdough loaf, ancient grain rolls, and garlic bread offered with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
Mains:
  • Braised beef short rib with potato puree, sage buttered carrots and parsnips, creamed Swiss chard, horseradish jus and Marlborough black garlic butter.
  • Pan fried snapper with roasted eggplant and red onion salad, pomegranate molasses, roasted cauliflower, tabbouleh and tahini yogurt dressing.
  • Manuka smoked chicken, black bean and millet salad with red peppers, cumin and fresh corriander, red cabbage slaw, and avocado lime mayonnaise.
To Finish:
  • Fig and manuka honey ice cream with raspberry sauce and ginger biscuit crumble.
  • Flourless dark chocolate cake, vanilla bean mascarpone, and walnut brittle.
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and crackers
Since I had breakfast #1 at my hotel earlier in the morning, breakfast #2 in the incredible Sydney Air New Zealand lounge, and had a stash of goodies from the lounge with me, I opted as last time to skip the main, even though our FA was fairly enthusiastic about the short rib in particular.  This was a new menu, and she was loving that one.  I'll admit the mashed potato puree, sage buttered parsnips, creamed swiss chard, black garlic butter, and horseradish jus did all sound promising, but, I really didn't need this meal, particularly given what lie ahead as well.

The starters though included a smoked salmon item, and sometimes I do adore the smoked salmon, so I opted for that.

And, as often happens, I wanted both desserts!  I adore their ice cream, but flourless chocolate cake with vanilla bean mascarpone and walnut brittle sounded pretty fabulous too.
Hunter's Chardonnay / Sparkling Water / Cashews.
Before takeoff, we ordered our drinks to be served once underway.  They came in a reasonable time frame, served with a little thing of nuts (just cashews, not warm, but always actually pretty good, nicely salted).

I opted for sparkling water as always, and a little wine, since Air New Zealand serves such wonderful wines.  I had the choice of three whites (pinto gris, chardonnay, or sauvignon blanc), and two red wines (pinot noir or a blend).  Since it was pre-noon, I went for white, fairly randomly going for the chardonnay (Hunter's).  I'd get to the reds later in the day.

I asked for a small pour of chardonnay, as I had a long day ahead of me, but, a fairly full glass was presented.  Oh well.  The chardonnay was ok, slightly sweet, slightly buttery, but a bit too acidic for me.  With a long day of flying/lounging/drinking ahead of me, I decided to not finish it.

Since the starters and bakery were served from the cart, with all wines were available on the cart as well, I decided to give something else a try when offered, opting for the sauvignon blanc.

It was a little better, sweeter yet dry, not as acidic.  I finished my small pour, but didn't want more.
To begin: Smoked salmon.
"Smoked salmon with tomato gazpacho jelly, cucumber, herb creme fraiche, and Kalamata olive tapenade."

As always, starters and wine were offered from a cart once underway.  My choice was easy, as I dislike goat cheese, and have really loved their smoked salmon before.

I didn't really care for this.  The salmon was in an oil of sorts, slimy, and fattier than I like.  I wasn't into the salmon itself much at all.  The dill flavor was good though.

The "tomato gazpacho jelly" seemed more like ... carrot mush?  It was an odd flavor and texture, interesting, but not particularly good, and I'm not sure how it was supposed to go with the salmon.  The cubes of cucumber were fine, but not my thing, same with the olive tapanade, standard tapanade, not really my thing.  I'm not really for Mediterranean flavors.  It had way too much herb garnish on top.

I liked the creme fraiche?

Basically, not great, and I was glad I had eaten so heavily in the lounge, and snagged a savory biscuit and scone for the flight.
Tawny Port. 10 year.
To pair with dessert, they offer a tawny port, or Riesling.  I haven't ever tried these before, but, particularly with the rich rich chocolate cake, I decided the port was in order.

It was a nice port, with a rich caramely flavor.  It paired *AMAZINGLY* with the rich chocolate dessert.  Fabulous, really.
To Finish: Flourless Chocolate Cake.
"Flourless dark chocolate cake, vanilla bean mascarpone, and walnut brittle."

Now, I adore the ice cream on Air New Zealand flights.  I'm not really a cake girl.  So why did I get this?  It was kinda pressure from the FA, really.  She kept saying I could have ice cream on the next flight, which was true.  But ... I kinda wanted both desserts on this one (vanilla bean msacarpone! walnut brittle!), and I worried the next flight, the night flight, might have caffeinated ice cream, so I'd miss out on my last chance for Kapiti ice cream.

But I'm glad she encouraged me to get this, even bringing it out for me to "see", which made it pretty hard to send back at that point.

The "cake" was DENSE.  Sooo thick and rich, intense.  Not a brownie, not a cake really, more like a serious block of chocolate.  It was hard to cut with my spoon even!  It had a gritty nature that I actually liked, if that makes any sense.

It was good.  The chocolate was such a deep flavor.  And you know me, of course I loved the sweetened vanilla bean mascarpone, which was necessary to cut the richness and thickness of the "cake".    I wished there was more walnut brittle, I expected to have big chunks of brittle, but instead it was just a little garnish, but it was a great texture and flavor.

I really enjoyed this, far more than I expected, particularly when paired with that port.  A magic bite of the cake, cream, and port was really, truly enjoyable.  If you are a fan of chocolate, or chocolate and port, do this.  The best non-ice cream dessert I've had on an Air New Zealand flight.
To Finish: Ice Cream.
"Fig and manuka honey ice cream with raspberry sauce and ginger biscuit crumble."

But of course, the ice cream!  You know how much I love ice cream, and in particular, I do really like the brand they serve (only on flights out of New Zealand and Australia, not the US), Kapiti, from New Zealand.  Air New Zealand always served it topped with a sauce and garnish, this time raspberry sauce and ginger biscuit crumble.

My FA knew how much I wanted both, and, once she finished all dessert offerings to the others, said it was my lucky day, as she had ice cream left over.  I gladly accepted the offer.
"Roasted fig ripple folded through smooth Manuka honey ice cream. Heavenly." -- Kapiti
I'm glad I tried this, but it was not a favorite.  The texture was perfection, soooo creamy and smooth.  Such high quality ice cream.  And since I was so late in service, it was at absolute perfect serving temperature, melty in all the right ways.  Really fabulous.

But the flavor wasn't a match for me, which is truly just my preferences.  The honey was sweet, and the dominant flavor, and I'm just not one for honey.  Particularly it didn't go well with the chocolate and port combination I had going on.  I think it might be fine with a cup of tea.  The bits of fig also weren't really my thing.  So, not a flavor that matched my preferences, but if you like honey, I think it was lovely ice cream, really.

The raspberry sauce was generously applied, and a bit too fruity for me.  Again, if you like fruity, and you like honey, I'm sure this was great.

The shocker though was the ginger biscuit crumble.  I LOVED it.  I don't like biscuits (e.g. cookies) usually, but it was a rich, buttery shortbread, sweet and crumbly, and I adored it, particularly with some cream from the chocolate tart-cake.

I'm glad I got to try both, but my strong preference was for the chocolate cake (with port!).

NZ 104, March 2019


Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled) 12:30pm (actual)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: Boeing 777-200.
  • Seat: 7K
Yes, literally, a month later.  Same journey.  Like I said, I was traveling a lot!

Delayed takeoff, due to ... a broken printer, so they couldn't physically print our documents.   Sigh.

I also had the worst window seat, the last one, the last served, etc, that I know I don't like, but, it was my only option.

Service was very friendly, polite, and experienced, an older crew, and they treated me well.
Dining Overview.
I had a sneak peak at the menu on my flight to Sydney from Auckland, since they are both printed on the same menu, so I knew what to expect, and I went in with a plan: starter and dessert only, feast in advance!
Lunch Menu.
The meal served is lunch service, with a choice of starter (veggie or duck), main (beef, chicken, lamb), and dessert (ice cream, cheese, cake).  Note that if you are vegetarian, you must pre-order, there is no vegetarian main on the menu.  I was surprised to see no seafood as well, and both lamb and beef on the same menu.

To Begin:
  • Smoked duck with quinoa salad, sour cherries, mizuna, and pumpernickel.
  • Baby leek and thyme tart, fresh goat cheese, caramelised fig relish, and crispy prosciutto.
From the Bakery:
  • Spelt sourdough loaf, ancient grain rolls, and garlic bread offered with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
Mains:
  • New Zealand Lamb Shank with skordalia, roasted butternut squash, broccolini, cucumber, and mint raita dressing.
  • Braised Chicken thigh and breast with lemon grass and spinach coconut sauce, peas, lentils, and crispy shallots.
  • Garlic roasted beef sirloin salad with rocket, red peppers, kumara, cherry tomatoes and red onion caper dressing
To Finish:
  • Vintage strawberries and cream ice cream with freeze dried strawberry meringue and strawberry compote.
  • Coffee and mascarpone tiramisu.
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and crackers
I finally followed my own advice, and just opted for a starter and dessert, given that I had way too many breakfasts already, and it was going to be a very long travel day.

It helped that I truly dislike lamb and chicken, and hated the salad when I had it the year prior (literally, exact same salad), so, skipping the main was no issue.  And I hate goat cheese, and loved the duck previously, so, the duck starter was a given.  The only section that gave me any second thought, as always, was dessert, because really, I wanted both.
Cashews & Chardonnay.
As always, drink orders for drinks served after departure were taken in advance, and served alongside some cold cashews once underway.  Drinks were served quickly, even to me in the back.

The chardonnay was an easy pick for me, since I had enjoyed it previously.  I liked it again, crisp but not too dry, slightly sweet, slightly buttery.

And although plain, and not warm, I liked the cashews too.  They really do have nice nuts on these flights.
To Stark: Smoked Duck.
"Smoked duck with quinoa salad, sour cherries, mizuna, and pumpernickel."

Starters were served from the cart after quite a while.  I was excited for this, given how much I adored the duck starter on a previous flight.

The duck was a good portion, 3 slices.  It was .. fine.  A bit tough, but not too chewy.  Slight smokey flavor.  Fine, but not nearly as memorable as the last time I had the duck.  Boo.

The quinoa I hated, red quinoa, mushy and moist, and cold.  I like crispy quinoa, or I like it when smothered in cream sauce or dressing, but this was really exactly the kind I don't like.  Cold and wet.  Meh.

The mizuna was literally just a single piece, which made me sad, I wanted more greens.

The sour cherries were a generous portion, a classic pairing with duck, and fairly standard quality.

Finally, pumpernickel was just a crumble on top, kinda fascinating, good texture, "chefy".

Overall, this was fine, but unremarkable, and I quickly just pulled out my incredible Calamari Smoked Chicken bun from 85* Cafe (review coming soon!), and enjoyed that instead.
To Finish: Ice Cream & Port.
 "Vintage strawberries and cream ice cream with freeze dried strawberry meringue and strawberry compote."

Strawberry is my last pick of ice cream flavor usually, and I don't like meringue, but, I do love the Kāpiti brand, so I opted for this over the tiramisu, although I did have to think before I made that decision.  Really, I had had cake nearly every day in Sydney (actually, really, every day), and I was pretty sick of it.

I paired it with the port, since I loved that so much before.  Sadly, I didn't care for the port as much as all my previous flights, it was ... less caramelized, more bitter.  I don't think it was a different brand though, so not sure why I didn't like it as much.

Kāpiti Vintage Strawberry & Cream.
"Smooth and creamy, and totally dreamy. An absolute favourite for strawberry lovers everywhere."

The ice cream was, as always, just so rich and creamy.  Kāpiti really is a fantastic brand.  It was strawberry, so not my favorite, but I still finished every bite.  It was served at *perfect* temperature, I was crazy impressed, melty as I like it, but not melted.  Kudos on the timing of this.

The meringue was fine, just crunchy bits, and the stawberry compote was a bit frozen still, but fruity and nice.

I jazzed mine up a little, adding whipped cream and fresh strawberries that I had with me from Mach 2, the garnish for the lackluster cheesecake.  It went much better here, but wasn't actually necessary.

NZ 104, October 2019


Flight Details:
  • Flight: NZ 104, Sydney to Auckland
  • Departure: 11:50am (scheduled) 12:30pm (actual)
  • Class: Business Premier
  • Aircraft: Boeing 777-200.
  • Seat: 6K
Another delayed takeoff, mostly spent just on board hanging out on the side of the runway.  Not sure why.   Sigh.

This time around I was one row up from my last trip, so the second to last row, the second to last served, etc, that I know I don't like, but, it was my only option if I wanted a window.  I opted for K as I'm right handed and the tray table is right handed in the K row.

Service was again very friendly, polite, and experienced, an older crew, and they treated me well.

October 2019 Feast!
I had a sneak peak at the menu on my flight to Sydney from Auckland, since they are both printed on the same menu, so I knew what to expect.  Unless previous trips, my plan was no longer starter and dessert only, as I was actually interested in this menu.

It was full of highlights, one of the better meals I've had from Air New Zealand in a long time.
Lunch Menu.
The meal served is lunch service, with a choice of starter (beef or fish), main (beef, chicken, fish), and dessert (ice cream, cheese, mousse).  Note that if you are vegetarian, you must pre-order, there is no vegetarian main or even starter on the menu.  I was glad to see seafood was back on though, as my previous flight was without for either course.

To Begin:
  • Seared beef tataki with edamame, radish, and green bean salad, sesame seeds, avocado, lime and wasabi puree.
  • Ahia manuka smoked blue moki with pickled beetroot, apple jelly, horseradish creme fraiche, and watercress.
From the Bakery:
  • Spelt sourdough loaf, mini walnut loaves, and garlic bread offered with Hawke's Bay extra virgin olive oil.
Mains:
  • Braised beef cheeks with potato gnocchi, creamy Swiss brown mushrooms, spinach, toasted almond, and rocket pesto.
  • Roasted monkfish with seeded mustard mash, caramelized fennel, tomato salsa rossa, and crispy buckwheat.
  • Lemon and thyme chicken salad with freekeh, green beans, fennel, celery, and edamame, roasted almonds and green goddess dressing.
To Finish:
  • Lemon shortcake ice cream with brown sugar biscuit and passionfruit sauce.
  • Salted caramel mousse with dark chocolate brownie center.
  • Fine New Zealand cheese served with quince paste and crackers
I was actually excited for the starter (yay, their smoked fish can be really good, and the things with it sounded interesting), and for nearly any of the mains - I've had good beef cheeks on Air New Zealand before, and I do like gnocchi, mushrooms, and spinach, so that was quite appealing, but of course, I do love monkfish and mash ... and even a salad seemed like a good idea to start off lighter for my long day of travel.  And for both desserts ... while lemon isn't my dessert flavor of choice, I do love the Kāpiti ice cream, and even the salted caramel mousse sounded good (although their cakes often disappoint).

Luckily, I was able to get my first pick of starter and main, and ... both desserts.  
Charddonay / Sparkling Water / Smoked Almonds.
Drink orders were taken before we took off, and distributed quite soon after takeoff, along with some smoked almonds.

I usually skip the alcohol on this first flight, again, knowing the long day ahead of me, but, I wanted just a touch of something to go with my meal.

Since I wasn't planning to drink much, I took a gamble and tried something new, the Chardonnay.  It was ... fine.  Nothing special.
Bakery: Mini Walnut Loaf.
I never get the "bakery" item, but the aroma of the garlic bread was amazing, and walnut loaves sounded different.

The bread was warm, so 1 point for that, and it did have nice chunks of nuts, but ... it just wasn't fresh bread, and I have no idea what compelled me to get this.

To Begin: Seafood Option.
"Ahia manuka smoked blue moki with pickled beetroot, apple jelly, horseradish creme fraiche, and watercress."

The starter was an easy pick for me, since I do think Air New Zealand does nice smoked seafood.  I was interested to try blue moki, unfamiliar to me.

It was ... meh.

The fish didn't have any real smoky nature to it, it was just, cold white fish.  Not fishy, but just not interesting.

The pickled beetroot was really, really cold, and hard to bite into.  The apple jelly cubes were cute, but had no flavor.  The "horseradish" creme fraiche certainly didn't taste of horseradish.  The watercress was ... a single sprig.

Also on the plate were two slices of watery radish, and ... CHICKPEAS.  Boo, hiss.  They looked crispy, which is the only way I can stand chickpeas, but, they were soggy.

So, yeah.  This wasn't *awful* but it certainly wasn't good. 
Main: Beef.
"Braised beef cheeks with potato gnocchi, creamy Swiss brown mushrooms, spinach, toasted almond, and rocket pesto."

This was actually pretty good.  Well, parts of it.  But great flavors overall, and I enjoyed it.

The beef cheeks were super tender, and nicely fatty.  I'm not really into beef that much, but this was really successful, a much smarter choice from Air New Zealand than standard steak that always disappoints.  It was braised in a really lovely sauce, not sure what it was (red wine based?), but the flavor was great.

On top of the beef cheeks was the pesto, another excellent, flavorful component, generously applied.  I liked how it was slightly chunky.  It wasn't really necessary for the beef cheeks, as they were so flavorful themselves, but, I devoured every last bite of the pesto, combining with other things on my plate.

The gnocchi themselves were the weakest element of the dish.  Just kinda gloopy, and starchy, and just not good at all, really.  I ate more than I wanted because I was enjoying the sauces so much, but, yeah, these were not good.

The sauce on the gnocchi was a creamy mushroom sauce, again, quite flavorful, and I liked the big chunks of mushroom.  I also added pesto to that, which worked great.

The spinach was good, steamed or wilted, and went well with both sauces, and the braising liquid.

Overall, I was quite pleased: good execution of the beef, tasty veggies, and a trio of award winning sauces.
Dessert #1: Ice Cream.
"Lemon shortcake ice cream with brown sugar biscuit and passionfruit sauce."

The first dessert, always a signature offering from Air New Zealand, was the ice cream.  The server even came around saying, "Can I offer you ice cream for dessert?", barely even mentioning the mousse to people, only offering it when they hesitated.

The flavor wasn't one I was particularly keen on (meh, lemon), but I love Kāpiti ice cream and never say no, no matter the flavor.

Kāpiti Lemon Shortcake Ice Cream.
"Sharp lemon curd rippled through a creamy ice cream and speckled with nuggets of shortcake."

"Sharp lemon curd rippled through a creamy ice cream and shortcake chunks to create a texture like no other."

The ice cream was so rich, so creamy, so quality.  Seriously, such high quality ice cream.  I didn't really taste that strong of a lemon flavor, yes, it was lemon, but "sharp" is not how I'd describe it.  Which was just fine, I didn't want strong lemon.  It melted beautifully.  I never really detected the "nuggets of shortcake" either.

The biscuit topping was just a crumble over it, good for a bit of texture, but not much else.

I did not care for the passionfruit sauce, just too sweet, and a strange pairing with lemon.

Overall, I was delighted to have Kāpiti ice cream, and polished this off, but, not my favorite.
Dessert #2: "Mousse".
"Salted caramel mousse with dark chocolate brownie center."

I also had the mousse.  When the flight attendant offered dessert, I said, "they both sound great, which do people seem to like more?", and she was like "we have tons of mousse, I'll just bring you both".  Well, that was easy.

The mousse ... was different.  Like many of the Air New Zealand desserts, I took some offense at the name "mousse", as, well, mousse it really was not.

It was ... such a strange consistency, but not light and fluffy in any way.  More like ... a jelly mold?  It was very sweet, salted caramel flavor came though clearly.
Inside the "Mousse".
Inside was not what I expected at all.  There was a very small bit of generic chocolate brownie (dark chocolate? eh. ), and ... another caramel component, another strange jelly like component, even more intense caramel flavor.
Port.
Yes, I usually skip alcohol entirely on this flight, and somehow decided to get dessert wine too.  Oops.

The port was excellent as always, although I asked for "a splash", knowing my day ahead, and got a *very* generous pour.  It went so very nicely with the desserts though!
Read More...

Monday, September 05, 2022

Happy Lemon

Bubble tea.  Definitely a huge trend, one I even succumbed to, about 10 years ago.  As I said in a post back then of Quickly:

I'm currently obsessed with taro bubble teas, in all variations.  It started a year or so ago with a simple taro milk tea with tapioca from Quickly, and then I upped the ante with a taro milk tea with taro pudding from Quickly, and then sorta forgot about taro teas, after a disappointing one from Out The Door.  But then I had the taro smoothie with tapioca from Miss Saigon, which was a creation entirely of its own, and delicious.  So I went back to standard taro bubble teas, trying a fairly mediocre one from Little Garden, and both hot and cold versions with assorted jellies from Chai Yo.  I crave them all the time now.

Back then, in 2014, taro milk tea/slush/smoothies were novel to me, and basically, I got them everywhere.  Then I stopped getting these kind of sugary dessert-drinks, except a few isolated times like Sharetea or Teaspoon, always because a friend wanted to go.  For some reason, likely because I just don't find the weather in San Francisco that bubble tea inspiring, I rarely get it these days ... in San Francisco (in Sydney, that's another story.  They have excellent bubble tea, and even more excellent yogurt drinks, there, zomg).

Anyway, San Francisco had a rare couple hot days (<3 September!) and, along with plenty of ice cream, I decided to seek out bubble tea drinks again.  My ventures lead me to Happy Lemon, an international chain based in Taiwan, with a few locations around in San Francisco.  I had their goodies a few years ago at a catered event, which I reviewed then, but this was my first time ordering items that I picked out.

Milk Tea

I started with the basics, milk tea.  Happy Lemon makes both green and black tea bases.
Milk Tea (w/ Boba). $6.
The most basic drink at Happy Lemon is their milk tea, made with black tea.  This was the default recipe full sweet, non-dairy creamer.  I'd normally go 50% sweet, or even less, but, I wanted to try their basic, signature drink.

It was pretty standard milk tea - decent tea flavor, creamy.  Sweeter than I'd like, but a nice change.  The boba were nicely chewy, and the quantity was good - sometimes I get sick of it after a while, but this was just right.  I saved a little, and the boba were not too gross after overnight.

Pretty good execution of a basic drink.  ***+.
Jasmine Milk Tea (w/ Boba). $6.
Next up, the same thing, just with jasmine green tea instead of black, slightly less caffeine.  Again default recipe, with boba.

It too was sweet and creamy, and the jasmine tea flavor was nice.  I didn't really notice much difference between the green and black tea to be honest, so again, good execution of a basic drink.  ***+.

Yakults

I'm going to admit it.  I've been to Tokyo several times, and I'm well aware of Yakult, but I've never had it.  Not on its own, and certainly not in a tea shop drink.  If you aren't familiar, Yakult is a Japanese sweetened probiotic milk, I think kinda like a thin yogurt?  Anyway, Happy Lemon has an entire line of Yakult based drinks.  I randomly tried one.
Grapefruit & Yakult. 0% Sweet, 0% Ice. $6.
Add Aloe ($0.75), Fresh Taro ($0.75), Salted Cheese ($1).
It was a strangely hot day in San Francisco, and I was craving something refreshing.  I also wasn't feeling great, and didn't want something very heavy.  So, very out of character, I opted for a drink that wasn't milk (or creamer) based.  Yup, I went for the Grapefruit & Yakult, one of the their best selling items.  I got it without ice so I could split it in half and save half for later, with 0% sweet as I wanted refreshing, not sweet, and I added in aloe so I'd have something to suck up, and taro ... because I couldn't resist (even though after I ordered I realized that it would likely be a strange combination).  And, um, of course I still wanted the salted cheese topping, although I asked for it on the side (again, so I could split it at home and add on as I pleased).

This drink was actually exactly what I was looking for.  It was very refreshing.  It wasn't very sweet, with a nice tartness from the grapefruit (and I suspect, the Yakult).  It had pieces of seemingly fresh grapefruit floating on top.  It certainly needed to be iced down, which I did with no problem.

As for my mix-ins, the aloe was a good pick, it felt healthier than standard jellies, and likely not as sweet either, and again, made it fairly refreshing.  I liked having something to suck up.  The fresh taro, yeah, that didn't really make sense here, it wasn't cubes, but rather, just mashed taro, which was hard to suck up, and not really a complimentary flavor.  Oops.  I mostly let it settle to the bottom and then scooped it out later.

The cheese foam was glorious.  I really do love that stuff.  Slightly savory, slightly sweet, oddly thick but in a way that works well when scooped on top of the drinks ... just, delicious.  I actually decided not to add it to my drink, but I think a lighter, refreshing drink like this, sipped through the cheese foam, would actually be fairly tasty.

Overall, I was quite glad to branch outside my norm, and this drink, besides the taro, was a complete success, and I'd consider it again if I was craving refreshing and healthy.  ***+.

Smoothies

Happy Lemon, like most shops of its kind, has a range of smoothies.  Several contain Yakult, and I almost ordered the Dragon Fruit Yakult Smoothie, but instead, my love of taro couldn't be bypassed.
Taro Milkshake. 25% Sweet. $7.25.
Add Boba. ($0.75).
For my smoothie, I opted for 25% sweet, still wanting some sweetness since I knew Happy Lemon uses real taro and not powder in the drinks, and I added boba, to have something to suck up.

The drink was ok.  It was decently blended, no ice chunks, but, the blended part, and the fresh taro mash, weren't really mixed together all that well, as you can see here.  It had tons, and I mean tons, of fresh mashed taro.  I liked the mashed taro, but, this was kinda more like a blended icee drink and taro mash, just, in a cup together, with some boba on the bottom.

My friend who was with me, looked at it confused, and said, "Wait, I thought taro was purple?"  I explained that it has a purple hue, but is really kinda brownish.  He was still confused, "But what about all the taro milk teas I get? Do they die those purple somehow?"  Alas, I had to burst his vision of taro, and let him know he was drinking powders all those times.  He tried this smoothie, and didn't like it at all.  He wanted sweet bright purple powder, not this.  So, beware, if you are in the powder camp, this drink will not please you.

The boba were fairly average, nice chew, some sweet syrup they were stored in.

Overall, this was a meh for me, but, I give them credit for so much taro. **.
Side: Fresh Taro. $0.75.
I also asked for extra fresh taro, on the side.  I did that thinking the drink might not have all that much taro and I might want to add more in, but, ha, yeah, that wasn't necessary, obviously.  I did like being able to taste the taro on its own.  It was, well, mashed taro, but I quite liked it.  Great smooth texture with some little bits, strong taro flavor, clearly, legit, fresh mashed taro.   I actually used it with dinner the next day, heating it up just like mashed potatoes, and kinda loved it.  ****.

Seasonal Drinks

Every season, Happy Lemon launches a handful of special drinks.  These range from special milk teas, like the "teddy bear" with puff cream and graham crackers (!), to refreshing fruit slushies or green teas, to berry milkshakes in the summer.
Ube Milk Tea w/ Taro Puff Cream & Taro Balls. $7.
0% Sweet, 0% Ice, Soy Milk (+$1).
When I saw the "D6" on the menu ("D" is the milk tea line), I knew I had to get it.  Um, it had two things I love, ube and taro, together, AND it had not just puff cream but *taro* puff cream, AND it had taro balls?  ZOMG, right?

I've wanted to try "puff cream" from a tea shop for years now, but I've never actually done it, and still had only a vague idea of what it would be.  I fully understand cheese foam (or any of its spin-offs), which are toppings on top.  I fully understand puddings that are mixed in like boba.  I think I kinda even understand brulee bits or brulee toppings.  But puff cream?  I still didn't quite get it, but I knew it would be integrated into the drink.  Happy Lemon has regular puff cream, but they also have a taro puff cream, presumably, taro flavored, which this used.

The puff cream, was, well, um, puffs of cream?  Lol.  No wonder I haven't ever really been able to find a good description of it before.  Its hard to describe!  Basically, big pockets (er, puffs) of, well, cream.  Not as light and airy as whipped cream, which would obviously just deflate amongst the weight of the rest of the drink.  But no where near a thick as a pudding.  So hard to describe.  But the puffs were very very rich, being full cream after all.  Fascinating.  And I think I liked them?  That said, I think I'd just go for cheese foam in the future.

The base of the drink was the ube milk tea, black tea based, and I asked for soy milk instead of the regular dairy.  I also did 0% sweet as is my standard.  The tea base was much like I remembered from before, good tea flavor, creamy.  I didn't taste soy in particular, but I'll trust that they used it.  I did hope to taste stronger soy, as I think soy and taro are a great combination.  I suspect the cream from the puff cream just drowned it out?  As for the ube ... um, I didn't taste it at all.  

And then there was the taro balls, fairly standard froyo shop/bubble tea shop likely mass produced taro balls, not freshly made.  Sorta like a slightly firmer mochi / less firm boba, in little balls, vaguely taro flavored.  The fresh taro from the other drinks had a far stronger taro taste.  These were nice to suck up though.

Overall, I'm not sure how I felt about this.  I didn't taste ube, nor the soy milk.  The taro elements weren't particularly compelling either, the puff cream didn't really seem to taste of taro, and the balls weren't fresh taro.  But I enjoyed trying crazy puff cream, and I do like their milk tea base.  I'll put this one solidly in the "sounds better than it tastes" and "I'm glad I tried that, but I won't get it again" camp.  ***.
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Thursday, September 01, 2022

Saga Bakery / Andy Bowdy Cakes

Update Review, August 2022 Visit

When I visit Sydney, there are a few things on my list of "musts".  One of them is always ordering a cake from Andy Bowdy, for a party at my office.  This visit was no different.  As soon as I had my travel dates locked in, I made sure we had an occasion to celebrate, and ordered a big cake, and some bread pudding, for my group.  We expected anywhere between 50-120 people, and thus we ordered plenty (plus, I knew I could take extra if there was any!).   See my previous reviews, and details on the baker below, here.

The cake, as always, was a ridiculous site to behold, and everyone immediately pulled out their cameras to take photos.  If you want a cake that makes an impression, these really are that.  Many people asked where the cake was from, and I was happy to spread the word about this marvelous bakery.
Bread & Butter Pudding (Large).
"Custard soaked brioche, mixed fruit and peel, walnut."

I wanted to get something else besides just the cake, so I could try more marvelous desserts from Andy Bowdy.  One that jumped out, as it was available in large format, was the bread & butter pudding.  I love a good bread pudding.  That said, I like a specific style of bread pudding, with chunks of distinct bread, super moist, but crispy top.  None of that homogeneous bread pudding for me.  I didn't know what style this would be, but I was thrilled when I saw it.

Good bread pudding it was.  It was remarkably moist, really, crazy moist.  The hunks of bread were huge, and clearly had soaked up so so much custard.  The top and edges though were nicely caramelized and crispy.  Yes, this was totally, completely, the style of bread pudding I prefer.

Along with the custard, the bread hunks were interspersed with assorted boozy fruit, candied citrus peel, and walnuts.  A different style of fruit than I am used to with bread pudding (usually fresh fruits), but it worked.  I liked the additional crunch the nuts added too.  It was well spiced, the spicing matching the winter flavors from the bread pudding itself.

Served warm, with a little ice cream to balance it out, it was, in a word, comfort.  It ate like a warm embrace.  I suspect custard would pair nicely as well.

There was nothing earth shattering about this bread pudding, but it was exactly the style I like, and I quite enjoyed it.  I'm not sure I'd get it again, just because there is so much more to explore on the menu, but, I liked it.  ****.

Individual sized ones are available at the bakery for $8.50 each.
Sir Jason James.  26cm. $410.
"White chocolate mousse, vanilla butter cake, hazelnut praline, raspberry jam, blood orange custard, salted caramel, milk cookie crumb, torched meringue."

For the cake, I picked a new one on the menu, the Sir Jason James.  Who is Sir Jason James?  I have no idea, but, apparently the inspiration for this cake.

Like all Andy Bowdy cakes we've had, this one had a lot going on, and was ridiculous to serve.  I tried to cut it so people got as many of the components as possible, but, it was certainly a struggle, as a top to bottom slice would be far too big no matter how thin you sliced it, but, without a full slice like that, you didn't get to taste all the components.

The base was a sturdy, crisp, caramelized layer.  It was hard to cut through, but I loved the crunchy element it added.  I believe it was likely made from hazelnut, like the praline in other sections of the cake?  I really loved it, sweet for sure, but, tasty.  I think it would be great with some fresh fruit and whipped cream or custard, just on its own really.  Or as a cookie.  So the base, definitely a winner, even if hard to serve.  **** for that component.

Above that was layers of the vanilla butter cake and thick layers of white chocolate mousse, several of each.  The cake was fairly average cake, moist enough, but not particularly compelling on its own, but, it didn't need to be, given how much else was in here.  ***.  The mousse was rich, thick, and creamy, almost like a really fluffy cheesecake ... but without the tang.  It didn't really taste like white chocolate to me, but, as a lover of mousse in general, I liked it. ***+.  Great with a bit of the crispy base layer and fruit too.

Between some of those cake and mousse layers was a thinner layer of fruity raspberry jam, that certainly made the whole thing quite sweet, but, it was nice to have the fruity element.  The raspberry continued to the freeze dried raspberries on top as part of the decoration.  I think fresh fruit would help balance it out better, but the jam and the freeze dried raspberries did give it some fruity component.  ***.

Also between the layers was a touch of blood orange custard, but, honestly, I didn't really distinguish it from everything else going on.  I suspect it was a bit thicker than the mousse? And should have added some acidity, but, it really did all get jumbled together.  On top was a drizzle of salted caramel, more sweet, that tied the caramelized notes from the base and the praline together.  Speaking of the praline, I did love that.  Candied hazelnuts ... what isn't to love?  They added crunch throughout as well, and went great with the mousse.  ****.

Somewhere there was milk cookie crumb, but, uh, I didn't quite find that either.  I think it was some of the decoration on top?  Also piled on top was hunks of actual cake, and more praline, and the aforementioned freeze dried raspberries.  And edible flours.  And of course, the torched meringue.  The meringue always makes the cakes look over the top, and this was no different.  It too was sweetened, but light, and a fun component.  I had many people ask if they could get more of that on their slices, so, clearly, it drew people in.  ***+.

Overall, I'd call this a successful cake.  It certainly was sweet, and certainly made it hard to really distinguish every element, but, it was enjoyable, and a crowd pleaser as always.  I took a little home with me, and enjoyed it more when I paired it with ice cream ... which I know sounds crazy given how much it already had going on, but I think it actually helped balance it a bit.  I wouldn't get this cake again, but, I do enjoy ordering these for a crowd.

***+ overall, **** for looks and reception alone.

Update Review, October 2019 Visits

Another visit to Sydney, another launch to celebrate, another reason to order a stunning, stunning cake from Saga.  My group continues to be seriously impressed with these cakes and other goodies.   See my previous reviews, and details on the baker, here.

Cake

The first thing I ever ordered from Saga / Andy Bowdy was a cake, and although last time I tried a trifle, I wanted to stun people again with the looks, and so a cake was in order.
Beautiful Cake Top.
As always, I was seriously impressed just opening the box up.  I mean, really.  It was stunning.

Every element just expertly perched, every freeze dried cherry, morello cherry, edible flower, and chunk of chocolate biscuit was in a deliberate location, nothing out of place.
Pat (sub vanilla cake for chocolate fudge cake). 18 cm. $220. 
"Vanilla cake, smoked almonds, morello cherries, vanilla mousse, chocolate crumb, Fresh cherry* (Fresh Cherry is used to decorate the cake when in season, if not in season Freeze dried cherries will be used)."

I went for the Pat, but modified it to use vanilla cake instead of chocolate.  It sounded like a black forest inspired cake, e.g. cherries and chocolate.

The cake was cake.  Simple vanilla cake.  Not particularly moist nor particularly dry.  Just, cake.  The least interesting layer to me, but, it is the foundation after all.

Ok, the real foundation, the base, was chocolate crumb, compressed like a cookie.  I'm sure this base made a bit more sense with the chocolate cake that Pat is intended to have, but it was fine here too.  The same biscuit was also on top, in chunks.  I liked that it added a touch of bitterness to the overall creation, and some crunchy texture.  I wonder if this is the same cocoa nib cookies they sell separately?

The other main layer was the vanilla mousse, which was far denser than I was expecting for a mousse, and was almost like a Japanese cheesecake in texture, although the flavor was more like a custard.  Kinda a hybrid Japanese cheesecake custard?  Just pretend that makes sense.  Once I was ready to accept that it wasn't a light fluffy mousse, I liked it, the flavor in particular.

Between the larger layers was an entirely unexpected layer: chocolate fudge and cocoa nibs.  Neither were mentioned in the description, so I was caught off guard by the chocolate components, and the crunch of the nibs.  That said, the chocolate fudge went very nicely with the custard-like mousse.

Now, the reason I opted for this cake is that I was excited for the cherries.  The cake was decorated with freeze dried cherries (darn, fresh weren't in season), which were a fun texture, somehow crunchy and spongy at the same time, but they didn't provide much cherry flavor.  I think this cake would be really different, and much better, when cherries are in season and fresh cherries are used.  The morello cherries on the other hand were sweet, soft, sticky, impossible to miss.  If you aren't familiar, these are the kind used in cocktails, like the classy version of maraschino cherries, made from sour cherries, and are intense sugar hits.  I think there also was some cherry component between the layers, but since I didn't get a chance to inspect a perfect slice, I cannot be sure.

But wait, there is more.  The meringue of course, a stunning cascade of sweet torched meringue - very sweet torched meringue, that I pretty much adored, although it made it very hard to cut and serve this cake, just like the other one I had previously.  Excellent, albeit very sweet, meringue.

And finally, the smoked almonds.  Which turned out to be my favorite component.  Very random, but I really loved them.  Slightly smoky, yet slightly sweet (caramelized?), and yay for crunch.

Finally, the edible flowers, I'm not sure what kind they were, but they were shockingly bitter.  A number of my guests were asking, "Can we eat these?"  I thought they actually were just a bit too bitter.

Overall, this was another stunning cake, well received by the group, but, I wouldn't get this one again - I wanted more creamy components and fresh fruit.
Victory.
The carnage after we carve up a Saga cake is always fairly amusing, and this was no exception.

I took the photo before we really did finish though ... I assure you, we got very last bite, there were several more bites left here!

Cookie S'mores

I've had my eyes on the cookie s'mores since the first time I saw them on the menu.
"Signature Cookies Stuffed with Filling and Torched Meringue."
Now, I might not be a cookie girl, but, I sure love fillings and meringue ...

Saga carries two different cookies on the regular menu, peanut butter or salted chocolate cocoa nib, but Cookie S'mores are only available for catering, minimum order of 6.  They come in 3 varieties, two of which use the chocolate cocoa nib cookies as the base, the other peanut butter.  They are all filled with fascinating fillings (mint fondant & chocolate ganache, or amarena cherries/smoked almonds/chocolate ganache, or baked cheesecake & honeycomb), in addition to the torched meringue.

I mean, really, classiest s'mores ever.  I had to try them.
Peanut Butter. $7 / each.
"Peanut Butter Cookie, Baked Cheesecake, Honeycomb, Torched Meringue."

I opted for the peanut butter version.

They looked just as good as I had hoped, the torched meringue really perfectly jutting out around the edges, and expertly torched.  S'mores, kicked up *many* notches.

The peanut butter cookies were good - very thick, very dense, and I loved that they contained whole peanuts.  Tons of peanut butter flavor, sweetened, but peanut was the dominate taste.  They were slightly crumbly, in the right way.  A single one of these cookies was a pretty substantial treat, but of course, there was much more here.

The meringue was the same as in the cakes, lovely, fluffy, extremely sweet, meringue.  When I was growing up, I used to eat spoonfuls of peanut butter and sweet marshmallow Fluff from a jar (together, I was the worst, but I'd dip into the peanut butter, get that in the back of the spoon, and then dip into the Fluff, and have that on the front ... such a magic bite), and this was the same flavor profile, and sensation.  I can only take this as a sign that I'm not the only one who did such things.

I forgot to get a photo of the inside, so you could see the filling, but, inside, in the center was a mix of cheesecake and honeycomb, also very sweet, and the honeycomb was a really nice touch.  Honey roasted peanuts?  Those exist for a reason.  Honey and peanut butter are a wonderful combo.

Overall, these were quite the treat. Every component was good on its own, but combined extremely well.

I'm a massive sweet tooth, and have a pretty big dessert stomach, but I did find it hard to polish one off on my own in a single sitting (although I came shockingly close).  I think splitting one is advisable, or, saving half for later ...

I really enjoyed this, and would get another if I was in the mood for a cookie type treat.

Note: I also discovered that they freeze beautifully.  Just pop one out of the freezer 30 minutes or so before you want it, and nearly as good as new, even the meringue somehow remains in tact.  Why do I tell you this? Because you have to order 6 at a time, so, you might as well fill your freezer.  You'll thank me later, I promise.

Original Review, March 2019

Saga is a bakery located in Enmore, a bit further afield than my normal stomping ground in Sydney.

I haven't actually been there, but it has been on my radar for a while, for both the incredible pastries, but also, their signature cakes.  Now, cakes aren't normally something I go for, but these ... these are special.  More on that soon.

Saga is relatively new, opened only in 2017, by the pastry chef, Andy Bowden (Bowdy), and his partner, Maddison, after he left his famed post at Hartsyard, which is when I first heard of him.

As I said, I haven't actually visited Saga in person, but I was able to order from them, twice, for parties, including a signature cake.  I've also been able to try a few individual pastries.

Ordering large format items was extremely easy, with Maddison quite responsive over e-mail, friendly, and fun to work with.  They even accommodated my orders that were under the cut-off time, and recommended a local courier to use for delivery.  Payment was done through their online portal.  All really remarkably easy.

I highly, highly recommend, either for a casual visit to the bakery (they have breakfast and lunch items too!), or if you ever have need to arrange for a extremely memorable cake.

Individual Pastries

The range of treats for an individual runs from mini pies and cakes, to pastries like apple turnovers, paris brest, and croissant "snails", to cookies, savory biscuits, and focaccia.  As a lover of all baked goods, this lineup was quite appealing.

While my orders were mostly larger items for a big group, I also was able to try a few individual items, picking from their Instagram feed, and giving Maddison a list of things I was excited to try, and letting her pick based on availability, since not everything is available every day.

I found that I loved some of these, but also really didn't care much for others.  I was surprised by how varied my experiences were.  I think this was largely based on personal preference, as the items do seem well made.  I'd gladly try more (and, have my eyes on a few in particular ...).
Strawberry & Custard Tart. $8.50.
"Pie crust, strawberry jam, vanilla custard, hazelnut praline, sour cream, fresh strawberry."

Saga always has a seasonal (weekly?) tart, along with mini banana cream pie.  I was pretty excited when I saw the description of the brand new version: strawberry and custard!  And I loved the idea that they use pie crust instead of tart shells, as I never love tart shells, and find pie crust just so much more enjoyable.

I was so excited to try this, but I was pretty underwhelmed, to be honest.  It made me sad, as there was so much promise.

The toppings were slices of fresh strawberry, which were fine, ripe enough, and hazelnut praline, also fine, but just some mildly candied nuts.

But those were just the toppings, not where I'd expect it to shine anyway.
Strawberry & Custard Tart: Inside.
The part that made me the most disappointed was the crust.  It seemed ... burnt?  It was crisp, too hard, and too dark.  It didn't actually seem like pie crust.  I'm used to not liking tart shells, but this still made me sad as I expected something flakier.

Inside was the vanilla custard and the strawberry jam.  The custard was fine, not all that vanilla forward, but a good consistency, not runny.  The jam though was very very sweet.  The custard and nuts didn't help balance it out for me.  Just, too sweet for me.

So overall, I was not thrilled with this.  Custard, fruit, nuts were fine, the jam too sweet, and the crust pretty bad.
Choux Bun. $8.
"Choux Pastry, Pecan Pie Filling, Salted Caramel Chantilly."

Saga has long had a larger paris brest on the menu, but this is a smaller version, a new item.

That said, it isn't a mini treat by any means, certainly the largest choux puff I've ever seen.

You may recall that I don't actually like choux pastry generally, but I loved the sound of these fillings, so I tried it anyway.  Plus, I'm always willing to believe that I can learn to like something if I have a good version!

But ... I still just don't care for choux pastry ... the eggy nature isn't for me.  I can acknowledge that this was well made, crispy top, generously coated in powdered sugar, light yet custardy inside.

Speaking of inside, I was in this for the fillings.
Choux Bun: Side View.
Here you can see the side view.

Adjacent to the bottom bun was the "pecan pie filling", a thick, sweet layer.  It didn't have noticeable pecans in it, but it was really thick, and I'm still not sure what it was.  It might have had ground nuts in it?  It was very sweet.

Above that was a nicely piped salted caramel chantilly.  The chantilly was rich, thick, and certainly sweet as well, I tasted the caramel very strongly, but not much salt.  It was good chantilly, much like I had in the cakes and triffles (more on those soon).

And finally, both regular and candied pecans perched on top.  The candied pecans were tasty, but very candied, so very sweet, and I was glad to have a few that weren't candied to offset that.

These fillings, much like the namesake pecan pie, were, as you might expect, very sweet.  Every element was sweet.  The pecan pie filling layer was certainly the sweetest.

Overall, this wasn't the item for me, just because the choux pastry isn't something I like, and the filling was too sweet overall.  That said, I added some whipped cream to mellow it out, and enjoyed it as a caramel mousse with whipped cream and crunchy nuts.

I wouldn't get this again though.
Sticky Buns. $6.50.
"Brioche rolled with cinnamon bourbon butter and baked cheesecake, salted caramel and cream cheese icing."

I actually really wanted to try the "Sticky Fingers", described as "croissant dough, peanut butter cookie, banana custard, salted caramel, peanut butter crunch", but, alas, they weren't available the day I ordered from Saga.

I pouted a little internally, and selected my second choice, the sticky bun.  My frown quickly turned upside down as I took my first bite.

O.M.G.

What a sticky bun this was.  Wowzer.  Seriously, a phenomenal sticky bun, unlike anything I've had before.  At first glace, it didn't even look that special, just a large, well glazed sticky bun, right?

But wow.  What a sticky bun.

The brioche dough was rich, moist, fluffy almost.  An amazing light yet rich bread, certainly not dense.  Wonderful brioche, really.  One of the best sticky bun bases I've ever had.

The icing too was fabulous, although it looked like something that had melted off and wasn't generous.  It was sweet, slightly cream cheese flavored, slightly caramel-y.  The caramel nature mirrored what you see in a traditional sticky bun with caramelized edges, the cream cheese was like that normally found on an icing topped cinnamon roll.  I love how it married the cinnamon roll and sticky bun toppings into a new creation, caramel cream cheese icing.  Really a wonderful glaze, and there actually was plenty of it.  It accented the brioche wonderfully.

The cinnamon aspect of the bun wasn't just some cinnamon/sugar filling between the layers, rather, the entire thing was infused with cinnamon bourbon butter.  There was more between the layers, but the top, sides, everywhere had fabulous cinnamon flavor ... and richness.  And yes, there was some bourbon aspect to it as well.

The cheesecake I wasn't sure about, when I read the description this sounded odd ... would there be ... chunks of cheesecake in here?  It confused me when I read it, and, as I dug in, it still confused me.  I never really found anything that was distinct cheesecake, although I tasted cream cheese, and just assumed that was the icing.

So, overall, this was a lovely sticky bun.  Large, decadent, and non-traditional.  I think it would be fantastic warm and alongside a coffee.  Large and easily shareable, particularly if you want to try another treat too.

Signature Cakes

The reason most people have heard of Andy Bowdy is for his signature cakes.  These cakes are, simply put, incredible works of art.  Available in 3 sizes (18 cm to feed ~20, 22 cm to feed ~35, and 26 cm to feed ~50), all layer cakes, many levels high, and filled with a huge variety of fillings, and then ... topped with torched meringue and a cascade of edible flowers.  They are stunning, the flavors are creative, and, well, they are delicious.

They come in 15 pre-designed flavors, all with given names, such as Jasper or Izzy or Karl, and are available as special order only, with a full week advance notice required.  Every "season", 4 are offered as mini 1-2 person cakes as well, which you can pick up at the bakery.  But really, you should come up with an excuse to get one of these full size.
Grace. 18cm. $200.
"Carrot cake, caramel mousse, baked cheesecake chunks, mandarin, walnut, ginger cookie base, salted caramel drizzle."

Um, wow.  Serious, wow.

This cake looked even more impressive in person than I expected.  I had seen online photos, but still, I wasn't really expecting that the garnish would be this elaborate.  Or, that it would survive transport so well!  Thank you, thank you courier for treating this with great care.

Yes, those are chunks of carrot cake perched deliberately alongside, there is salted caramel dripping  precisely down the sides, and there is a topping of crushed walnuts, mandarin segments, candied nuts, and I think some ginger cookie crumb.  Oh, and the meringue of course.  And, um, flowers.  Wowzer.

I cater many events, but I've never seen soooo many people react so strongly (positively!) to anything I've arranged like they did for this.  The number of people who lined up ... to take *photos* was impressive.  Everyone was blown away by the looks.

But looks are one thing.  We wanted it to taste good too.  One co-worker cautioned it might be a "stunt cake", made for Instagram, but not for consumption.  I too was skeptical.

The good news?  It was very, very good.  It turns out, that much insanity can be delicious too.
Grace: Layers!
It was, however, ridiculously hard to slice, particularly as the layers were not all the same, and so just giving someone a "top half" slice was very different from a "bottom half" slice.  I had no choice but to attempt to cut tall thin slices.  It also lost its structural integrity as we neared the final 30%.

But none of that matters.  It was worth the slicing difficulty.  Because it was delicious.  Every single component of it.  It turns out, every single element had its place, and was most welcome.  I was not expecting that, either.

Let me try to break it down.

The very base layer was a thicker, harder layer, I believe the ginger cookie.  I think it had coconut in it as well.  It was sweet, a good texture, and nice to have a more solid ingredient in the mix.  I'm not a cookie fan, but I liked this.  Now I'm curious to try their cookies (particularly the "Cookie S'mores", cookies stuffed with fillings and torched meringue.  ZOMG.  Available for catering only.).

Above that came layers of what looked like just carrot cake and caramel mousse from the outside, but actually had chunks of cheesecake, more salted caramel, crushed walnuts, and unexpected blood orange gel.  The blood orange added an intense hit of citrus, the combined really pleasantly with the salted caramel, and set your palette up for wanting the fresh mandarins on top.  What an unexpected, but totally successful, add-in.

The cake itself was good, moist enough, well spiced, pretty good carrot cake.  I'd be happy with it as a regular cake.

The cheesecake, which at first made me think, "What? Why cheesecake?" made complete sense when I encountered it in the mix, as it provided the elements of cream cheese frosting you normally find on carrot cake, just in a richer, honestly more fun, way.  Like the carrot cake, and the cookie base, it was a well executed version of cheesecake, rich, creamy, good consistency.  I'd be happy with it on its own too.

The nuts throughout I loved, as I am definitely the type who wants nuts in her carrot cake, and I loved the crunch they added.  There seemed to be regular small chunks of walnut within, but then on top was the candied walnuts, which of course I adored.  And of course perfectly caramelized, not too hard of a caramel, no hint of burnt.  I gladly took more than my share of the candied nuts.

Also on top were mandarins, which I wasn't particularly excited by when I saw them, as I don't tend to go for citrus, but they too had their place, providing a juicy freshness, and what I normally get from pineapple in my carrot cake.  A totally different approach to a similar concept, and it totally worked.

The caramel mousse was creamy, fluffy, sweet.  It was the one element I didn't necessarily want combined with the carrot cake, but it was still delicious fluffy pudding, and it was great with the nuts, with the cookie base, with the meringue.  It was fine with the cake, but I felt both were better without each other.

The salted caramel drizzle was sweet and I loved it with the cheesecake in particular.  It might have been the only component that didn't seem truly necessarily, but I still liked it and welcomed it.

And then, the rest of the topping.  The meringue was, simply put, meringue perfection.  I'm still impressed at how well it transported and stayed in place.  Sweet, airy, fluffy, delicious.  Many people specifically requested pieces with meringue, so as I sliced, I tried to give it out fairly ... while still saving plenty for myself of course!  It was awesome with basically anything else.  Or alone.  It was perhaps the best meringue I've ever had?

And finally, the element that took me the longest to figure out: the crumb on top.  It was softer than the ginger cookie base.  It wasn't spiced like the carrot cake, it seemed more buttery.  It didn't seem to be ground nuts.  "Cookie crumble" is what I kept thinking, but that didn't seem quite right.  So I asked the bakery.  The answer? Milk crumb (vanilla cookie and a shortbread hybrid).  Well, of course :)  I know milk crumbs well, introduced to them by Christina Tosi years years years before Milk Bar was an empire, long before she was on TV, long before they were commonplace.  She gave a really small talk in San Francisco way back, and she brought samples of all her different crumbs with her, just to share with us and introduce the concept.  I remember adoring them, and thinking that I didn't even need her cookies and cakes, I just wanted tins of those milk crumbs.  They were oh-so-snackable.  I have no idea if that was the inspiration for the milk crumbs here, or if Andy Bowdy independently came up with these, but they were a wonderful component, sweet, crumbly, and yes, just as addicting as those from Milk Bar.

My words don't really do this cake justice.  Every part of it was really nicely done, and I'd gladly get this cake, or any other variety, again.  I highly recommend.
Grace: Success.
It is safe to say that my group felt the same.

I assure you, not a single bite went to waste.  Yes I licked the serving utensils clean.

Trifles

"Want a hassle free, easily transportable, super tasty and overly impressive on the eye dessert for your feasting table? Look no further. "
For catering, Saga makes large format trifles, definitely less show stopper, but far earlier to serve.

For my second event ordering from Saga, I opted for a trifle, just for ease.  However, trifles are only available in 4 flavors.  And sadly, they do not feature the torched meringue from the cakes.  But ... they serve 20+ people easily, and you get to keep the beautiful trifle bowl!
Nicely Boxed.
Just like the cake, I was impressed the moment I opened the box, both in the visual appeal, and in the fact that it was transported with no harm, elaborate as it was.  

Ok, I take it back, there was one element that went awry - a single brown sugar pecan, which I eagerly snatched up.
"Philly". $195.
"Vanilla Sponge / Maple Custard / Peach and Bourbon Jelly / Brown Sugar Pecans / Vanilla Chantilly / Anzac Crumb / Peach and Rosemary Compote / Fresh Peaches and Raspberries."

The topping of the trifle, while not as beautiful as the cake with its toasted meringue flowing off the edges and intricate edible flowers perched throughout, was no less elaborate.  Every single slice of fresh peach, every single raspberry, every brown sugar candied pecan, every torn chunk of vanilla sponge, every crumble of anzac biscuit, was placed in a deliberate fashion.

I bought this expecting it to be easier to serve than the cake, but, it proved pretty difficult as well.  Getting started without spilling toppings everywhere, and then actually getting scoops that had everything was a challenge.  The first few servings inevitably were just the cake, fruit, crumble, and a little chantilly.  The servings that came mostly from the base were crumble, chantilly and custard, and compotes, but no cake.

Still,we all enjoyed.  It disappeared very fast.
Philly: Toppings.
The fruit was all fresh, good quality berries and peaches, all of which were sliced nearly identically.  Since it was early autumn, the peaches weren't quite as juicy and ripe as I'd want for just eating as a fruit on its own, but in the trifle this was fine.

The vanilla sponge was fairly standard vanilla cake, moist, good crumb, not much interesting to say about it.  It added the non-cream substance to the trifle.

The anzac crumb on top impressed me, just how well placed it was, as at first it looked like just the edges of the cake.  It added a bit of texture, but not much more.

The brown sugar pecans were highly caramelized, I think in the pan a moment longer than ideal, as they were just on that edge of almost bitter and too far.  I still loved having candied nuts for crunch though, and when mixed with the sweeter compotes this slight burnt flavor almost helped balance it.  There was also a salty element I loved in here somewhere, and I think it might have been on the nuts? I'm not sure.
Philly: Layers.
Now, diving in to the layers.

The base was more anzac crumb, then a layer of the peach and rosemary compote and more fresh fruit, then maple custard and vanilla chantilly.  Next came a cake layer, above which was more compote and fruit, more chantilly and custard ... oh, and peach and bourbon jelly cubes in there too.

The peach and rosemary compote I was slightly skeptical of, as I wasn't so sure about the rosemary, but it actually was wonderful.  Not a compote with broken down fruit really, rather, huge chunks of stewed fruit, really juicy and flavorful, and the rosemary, even though in sizeable big pieces, gave it a savory touch I appreciated.  I really liked the compote.  It ... might have been my favorite element?

The vanilla chantilly was just good rich fluffy whipped cream, much needed to complement all the sweeter flavors and break them up a bit.  I failed to really get any distinct bites of the maple custard, which made me a bit sad, as I love custard and maple.  I should have given myself a more ideal portion!

The peach and bourbon jelly cubes were very noticeable when you found one.  There weren't many, but they were a fairly large size, and, quite different from everything else, rather firm cubes of jelly, slightly boozy.  I'm not sure if I liked them or not.  I think I did, but wasn't crazy about them inside the trifle.

And finally, the anzac crumb base, which I expected to just be kinda throwaway (I'm not much into anzac biscuits), but I ended up really liking the crunch and buttery quality to it.

Overall, this was quite enjoyable.  There were some bites I really, really enjoyed, composed of a big chunk of the peach with rosemary compote, some creamy chantilly, crunchy biscuit and candied nuts ... truly great.

I'd definitely get another trifle, although I'd like to try another flavor, and yes, it was moderately easier to serve than the cake, but, only slightly.
Saga Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato
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