At Loam, Aaron Turner turned heads, bringing a Noma-like sensibility to cooking the food of Victoria’s Bellarine Peninsula. Now at Igni, in Geelong, he has taken it up a notch, cooking with fire to bring a greater sense (and taste) of immediacy to pristine ingredients, while simultaneously making the larger experience more relaxed. It’s a great way to dine. “This marron dish is all about letting the fire and smoke do the work, setting the marron flesh and charring the leaves for flavour,” says Turner. “The finger lime and Jersey cream add acid and fat and bring it all together.”
Ingredients
Method
Main
Jersey cream is available from select grocers. If it’s unavailable, use the best high-fat cream you can find. If you don’t have access to a wood fire, you can char the marron parcels on a wire rack over a gas flame, or finish under a hot grill. Finger limes are available from select greengrocers. RSPCA Australia’s recommendations for killing crustaceans humanely are to first render the animals insensible by placing them in the freezer (under 4C – signs of insensibility are when the tail or outer mouth parts can be moved without resistance); crustaceans must then be killed quickly by cutting through the centreline of the head and thorax with a knife. For crabs, insert a knife into the heat. This splitting and spiking destroys the nerve centres of the animal.
Drink Suggestion: Sauvignon blanc fermented on skins.
Notes