Nourish Magazine Waikato Autumn 2024 edition

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WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ ISSUE NO. 55 AUTUMN 2024 WAIKATO, NZ ISSUE NO. 55 AUTUMN 2024 WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ FRESH LOCAL FLAVOUR WAIKATO, NZ

3 4 5 3

Nestled in a small Tamahere cul-de-sac, the home overlooks Waikato River in relative anonymity. Designed by TAWA Architecture & Design, the brief was for classic architectural detail, in a modern way, using timeless materials and cutting-edge technology.

The definition of refinement; international influences are reflected throughout, while highlighting New Zealand’s empathy with nature. Sustainable principles and materials accentuate an extraordinary home, 619sqm (more or less).

Five bedrooms, four bathrooms, several living/entertainment areas - inside and out - plus an executive office and lounge are just the introduction. Once down the driveway, you’ll marvel at the home’s stately presence. Displaying an innate understanding that true wealth is unpretentious, this home’s beauty lies in its simplicity; letting design and materials weave the story.

Phone me today for further information or to arrange a viewing 021 623 550!

 021 623 550  angela.finnigan@bayleys.co.nz
REAL ESTATE AGENT
ANGELA FINNIGAN BAYLEYS
FOR SALE
4 GREEN HAVEN LANE, TAMAHERE

EDITOR Vicki Ravlich-Horan

HEAD DESIGNER Sara Cameron, Minted Design Co.

PROOF READER Nikki Crutchley (Crucial Corrections)

CONTRIBUTORS Denise Irvine, Emma Galloway, Amber Bremner, Liz French, Lynda Hallinan, Kathy Paterson, Harriet Boucher, Rachel Hart, Fiona Hugues, Vicki Ravlich-Horan, Megan Lyon.

COVER IMAGE Brydie Thompson

PHOTOGRAPHERS Brydie Thompson, Ashlee DeCaires, Emma Galloway, Amber Bremner, Kathy Paterson, Fiona Hugues, Vicki Ravlich-Horan.

ISSN 2324-4356 (Print) | ISSN 2324-4364 (Online)

ADVERTISING ENQUIRIES

Vicki Ravlich-Horan

vicki@nourishmagazine.co.nz

0210651537

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12 Ask a Local - Whakatāne

16 Flavours of Plenty Festival

18 New Wave of Foodies

38 Office Perks with Diesel Coffee

40 Waikato Wardrobes

43 Shop 9

46

News
Nutrition
Herbal
6 Vic’s Picks 7
22
34 Gardening 36
Events
37 Waikato Farmer’s Market News 74
regular
Marketplace
The Good Life – Part Two
Liquid
Investing with Purpose features recipes 10 A Good Curry 23 Unbeetable 26 Pack a Picnic
Oh, Onions!
Chocolate Lamingtons
Chocolate Recipes You Will Melt Over
Easter Pie
Pumpkin to Talk About
Olive Oil Recipes
CBD Bakeries 48 Harriet’s How to – Lamingtons 63 Mr Goodfellow 66
Gold 72
31
50
52
57
60
68

The range of experiences were unique from the amazing salt farm (one of my favourites) to wining and dining in a palazzo, Mt Etna, everything formed an absolutely unforgettable experience. Vicki and her team were the ‘icing on the cake.’ we could not have had a more fun, inclusive and experienced team.

The small and intimate nature of the trip made it extra special. A perfect way to explore the island of Sicily with a passionate, knowledgeable local guide, supremely organised tour leaders and equally passionate adventurers and foodies. Be prepared for an action packed week that really does showcase the diverse landscape and cultural offerings of Sicily.

Love Food? Love Travel? So do we! Join me on one of our small group Nourish Taste of Tours and enjoy both plus a whole lot more. Coming in 2025 – Sicily, South Australia and Sri Lanka
BE THE FIRST TO KNOW! SIGN UP AT nourishmagazine.co.nz/nourish-foodie-tours SICILY 2024 – ONLY 4 SPACES LEFT!

Here's to Autumn

Holy moly, how quickly did summer go? It’s late Feb as I write this, and I found myself wishing someone a happy new year yesterday!

I think I have lamented the speed of time passing before. It’s a pitfall of a job where we are always looking 1–2 seasons ahead.

The truth is the beautiful summer weather filled with afternoon swims, lazy lunches, regular happy hours and a string of long weekends has lulled me into a routine even school going back couldn’t break.

With this chilled out vibe I pondered whether 2024 should be the year of doing less. For those of you saying, “yeah right”, you are right. While I loved a summer spent hanging, there are far too many exciting things coming up in the next few months, not to mention further into the year, for me to abstain. It is time to take the togs off and put my big girl panties on and get stuck into 2024 and all it will bring.

Luckily I keep my head in the clouds a little longer in March with quite possibly my favourite festival of the year and one that fills me with pride to be a Hamiltonian – Balloons Over Waikato celebrates 25 years this year. While the night glow is a great party, the whole week is filled with excitement each morning as you watch the balloons rise into beautiful clear Waikato skies.

Easter comes early this year and sees me host our first Taste of South Australia tour which I am really looking forward to. This magical spot makes more than beautiful wine and we will be there to taste and experience it all while the autumnal colours put on a show.

With Easter in mind, Kathy Paterson bakes up a beautiful Easter Pie on page 57, while on page 52 Fiona Hugues will have you melting over her decadent chocolate recipes.

I have teamed up with Red Kitchen and Falls Retreat to put on a couple of wonderful events in May. These include a cooking demo from yours truly, a wonderful lunch and a copy of our Nourish Cookbook. We’ve timed them to make a great Mother’s Day gift but they’re also a great way to spend a Sunday with friends.

Outside of Nourish I am a founding partner in The Feed. If you haven’t already signed up to our newsletter, do! (www.thefeed. co.nz.) At the end of 2023 my partner in The Feed, and New Zealand’s leading drinks writer, Tash McGill and I launched a podcast, The Sauce. You can listen in on Spotify or Appleplay. And while it is weird listening to yourself (say “you know” 200 times in 30 minutes), I am excited about what we are building and the conversations we can have with those doing innovative and awesome things in the New Zealand food and beverage scene.

Tash and I also chat about what we’ve been eating, so with that in mind let’s look at what you could be eating this autumn with inspiration from some of our talented recipe writers.

Keeping with the chocolate/Easter theme, Harriet tackles making the perfect lamington on page 48. Emma Galloway digs up her crop of beetroot for some unbeetable recipes on page 23, while Amber gives us pumpkin to talk about on page 60. On page 31 I run rings around onions, frying them in several delicious ways. And on page 10 Wayne Good shares with us a curry recipe made with homemade paneer.

On page 66 I get the pip with confusing and misleading olive oil labels before creating some beautiful confit garlic you will love having in your fridge.

If you are wanting to extend the summer vibes a little longer check out our locals’ guide to Whakatāne on page 12 and read about the new wave of foodies in Whangamatā on page 18.

Enjoy!

NOURISH | ISSUE 55
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Vic's Picks 1.

NOT JUST THE BARE ESSENTIALS

Frozen berries, dumplings, milk, locally roasted coffee beans, washing detergent, tea, even toothpaste! These are just a few of the unexpected things I discovered you can get at Bare Refill Grocery. This gorgeous store in Made Hamilton East is all about minimum packaging. So, armed with my own jars, I was there to pick up some cupboard staples – sugar, flour, pasta, herbs and so on. I was blown away when I saw that I could fill my basket with so many more goods without the plastic packaging. And for those who forget their own, there are paper bags and a jar library – genius!

Bare Refill Grocery

Made Market, 401 Grey Street, Hamilton East

ADD A LITTLE SPARKLE

I was in chatting to Suzanne and Paul Briggs at Midas Diamond Jewellers the other day and before I knew it Suzanne had whipped off my engagement ring and given it a thorough clean. When she returned it to me, I thought it was a brand-new ring, not the 15-year-old ring that I wear 24/7, including when kneading bread, gardening or swimming in the sea. While bringing my ring back to its former sparkle she also checked for any damage because, let’s face it, it would get a fair bit of wear and tear.

The Midas team offer this service free to anyone, so if you are wanting to add a little sparkle to your life, perhaps it’s already on your hand.

Midas Diamond Jewellers

307 Barton Street, Casabella Lane, Hamilton

BALLOONS OVER WAIKATO

There is something about Balloons Over Waikato that fills me with pride for where I live. This year marks 25 years of the festival bringing joy to the Waikato with its string of free events.

While we live fairly close to the Hamilton Lake and can most days watch the balloons fly over us as we munch on our Marmite toast, there is nothing like getting up early, wrapping up warm and heading to Innes Common to be amongst the action.

The team behind the festival wish that “however you connect with Balloons over Waikato, whether it be coming to Innes Common, heading to the ZURU Nightglow, dancing at the Base Basket Burn, or just standing on your front lawn in your pyjamas waving to the balloons as they float by each morning … this event is celebrating 25 years in our community, and we want you to join us”. Tuesday 19 March – Saturday 23 March.

Visit www.balloonsoverwaikato.co.nz for all the information you need or follow @balloonsoverwaikato on Facebook for the most up to date daily flying information.

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OPENINGS AND RE-OPENINGS

Rototuna North recently saw the opening of another eatery with Fergus Bar and Kitchen opening in February. Open 7 days for lunch/brunch and dinner, this family friendly space is sure to hit the mark with locals.

Hamilton’s most successful restaurant, Palate, recently re-opened at the front of SkyCity Hamilton. While there are touches of the old Palate throughout the new space, chef and owner Mat McLean sees the move as a great opportunity to change things up a little.

There is no longer separate lunch and dinner services, instead the restaurant will be open from lunch right through to dinner. This means more opportunities for people to use the space to enjoy a long, or late lunch, to meet friends for a drink from the well-crafted list or to enjoy a great dinner cooked by one of New Zealand’s most celebrated chefs.

At the heart of the new restaurant is the woodfired Asado. Mat says, “This is all about getting back to basics: great meat cooked over fire and embers, showcasing the best of New Zealand’s produce.”

LUNCH WITH NOURISH

We’ve teamed up with Falls Retreat and Red Kitchen to put on two great events.

Join me at Red Kitchen on Sunday 19 May or at Falls Retreat on Sunday 26 May, where I will be demoing a few great recipes from our cookbook which you will get a copy of to take home. We’ll then sit down to a wonderful lunch. This would be a great Mother’s Day gift or simply a great excuse for a day out with friends. Price includes a copy of Nourish, The Cookbook, vol 2.

Nourish at Red Kitchen

Sunday 19 May, 11am | Cost $105pp

For tickets email ryan@rkcafeandstore.co.nz

Nourish at Falls Retreat

Sunday 26 May, 10.30am | Cost $149pp www.fallsretreat.co.nz

Mother's Day

BLOOMIN' LOVELY

With Mother’s Day around the corner The Flower Crate is the perfect destination to send flowers, choose just the right gift, or maybe something for Mum’s green fingers. Alex at The Flower Crate has curated a delightful collection of home and garden wares, artisan and lifestyle products – it’s bloomin’ lovely in there. Find them down Lovegrove Lane in Hamilton East or online at www.theflowercrate.co.nz

HOME COOKED TREATS

Spoil Mum this Mother’s Day with a range of homemade sweet treats from Dot & Winnies, including their famous yoyo’s. The team also have vouchers available if you want to pick up one for Mum to treat herself when she feels the urge.

Dot & Winnies, 127 Alexandra Street, Hamilton dotandwinnies.co.nz

News
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WORDS DENISE IRVINE | IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES PAGE 8 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
(part II)

Wayne Good has made plum cake for afternoon tea, a soft fruity beauty using his own Luisa plums and eggs from his chooks. It is the taste of summer, served with thick, decadent clotted cream.

Wayne makes the clotted cream with milk from cows on the farm near his home, and he gives a quick rundown on the method: “Heat a saucepan of milk to 80 degrees Celsius, switch it off, place a round of baking paper over the milk (but not the lid), leave it to cool on the stove, refrigerate overnight, in the morning peel off the paper and a thick layer of clotted cream will be stuck to it.”

It’s perfect with the cake, and Wayne also uses it in sauces, scrambled eggs and quiche.

Pretty much everything he eats – eggs, fruit, vegetables, herbs and condiments – comes from the 1ha property at Gordonton, near Hamilton, where he has lived for nearly three and a half years. “I also make my own bread but I just can’t eat the animals from around here. I have to buy meat elsewhere.”

Wayne is a trained chef, his business is Arkanda Living & Antiques, and under its broad umbrella he runs an annual series of sell-out culinary demos in his kitchen; leads small group tours to France, Spain and Portugal; and has an antiques barn adjacent to his home, stacked with collectables – furniture, fine china, art, mirrors, crystal, and other furnishings – sourced at estate sales, auctions and similar. He is committed to the notion of sustainable living, of avoiding waste, and recycling and repurposing.

Wayne has previously offered an Arkanda interior design service, but he’s recently sidelined that after 28 years and has filled the gap by catering for private dinner parties. And for something entirely different, he has a regular afternoon gig in the cowshed on the farm where the milk for the clotted cream comes from. “I do what makes me happy.”

So welcome to The Good Life, Part II: Nourish is revisiting Wayne after an earlier story (Nourish, Summer 2020) when he relocated a tiny cottage to Gordonton, opened the antiques barn and moved from town to country.

Back then he would never have dreamed of being in a cowshed each day, spending untold hours on a ride-on mower taming his large lawn, owning 21 Indian runner ducks, harbouring a broody hen under his tomato plants, having three goats over the back fence (Betty, Bertie and Gertie), and being woken each morning by George the resident rooster.

To recap briefly, Wayne’s home is a 1940s weatherboard cottage, originally from the old RNZAF Station Hobsonville, near Auckland. He found the cottage in a house-mover’s yard. It was a wreck, it cost him $1, and it was trucked to its present site just before New Zealand’s first nationwide Coronavirus lockdown in March 2020. It has since been refurbished, judiciously extended and is now 80sqm and filled with his favourite collectables. Every inch of usable space is occupied by something beautiful.

“Things cycle in and out of the barn and home. I’ll buy something for the antiques barn and then move it across to the house. But I have a strict policy of one in, one out.”

In his small kitchen, Wayne’s gone for the French tradition of using cabinets, dressers and curtained cupboards for storage rather than the typical fitted New Zealand kitchen. He’s recently added a 17th century English gentleman’s chest to the cabinetry and it now holds cutlery and other items.

Wayne hosts his culinary demos here and last year there were 400 enrolments for his Christmas classes. Other demos cover French and South East Asian cuisines, high tea, and New Zealand and

European favourites. This year he’s adding a class on northern Indian cuisine, known for its biryani, palak paneer, saag, samosas, pakora, and use of aromatic spices.

He’s recently had the pleasure of learning to make pakora (spicy vegetable fritters) with a friend of Indian heritage. “There was no recipe, we cooked together and I took pages of notes. Now I make the best pakora, and a really good dahl, and paneer and potato curry." (See recipe, next page.) The new food focus ties in neatly with Wayne’s plans to take a tour group to India next year.

Wayne is similarly enjoying the dinner parties he caters for in private homes: there is a minimum of eight people, maximum of 20, and for the bigger events he has Hamilton chef Ashleigh Brodie to work with him.

Menu options are discussed with the hosts, and the $125 per head cost covers a platter for pre-dinner drinks, and a three-course meal. “We cook, serve, clean up and disappear. I don’t do picture-perfect plates; it is beautiful, wholesome, seasonal food and everything is made from scratch.”

He’s just signed off a dinner menu starting with prawns served with green leaves, coconut shards and Vietnamese dressing; whole eye fillet with truffle and red wine jus; and lemon posset with tuile biscuits and fresh raspberries. “There will be a salad with lots of fresh herbs because this client loves herbs.”

We finish our plum cake and cream, head outside to meet the menagerie of chooks, ducks, goats, pigs and cows, admire the abundant garden, and I’m coveting a few pieces in the antiques barn.

“I love my life,” says Wayne, as he seamlessly points out the broody hen under the tomatoes and a stunning collection of English Mason’s Regency china in the barn. “I feel grateful every day that I’m here, doing what I want to do.”

You could say it’s a good life!

Arkanda, 128A Whitikahu Road, Gordonton arkanda.co.nz

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Good CURRY

Living and working on a dairy farm, I enjoy the challenge of living as self-sufficiently as possible. Having access to beautiful fresh milk allows me to make my own butter, mascarpone, yoghurt and this beautiful paneer, which is one of the recipes I have had the very good fortune of being shown how to cook from the north of India.

RECIPES WAYNE GOOD | IMAGE ASHLEE DECAIRES
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PANEER

I use full fat milk from the farm for this, but store bought will work just as well. Just ensure it is full fat (silver top is best).

4 litres of full fat milk

½ cup white vinegar

In a large pan bring the milk to just under the boil. Add the vinegar and stir. The milk will automatically form curds and whey.

Place a large piece of cheese cloth (available from Simply Divine Kitchen in Cambridge) into a colander, completely lining it. Strain the curds and whey through the cheese cloth.

Bundle the curds up in the cheese cloth and press with a very heavy weight (a cast iron pot filled with water works well). Leave for 24 hours at room temperature with the weight on top.

Once this has happened, the cheese is ready to use. It can be stored in the fridge for 3 to 4 days.

PANEER AND POTATO CURRY

3 tbsp ghee

2 tsp cumin seeds

2 large onions

1 whole garlic bulb

1 large piece of ginger

2 tsp salt

1 tsp turmeric

2 tsp garam masala

½ tsp minced chilli

1 400g tin diced tomatoes

700g cubed waxy potatoes

500g cubed paneer

fresh coriander, chopped, to serve

Melt the ghee in a large pan. Add the cumin seeds and lightly toast. In a food processor, process the onions, garlic and ginger quite finely. Add to the ghee and cumin and cook gently for 10 minutes. Do not allow to burn.

Add the remaining spices and salt. Cook for a further 2 to 3 minutes. Again, make sure the pan is not too hot as you do not want to burn the spices.

“We like to make things that make everyday life a little bit nicer”
- Emma Bridgwater.

Add the tinned tomatoes and 2 cups of water.

Finally add the potatoes and simmer, covered, until the potato is tender. Check the seasoning.

At the end, add the cubed paneer and gently warm through. This curry can be made in advance and stored in the fridge. To change it up, add green prawns when adding the paneer – delicious!

Serve sprinkled with chopped fresh coriander, roti and raita.

ROTI

4 cups chapati flour + extra for rolling oil for greasing bowl warm water butter

Place the flour into a large bowl and add enough warm water to form a dough, the consistency of a bread dough. Knead in the bowl for a few minutes.

Oil another bowl and place the dough into the oiled bowl and rest for 10 minutes.

Heat a roti pan on your stove.

Take a small handful of dough, about the size of a small bun. Using your fingers, start creating a round shape, before placing onto a floured surface. With a rolling pin, roll into a very thin disk.

Set a roti rack over a gas flame, with the flame on medium.

Place the roti onto the pan, and cook until the colour changes, then turn. This will only take a minute or so.

Remove the roti from the roti pan and place on the rack over the gas flame. The roti will puff up. Turn over, and using a fish slice, push the steam out of the roti.

Remove and place into baking paper lined tinfoil. Brush each roti with butter.

Continue until all the dough is made.

Keep warm and serve with the curry.

A roti pan is a very flat pan, similar to a crêpe pan. A good cast iron pan or the flat part of your BBQ are good alternatives.

NOURISH | RECIPES 5 Empire Street, Cambridge www simplydivinekitchen co nz Discover Emma’s latest range of plates, bowls, mugs and more in store and online
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Ask a Local WHAKATĀNE

If you’re looking for the true taste of a town you need to talk to the locals. Where do they get their coffee? Where do they love to eat out?

So we asked a few Whakatāne locals to give us the inside scoop on this piece of paradise in the Eastern Bay of Plenty.

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WORDS VICKI RAVLICH-HORAN

BRING ON BRUNCH

Oliver Dobbin from Salt Spray Surf School says his go-to brunch has to be Cafe Awa. Noting it’s a great spot with great food and people, Oliver says, “Being able to stroll along the riverside after a filling brunch is a favourite Sunday activity of mine.”

Maria Grant, Community Engagement Advisor at Whakatāne District Council and owner of A:M Clothes agrees: “My go-to spot is Cafe Awa. It has yummy coffee and kai; the staff are always very friendly. It’s a lovely light space with lots of sunshine. Plus being able to sit outside and see the awa is always good for the wairua/ soul!”

If location is what you are after, Glenn Smith from One Double X says you can’t beat Fisherman’s Wharf. Glenn says, “Fisherman’s Wharf has a beautiful outlook, yummy food such as the smoked fishcakes and excellent Bloody Marys.”

Colin Stobbie from The Good Tonic Design studio and store is a fan of the Smoking Goose, which is a 10-minute drive inland from Whakatāne. Mouthwatering barbecue meats infused with a Kiwi twist are on the menu. Colin says it’s a great place to catch up with friends, with too many great options on the menu to choose from.

Whakatāne Mayor Dr Victor Luca notes Moxi’s in Ōhope is always busy so has to be on the list.

CAFFEINE FIX

Moxi Cafe in Ōhope is not only popular for brunch, they do a great brew according to Maria. And she says they get “bonus points for being close to a papa tākaro/playground so you can get your caffeine fix takeaway and the kids get to burn their energy and have fun too!”

Megan Taylor, owner of Moxi’s, would agree with Maria but admits on her day off when she is in need of a caffeine hit, she’ll head to

Oliver says Dream Bean Coffee at West End, Ōhope Beach is his go to. “This is a no brainer!” says Oliver. “The coffee is as good as it gets and their cute coffee cart is parked right at my favourite part of Whakatāne/ Ōhope, West End Beach.”

Natasha Manuel from Tio Ohiwa Oysters agrees with Oliver, not just on the coffee from Dream Bean but that they are parked at the best beach in New Zealand.

In town Volk & Co Coffee Brew Bar on Boon Street came up again and again, with the mayor noting its popularity among council staffers.

Jord Espresso based at The Hub.
NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 13 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

BEERSIES

If you’re after a beer in Whakatāne a local brew from Mata is a must says Megan. Oliver adds that over the summer months the Mata team set up at Wharfside at Port Ōhope Wharf. “This is still a bit of a secret spot and the best place for an arvo beverage. Sipping on locally brewed beer or cider and looking out over the harbour for sunset – unreal!” comments Oliver

Maria says her “favourite spot over summer has been the General Store Ōhope – again, bonus points for having wine and beer for the adults, and ice-creams for the kids! Those million-dollar views are a pretty sweet extra too.”

For Glen it’s upstairs at the Whakatāne Sportfishing Club where he says you will find great river views and friendly staff. And for Colin it’s The Comm for great beer and a menu that is spot on.

Mayor Luca says, “The Comm has had many ‘lives’ since 1894 – it was certainly a pretty lively public house when I was growing up in Whakatāne. It’s been refurbished into a gastropub and accommodation in recent times and has fast become ‘the local’ for many.”

DINING OUT

Glenn loves The Comm for a great dinner out while for Oliver his go to is Cadera Mexican Bar and Restaurant in Ōhope where he says, “the fish tacos are incredible!”

Maria loves Double Zero, saying “their pasta and pizza flash me back to my days of travelling around Italy!”

While Megan from Moxi Cafe agrees with both Oliver and Maria saying “Double Zero Italian on The Strand’s freshly made pasta is to die for. And Cadera Mexican restaurant in Ōhope, where the food is amazing, as is their frozen cocktails”, she adds a third recommendation into the mix with Popsies Indian. “Hands down the freshest, tastiest Indian food I have ever had.”

Natasha’s pick is Cigol, saying the service is excellent and the flavours will blow your mind. Colin agrees. “Their modern fusion menu of Korean-based cuisine with a Pacific twist offer great dishes to share with friends making Cigol a hidden gem in Whakatāne.”

HIDDEN GEMS

Speaking of hidden gems, where do the locals take visitors for a unique slice of Whakatāne?

Oliver asks, “Have you ever heard of Ōtarawairere Beach? No? That’s because it’s the best kept secret Whakatāne has to offer. If you manage to discover the few walking tracks to get to the beach

you will be blown away. If Ōtarawairere was located anywhere else in the world it would be packed with tourists and yet you can still get the beach totally to yourself all year round. Absolutely stunning.”

And if the beach is the drawcard for you, Oliver says, “Ōhope and surfing go hand in hand. And if you’re hanging out with me over the warmer months, we are hitting Salt Spray Surf School and hiring a board or getting a surf lesson! If we are looking to be a bit more cruisey, a stand-up paddleboard Hire at VMAC Rides is a great option too.”

Colin says, “We enjoy walking along the Ngā Tapuwae o Toi trail. You can access this from Whakatāne or Ōhope, stunning views over the ocean and trails in deep native forests, Ōtarawairere Beach is a great spot to relax and enjoy the afternoon sun shaded in the pōhutukawa trees.”

Megan recommends heading up Kohi Point for 360-degree views over Whakatāne, Ōhope and beyond. Or enjoy the Awakeri Rail Adventures and the rich rail history and beautiful scenery.

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A stroll along the Wharfside Ōhope is Maria’s pick, where you can enjoy live music, kai, drinks, and bombs off the wharf!

If you are staying in Ōhope, Natasha recommends Ōhope Beach Top 10 with its variety of accommodation offerings and, she says, “amazing spa and views of Whale and White Island.”

Two minutes from Ōhope is Tio Ohiwa Oyster Farm, Takeaways and Tours. Megan says, “Book one of their harbour tours and discover Ōhiwa's rich history, oyster farming, cultural significance and stunning harbour. Experience the ocean’s bounty first hand, learn the art of shucking oysters before getting to taste them. Or you can simply order fresh oysters or fish and chips from their takeaways.”

Colin sums it up when he says “Whakatāne and the Eastern Bay is a hidden gem, with so many amazing spots to explore and enjoy, we are never short of places to go, walks to enjoy, and great food stops along the way. There is too much to see in a day, so well worth a weekend or longer to truly appreciate what the area has to offer.” While you are in town pop in to Colin’s store The Good Tonic, 36 Boon Street.

on the corner of Rostrevor & Harwood Streets, Hamilton. NZ’S LARGEST RANGE Of party & cake decorating supplies! FIND US PAGE 15 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

flavours of plenty festival returns

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The award-winning Flavours of Plenty Festival returns to the Coastal Bay of Plenty this April with a menu of events to excite and inspire. From a seafood soirée like no other at Trinity Wharf to the Four Hands Dinner with Chef Neil Sapitula from Solera and Chef Sun Peng of Amisfield, the festival’s organisers have been preparing a programme full of enticing culinary collisions.

“Hot on the back of our amazing double-win at last year’s New Zealand Events Association annual awards, our 2024 festival will have long lunches, degustation dinners, and everything in between!” says Festival Director Rae Baker. “This is our third festival and we know that foodie fans will savour the chance to explore the secrets behind the unique and tasty treats our region produces and will enjoy picking up some handy culinary skills at one of the workshops.”

The programme, which is managed by Tourism Bay of Plenty, includes over 40 events with some past favs like Kitchen Takeover and Bee First Apiaries hands-on experience, Fife Lanes Flavours of Plenty Luncheon, the Mount Main Street’s roaming lunch, and the very popular “Battle of the Snack” at Saltwater Seafood Grill & Oyster Bar.

The theme for this year’s festival is ‘Culinary Collisions’. Rae says, “It’s all about creative collaborations, where chefs, producers, artisans, and food enthusiasts unite to craft and savour remarkable taste experiences.”

‘Five Go Wild with Food’ is one shining example of this with Ian Harrison (Sugo), Perrin Yates (Sailor, Hide, and Brew Co.), Neil Sapitula (Saltwater and Solera), and Masterchef’s Kasey and Kārena Bird joining forces for a unique event held at the new St Amand Events Venue in Tauranga where each chef crafts one course using mystery box ingredients, resulting in a 5-course culinary extravaganza.

Other awesome collabs see local eateries and producers joining forces. If gin is your thing you can choose ‘Dabbler's Degustation’

at Oscar and Otto or an evening of sweets and spirits at But First Dessert. While Fife Lane are pairing local brews with beef.

The Plates a Plenty Challenge, where local eateries transform local ingredients into a winning dish, is also back. This awesome challenge not only highlights incredible local ingredients along with the talent and creativeness of local eateries' culinary teams, but it also offers the public a chance to literally take a bite.

The festival not only offers you a chance to taste new things, you can also learn new tricks.

Unleash your inner pitmaster at ‘The Big Smoke BBQ Masterclass’ or get hands on learning to make your own salami. Mix it up with one of the cocktail making workshops or even craft your own gin.

Or get carried away on an adventure to truly remember. Join the Tio Ōhiwa Oyster Cruise, a 2.5-hour culinary and cultural voyage, delving into the rich Māori history of the lands. Gain insights into oyster farming and participate in shucking your own oysters at the farm.

Join Virginia Jeeves from Epic Whakatāne on a whimsical mystery bus tour, indulging in a day filled with delightful surprises.

Immerse yourself in a culinary experience that transcends borders and captivates the senses with Lantern's ‘Journey Through Southeast Asia’. Don your best Norse attire for Latitude 37's ‘Flavours of the North: Sizzle & Stein Sunday Festival’, a Vikingthemed culinary extravaganza.

Join Avocado Tours for an immersive exploration of a working avocado orchard or uncover the rich history and innovation of horticultural champions, including kiwifruit, avocados, bees, and honey at Western Bay Museum's latest exhibition, ‘The Food Bowl of Plenty’.

Be sure to grab your tickets to at least one of the delectable events and immerse yourself in unforgettable culinary experiences that showcase the incredible ingredients and cultural richness of the Bay of Plenty.

www.flavoursofplentyfestival.co.nz

NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 17 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

A New Wave OF FOODIES

Whangamatā has long been a hot spot for the quintessential Kiwi holiday. With its beautiful beaches, great fishing, nearby bush walks and mountain biking trails this is a town where the humble bach still outnumbers the sandcastle mansions.

As any ardent Whangamatā fan will tell you, this beachside town has so much going for it, you don’t miss the lacklustre culinary scene. Don’t get me wrong, there are some standouts, like Port Road Project, along with some eateries hitting the right mark with the casual beach vibe and consistency many beachside establishments struggle with. This summer we had a delicious meal at Rassasay, and we always enjoy a quick casual bite at Craft Haus and Smoky Pallet.

In recent years there has been something in the air. It started with Simon Wright moving to town and opening Gather & Roam. Suddenly foodies from around the country began to visit Whangamatā for more than the surf. More recently the pop up bakery Rüdi’s created ripples, and long queues only ever seen outside the fish n chip shop on a Friday night began to form early each morning as punters queued for delicious pastries and breads. Rüdi’s has since moved to Hamilton, while Simon is Head Chef at Clarence in Tauranga. And although these trailblazers have left town, in their wake is a growing sense of pride, not to mention a growing number of foodie businesses giving us another compelling reason to visit this town.

SALT DISTRICT

We first met Liam from Salt District Brewery at the start of last year just after he had opened their cellar door. Tucked down an alleyway off the main street, Salt District are open Thursday, Friday and Saturday afternoons for you to fill a flagon with one of their staple or seasonal brews. “The cellar door isn't just a tasting room,” says Liam, “it's a hub of camaraderie. A place to meet fellow beer enthusiasts, exchange stories and share surf reports in a laid-back welcoming atmosphere, and footwear is optional.”

Discovering his love of craft beer when travelling in the States in his early twenties, Liam recalls, “I had a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and it just totally blew my mind.” Back in New Zealand he took up a trainee brewer position at bStudio in the Hawke’s Bay and spent the next two years learning his craft and surfing, or some would say, living the dream.

Back in Whangamatā and homebrewing with his friend Kehan, the pair decided to turn a yoga studio into their HQ. With Covid lockdowns a thing of the past, what could go wrong?

Salt District had only had their doors open a few weeks when cyclone Gabrielle knocked out state highway 25. Liam says, “Looking back now it was kind of a great period to really focus on our processes, dial in our equipment, fine tune some recipe development and to continue learning as much as possible.”

Fast forward to this summer and Liam says, “Once the Christmas weather forecast was locked in and the hordes of people turned up, it was the best feeling, a great confidence boost for our small business and with customers loving our beer, branding and ethos it has really made us realise we are potentially onto something viable for the long term.”

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To extend the summer season and continue to grow the community vibe, Salt District plan to host a number of events in their courtyard. These, Liam says, will involve food trucks, live music and, of course, slinging suds. There are also plans for some canning runs of the core range which Liam admits “will be really exciting and probably a little surreal to see them on the local supermarket shelf”. They also have a re-brew of the famous Coromandel chocolate porter, so watch this space.

You can enjoy a Salt District brew by filling a flagon at their cellar door or by enjoying a pint at a number of local eateries like Port Road Project, Craft Haus, Six Forty Six Café, Whangamatā Golf Club and Rassasay Restaurant.

Salt District Cellar Door, 101B Winifred Ave, Whangamatā

COROMANDEL CHOCOLATE

Frenchman Thomas Capdevielle’s passion for his craft and adopted hometown is infectious. Thomas and wife Jess started Coromandel Chocolate in February 2023. In just one year they have quickly grown and recently opened a shop in town. And although Thomas talks about great chocolate taking time, I get the impression he is not one to sit back and wait.

Thomas has spent a decade gaining the skills he needs to be a great chocolatier, while also refining his vision for the chocolate company he wanted to own, and knew it had to be based in Whangamatā – where he and Jess met and where they want to raise their family.

After four years studying at a prestigious chocolate academy in Southwest France followed by apprenticeships with some of France’s leading chocolatiers, the Capdevielle’s moved back to New Zealand. Here Thomas worked with Honest Chocolate before it was time to go out on his own.

A small but perfectly formed chocolate factory was built in front of the couple’s home. While some equipment needed to be imported, a 700kg, 1950s roasting machine originally from Kawau Island which had found its way to Kerikeri and had sat idle for years was brought to Whangamatā and resurrected with help from Pieter van Leeuwen (from the Coromandel Cheese Co).

Roasting the beans is a key step in the chocolate making process, but what Thomas believes sets Coromandel Chocolate apart is they have control of the product not just from roasting the bean but before the bean arrives.

Coromandel Chocolate exclusively uses cacao beans from Meluka Island in Vanuatu, where their plantation boasts cacao trees that are 30–35 years old, flourishing under mango and banana trees.

The cacao fruit ripens to a yellow colour and develops delightful berry, dried fig and banana flavours. After being handpicked the cacao beans are fermented for 8–10 days before being dried and then dispatched to Whangamatā.

“Why import cacao beans from elsewhere when we can invest our money right here in the Pacific?” asks Thomas. “Our goal is to raise the profile of Pacific single origin cacao and give it the recognition it deserves.”

While making a delicious product, Thomas is on a mission to shine the light on the dark side of chocolate while offering an alternative. “At Coromandel Chocolate, we truly want to help people understand the power they have by supporting small scale chocolate makers and cacao farmers.”

Coromandel Chocolate Boutique, 100 Hunt Road, Whangamatā, open Friday–Tuesday 9am–5pm coromandelchocolate.co.nz

Vintage & Antique Homewares and Jewellery French Brocante and english country Wares NeW and recycled clothiNg 40 duke street, cambridge shop@theheritagetradiNgcompany.com
image: agNes grace PhotograPhy
NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 19 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

COROMANDEL CHEESE

A few kilometres north of Whangamatā is the van Leeuwen’s 60-hectare dairy farm. Originally from Holland the family moved to Coromandel in 2001 to enjoy the lifestyle the area offered. With their Dutch heritage and an abundant supply of fresh milk, the van Leeuwen’s had always made cheese for friends and family. It was youngest child Marten’s idea to make the cheese to sell. And so, four years ago, Coromandel Cheese was born.

Pieter and Sabina (aka Dad and Mum) are the farmers and cheesemakers while son Thijs and daughter in law Lisa have established ‘The Little Dairy Company’ to market and sell the cheese and future products. “I have to tell them to slow down,” Pieter laughs, “as we don’t have the storage facility.”

Pieter has ingeniously converted some shipping containers into the cheese factory. There are plans in place to expand this to include yoghurt making facilities plus room to age and store more cheese.

The family’s herd of 90 pure bred Holstein Friesian cows are milked year-round and graze only on grass. They have been bred to all have the A2A2 genetics. Lisa, who spends most of her weekends at markets selling the cheese says, “people love it”. And believes the A2A2 milk is a real advantage with customers who haven’t been able to eat cheese for years enjoying Coromandel Cheese.

Sold in very cool 1/2kg rounds, this beautiful cheese makes a gorgeous centrepiece to a cheeseboard or antipasto platter. But the van Leeuwen’s are adamant that their cheese is not just for special occasions, and part of the ethos from the start was that it needed to be a fair and affordable price for all.

The range currently consists of five flavours, the original –Kawakawa with its leaves picked from nearby Onemana beach – along with plain, chilli, cumin, and fenugreek. A more aged cheese is on the cards when room allows for cellaring and so too is a strained yoghurt. In the meantime, the family are working on online orders and deliveries, so those who can’t visit them at the markets can still enjoy their cheese.

You can find Coromandel Cheese at local markets most regularly at Waihī Beach Farmer’s Market, Hamilton and Cambridge Farmer’s Markets and the Howick Village Markets. Keep an eye on the website: thelittledairycompany.co.nz.

NĀHANA HONEY

Husband and wife Mike and Tanya Ward moved to Whangamatā in 2013, where they established 50 beehives. The hives thrived in the warm climate and now number over 1000, plus those of parents, siblings, children, cousins, and friends, making up this true family business.

Mike’s interest in beekeeping began on his parents’ property in Makakahi Valley near Mt. Ruapehu where the mānuka covered hills offered an opportunity to find a complementary income for the multi-generational farm. As he has learnt the craft, and the couple have built the business, they have done so with a community of friends, family and neighbours around them. Around two years ago they launched the brand and began selling their honey to the public. They called the new beekeeping venture Nāhana (meaning ‘belonging to him or her’) as an ever-present reminder of their role as stewards of the land, working to leave an even better legacy for future generations.

Tanya says, “In essence, honey is a lot like wine in many ways –the area the honey comes from has a significant impact on the taste.” The terroir of honey is especially noticeable in honeys like Nāhana, where there has been minimal processing or heating.

Tanya says their Native Honey is a good example of this. Often labelled 'Bush Honey' by other brands, Nāhana Native honey, according to Tanya, “has the distinct flavour of rewarewa [which grows well in the Coromandel with its warm weather and low alpine ranges] paired with the smooth sweetness of kānuka. Both are sought after honeys on their own and together they create a truly delicious honey.”

In addition to their Native honey, Nāhana have a Mānuka honey sourced from the family farm in the Central North Island, along with a Pōhutukawa honey and Multifloral Mānuka honey, which are also harvested from the coast surrounding Whangamatā.

Look out for Nāhana Honey at Coromandel Chocolate on Hunt Road and a growing number of outlets. www.nahana.co.nz

PAGE 20 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

CAMINA

This Spanish-style eatery opened just before Christmas and has quickly become the hot ticket. Co-owner Rowan Crowe says, “The first two months have been incredible; we have been fully booked out every night. We didn't really know what our expectations were but whatever they were they have been completely blown out of the water.”

Rowan and co-owner Barend Beukes have both called Whangamatā home for several years. Rowan moved the family to Whangamatā from Devonport in 2020, wanting to raise his children around family and so that they could grow up surfing and enjoying small town life.

Barend, who is originally from South Africa has cheffed around the world, including Michelin starred restaurants in England and superyachts in Sapin. When he moved to New Zealand he worked with Jason Scott at Scotts Epicurean in Hamilton, following Jason to Whangamatā when he started Port Road Project seven years ago.

Rowan, who worked in the building trade after moving to Whangamatā, says, “My love for people made me want to do something different and when Barend presented his idea of doing the restaurant with me, I jumped at the opportunity.”

Those building skills were to come in handy as they transformed

the iconic cinema building that, until recently, the only culinary memories it would conjure up were of tangy fruits or crushed jaffas.

Camina includes a warm, intimate dining room and casual laneway gathering space, making it the perfect spot for drinks with friends or a refined night out.

In keeping with the Spanish theme the menu gives a nod to traditional tapas, all perfect to share – except the Coromandel Chocolate s’mores, that one you’ll want to keep to yourself!

Like the s’mores, the food is centred around fire, with locally sourced produce shining.

The majority of their fresh produce comes from Pākaraka permaculture garden just outside of Thames. Rowan says, “We feel so grateful to have such incredible produce from such amazing people so close to the restaurant. Seeing it turn up and then on people's plates so soon after it got pulled from the ground is very special.”

Camina Restaurant & Bar 708 Port Road, Whangamatā www.camina.co.nz

thecoromandel.com

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COOK. BAKE. Create. CHECK OUT OUR HOMEWARE RANGE ONLINE AND INSTORE.
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BRILLIANT BEETROOT

Growing up in Canada, beetroot didn’t often feature on my dinner plate. It would show up in the odd salad, and my Polish ancestry meant I had heard of borscht – the ruby red Slavic soup – but I had certainly never seen beetroot on a burger. That is, not until I moved to New Zealand.

I now know that beetroot on a burger is as classically Kiwi as pavlova, feijoas and mince pies. But back then, whether I sat down at a burger joint or at my mother-in-law’s dining table, finding beetroot on a patty was a revelation. The colour! The juiciness! The earthy sweetness! Plus, I loved how it snuck a dose of nutrition into a meal of burgers and chips.

Looking at a beetroot, you just know it’s healthy. The first thing you’ll notice is the dark purple hue; peel the skin to reveal a brilliant vibrancy which will leave your hands stained for days. The pigments responsible for the deep reddish-purple of plants like beetroot, bougainvillea and dragon fruit are called betacyanins, and like pigments found in all brightly coloured fruit or vegetables, they have antioxidant properties that help protect the cells in our body from damage.

If the purple colour alone isn’t enough to convince you of their health status, the lush stalks and stems will. Even though they grow underground, beetroot is in the same family as spinach and Swiss chard, making them both a root vegetable and a leafy green – talk about a superfood! And finally, just in case anyone still has doubts, there’s the smell – that earthy scent of a vegetable grown beneath the soil, soaking up nutrients before it pushes up past the dirt.

Considering the mounting evidence, it's hardly surprising to discover that beetroot boasts a wealth of health benefits. Beetroot is mostly made up of water and offers a decent dose of fibre and a whole host of vitamins and minerals. Notably, it is high in B vitamins, vitamin C, folate, and manganese.

Beetroot is also rich in nitrates, which improve blood flow and bring more oxygen to the body, potentially lowering blood pressure and helping with muscle recovery. And it’s particularly high in glutamine, an amino acid that boosts digestive health and helps protect the gut from injury and stress.

While beetroot is indisputably healthy, what’s less obvious is how versatile it is. In my experience, Kiwis tend to boil beetroot and either serve it straight away, or pickle it for later use. While boiled beetroot is delicious, there are other options.

Roasting beetroot will bring out its natural sweetness, while steaming it retains more of its nutrition. You could also slice it paper-thin to create a striking layered salad, or grate beetroot and toss it into a coleslaw, turn it into relish – another Kiwi staple – or mix it into batter for an unbelievably moist chocolate cake. There are plenty of ways to elevate your beetroot game, but I will always maintain that there’s no better use for this sweet, juicy, nutritious vegetable than on a classic Kiwi burger!

Hailing from Canada, Rachel has fallen in love with life in the beautiful Bay of Plenty where she is a freelance writer with a passion for healthy food. She splits her time between telling people’s stories, creating web content and experimenting in the kitchen.

NOURISH | NUTRITION
PAGE 22 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Unbeetable

Fresh beetroot is an often overlooked vegetable which intimidates many, and while I love a slice of good ol’ tinned beetroot as much as the next person, there’s something truly magical about growing or buying whole beetroot and preparing them yourself. Whether that means grating and eating raw, juicing, boiling or roasting, its earthy sweetness can’t be beaten.

NOURISH | RECIPES PAGE 23 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
RECIPES & IMAGES EMMA GALLOWAY

Beetroot and Carrot Salad with Pomegranate Dressing

My dad grows THE BEST beetroot. Every year without fail he produces huge, tender beetroot of different sizes and colours. I, on the other hand, can only seem to manage to get one specific variety to grow (golden beetroot for those wondering) and all others turn tough and woody, seemingly overnight. Recently Dad grew long cylindrical beetroot, the kind that are perfect for bottling/canning. They were so tender and sweet I couldn’t bare do anything else with them other than prepare and eat them raw. This salad is a nod to my 80s hippy childhood, where beetroot and carrot salads were a regular feature.

SERVES 4–6

2 medium beetroot, peeled

2 small carrots, peeled

generous handful of coriander leaves and tender stems, roughly chopped

TOASTED SEEDS

¼ cup sunflower seeds

¼ cup pumpkin seeds

2 tbsp sesame seeds

1 tsp soy sauce (gluten-free if needed)

1 tsp olive oil

POMEGRANATE DRESSING

1 tbsp honey or raw sugar

2 tbsp pomegranate molasses (available from Vetro, Herbal Dispensary and La Cave)

2 tbsp balsamic dressing

2 tbsp lemon juice

¼ cup extra virgin olive oil

salt & pepper

Finely shred beetroot and carrot using a mandolin or grater and place into a bowl with the coriander. To make the toasted seeds, combine sunflower, pumpkin and sesame seeds in a small frying pan over medium heat and cook while stirring until lightly toasted. Add soy sauce and olive oil and stir for a further 20–30 seconds until the mixture is dry. Remove from heat and transfer seeds to a bowl.

To make dressing, combine honey/sugar and pomegranate molasses in a small bowl and whisk until smooth. Add balsamic and lemon juice and

whisk to combine. Continue whisking as you drizzle in the olive oil to form a lovely, emulsified dressing. Season with salt and pepper to taste. To serve, add toasted seeds to shredded beetroot/carrot mixture, stir through as much dressing as you like. Taste and adjust seasoning, then serve.

Roasted Beetroot Salad with Mustard Caper Dressing

I LOVE raw beetroot salads, but as with most root vegetables, roasting intensifies its natural sweetness.

SERVES 4–6

6 medium beetroot, ends trimmed

2 small red onions, peeled and cut into wedges

olive oil

salt & pepper

2 radishes, thinly sliced

¼ cup pumpkin seeds, lightly toasted

50g feta cheese, crumbled

2 handfuls micro greens or mesclun salad greens or rocket

MUSTARD CAPER DRESSING

1½ tsp Dijon mustard

1½ tsp honey or raw caster sugar

1 tbsp lemon juice

1 tbsp red wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar

¼ cup extra virgin olive oil

1 tbsp capers, drained and finely chopped

Preheat oven to 200°C. Cut beets in half, then into bite sized wedges. Place on an oven tray with the red onion wedges, drizzle with olive oil, season with salt and pepper and roast 20–25 minutes or until tender and charred in places. Remove and set aside to cool slightly.

To make the dressing, combine mustard and honey in a small bowl, add lemon juice and vinegar and whisk. Continue whisking as you drizzle in the olive oil. Add chopped capers and season to taste with salt.

Combine roasted beetroot, onions, sliced radishes, toasted pumpkin seeds, feta cheese and micro greens/mesclun/rocket in a bowl. Drizzle over enough dressing to coat and serve immediately.

PAGE 24 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Emma Galloway

mydarlinglemonthyme.com

@mydarlinglemonthyme

Emma Galloway is a former chef and creator of the multi-award winning food blog My Darling Lemon Thyme. She is the author of three best-selling cookbooks, which focus on flavour-packed everyday recipes that happen to be vegetarian and gluten-free.

PAGE 25 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

PACK A PICNIC

WORDS HARRIET BOUCHER | IMAGES BRYDIE THOMPSON PAGE 26 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

We picked up the gorgeous green blanket from The Heritage Trading Co.

There’s nothing quite like an autumn day with clear blue skies, gorgeous colours on the trees, and the sun streaming down. It’s the perfect time to grab a basket, a blanket, and a few drinks and find the perfect spot to enjoy these recipes.

The trick to packing the perfect picnic is choosing food that can be made ahead of time and is easily transportable. If it can be eaten without cutlery, even better.

HERBY LEMON CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS

My mum, Tracey, always made chicken drummies for family picnics when we were younger. They’re fabulous hot or cold and have their own little handle so you don’t need cutlery!

10 chicken drumsticks

zest and juice of 1 lemon

¼ cup olive oil

1–2 cloves of garlic, crushed ¼ cup finely chopped fresh herbs (mix of rosemary, oregano, thyme, parsley)

salt & pepper

3–4 tbsp flour (optional)

Cut around the skin and meat at base of the chicken drumstick using a small sharp knife, then push the meat up to expose the bone and create a lollipop look. I love doing this as the meat stays tender and the bone dries out when cooking which makes it a bit cleaner to eat.

Mix together the lemon zest and juice, olive oil, garlic, herbs, and a good grind of salt and pepper. Pour over the chicken drumsticks and allow to marinade for at least an hour or overnight.

Preheat the oven to 200°C.

Transfer the chicken to a baking tray. If desired, sprinkle a little flour over the skin of the drumsticks for extra crunch. Cook for 20–30 minutes or until fully cooked through and golden, turning once during cooking. The timing depends on the thickness of the drumsticks.

The drumsticks can be eaten hot or cold. If you’ve cooked them just before setting off, pop them into a container and straight into your basket. If you’ve cooked them in advance, allow them to cool in the fridge before popping the lid on the container.

More than just a café

127 Alexandra st, Hamilton

Monday to Friday 7am - 3.30 Saturday for Catering / Functions www.dotandwinnies.co.nz

NOURISH | RECIPES
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CURRY POPCORN

I was lucky enough to go to Tokyo Disneyland as part of an intermediate school exchange. My standout memory from there was the savoury-sweet curry popcorn, so this is my attempt to recreate it. You could get away with using 50g of butter; I just love buttery popcorn.

2 tbsp neutral oil

¹⁄³ cup popcorn kernels

75g butter

2 tsp curry powder

1 tsp flaky salt

2 tsp sugar

Heat the oil in a large pot, over medium-high heat. Add the popcorn kernels and shake to coat in the oil. Cover with the lid so you don’t end up with popcorn on the floor. Shaking often, allow the popcorn to cook until the sound of the popping slows down.

Melt the butter in a small pot, then add in the curry powder and salt and stir to combine. Sprinkle the sugar over the popcorn, pour over the curry butter and shake the pot (lid on) vigorously to coat the popcorn.

Place the popcorn into an airtight container once it’s cooled slightly.

ROCKY ROAD

This recipe is a family favourite of Vicki’s that never lasts long. I convinced her it had to go in the picnic recipes as it’s the perfect sweet treat for any occasion.

FOR THE ROCKY ROAD BASE

250g butter

½ cup sugar

½ cup cocoa

1 tsp vanilla extract

500g biscuit crumbs

2 eggs, lightly beaten

180g packet of marshmallows, chopped 180g packet of jubes, chopped

FOR THE GANACHE

200g chocolate

¼ cup cream

In a pot melt the butter, sugar, and cocoa together. Mix in the remaining ingredients, stir well until evenly combined and press into a lined tin. Place in the fridge for at least 30 minutes to set before making the ganache.

For the ganache, chop the chocolate into small pieces. Place the chocolate and cream into a bowl set over a pot of simmering water and allow it to melt together. Stir until smooth, then pour over the rocky road base and leave in the fridge to set for a few hours. Portion into small squares and keep in an airtight container in the fridge.

PAGE 28 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

GRILLED VEGGIE PIDE

Each component of this sandwich melds together for the perfect mouthful. I highly recommend making each component, but if you’re short on time, you could buy a sundried tomato pesto.

FOR THE RED PEPPER PESTO

10–12 sundried tomato halves

3 roasted capsicums (make your own or grab a jar from Vetro)

3 tbsp olive oil

1 tbsp tomato paste

FOR THE SALSA VERDE

½ cup olive oil

1 cup of packed herbs (I use a mix of basil and parsley)

2 tbsp capers

1 tsp Dijon mustard

1–2 tsp lemon juice or white/red wine vinegar

FOR THE FILLING

2 zucchini

1 eggplant

1 200–250g block of haloumi

2 large handfuls of rocket or mesclun

extra olive oil for grilling

1 fresh Turkish pide (or a ciabatta) baking paper butchers twine

In a small food processor/blender, blitz the sundried tomatoes, capsicums, 3 tbsp of olive oil, and tomato paste together to form a spreadable pesto. Place into a container and rinse out the blender.

In the clean blender, blitz together the ½ cup of olive oil, herbs, capers, mustard, lemon juice, and a pinch of salt.

Slice the zucchini and eggplant lengthways into thin slices. Drizzle the veggies generously with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Heat up a BBQ, grill pan, or good quality pan until smoking. Grill the veggies until cooked through and charred. Slice the haloumi into thin pieces, then grill until golden on each side (this may be easier in a hot nonstick pan but the grill will also work).

Slice the Turkish pide horizontally. Spread the sundried tomato pesto on the top and bottom of the pide. Add a layer of rocket on the bottom, followed by the eggplant, zucchini, and haloumi. Generously drizzle the salsa verde on top, then place the top piece of pide on. Slice the pide into 5 pieces using a sharp bread knife.

Wrap each sandwich in a piece of baking paper and tie it with some butcher’s twine, then place into a container, ready to pack into your picnic basket.

the midas touch

Over 42 years of bespoke design, craftmanship and repairs of precious jewellery.

307 Barton Street, Casabella Lane, Hamilton P. 078390039 www.midasdiamondjewellers.co.nz

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LEADERS IN BESPOKE CABINETRY With over 60 years of experience, Treetown Designer Kitchens is a trusted expert in creating custom kitchen and interior joinery solutions for homes and commercial spaces in Cambridge, Hamilton, and the greater Waikato region. W: www.treetownkitchens.co.nz P: 07 827 7309 E: info@treetownkitchens.co.nz Image thanks to LIV.visuals Ketchup to date with NZ’s foodie news. BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE TEAM AT www.thefeed.co.nz LISTEN WHERE YOU GET YOUR FAVOURITE PODCAST

OhOnions!

Recipe page 33

The sight of onions floating down the streets of Pukekohe last summer was enough to make you cry. The backbone of so many dishes, onions are loved the world over but seldom as the hero. Sure, the French have their soup, but I say the way for everyone to celebrate the lovely layers of an onion is to fry them. I still remember when I discovered the beauty of an onion ring and can never visit Little India without an order of onion bhajis! So here is my ode to onions with the mantra, don’t cry over onions, fry them!

NOURISH | RECIPES
RECIPES VICKI RAVLICH-HORAN | IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES
PAGE 31 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

BEER BATTERED ONION RINGS

I’m a sucker for a good onion ring – battered, definitely not crumbed. The beer in this recipe conveniently means there is half a bottle spare for the cook – although I am not endorsing drinking and frying! You can swap the beer for sparkling water which will give you just as light a batter although not quite the same flavour. A teaspoon of cumin seeds is not essential, but a beautiful addition to the batter, especially if you are making these just to munch on with a beer.

1 cup self-raising flour

½ tsp salt

½–1 tsp cumin seeds (optional)

1–1½ cups beer (any will do although I prefer a lager)

2–3 large onions

oil for frying

Place the flour, salt, and cumin seeds (if using) in a bowl. Slowly whisk in 1 cup of beer to form a smooth batter, adding more if the batter is too thick.

Carefully peel the onions, trying to avoid cutting into the layers. Cut the onions into ½ cm rings. Separate the rings, adding the large/medium ones to the batter. The innermost rings can be saved and used next time you need onion.

Heat the oil to 180°C and carefully drop the batter-covered onion rings into the oil. This is best done using tongs and in batches. Also make sure you allow excess batter to fall off the rings before you place them in the oil. Cook the rings until golden, turning them at least once. Remove from the oil and place on paper towels to soak up a little of the excess oil. Season with additional salt if desired and serve.

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ONION BHAJIS

These are based on Little India’s onion bhajis, where they are a must order.

2 onions, thinly sliced

½ tsp carom seeds, also known as Ajwain seeds

½ tsp cumin seeds

¾ tsp ground turmeric

1¼ tsp salt

pinch of red chilli powder

oil for deep frying

2 cups chickpea flour (available from Vetro, Bare & Herbal Dispensary

¾ cup water

Place sliced onions, carom and cumin seeds, turmeric, salt, and chilli powder in a bowl and stir together.

Add oil to a large pan over a high heat so it is ready for frying when the batter is.

Working quickly, combine chickpea flour and water in a separate bowl to make the batter. Whisk until batter has a smooth custardlike consistency. Feel batter with your fingers and remove any small clumps of chickpea flour. Immediately add batter to onion and spices and stir together with your hands. Do not leave batter to sit as it will go watery and the onion bhajis will not come together correctly in the hot oil.

Make batter and onion mixture into a palm-sized fritter and carefully place in hot oil (the oil is ready when batter dropped into the oil rises to the surface). Repeat with remaining mixture. The bhajis can be a bit fiddly so it is best to fry one at a time. Fry onion bhajis until golden brown.

TAMARIND SAUCE

2 tsp vegetable oil

½ tsp each cumin, cardamom, and ground ginger

½ cup tamarind paste (available from Vetro)

¹�³ cup brown sugar

½ cup water

Heat the oil and spices in a small pot and cook for 1–2 minutes. Add in the tamarind, sugar, and water and simmer.

BUTTERMILK ONION FRIES

This recipe is the delicious combo of the flavours you find in fried chicken and onion rings!

1 large (or 2 medium) onion

1 cup buttermilk

2 cups flour

1 tsp garlic powder

1 tsp onion powder

½ tsp celery seeds

½ tsp white pepper

1 tsp salt

oil for deep frying

Peel and halve the onion, and then with the flat sides down slice the onion thinly vertically. This is often referred to as pole to pole and will result in thin strips as opposed to half rings.

Place the onion slices in the buttermilk and allow them to marinate for at least an hour.

In another bowl mix together the remaining dry ingredients.

Heat the oil in a deep fryer (or large pot) to 180°C.

In batches, dredge the buttermilk-soaked onion in the flour mixture and then place carefully in the hot oil. Fry until golden and crispy. Drain on paper towels and repeat with remaining onions.

Serve while warm and before you munch them all!

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PEEL OF APPROVAL

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Oranges and lemons say the bells of St Clements, but not all citrus varieties make our taste buds sing. In the garden – and the kitchen – we all have our favourite squeezes.

The Meyer lemon (actually a citron-mandarin cross) is ubiquitous in Kiwi gardens, hanging onto its golden fruit for three-quarters of the year, but it's a wuss on the flavour front compared to its acidic cousins. For baking and desserts, you need a Yen Ben, Lisbon or Villa Franca.

Mandarins are polarising – do you prefer easy-peel Satsumas or sweet but finger-nail shredding Clementines? But at least oranges don't compete with each other. Navels ripen in winter, while Valencias ripen in summer, so for the longest fruiting season, you need to plant one of each type, plus a bitter Seville for the best marmalade.

Sadly, many orange trees lack the Meyer's dependability and the grapefruit's gregariousness. They can be stingy to fruit while young, so if you buy a property with a gnarly old orange tree, count your blessings.

I reckon I own the biggest orange tree in New Zealand, a tree so tall that it's a local landmark behind our main street bach in the Coromandel township of Tairua. Grown from a pip by the bach's original owners, it's a real sourpuss until late spring, suggesting it has Valencia in its parentage.

If, like mine, your orange tree develops a pattern of biennial cropping, producing a huge haul one year followed by a miserly harvest the next, thin the fruit ruthlessly to reset this habit. (This is true of pears, quinces and plums, too.)

Water oranges frequently from blossom to harvest, and feed twice a year, once in late spring and again at the end of summer. Use a specialist citrus fertiliser with magnesium to green up yellowing foliage.

Incidentally, it's not just the vitamin C in oranges that perks up our spirits. In a former life, I once had a new-age boss who waltzed into my office one day and proudly pinned a sheet of orange cardboard onto my noticeboard. She'd read in some corporate psychology

manual that the colour orange increases our energy levels, arouses excitement and inspires creativity, which could explain all the enthusiastic marmalade making and mimosa mixing that goes on in my kitchen.

Zesty besties

Fancy an Italian-style potted orangerie? The best variety I've found for planting in pots is ‘Cipo’, a large-fruited but small growing tree that has a natural weeping habit. It's sold as a grafted standard so always looks posh in pots as well as being productive. Order through garden centres. Navel oranges, so-called because they grow a wee belly button where the blossom detaches from the baby fruit, ripen from July onwards. Choose from Washington or Carter's.

Valencia and its New Zealand descendant, Harwood Late, crop from late spring into autumn.

Blood oranges? Don't bother. They're more of a bloody frustration than anything in our Kiwi climate, as they need a certain mix of hot days and cool nights – at the same time – to kickstart the colouring up process. You may get the odd fruit with ruby-streaked flesh, but don’t bet on it.

Don't fret about the pips. Citrus fruit are notoriously promiscuous cross-pollinators, so the more varieties you plant, the more seeds you'll end up with regardless of whether you choose seedless varieties or not.

Lynda Hallinan

Waikato born-and-raised gardening journalist Lynda Hallinan lives a mostly self-sufficient life at Foggydale Farm in the Hunua Ranges, where she grows enough food to satisfy her family, free-range chooks, kunekune pig and thieving pukekos. She has an expansive organic vegetable garden and orchards and is a madkeen pickler and preserver.

122 Rostrevor Street, Hamilton 07 974 0415 Follow us on @vetrohamilton Not your ordinary food store NOURISH | GARDENING
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INTRODUCING Nicky Swallow

Whether it’s a cough or cold, a rash, you are looking for a better night sleep or something more serious, the naturopaths and herbalists at The Herbal Dispensary can help.

Nicky Swallow says this could be recommending an off the shelf product or a tincture or remedy made specifically for you, or it could mean booking a consult for those bigger issues.

Nicky has worked off and on at The Herbal Dispensary for the past 10 years but joined the team on a permanent basis late last year. Healthcare and helping people, Nicky concedes, has always been her calling.

Originally from the UK, Nicky trained and practised as a nurse but admits “after ten years of practice in conventional medicine, I became disillusioned. I wasn’t helping people as I had hoped”. While Nicky respects and believes in conventional medicine, its focus on treating the symptoms was a source of frustration. On a personal level Nicky had been suffering from eczema for several years, treating this with steroids. With the support of a nutritionist she made some dietary and lifestyle changes. “And within three months,” Nicky declares, “I was free of eczema and the steroids.”

This was a turning point for Nicky, who became more and more interested in a holistic approach. “This grew further with the birth of my first child,” says Nicky. “When my second child was eighteen months old, I was able to enrol in night classes, focusing on herbal medicine and nutrition.”

After moving to New Zealand Nicky studied at the South Pacific College of Natural Medicine in Auckland, completing her Bachelor in Natural Medicine. For the past five years Nicky has grown her knowledge and skill, practising and collaborating with seasoned herbalists and naturopaths, both in Hamilton and Raglan.

Nicky says, “Everyone has a unique and intricate genetic makeup, along with diverse commitments, families, lifestyles and dietary

preferences. I strongly believe that promoting optimal health requires a personalised approach. One size definitely does not fit all!”

This is the beauty of visiting a naturopath. They want to know about you and what is causing the symptoms, not just how they can treat those symptoms. Nicky says, “During a consultation, I assess your medical history, lifestyle, diet and bodily systems to gain insights into potential underlying causes of your concerns. I then create an individualised treatment plan which could include advice on nutrition and lifestyle, herbal medicines, practitioner supplements and various natural therapies.”

A naturopath’s approach is holistic and this, Nicky says, means working with conventional medicine but, most importantly, it’s about putting the client first.

“Having worked with individuals across diverse age groups and genders, addressing a spectrum of health conditions from anxiety and stress to digestive issues and hormonal imbalances, I love to be able to help and offer a comprehensive, holistic plan,” Nicky says. “Transitioning from my nursing roots to naturopathy has reinforced my dedication to empowering my clients to unlock their innate healing potential.”

Experience a different approach to your wellbeing and healthcare and visit the team at The Herbal Dispensary in Raglan or book a consultation with Nicky.

The Herbal Dispensary

07 825 7444 | 6 Wallis Street, Raglan www.raglanherbaldispensary.nz

NOURISH | HEALTH
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WORDS VICKI RAVLICH-HORAN | IMAGE ASHLEE DECAIRES
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WORDS VICKI RAVLICH-HORAN | IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES

Workshop Manager at Fiasco, Luke Powell-Phelps says, “This place runs on coffee!” Often the first one in each morning, it’s Lukes’s job to put the coffee on, so when the team arrive there is hot coffee to be had. It’s a trusty percolator machine for the Fiasco team for its sheer simplicity and the fact there is always coffee. Feeding that machine is freshly roasted Diesel beans, as it’s not just about having coffee at the ready it’s also about having good coffee. Make a bad brew and you’ll be banned, I’m told by Dispatch and Workshop Coordinator Debbie Norvill.

Fiasco design and build state-of-the-art road cases along with the Work from Home Desk, an innovation that came about from Covid lockdowns when no one needed touring cases but did need flexible desk spaces at home. The team of 15, based in Cambridge, are a friendly bunch who obviously love their work, or possibly that’s the coffee talking.

Another jovial office fuelled on great coffee is the support team of Gateway Church. Here in their brand-new office space, you can make your coffee using the traditional espresso machine or for ease with pods.

“Coffee is life,” laughs Ana Reddish, Connections Lead at Gateway Church. Ana says, not just having coffee but great coffee in the office space has proved a winner. The team don’t disappear at different times to go buy a coffee, instead they come together to enjoy a brew. “It has been amazing in changing the culture,” says Ana, who says sharing a great cup (or more) has helped develop friendships and a sense of togetherness.

While Ana loves the espresso machine Sylvia is a fan of the pods. “I would have two to three cups a day,” says Sylvia, who appreciates the ease of the pod machine, which is also what she uses at home.

Each week Fin from Diesel drops the team freshly roasted coffee for both machines as well as coffee for some of the team that can’t go without great coffee at home either. Having that regular delivery or a subscription of freshly roasted coffee means the team never run out. With three blends available, Fin says there is a coffee for everyone. “Diesel Socio is our most popular for espresso machines, whilst Diesel black is a hit on pods and filter. Diesel Light is our decaf option which also is available in pods.”

Whether it’s for home or your office, locally roasted small batch Deisel Coffee can fuel your day.

Check them out at www.dieselcoffee.co.nz

NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 39 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

WAIKATO WARDROBES

“It’s ridiculous how exciting it is,” says Nadine Waterson, laughing, as we talk about the plans she has to add new storage systems in the house they recently purchased.

“Having a designated place for everything through custom designed storage makes daily home organisation so much simpler.” First to get an overhaul was the wardrobes and cupboard under the stairs. Now Nadine has her sights set on the garage and a few tweaks to the laundry.

Nadine and husband Duncan own Waikato Wardrobes, so you can understand Nadine’s enthusiasm to put what she knows into practice at her house. Although to be fair Nadine and the team at Waikato Wardrobes get excited about everyone’s wardrobes, laundry, garage, study nook … wherever they can work their magic. The Watersons bought Waikato Wardrobes in November 2019.

Duncan is a builder by trade, so the business appealed to the couple who are both hands on.

While Duncan takes care of the manufacturing and installations, Nadine oversees the design team, customer relations and administration. According to Nadine, getting to know the client is the key component of designing the perfect storage solution.

The traditional shelf and rail wardrobe was not only inefficient in its use of space, it also suited very few people. “Do you hang or fold your clothes?” asks Nadine. “Are you a dress wearer or more tops and bottoms? Do you have lots of shoes? Do you want these on display? Are they sneakers or high heels?” All of these questions and more will determine what your perfect wardrobe design will be.

These questions and the storage solutions extend beyond wardrobes as, despite their name, Waikato Wardrobes design and build storage systems for spaces throughout your home.

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Modern homes often have smaller bedrooms which makes an efficient wardrobe even more important. “Instead of investing in furniture,” Nadine says, “invest in a wardrobe system that suits all your needs, freeing up room space.”

While modern houses may have existing wardrobes, older houses often need a little more planning to create and maximise the space, from converting an under-utilised cupboard to taking over a bedroom for the ultimate walk-in wardrobe. A random cupboard can be turned into an office space which when not in use can be shut behind doors. And here is where great design can work for you. Sliding or bifold doors give you more space in small spaces.

Emma Yarndley knows firsthand the benefits of great design and adding usable storage in an old house. Emma, along with siblings Rebecca and Matthew, recently completed the renovation of their dad Stuart’s 1950s house.

All three of the Yarndley’s have worked for Waikato Wardrobes at some stage so had a good understanding of what they needed to think about when it came to adding useful storage to the house.

Emma says, “A really cool and interesting part of the project was the laundry.” In fact, the upstairs laundry and hot water cupboard were combined to make a multifaceted storage space. Situated behind the kitchen it could be for storing bulky kitchen appliances like that food mixer you might use infrequently. With this in mind,

the storage under the bench was intentionally deep to accommodate such appliances. This is also a space many people wish their houses had; a place to neatly store your stuff, whatever it may be and shut the door.

The newly created downstairs laundry also has plenty of storage, including a linen cupboard, saving many trips to and fro.

Meanwhile, an awkward space above the stairs was converted into a useful wardrobe. And a master stroke in the main bedroom with a four-track sliding door system, also manufactured and installed by Waikato Wardrobes, allows access to three-quarters of the wardrobe at any time.

We use and

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Emma says they are immensely proud to have been able to finish this project for their dad. “It was invaluable to have the knowledge gained from working at Waikato Wardrobes and the connection with builder Stan at Goldsack Builders Ltd.”

It appears the siblings had every right to be proud, with the house selling before it even went on the market.

Waikato Wardrobes has a team brimming with experience in design, manufacturing and installation. They pride themselves on a reputation of great service, quality product and workmanship.

TOP TIP

Both Nadine and Emma agree that functionality is the key when it comes to creating storage space you will use and appreciate. “Even on a budget, don’t sacrifice functionality,” warns Nadine. There are many options as far as finishes go but getting a practical, efficient design is the most important.

So whether you are building new, renovating or just want to find better use of your space give the Waikato Wardrobes team a call.

Waikato Wardrobes

79 Church Road, Hamilton Phone: 07 850 9959 www.waikatowardrobes.co.nz

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SHOP 9 BOUTIQUE:

Fashion with an Edge

| IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 43 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
WORDS MEGAN LYON

A lifetime lover of design, fashion, and interiors, Rosemary Poole was looking for a career change and identified a need in Hamilton’s clothing scene to bring fashion with an edge. She jumped on an opportunity in 2009, opening Shop 9, named for its location at 9 Braid Road, St Andrews, and in July this year celebrates 15 years. In 2022 they moved to River Road, occupying the space between the French Tart café and Va Va Voom Hospice store.

Rosemary’s eclectic vision is shaped by what inspires her visually and texturally, with an appreciation of quality fabrics. At home she loves her amazing collection of furs and taxidermy, juxtaposed with more modern pieces. At Shop 9 one might just find one of these beloved furs casually draped over a classic wooden chair bringing warmth and personality into the space.

This also echoes Rosemary’s sustainability stance, which sees a careful selection of designers and choosing fabrics and styles that are both enduring and long-lasting. Shop 9 attracts stylish regulars from their neighbourhood, some of whom pop in several times a week for a look and a chat.

While the European fashion scene is inspirational and key in fashion forecasting, there is pride and excitement found in supporting closer to home New Zealand and Australian labels. These include Trelise Cooper, Turet Knuefermann, and Mossman, and on the accessories side there are Kathryn Wilson shoes, Saben bags, and jewellery from local maker Crystal and Cord who make bespoke pieces, mainly for weddings. “I love to wear understated with a bit of edge,” says Rosemary, “and that’s pretty common in the over 50s market.” She cites two of her favourite designers – Shen, designed by Mary-Ellen Prendergast and Turet Knuefermann as timeless and easy to elevate.

Rosemary’s daughter Natasha Poole joined her mother, after having her son, seeking a creative role offering more flexibility. She has grown the e-commerce side of the business considerably, working with a web developer for the practical aspects, and they attribute 30% of their business to online sales, often in rural areas. Natasha’s fashion is right on trend and she enthuses: “I just want to wear everything!” This mother and daughter team is complemented by Marise Savage and between them cover a range of ages, all enjoying the interactions with their regular clients.

One such client of Rosemary’s is Anna, a primary school teacher, who started buying from her 15 years ago and values on trend fashion. They both appreciate this trusted long-term relationship and being able to have a laugh together. Rosemary has noticed Anna’s style develop with increased confidence built in selecting key pieces over this period. “It has kept her looking youthful and Anna can rock an outfit really well by mixing fabrics up such as leather and silk.”

Having clients for either Mother of the Bride or Groom is also very fulfilling for the team, especially for those non-traditional edgy outfits that are special. There are often one-off pieces, sometimes just one in New Zealand, which means that there is never any risk of the dreaded outfit double up. There are some style classics, such as the Berlin dress, which they’ve consistently sold since opening. Rosemary bought this dress in 2010 and recently wore it to a dinner in Auckland, proving the adage of buying well.

There’s been some challenges, especially with Covid 19 lockdowns, yet on the other side they’re delighted to see women elevating their outfits. While rugby matches may be the perfect reason to slip into some activewear, it turns out many women will complement their jeans with a special shirt or cashmere top. They’ve also noticed an appetite for dressing up for an occasion and making the most of attending events and functions which are already fast filling up calendars this year.

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Looking ahead for the 2024 winter season is a rich palette of mulberry, dark navy and caramels. We can expect to see some long-line denim skirts and the return of cowboy boots.

Having a strong sense of Rosemary’s personal style enlivens the space and adds to its warm and friendly atmosphere. Here natural light is important with floaty linen curtains and a minimalist aesthetic setting off the colours, textures and luxe. “The clothes need to speak,” declares Natasha.

Their clients are hard to categorise, ranging from landscape gardeners to lawyers, yet everybody is made to feel welcome with a friendly and relaxed approach to helping women find what they want. Rosemary says, “We don’t rush people. We know that investment takes some time and we want women to leave here feeling happy and good about themselves.” Natasha echoes this sentiment, adding that it is “definitely a place where you can find something special”.

Shop 9

546B River Road, Hamilton www.shop9.co.nz

Megan Lyon

Megan grew up on the Coromandel with an abundance of freedom and creativity.  Studying arts led her to Kirikiriroa, Hamilton where she returned to having run a dealer gallery in Tāmaki Makaurau, Auckland. Happily stationed in Hayes Paddock, with her husband and two boys, Megan has directed an international arts festival for a decade and freelances installing artwork and writing for several national publications.

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CBD Bakeries

Before there were cafes the bakery ruled supreme. Hamilton Central is home to some long-standing favourite bakeries as well as some up and coming ones. We paid them all a visit to see what was on offer.

LYNDA’S LUNCHBAR

6 Harwood Street

Visit at lunchtime to see how popular this tiny spot hidden in the back streets of Hamilton Central is. Be tempted by the sweet treats, get your fill of their giant filled rolls, try a gourmet pie or select from the takeaway items of the deepfried variety.

THE GRUMPY BAKER

595 Victoria Street

In three years the Grumpy Baker has won the hearts and tummies of many Hamiltonians with their freshly baked breads, rolls and pies, not to mention their doughnuts and cinnamon buns.

GAILERS CAKE KITCHEN

799 Victoria Street

A Hamilton icon, Gailers have been around since 1948. Step inside this classic Kiwi bakery where everything is still made on site, from the pastry to lamington sponge.

LA PROMESSE BAKEHOUSE

5 Ward Street

Husband and wife duo Ling and Richard opened La Promesse late last year in the heart of Hamilton Central. You’ll find it hard to choose from the most stunning looking croissants and pastries in town.

THE GRUMPY BAKER COLLINGWOOD BAKERY SHALLOW BAKERY
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LA PROMESSE BAKEHOUSE

RÜDI’S

Riverbank Mall, Victoria Street

Beginning life as a pop up in Whangamatā, Rüdi’s have found a permanent space in the Riverbank Mall on Victoria Street. Run by husband and wife duo Stefan and Fern, this artisan microbakery excels in handcrafted sourdough breads and pastries.

SHALLOW BAKERY

120 Alexandra Street

If you’re after something a little different, Shallow Bakery is the place to go. From meat floss to moochi cakes, durian flavoured desserts and milk bread, you’ll find them all here along with custom cakes and delicious desserts.

COLLINGWOOD BAKERY

28 Collingwood Street

Looking for that true Kiwi bakery with everything from filled rolls to hearty meat pies? Collingwood Bakery has been hitting the mark in the central city since forever.

GOT A SWEET TOOTH?

This Little Cakery - 9 Princes Street

Get in quick for their doughnuts along with a range of tempting brownies, macarons and more. Lynn also makes the most spectacular special occasion cakes.

Razzle Dazzle Cakes - 148 Ward Street

Specialising in gorgeous bespoke cakes, Razzle Dazzle is also the place to go for a sweet treat – cupcakes, brownies, cookies and more.

There’s always something to do, see, eat, drink and love when you visit Hamilton’s city centre.
lovethecentre.co.nz
NOURISH | FEATURE
RÜDI'S - IMAGE BY STEFAN KELLY-ZANDER LYNDA’S LUNCHBAR
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GAILERS CAKE KITCHEN

HARRIET’S HOW TO:

Lamingtons

HARRIET BOUCHER | IMAGES BRYDIE THOMPSON PAGE 48 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
WORDS

I’m ashamed to admit it, but this all started with a love for Pak ‘n Save lamingtons. I know what you’re thinking, they can’t be that good, can they? Oh, but they are.

The unbelievably light sponge, thin but moist chocolate icing, perfectly textured coconut and a lick of almost certainly fake cream all meld together for the perfect bite. The only ones I’ve tried that are a very close second, if not tied first, are those from the Grumpy Baker in Hamilton.

My friend Carissa worked in the New World bakery when she was younger and let me in on a little (unsurprising) secret that the sponge comes from a pre-mix. I assume this is the case for Pak ‘n Save too, but challenge accepted to try to beat theirs from scratch. Vicki vetoed pink lamingtons, so I put the hard work in to finding the best homemade chocolate lamington recipe.

THE SPONGE:

I started off with Donna Hay’s sponge cake from her Modern Classics book. During my research I discovered that lamingtons are in fact Australian, but Kiwis were the ones who invented the raspberry version, so of course I had to try Donna’s recipe. Her recipe was a simple four ingredients: flour, eggs, sugar, and butter. It was the only recipe I made with butter in it and while it enriched the flavour, I felt it made the sponge heavier. The six eggs made the fresh out of the oven sponge smell like a Sunday breakfast and for an egg hater like me, it was a bit off-putting. This sponge held its height the best, and I made nine generous sized lamingtons out of the mix. I found the flour dominated the senses; a hint of vanilla would have improved the overall taste.

Next on my list was Jackie’s Mum’s Sponge from Stephanie Alexander’s 1000+ page bible, The Cook’s Companion. This sponge is gluten free, using cornflour, custard powder, cream of tartar, baking soda, eggs, and sugar. I was blown away with how light and airy this sponge was, you wouldn’t know it was gluten free. My test tasters were drooling over these lamingtons, but unfortunately this isn’t a practical sponge to glaze. It’s so light that it’s tricky to slice and you must be incredibly gentle when either dipping or spreading icing onto it or the crust just crumbles off. I tried this recipe twice and even freezing the sponge (we’ll get to this soon), doesn’t hold it together enough to make it a feasible option. If you’re looking for a sponge cake to ice whole or you’re gluten free, I highly recommend giving this a go.

I ventured into The Great New Zealand Baking Book next to try Kate Fay’s sponge from her Raspberry Lamington recipe. Her recipe uses flour, baking powder, salt, eggs, sugar, milk, and vanilla. This sponge was light and flavoursome without being eggy or crumbly. It cooked evenly and came out of the tin with no blemishes on the outer.

The final sponge I tried was Vicki’s edited version of the Edmonds Cookery Book. I added vanilla to the ingredient list of eggs, salt, sugar, cornflour, flour, and baking powder. Kate Fay’s cooked more evenly than this, but Vicki’s was my favourite sponge of the four to eat in its plain form. My lamington loving dad had tried a few of my previous recipes and told me “your lamington skills have improved” after eating this one, so I was confident I’d found the right sponge.

As much as I would have liked Jackie’s Mum’s sponge to work, Vicki’s version was the most practical to ice while being the closest to a Pak ‘n Save sponge in flavour. It needs vanilla added to enhance it, but other than that I think she had nailed it. Carissa

had also let me in on a hot tip that her grandma had taught her, which was to freeze the sponge before glazing it. This proved to be a game-changing trick and the quality of the sponge wasn’t compromised.

THE GLAZE:

Going into this research I expected the sponge to be the most complex component, but it was the glaze that had me stumped. When I made Donna Hay’s lamington recipe, I used her chocolate icing, which was the classic icing sugar, cocoa, hot water, and butter. I thinned it out with far more hot water than the recipe specified but I could have made it even thinner. Being a rookie lamington maker at this point, I used a knife to spread it on the six sides of the sponge cube and I don’t think I’ve ever made a bigger mess in the kitchen. This didn’t come close to the Pak ‘n Save lamington glaze, I needed to find one that was pourable, would adhere to the sponge, keep it moist, and possess a deep chocolatey flavour.

Mirror glazes were trendy a few years ago, and I thought one of these might tick my glaze criteria. They’re designed to be so shiny and smooth that when poured over a cake, you can see yourself, hence the name. I tried the Recipe Tin Eats chocolate mirror glaze, which uses water, cocoa, gelatine, cream, and sugar. I found it to be really thick, despite adding extra cream, and I ended up spreading it onto the sponge like Donna’s icing. The cocoa gave a rich chocolatey flavour without it being too sweet so I felt like I was on the right track.

I wanted to try a chocolate-based glaze, which I found on a blog called Chef Iso. This glaze made a HUGE recipe, even after I halved it. It used dark chocolate, water, sugar, condensed milk, vanilla, and gelatine. He recommended adding cocoa if you wanted a dark glaze, but I stuck to just chocolate at first. The consistency of this allowed me to dip the frozen lamington sponge directly into it which made for a far cleaner job. Initially I found it too sweet, but when paired with the sponge and coconut, it balanced well. I added cocoa and extra water to the remaining glaze to thin and enrich it, but the Recipe Tin Eats glaze was still my favourite.

For curiosity’s sake I made a dark chocolate ganache using just cream, chocolate, and a bit of gelatine to help it set on the sponge. It coated the sponge unenjoyably thick, and I found it overpowering, so I quickly dismissed using a ganache.

I went back to the Recipe Tin Eats glaze and halved the gelatin, increased the liquids, and added vanilla bean paste, then modified the method so that I used it whilst still quite warm. This is as close as I’ve got to the Pak ‘n Save glaze and I love the chocolatey flavour it brings to the lamington.

THE COCONUT:

I was surprised by how big of a part the texture of the coconut plays. Over the course of my trials, I used a very fine coconut, thread, and desiccated. The fine coconut was floury in texture, and I really had to press it into the glaze. The coconut flavour was lost being so fine so it ended up being a gritty layer on the palate. Initially I found the thread coconut too dominating, but visually this is the most appealing, and when paired with the right glaze, it brings a welcoming texture and flavour. The desiccated coconut was my favourite all round. It’s the perfect mix between the other two extremes, although visually thread is best.

When up against a pre-mix undoubtedly filled with additives, preservatives, and artificial flavourings, I’m proud of my final lamington. The whole family will love these classic bakery treats. I know I’m addicted.

NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 49 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

CHOCOLATE

Lamingtons

I’ve fallen in love with lamingtons. The combination of a light fluffy sponge, chocolatey glaze, and coconut are just glorious. I like making 16 smaller ones but if you’re piping cream in the middle, I’d make 9.

RECIPE HARRIET BOUCHER | IMAGES BRYDIE THOMPSON
PAGE 50 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

FOR THE SPONGE

3 size 7 eggs

pinch salt

½ cup + 1 tbsp sugar

1 tsp vanilla

3 tbsp cornflour

¼ cup + 1 tbsp flour

1 tsp baking powder

FOR THE SPONGE

FOR THE GLAZE

2 tsp gelatine powder

1 cup water

1 cup cocoa

1 cup cream

1 cup sugar

1 tsp vanilla

2–3 cups of desiccated coconut whipped cream to serve (optional)

Preheat the oven to 180°C (not fan bake). Butter and flour* a 20cm square cake tin.

Beat the eggs, salt, and sugar until thick and pale, approximately 5 minutes, then add in the vanilla and beat well.

Sift together the cornflour, flour, and baking powder, then sift it again over the beaten egg/sugar mix. Use a large metal spoon to fold the dry ingredients in. A tip I learnt at chef school is to gently shake the spoon as you lift the mix over, which helps disperse the flour. Don’t over mix but also ensure there’s no flour pockets left.

Gently pour the mix into the prepared cake tin and place it into the oven. Do not slam the oven door, treat it with respect so you don’t knock the air out. Bake for 15–20 minutes. Don’t open the oven door until 15 minutes has passed. This just helps it have the best chance of staying light and airy. When cooked, the cake will be coming away from the side of the tin and it will spring back when lightly touched.

Allow the cake to sit in the tin for 5 minutes, then tip out onto a wire rack to cool. Once cool, cut into 9 (3x3) for larger lamingtons or 16 (4x4) for smaller lamingtons. Place the sponge squares in an airtight container and freeze for a few hours or overnight.

*To butter and flour a tin, rub softened butter right around the inside of the tin, ensuring you evenly coat it. Add about a tablespoon of flour into the tin and shake it around so it sticks to the butter. Tip out any excess flour and ensure the whole inside of the tin is coated.

FOR THE GLAZE

Sprinkle the gelatin over 2 tbsp of water, give it a stir and allow to bloom.

In a pot, mix the cocoa and water together to make a paste. Add in a little of the cream to loosen the mix, then add the rest of the cream, sugar and vanilla. Place over a medium heat and slowly bring to just below boiling point, whisking to get rid of any lumps. Once hot, take off the heat and whisk in the bloomed gelatin.

Strain into a deep jug or bowl, wide enough to dunk your sponge in and allow to cool for about 15–20 minutes.

Place a layer of coconut on a plate or tray. Gently stick a piece of frozen sponge onto a fork and give it a quick dunk in the glaze. Allow it to drip for a few seconds before prying it off onto the coconut. Roll the glazed sponge in the coconut until it’s fully coated, then place on a clean plate and repeat with the remaining sponges. Top the plate of coconut up as you need it rather than putting it all on the plate at once.

Serve with whipped cream.

TIP: Work with a few pieces of sponge at a time, keeping the rest in the freezer. They defrost quickly and are much easier to work with from frozen. You can also make the glaze ahead of time, just warm it up when you’re ready to use it.

Harriet Boucher

Harriet is a Waikato born and raised foodie. She is a chef by trade and has worked in a few popular cafes and restaurants around Hamilton. When she isn’t whipping up treats, you can find her enjoying a walk along the river or dining at her favourite local eateries.

NOURISH | RECIPES PAGE 51 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Chocolate Recipes You Will Melt Over

RECIPES & IMAGES FIONA HUGUES PAGE 52 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

A LOAFY CHOCOLATE SITUATION (AN ODE TO DKD)

Any young at heart Auckland party goer or night owl student of the nineties will undoubtedly remember DKD café tucked at the back of the Civic Theatre. Named after the trio that started it, Darren, Karen and Derek, I always thought it stood for Decadence Kills Desire. Maybe it did, I don’t care. It’s where you went with the munchies late at night when partied out and usually a bit pissed, to devour the most delicious chocolate cake in the city. The legendary locale is now long closed but the coffee legacy still rides on via beans you can buy from a roastery north of the big city.

Such good staggery, stuff-face memories were made back then, and this almost black loaf cake sandwich stuffed full of a silky crème fraîche ganache situation with loads of espresso cream on the side is my ode to those dim, gloriously decadent nights, dark chocolatey and delicious, just like those slabs of famous cake and the stand out coffee at that unforgettable café.

FOR THE LOAF:

220g plain flour

350g granulated sugar

90g good quality cocoa powder

2 tsp baking powder

½ tsp baking soda

160g full fat sour cream

120ml vegetable oil

2 large eggs

2 tsp vanilla extract

250ml hot brewed espresso

FILLING

250ml fresh cream

100g butter, cut into chunks

120g dark baking chocolate

120g caster sugar

60g Dutch-process cocoa powder

160g crème fraîche at room temperature

ESPRESSO CREAM

300ml fresh cream

1 short double shot of espresso

1 tsp finely ground coffee beans

2 tbsp icing sugar (optional)

BOUTIQUE DESIGNER WOMENS FASHION

FOR CHOCOLATE LOAF:

Preheat oven to 170°C fan bake.

Lightly grease and line a standard size loaf tin.

In a bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder.

In another bowl or 2-cup glass measuring cup, whisk together sour cream, oil, eggs, and vanilla until evenly incorporated. Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients and pour in sour cream mixture. Stir until just combined. Pour in the hot coffee and stir until smooth, then pour batter into prepared loaf pan.

Bake for 40–50 minutes when tested with a skewer it comes out clean. If the top looks like its baking too quickly cover with a piece of foil.

Remove baked loaf from oven and let cool on a wire rack. Dust top with good quality cocoa powder.

FOR THE FILLING:

Place cream, butter and chocolate in a bowl and microwave for 1 minute on high. Let sit and gently stir to combine.

Add sugar, cocoa powder and whisk until incorporated. It will look like a slightly grainy brownie batter at this point.

Next add crème fraîche and whisk until smooth and shiny.

Set aside if using straight away or chill and bring to room temperature to make spreading easy.

FOR THE ESPRESSO CREAM

Whisk the cream until starting to thicken. Add the espresso, ground beans and icing suagr if using.

Continue to beat until just beginning to firm up.

To serve – Using a bread knife cut thick slices of loaf and sandwich them with lashings of the filling. Serve with copious amounts of espresso cream on the side. You’re welcome.

546b River Road, Hamilton www.shop9.co.nz
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CHOCOLATE BASQUE CHEESECAKE

I made my usual vanilla Basque cheescake a few years ago and it was photographed as part of a festive editorial for a national magazine. I won’t name the publication, as the readers, I imagine, are much akin to the legendary readers of UK Horse & Hound, opinionated, unbudgingly fuddy, quite proper and easily offended (and it may bite me in the bum, just like their fussily groomed miniature Schnauzers). Anyway, my cake back then was perfectly dark, but alas, to those with no pining for pinxtos or much Spanish culinery nous at all, it looked burnt to buggery. And so it was shoved to the end of the spread, small and unfortunte, like some unavoidable, shameful, overcooked embarrassment.

Fast forward to now and the basic blackened Basque is found in many a Mediterranean-esque establishment across the motu. The deliberatly burnt-top combination of vanilla, cream cheese, eggs, cream, sugar and flour most probably these days pops into the chintz-lined mahogany dining rooms of my critics and I’m happy for them, I am. Gratefully I’ve since got over my woes and moved on, so here’s my swankier version for now, smacked full of chocolate for je ne sais quois, dark and mysterious, hopefully now she’ll get the page real estate she deserves.

Keep in the fridge for a few days (if it lasts that long) and always serve at room temperature with copious amounts of fluffy whipped cream dusted in cocoa powder.

NOTE – These days I try to eliminate as many of the inevitable variables with recipe sharing so weigh most of my solid ingredeints. With a digital set of scales on your bench you can whack out recipes tout suite without all that faffing about with measuring cups.

650g cream cheese

300g dark chocolate

1 tsp espresso powder dissolved in 1 tbsp hot water

4 large free range eggs

300ml fresh cream

280g caster sugar

1½ tbsp cocoa powder

1 tbsp plain flour

Grease and line a 25cm springform tin. Preheat oven to 180°C fan bake.

Place cream cheese in a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attchment and beat until smooth and creamy. While it’s beating, melt the chocolate (I zap mine in the microwve for 1 minute then let it sit for 2–3 minutes before strring together). Stir the dissolved espresso powder into the chocolate. Add this to the cream cheese and beat in until combined. Add the eggs one at a time until incorporated.

Mix together the cream, sugar, cocoa and flour. Add this to the cream cheese mixture and beat until smooth.

Pour into pepared tin and bake for a little over an hour or until its wobbly in the middle and the top is dark and shiny.

Set aside to cool, then cover and chill.

Serve on a pretty plate dusted with cocoa and plenty of whipped cream on the side.

Add a few berries or bits of seasonal fruit, only if you’re feeling virtuous.

Fiona Hugues

Award winning food stylist, designer & creative multi-hyphenate Fiona Hugues spent her childhood gallivanting around the Waikato countryside on horse back. After Hillcrest High School, Elam School of Fine Arts took her to Auckland where she has lived ever since and now resides on a rural property with her French husband, their three children & a plethora of animals. She’s an entertaining expert, sourdough coach, art director and gourmand and it’s said in dire circumstances she would possibly trade one of her children for a bottle of Pinot Grigio & a good burrata.

YOUR PLACE TO MEET AT THE HEART OF LOCKERBIE ESTATE NOW FULLY LICENCED 105 Fairway Drive, Morrinsville hello@oakeatery.co.nz Oakeatery_
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‘I FEEL LIKE SOMETHING ELSE’ TRIPLE CHOC BISCUITS

We have a thing in my household at those pre at-home movie nights or post sports event times when ineveitably one of us will say in a slightly puzzled tone, “I feel like something else.” At that point it is an open floor to pipe up with sweet little (or big) suggestions for a delicious treat, a sweet something to settle in with. These biscuits are those – rich, chewy and delicate with all, I mean all, the chocolate and a bit of roasted nut to be virtuous. The added sprinkle of sea salt perks up the chocolate flavours, so do not be scared, shower that sh*t on for added enhancment.

They are a softer chewy biscuit, so keep them in an airtight container for a couple of days.

MAKES 15 OR SO LARGE BISCUITS

230g dark cooking chocolate

80g butter, softened

150g brown sugar

70g caster sugar

2 size 7 eggs

100g plain flour

50g cornflakes, finely ground

20g cocoa powder

1 tsp baking soda

250g chopped milk chocolate

50g toasted flaked almonds

sea salt flakes for sprinkling

Melt the dark chocolate then set aside to cool.

In a bowl or bowl of a stand mixer, cream butter and sugars until pale and smooth. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Add the melted chocolate and mix until combined.

Put the cornflakes in a food processor and blitz until a fine crumb forms. In a separate bowl, sift together the dry ingredients and stir through the ground cornflakes and almonds. Add to the stand mixer and slowly mix to combine. Once well combined, stir in the milk chocolate with a spoon.

Heat the oven to 180°C regular bake and line an oven tray with baking paper.

Spoon 6–8 heaped dessert spoon sized balls onto your tray, allowing room for them to spread. Sprinkle with flaked seasalt and bake for 8–10 minutes. Leave on the tray to cool and harden slightly before moving to a wire rack. Repeat with remaining dough.

PAGE 56 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

EASTER PIE

The brief to myself was to make a rustic pie that is a very loose play on the Italian Torta Pasqualina (an enclosed pastry pie using spinach and eggs). After many tests and neighbours’ approval, this one came out on top.

NOURISH | RECIPES
PAGE 57 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
RECIPE & IMAGES KATHY PATERSON

EASTER PIE

SERVES 6

PASTRY

250g plain flour

150g cold butter, diced

25g cheddar cheese

5 tbsp cold water

1 egg, beaten for an egg wash or use a splash of milk

FILLING

120g packet tender spinach leaves, well washed

150g cow feta (or use goat’s milk cheese)

90g mozzarella (buffalo or cow)

125g ricotta

6 tbsp freshly grated parmesan or pecorino

1 egg, lightly beaten

TO FINISH

1 egg, hardboiled, optional

To make the filling, wilt the spinach in a saucepan with just the water that is clinging to its leaves then put into a sieve sitting over a bowl to drain. Set aside to cool.

Crumble the cow feta into a bowl. Grate the mozzarella, or, alternatively, tear into small pieces using your hands and add to the feta. Add the ricotta and 3 tablespoons of parmesan or pecorino. Add the egg and season with salt and pepper. Set aside.

To make the pastry, put the flour, a pinch of salt, and the butter in a food processor. Grate in the 25g cheddar cheese. Process until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs, then drizzle over the water and continue to process until the mixture just begins to form clumps. Tip out onto a lightly floured bench top and bring together, flattening to a disc shape.

Roll the pastry out into a 30cm disc then put onto a lightly greased baking tray (or line the baking tray with baking paper).

Squeeze any excess liquid from the cooled spinach and mix into the cheese mixture. Spread over the pastry, leaving a 5–6cm border around the edge uncovered.

Fold the uncovered edge of the pastry, pleating as you go to give a pastry edge to the pie. (There will be an open hole in the middle.)

Ensure the pastry does not split while folding, otherwise the filling may leak during cooking. Put in the fridge to firm up while you heat the oven to 200°C.

Remove from the fridge and brush the pastry top with enough egg wash or milk to coat and sprinkle the remaining parmesan or pecorino over the filling, sprinkling a little on the pastry as well.

Put in the oven and cook for 30 minutes until the pastry is beautifully golden brown and the filling just set.

To serve, cut the hardboiled egg in half lengthwise and scoop the yolk into a small, fine sieve. Cut the egg white into fine shreds and scatter over the pie. Push the egg yolk through the sieve directly over the pie.

TIPS – Swap out the spinach for the green leaves of silverbeet or use rainbow chard. You will need to wilt these a little longer until tender.

The delight of making the pastry in the food processor is that you can work with it straight away. In fact, you do not want it firm when you are folding it.

The pie can be eaten hot, warm, or cold.

HERBS AND GREEN LEAVES WITH MUSTARD DRESSING

Slightly bitter salad greens and herbs are gently pacified with a fullflavoured mustard dressing, so don’t be afraid to use them.

Shiso grows easily in the garden and taking over in mine is the variety that is green on one side, purple on the other. Shiso is from the mint family with flavour notes of basil, anise, and cinnamon.

SERVES 4

DRESSING

2 cloves garlic, crushed

1 tbsp Dijon mustard

1 tbsp sherry or red wine vinegar

4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

SALAD

4 handfuls seasonal salad greens, torn if leaves are large

1 handful flat leaf parsley leaves

1 small bunch chives, snipped a few baby nasturtium leaves

3–4 shiso leaves, shredded to impart flavour

2 tbsp NZ Pinoli pine nuts, toasted (available at Vetro & Herbal Dispensary)

To make the dressing put the garlic, mustard, vinegar, and oil in a clean screw top jar. Season with salt and pepper then screw on the lid and shake well.

Gently toss the greens and herbs together then drizzle over enough dressing to moisten and gently toss again. Sprinkle over the toasted pine nuts.

Kathy Paterson

Kathy Paterson is a recipe developer, food stylist and photographer. A plentiful herb garden and a trial and error vegetable garden give Kathy the starting place for her recipes along with her love of the classics with a modern twist.

www.kathypaterson.co.nz

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69 Mahoe Street, Te Awamutu | 07 871 8715 INSTAGRAM facebook @redkitchencafeandstore Your NEW old favourite spot PAGE 59 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

P umpkin to Talk About

RECIPES & IMAGES AMBER BREMNER
PAGE 60 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Move over pumpkin soup, time to try something new. Buttercup pumpkin (known as kabocha squash outside of New Zealand) is sweet and firm fleshed, with thin skin that’s good enough to eat when roasted. Here are two ideas – one simple, one requiring more effort – to enjoy buttercup pumpkin differently.

Buttercup with Rosemary, Orange + Chilli

A sizzling roasting dish of caramelised wedges of buttercup pumpkin, fragrant with rosemary, orange, and chilli is far more exciting than it has any right to be. The orange helps create sticky, crunchy edges and crispy skin, making for moreish bites that are delicious dipped into a creamy, tangy yoghurt and tahini sauce.

PUMPKIN

1 buttercup pumpkin

2 tbsp olive oil

2 cloves garlic, finely grated or crushed

1 tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped

1–2 red chillis, deseeded and finely chopped zest of one orange

2 tbsp freshly squeezed orange juice salt and pepper

YOGHURT TAHINI SAUCE

¼ cup yoghurt (dairy free or regular, I use coconut)

1 tbsp tahini (available from Bare, Herbal Dispensary & Vetro)

1 tbsp freshly squeezed orange juice pinch salt

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Wash pumpkin, cut in half and remove seeds, then slice into even sized wedges. Place wedges in a roasting dish or oven tray.

In a small dish, mix together olive oil, garlic, rosemary, chilli, orange zest and juice. Pour over pumpkin, then use your hands to rub the mixture over all surfaces. Season with salt and a good grind of black pepper.

Roast pumpkin for about 30 minutes (turn after 20 minutes), until the flesh is tender and the skin and edges are caramelised.

For the sauce, stir all ingredients together until smooth. Taste and adjust seasoning if necessary.

Serve pumpkin hot from the oven, with a dollop of yoghurt tahini sauce.

NOURISH | RECIPES
Preheat oven to 220°C.
PAGE 61 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Stuffed Buttercup Pumpkin

Stuffed vegetables may not be at the cutting edge of modern cuisine, but I still love them for their homely vibes and let’s face it, they make a stunning centrepiece when you feel like making an effort. This buttercup is stuffed with a tasty mixture of wild rice, chunks of sourdough, apple, walnuts, and sage. The wild rice could be swapped out for half a cup of cooked lentils, brown or black rice, freekeh, or farro for a similar result.

¼ cup wild rice (or ½ cup cooked)

1 tbsp olive oil

1 onion, finely chopped

3 cloves garlic, finely chopped 6–8 fresh sage leaves

¼ cup walnuts

2 slices of sourdough (about 80g), ripped or cut into small chunks

½ a Granny Smith apple, cut into small dice juice of half a lemon salt and pepper

1 buttercup pumpkin

Start by cooking wild rice, by simmering in salted water for 20–30 minutes until tender with a little bite. Drain and set aside.

Preheat oven to 200°C.

Heat olive oil in a frying pan over medium heat. Add onion, garlic and sage and cook, stirring often, until tender and golden. Add walnuts and bread and cook for another few minutes, until lightly browned. Stir through the diced apple, squeeze over the juice of half a lemon and season well with salt and pepper. Turn off the heat.

Prepare pumpkin by washing the outside, then use a heavy knife to cut off the top

2cm in one piece (this becomes the lid). Use a spoon to scrape out the seeds and soft insides of the pumpkin (put these in the compost).

Pack the filling into the pumpkin, drizzle a little more olive oil over the filling, and rub some oil over the skin of the pumpkin. Put the lid on, then roast for 45–60 minutes, until the pumpkin is tender when poked with a toothpick. Take the pumpkin lid off at about 40 minutes, to allow the top to brown. Cut into wedges to serve.

Amber Bremner

Quite Good Food www.quitegoodfood.co.nz

Amber Bremner is the author of popular plant based food blog Quite Good Food. A champion for cooking and eating food that makes you feel good, she believes small changes in the way we approach food have the power to make a difference.

PAGE 62 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

Mr. Goodfellow

IRVINE | IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES NOURISH | FEATURE PAGE 63 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
WORDS DENISE

Hamilton chef Brad Bakker became catering manager at Waikato Diocesan School for Girls in January 2020, just a couple of months ahead of the country’s first Covid pandemic lockdown. He and his kitchen team went from cooking for the school’s 140 boarders to overseeing an empty dining room as students quickly went home.

“Suddenly the school was deserted and we had no one to cook for,” he says. He and his staff were still on site. It was like they were all dressed up with nowhere to go. Brad didn’t like being idle, it’s not his natural style, so he and Diocesan’s then commercial manager Delwyn Guilford talked about ways to diversify, using the team’s skills and the facilities to create another revenue stream for Diocesan.

Mr Goodfellow Catering (MGF) was born out of these talks, an out-catering business with a “Good Food Good Mood” slogan, run under the school’s umbrella but independent of day-to-day cooking for students.

Mr Goodfellow takes its name from Sir William Goodfellow, one of the original owners of Waikato Diocesan’s site on Hamilton’s River Road. Sir William was a generous school benefactor and the former owner of the historic Bankwood House, which nowadays serves as Diocesan’s reception area and home for its principal.

The company named in Sir William’s honour caters for a wide range of clients: it may be 200 people at a corporate event, or a wedding, or perhaps a buffet drop-off for 50 guests at a birthday

party, or a private dinner party for eight. A food truck with smart MGF signage and fit-out has been added to the mix (you can catch it at Gourmet in the Gardens on summer Sundays).

Brad says they’re now seeing the snowball effect on the MGF brand. It is gaining momentum, and happily headquartered in a state-of-the-art kitchen – which he helped design – to service the new school dining area that opened in April 2023. The staff is organised to split student and out-catering requirements. “It’s an amazing facility,” he says. “It’s great to use it to the maximum.”

In other developments, Hamilton hospo professional Emily Donderwinkel joined the MGF team as catering events coordinator, and there is also an online shop with a range of housemade condiments and take-home heat-and-eat meals.

The spoiler alert on the condiments is that Mr Goodfellow’s punchy habanero mustard from the online range that I intended as a gift never made it to the intended recipient because it’s so damn good, and same with the hot pineapple chutney.

Which leads us to talk about food: Brad says he likes to brush the mustard on a side of salmon, and top it with capers and lemon. It’s also good with his buffet-style roast beef, and other meats. The pineapple chutney is an essential on MGF’s cheeseboard, and it adds extra flavour to a beef brisket and cheddar quesadilla (on the food truck menu).

Another buffet specialty is slow-cooked lamb leg (done overnight), served with homemade red wine jus alongside fresh seasonal salads. Brad shops as local as possible for produce, using the likes of meat from Te Awamutu-based butcher Expleo, and breads from Hamilton’s Volare and Grumpy Baker. “Everything is made from scratch, including all the condiments.”

The food truck menu is strong on condiments: the Asian-style fried chicken comes with wasabi mayo, Nashville fried chicken has MGF’s amped-up Mac Sauce on the side, venison mini-burgers are served with Swiss cheese and kasundi, and so on.

“Everyone raves about the food,” says Emily. “And people love the

PAGE 64 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
IMAGE SUPPLIED

baking. When they have Brad’s caramel slice, they usually say, ‘It’s just like my grandmother used to make’.”

In fact the MGF caramel slice is one that Brad’s own grandmother, Hazel Hayes, made when he was a youngster. Brad named his first Hamilton café Hazel Hayes, after his gran, who was an excellent baker. This is one of Brad’s specialties, too, and his Hazel Hayes brand also had a substantial catering business.

Brad is originally a South Islander, from Invercargill, and he did his London and City Guilds chef training in Dunedin and Christchurch. He went overseas as a 21 year old and stayed five years, working in kitchens in Europe, the UK, and Ireland, came back to Wellington, then moved to Hamilton. He opened Hazel Hayes in north Victoria Street in 2010, and later owned Mr Milton’s Canteen in Alexandra Street.

Kiwi chef Al Brown is Brad’s top food hero, and Brown’s Auckland eatery, Depot, is his favourite restaurant. “His food has heaps of flavour, it’s rustic, and not all fancied up.” On the laden bookshelf

SHOWROOM:

in Brad’s office there is a faded but not jaded Al Brown cookbook with a busted spine. Testament to plenty of use on his kitchen bench.

If Brad were to explain his own culinary style it would be along the lines of “cooking from scratch, nothing the same twice, bloody good food, everything made in house”.

Emily Donderwinkel adds a last line: “Mr Goodfellow’s food is made with love, served with love, and a smile. We know it’s good.”

mrgoodfellow.nz

Denise Irvine

Denise Irvine is a born-and-bred Waikato journalist and foodwriter. Her work frequently showcases the region's talented chefs and food producers; she says we have the best of the

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Liquid Gold

Liquid gold – this description for olive oil is becoming more and more accurate every year.

Prices of olive oil have skyrocketed in the last few years. Donald Montes from Taste of Greece has seen a 120% increase in prices in just one year. Increasing demand and falling production has predictably led to price increases, not to mention the rise of dubious practices when it comes to the labelling of this sought after culinary staple.

We consider olive oil a staple, but it’s a reasonably new food for New Zealanders. In her day my nana had to buy her olive oil from a chemist! And while it is commonplace now and can be found on every supermarket shelf, does this lack of tradition and understanding of the product mean we lack a real understanding of olive oil, its benefits, uses and what we’re really paying for?

To find out more we spoke to Anna from Vetro Hamilton, which sells a range of different olive oils from both the Mediterranean and New Zealand, along with Nathan Casey from Village Press in the Hawkes Bay, Gino Cuccurullo from Medifoods and Donald Montes from Taste of Greece.

Not all olive oils are equal. While country of origin and variety of olive is important to some, and we will come to that, it’s more important to understand the difference between an extra virgin olive oil and

the plethora of other types of olive oil.

EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL (EVOO)

This is the highest quality and purest form of olive oil. It is made from the first pressing of olives and most crucially is free from any chemical processing. EVOO has a low acidity level (usually below 0.8%) and a gorgeous flavour, ranging from peppery to grassy, fruity to nutty. It is commonly used for dressing salads, drizzling over cooked vegetables, and dipping bread.

VIRGIN OLIVE OIL

Rarely seen in New Zealand, this type of olive oil is also derived from the first pressing of olives but has a slightly higher acidity level (up to 2%). Virgin olive oil has a milder flavour compared to EVOO and is frequently used for cooking and sautéing.

OLIVE OIL

Sometimes referred to as ‘pure’ olive oil, this is a blend of virgin olive oil and refined olive oil. Refined olive oil has been processed using heat or chemicals. Olive oil has a neutral taste and a slightly higher smoke point compared to virgin olive oil, making it suitable for various cooking methods, such as frying and baking.

LIGHT OLIVE OIL

Despite its name, ‘light’ olive oil is not lower in calories or fat. It simply means that the oil has a lighter flavour and colour. Like pure olive oil, light olive oil is a blend of refined olive oil and EVOO or virgin olive oil and is good for recipes where a milder taste is desired or when cooking at higher temperatures.

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OLIVE POMACE OIL

Sitting at the bottom of the hierarchy of olive oil grades, olive pomace oil is produced from the byproducts of the virgin and extra virgin olive oil production process. Around 5–8% of the oil remains in the olive pulp after pressing and extraction for extra virgin and virgin oils. To release this oil chemical solvents and heat are used in similar ways canola oil is extracted. The result is an oil useful for cooking but in no way has the benefits of an extra virgin olive oil.

Donald says ‘pure’ and ‘light’ are not labels that exist for olive oil in Europe. This is because when they want to use an olive oil it is for its flavour as much as it is for the oil’s properties. Gino laments, “Imagine Caprese salad with canola oil. Life would never be the same.” I hasten to add the same gorgeous salad would be ruined by a drizzle of olive pomace or light olive oil too. Which brings us to the question – when is olive oil the right oil?

For me the benefits of an olive oil over others are the health benefits and the flavour. This means I am likely to only buy extra virgin olive oil and would use this in salad dressings, as a dip for bread, drizzled over grilled vegetables, a soup, pizza. I won’t use extra virgin olive oil in an aioli, as its flavour overpowers the mayonnaise, but I love it in the lemon cakes (on page 69), as it adds a lovely herbaceous note. I may use extra virgin olive oil when searing a steak, but I do so out of convenience as the heat will ruin the flavour of the oil. It’s convenient as I avoid oils that have had heat treatment or solvents used in their production which is also why you won’t find any other form of olive oil in my pantry other than extra virgin.

TASTE

As we’ve already established, other than extra virgin, all other olive oils on the New Zealand market have little flavour. For this reason, if taste is what you are after, extra virgin olive oil is your only choice.

The flavours of extra virgin olive oil will vary depending on a number of factors, including the type of olives used, the region they come from, the ripeness of the olives, and the production methods employed.

Anna from Vetro Hamilton says, “At home, we have at least three olive oil pourers by our cooktop, each filled with a different olive oil and each used for different purposes. I love the peppery finish

of our range of Greek extra virgin olive oils, and I never make a salad dressing (a hangover from when our children were young and refused any form of dressing on their veggies and salads), instead I drizzle with a Greek EVO and a well-aged balsamic vinegar or fruity balsamic glaze. We use pomace for roasting and deep frying, as it has a high tolerance to heat and virtually no flavour. A chilliinfused oil seldom goes astray in our house – it’s a lovely, healthy alternative to sweet chilli sauce and goes perfectly with pierogi and caramalised onion.”

QUALITY & AUTHENTICITY

When it comes to olive oil these two things are intertwined. With weather patterns changing in traditional olive regions resulting in falling production, countries like Tunisia are filling the gap. While Tunisia, like New Zealand, Australia and California, may be able to produce beautiful olive oils, it is unregulated and thus open to them producing quantity over quality.

The world of olive oil production in Europe is already rife with grim mafia practices and country of origin labelling often being fudged. This is why it is essential to buy from reputable companies and look for a seal or certification like a PDO.

Donald says, “I guarantee you not a single imported olive oil in a New Zealand supermarket is 100% extra virgin olive oil.” He can make this claim based on the sheer price so called extra virgin olive oil is sold at your local supermarket considering world demand and the cost to ship the oil to New Zealand.

New Zealand company Village Press have also been grappling with falling production and the cyclones in early 2023 played havoc with the harvest. For this reason Village Press added a small amount of oil from Europe to their traditionally 100% New Zealand oil. But to put this in context, Italy, the world’s second largest producer of olive oil now imports more olive oil from Spain than it produces.

Anna says, “With the challenges of the olive oil market, we work really hard to have a comprehensive and affordable range of olive oil. This is a daily focus for us at Vetro Hamilton and we work very closely with our suppliers to maintain a solid and current understanding of the market both domestically and internationally.”

So if you are looking for a delicious, healthy extra virgin olive oil head in to your local Vetro to discover the one that is right for you.

We’re not just good eggs.
fully licenced too.
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*we’re

OLIVE OIL RECIPES

WORDS VICKI RAVLICH-HORAN | IMAGES ASHLEE DECAIRES
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OLIVE OIL AND LEMON CAKE

You can’t get more Mediterranean than olive oil and lemons! Like the Olive Oil Cookies, the oil in these cakes make them simple to make and means they keep fresh for a few days. I love the addition of thyme to the lemon syrup as it complements the herbaceous notes of the extra virgin olive oil.

1 cup extra virgin olive oil

1¾ cup sugar

3 eggs

3–5 lemons, depending on their size and juiciness

½ tsp baking soda

1 cup milk

1 tsp vanilla extract

2 cups flour

1 tsp baking powder

1 tsp salt

fresh thyme (optional)

Beat the olive oil and 1 cup of sugar together. I used a stand mixer but you could use a hand mixer or do this by hand to the same effect.

Add the eggs, 2 tbsp of lemon zest and ¼ cup of lemon juice and beat well.

Dissolve the baking soda in the milk and add to the batter along with the vanilla, flour, baking powder, and salt. Mix until combined.

Pour the batter into a greased 21–23cm cake tin or 8–10 Texas muffin pans or similar.

Bake at 180°C for 40–50 minutes for the large cake, less (around 30 minutes) for the smaller individual cakes.

While the cakes are cooking, make the lemon syrup by dissolving 1 cup of lemon juice and 1–2 tbsp of lemon zest with the remaining ¾ cup of sugar and fresh thyme if using. Bring to a simmer and reduce by half.

When the cake is slightly cooled, remove from the pan and drizzle over the lemon syrup.

OLIVE OIL COOKIES

The olive oil in these cookies does two things: it shortens the time it takes to make a batch, as there is no creaming butter and sugar, and it results in a crispier texture without the cookies being hard.

Double this mixture, as the cookies last well. (Well, they do if hidden from the family.)

½ cup of extra virgin olive oil

½ cup brown sugar

½ cup sugar

1 egg

½ tsp baking soda

½ tsp salt

1 cup flour

¾ cup dark chocolate chips (I use Callebaut 42% Chocolate Callets from Vetro or 125g or half a block of 50% dark chocolate from Whittakers, roughly chopped)

Whisk together the oil and sugars. I used a hand mixer to do this. You could use a stand mixer with a whisk attachment or by hand. When the oil and sugars are well combined, whisk in the egg.

Now add the baking soda, salt, and flour and mix before adding in the chocolate. Place the cookie dough in the fridge for 30 minutes to firm up.

Roll dough into tablespoonfuls and place on lined baking trays. Bake at 180°C for 15–20 minutes, or until golden brown.

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AGLIO OLIO

With a jar of confit garlic in the fridge you can have a tasty bowl of pasta ready in the time it takes you to cook the pasta. Simply cook your spaghetti pasta in a large pot of boiling water. When it is nearly cooked, for every serving, heat a generous spoonful of the confit garlic oil in a pan, making sure you get a few of the garlic cloves. Smash the garlic up and add a dash of dried chilli flakes (optional).

Add the cooked pasta with a little of the cooking water and a generous amount of grated parmesan. Stir to combine and serve.

CONFIT GARLIC

Confit simply means cooking in oil. Slowly cooking garlic in olive oil gives you beautiful soft garlic with a more subtle flavour than raw to use in cooking, spread on sandwiches, add to aioli and dressings and more. With New Zealand garlic back in season, this is the perfect time to confit garlic and reap the benefits of always having a flavourful oil and preserved confit garlic on hand.

To make, simply peel your garlic cloves and cover with extra virgin olive oil. If you like, you can add some thyme or rosemary. Cook in the oven at around 120°C for an hour to an hour and a half or until the garlic is super soft.

Allow to cool completely before placing in a jar and storing in the fridge.

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INVESTING WITH PURPOSE: ALIGNING YOUR WEALTH WITH YOUR VALUES IN TODAY'S CHANGING LANDSCAPE

Have recent geopolitical events prompted you to reevaluate your investment choices?

Some of my discerning clients are placing a premium on aligning financial decisions with personal values. They are not alone. Many people are looking beyond traditional considerations of returns and incorporating non-financial factors into investment strategies, ushering in a new era of sustainable investing for long-term prosperity. So what does this look like?

PUTTING YOUR MONEY WHERE YOUR VALUES ARE

I have seen investors across New Zealand increasingly seek opportunities that go beyond financial gain, placing emphasis on Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards. This shift is not only a testament to a desire for healthy returns but also a conscious effort to make a positive impact on the world. According to the Responsible Investment Association Australasia, within New Zealand responsible investment assets under management reached $183 billion in 2022, up from $142 billion in 2020.

Vanessa Stevens, Senior Sustainability Analyst at Craigs Investment Partners, identifies key drivers behind this shift. “Clients are now attuned to companies’ environmental and societal impacts, while government regulations are compelling corporations to embrace change. The Global Sustainable Investment Alliance underscores the global significance of this trend, with the value of global assets invested in sustainabilityfocused endeavours surging by over 130% to $30 trillion from 2016 to 2022.”

ADAPTING TO A SHIFTING LANDSCAPE

The rise in geopolitical risks, including conflict in the Middle East, the war in Ukraine and the elevated tensions around the upcoming

US election, are influencing investor behaviour in New Zealand. Despite market uncertainties, investors are steadfast in their support of ESG standards. I have noted in dealing with my clients that people become worried, but they don’t throw away their values overnight because something’s not performing well short-term.

Craigs Investment Partners has responded to this growing demand by developing a comprehensive sustainability scoring framework. This framework evaluates listed companies based on ESG criteria, providing investors with a nuanced view of a company's overall sustainability performance. Craigs’ research and leadership in the ESG arena enable us as a firm to engage with New Zealand listed companies, encouraging transparency and accountability.

FROM EXCLUSIONS TO MORE ACTIVE CHOICES

While investors once had a ‘no-buy’ list excluding certain industries, the landscape has evolved. Today, clients are broadening their outlook to embrace pro-environmental and pro-social policies, covering diverse issues such as clean energy, gender equality, climate action, healthcare, and artificial intelligence.

Craigs’ sustainability scoring framework empowers me and my fellow Craigs Investment Partners advisers to collaborate with clients in tailoring portfolios that reflect their individual values.

It is key to emphasise the personalised nature of this engagement approach. It’s not our role to tell clients what they should value or care about. The sustainability scores act as a starting point, enabling clients to assess the relevant ESG factors according to their specific preferences. As an adviser, it is my job to ask the right questions to truly understand what is both important and valuable to my clients to ensure we provide the best possible investment options to suit them.

NOURISH | EXPERTS
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The wild, up close and personal. Book at hamiltonzoo.co.nz See more, learn more, and get close in our Animal Encounters! 027 537 1853 | events@hayescommon.co.nz CREATING INTIMATE, BESPOKE EVENTS SINCE 2016 BESPOKE EVENTS AT YOUR LOCAL As clients navigate the dynamic terrain of global finance, Craigs Investment Partners stands as a trusted partner, offering a tailored approach to sustainable investing. In a world where every dollar invested makes a statement, the emphasis on non-financial attributes reflects a collective commitment to creating a positive impact on society and the environment. Contact Craigs Investment Partners adviser, Dwight Egelhof, to learn more about Craigs Investment Partners and the sustainability framework – phone 07 981 2556 or visit craigsip.com. Dwight's disclosure statement is available on request and free of charge. Disclaimer: This article is general in nature and should not be regarded as specific investment advice. It does not take into account your financial situation, objectives, goals, or risk tolerance. All investments involve risk and can go down as well as up. Craigs Investment Partners recommend seeking advice from a licenced financial adviser about your financial situation and goals before acquiring any financial products or making any investment decision. To talk to one of Craigs Investment Partners’ financial advisers, please call 0800 272 442. Craigs Investment Partners is a NZX Participant firm, and their Financial Advice Provider Disclosure Statement can be viewed at craigsip.com/tcs. Visit craigsip.com. PAGE 73 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ

EVENTS

WAIKATO FARMER'S MARKETS

Where local and convenience collide, the Waikato Farmer's Markets are on every weekend come rain, hail or shine.

Cambridge Farmer's Market, every Saturday 8am–12noon, Victoria Square Hamilton Farmer's Market, every Sunday 8am–12noon, The Barn, Claudelands www.waikatofarmersmarkets.co.nz

NEIGHBOURHOOD EATS – LATIN FIESTA!

Get ready to spice up your midweek with the first of Hayes Common’s 'Neighbourhood Eats' nights celebrating Latin food, music and drinks. Grab a group of friends and immerse yourselves in the vibrant flavours of this diverse region – think fresh ceviche, flaky empanadas and mojo washed down with a spicy margarita, paloma or a pisco sour!

Thursday 21 March, 6pm–9.30pm

Cost $95 food, $130 with drinks pairing www.hayescommon.co.nz

FRENCH FRAGMENTS SLOW STITCHING WORKSHOP

A slow stitching workshop using recycled French fabrics to create a collage with simple embroidery stitches which is then embellished with laces, trims, buttons and other recycled bits. You will create a unique piece of fabric art which can then be made into a cushion, a bag or framed.

Thursday 14 & 21 March at 6.30pm OR

Friday 15 & 22 March at 10.00am

COST $125 including kit

Heritage Trading Co., 40 Duke Street, Cambridge Phone (07) 8274211

DECOUPAGE

Learn how to decoupage, stencil and stamp your way to bringing life to your home with colour and texture. Over two nights, learn how to decorate a small object (your choice) and personalise it with different techniques.

Thursday 28 March & Thursday 4 April 2024, 7.00pm

COST $125

Heritage Trading Co. 40 Duke Street, Cambridge Phone (07) 8274211

DECADES CHARTED: A WINDOW INTO THE CHARTWELL COLLECTION

A bold exhibition of Aotearoa New Zealand contemporary art, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Chartwell Collection.

Open from 23 February | Free entry

Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato

TE PANI, TE POUARU, TE RAWAKORE: NURTURING GENERATIONS THROUGH POUKAI

Filled with colour photographs, this exhibition showcases the ongoing tradition of Poukai (marae gatherings), first introduced in 1885 by Kiingi Taawhiao.

Open from 1 March

Free entry

Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato

SOUTH EAST ASIAN WITH WAYNE GOOD

Focusing on Thai, Vietnamese and Balinese dishes, all wonderfully fresh flavours and very light to eat. Day includes refreshments, lunch and cooking demo.

Saturday 13 April or Sunday 14 April, 9.30am |

Cost: $90.00 pp

128A Whitikahu Road, Gordonton. To book email please at wayne@arkanda. co.nz, or phone 021898909.

When booking, please include your phone number.

EASTER WATERCOLOUR WORKSHOP

Join local artist, Elena Brambilla (aka The Sewing Sailor) and learn how to get started with watercolour paints, practicing these techniques to paint your own Easter decorations. All supplies are provided, along with snacks & refreshments.

Cost $75 | Friday 22 March, 7 - 9pm

www.thesundaysociety.co.nz/product-page/ water-colour-workshop-with-the-sewingsailor

FLAVOURS OF PLENTY FESTIVAL

Celebrate Coastal Bay of Plenty’s worldclass food scene, showcasing the region’s horticultural heroes and weaving a powerful connection from our place to your plates in the third annual Flavours of Plenty Festival. 4–14 April

www.flavoursofplentyfestival.com

FALLS RETREAT WORKSHOPS

‘Full Monty’ Edible Gardening Workshop –Sunday 7 April & Friday 3 May

Sourdough Bread Making – Friday 12 April

Pickling & Preserving Masterclass – Friday

$150pp includes morning tea and nibbles on arrival, workshop booklet to take home and delicious shared lunch.

www.fallsretreat.co.nz

FALLS RETREAT EASTER FEAST

Gather your family and friends for this special event! This is a leisurely lunch with everyone seated on long tables. Our chefs will create a special three-course set menu using homegrown produce from our organic veggie gardens and local farmers, plus a housemade welcome drink and breads on arrival with the opportunity to wander around our kitchen gardens, utilise our outdoor games and explore the kids playground. Sunday 31 March, 11.30am

$85pp ($35 for kids, 2 courses)

www.fallsretreat.co.nz

SMALL MOMENTS – PLEIN AIR PAINTINGS BY ELEANOR GEE

We are rekindling our exhibitions at The Framing Workshop. We are excited to introduce Eleanor Gee with her compact, colourful, nature inspired works. You are welcome to come to the opening preview on Friday 19 April, 5.30–7pm Exhibition runs April 20 – May 15

The Framing Workshop, 120 Silverdale Road, Hamilton

www.theframingworkshop.co.nz

PAGE 74 | WWW.NOURISHMAGAZINE.CO.NZ
MARKETPLACE European Antiques | Gifts | Homewares | Art The Matangi Dairy Factory 452 Tauwhare Road Hamilton SPIRITUAL WELLNESS STEPPING INTO A WHOLE NEW WAY OF LIFE Reiki Health: www.reikihealth.co.nz | Readings: www.yolanda-innervisions.com REIKI HEALTH & INNERVISIONS INTUITIVE READINGS Wholesome artisan meal bases for home cooking Bases Covered Order online at www.baseatyourplace.co.nz P 07 856 4236 • 120 Silverdale Rd • Hamilton www.theframingworkshop.co.nz Combining creativity with expertise Mission: free the food Method: plastic-free groceries Values: a cleaner planet Wanna join the good fight? Made Market | 401 Grey Street, Hamilton East www.barerefillgrocery.co.nz Hours: 9-6 Monday - Friday (closed tuesday) | Sat/Sun - 9-5 JUST $59 INCLUDING POSTAGE. ORDER YOURS AT: www.nourishmagazine.co.nz Out now! Get yours today.
1763 River Road, Hamilton | Open Wednesday–Sunday 1 to 4 pm Phone 07 849 7502 Find out more at www.downey.co.nz THE KINGSMAN SHOW HOME
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