Prospects, Federation Uni SMB Campus, Lydiard St South, Ballarat

cafe review Ballarat

Those who haven’t tried dining at a hospitality training restaurant are missing out. Not just for the opportunity to help the students practice their cooking, waiting and sommelier skills, but also to eat food which is gourmet standard, beautifully presented, and great value. Lunches, while casual, are generous – a three course lunch for $15 can’t be turned down, nor can a 3 course fine-dining dinner experience for $35. It’s not open regularly, as hours are dictated by student availability.

Prospects Cage Review Ballarat

A work colleague and I tried the special diets menu last week (and we’re going back this week, and again next week). Starter was a ploughman’s platter to share – an unusual choice for special diets, given it contained cheese, crumbed arancini, and non-gluten free soda bread. When asked, no gluten free bread was available. But there were plenty of other things on the platter to eat, and knowing it was only the first course didn’t make the unavailability of bread a problem.

There was a choice of four options for main – I had the Vietnamese Beef Pho, which was delicious, and very filling. My colleague had the Soy Poached Chicken, served on brown rice and, while delicious, looked rather stodgy as there were no vegetables or salad. I’m going to try the Mexican Sweet Potato this week, and the Fish Tacos next week.

Dessert was a tasting platter with orange and rosemary polenta cake (divine), vegan chocolate tart (delicious, but very rich), and a raspberry ruffle bar (which looked like a chocolate and tasted oddly of something artificial).

While this particular lunch review is not overly positive, the overall dining experience was great, and the fact that we’re going back again shows we’re up for giving it another try and seeing if our feedback has made any difference to the menu.

Either way, the value, quality of food, and opportunity to help the students means I’ll keep going back whenever the limited opening hours allow.

Prospects – follow-up

I had the pleasure of a three-course dinner at Prospects this week. The menu offered a choice of three entrees, three mains, and two desserts. The only unfortunate thing was that my friend and I ordered the same things, limiting our tasting options. We started with grilled aubergine with bocconcini and basil pesto – delicious. Main course was scotch fillet with seared asparagus and béarnaise sauce – the fillet was perfectly cooked, the meal was simple, but each element was done perfectly. And we finished with a honeycomb semifreddo. I licked the plate. I highly recommend this dining experience as a chance to not only support the hospitality students, but to have a stupendous meal at a very reasonable cost.

Broccoli and Zucchini Soup

broccoli and zucchini soup recipe

My Version of Broccoli and Zucchini Soup

Soup recipe broccoli and Zucchini soup

I remembered seeing a recipe somewhere for broccoli and zucchini soup, and felt inspired to make it, but when I was finally ready after a few days, I couldn’t find the recipe.  Not surprising, given my collection of cookbooks, ripped out pages from magazines, typed out recipes from cookbooks and magazines I don’t own, and randomly reading through my favourite food blogs.  So I decided to experiment (not always a success in my kitchen) and am thrilled that this one worked amazingly well, and provided a much needed warm up on a recently shivery 40 C Ballarat day.

Ingredients

  • 1 head broccoli (including stalk), chopped
  • 2 zucchini, chopped
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 1 stick celery, chopped
  • 1 carrot, chopped
  • 2-3 cloves garlic, crushed
  • Grated peel from half a lemon
  • 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
  • 3 cups chicken stock

Method

Heat some oil, and gently fry onion, garlic, cumin seeds, celery and carrot until soft. Add remaining ingredients and cook for around 20 minutes, then puree until smooth. I added some fennel fronds just before I pureed to give a bit of extra flavour.