June 2011

Enough is Enough

Did you know that young people who identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender (GLBT) experience disproportionately higher levels of homelessness than the general youth population? On any given night 26,060 young Australian’s don’t have a fixed address. Of these, it’s estimated that approximately 24% identify as GLBT.

The process of coming out often forces families to confront their attitudes and beliefs around sexual orientation and gender identity. Sadly, rather than accepting their children’s sexuality or gender identity, family relationships break down and way too many young people are forced out of their support networks and onto the streets.

In an effort to secure a roof over their heads for the night, many same sex attracted and gender diverse young people are forced to put themselves at high risk of abuse and exploitation by hitting the scene and going home with people they barely know.

Here at STREAT, we feel the impacts of this issue first hand. Over 25% of young people accessing our program identify as GLBT.

So what causes a family to push one of their own out of the house and onto the streets? Well if you turn to recent media coverage the answer becomes pretty clear. Everyone from politicians to sports heroes are dishing out homophobic slurs and garnishing them with a good dose of discrimination. It’s easy to see that homophobia and heterosexism are deeply entrenched within Australian society.

Imagine what it must be like for GLBT young people to come out amidst all of this fear and hatred? A recent study provided a sobering reality check…  GLBT young people are five times more likely to attempt suicide than heterosexual young people (21.5% compared with 4.2%).

In the powerful words of the Victorian Gay & Lesbian Rights Lobby - Enough is enough! It’s time that young people who identify as GLBT are provided with an inclusive and supportive social environment in which to be nurtured, so they can reach their full potential, and enjoy the basic human right to live their lives free of homophobia, transphobia and discrimination.

My parting words for you today are - always remember that you are not alone, and it does get better.

If you are a young person questioning your sexuality or gender identity, the Gay & Lesbian Switchboard offer free telephone counseling, information and referrals for the GLBTI community in Victoria & Tasmania. You can give them a call on 9663 2939.

Kylie

Thank You

I would like to thank everyone at STREAT for everything they’ve done for me. They have helped me through so much. Now I don’t have to be afraid of Nada anymore! Thank you Craig, Vanessa, Bec, Kate, Kim, Nada & everyone else who is part of STREAT for this wonderful experience!

Love you all.

Jamie

Future Shock for Creative Sydney

Are you a creative thinker who wants to see the world differently? Then get your groove on and come along to Future Shock for Creative Sydney, presented by IF Talks.

IF connects local innovators and experts to discuss far reaching themes like ethonomics, online, design, technology and more. In this IF talk the panel will discuss the future of technology and the impacts on our immediate future.

The expert panel curated by uncluttered white spaces will address the simple questions: What has changed, what is changing, and what should we be doing to address these changes?

The event is taking place in just three days on Thursday 9 June from 6.30 – 8.30pm in Sydney CBD. All profits raised from the IF Talk will go to STREAT.

Head to IF Vivid for bookings and event info.

Susie’s Recipe Disasters

Hi! I’m Susie, one of the trainees here at STREAT. Have you ever had a recipe that you’ve attempted to cook but for some reason it just hasn’t worked? Well me too, and I’d like to help by sharing one of my very own recipe disasters. I made chocolate éclairs the other day as part of my hospitality training and it was a disaster!

The hardest part of making chocolate éclairs is the choux pastry. It’s really tricky and if it’s not made correctly the éclairs won’t turn out properly. Here’s the recipe that I used.

Choux Pastry

Ingredients:

250ml water

100g butter

5g caster sugar

Pinch of salt

190g plain flour

6 eggs

Method:

Boil the water with the butter, salt and sugar.

Add the flour all at once and return to the heat to ‘burn off’ the mixture, until it forms a layer at the bottom of the pan, the mixture should form a ball when it’s stirred.

Cool the mixture to 30C to prevent the eggs scrambling when you add them. Once it’s cool enough add the eggs 1 at a time.

The paste doesn’t need to rest, pipe the desired shape and bake at 210C in the centre of the oven. I followed this recipe to the letter, well at least I thought I had…

I did have to add a little extra flour as the mixture was runny and wasn’t piping bag consistency, but the real problem that I had was that the oven temperature was set to 180C instead of 210C. So the Choux pastry that I cooked looked more like flat pancakes rather than nice puffed up pastry!

I also made a crème patisserie (which means pastry cream) for the éclairs. This mix has to be measured out very carefully. If it’s not, then the crème patisserie will either be too sweet or really stiff.

Crème patisserie

Ingredients:

500mls milk

2mls vanilla essence

4 egg yolks

120g sugar

40g corn flour

25g butter

Method:

Heat 400ml of milk with the vanilla essence.

Cream the eggs and sugar together until they become light in colour.

Mix the remainder of the milk with the corn flour, using your fingers as this will remove any lumps.

Add the egg mixture to the milk and whisk thoroughly, then add the cornflour mix.

Bring to the boil, stirring continuously, the mix should start to thicken up immediately, and once it’s at the thickness that you want it, add the butter.

Place the crème patisserie in a bowl and cover with cling wrap (the cling wrap should be sitting on top of your mixture with no air bubbles), this is to prevent a skin forming on the top and place in the fridge until needed.

I’m proud to say that this chocolate éclair recipe was the one that I’ve had the most trouble with, but in saying that it was also fun to make. 

I hope that by sharing my recipe disaster I have helped anyone who has had trouble trying to make chocolate éclairs, and for those who might not have had a go at making them, give them a go – you might enjoy it!

I’d love to hear about your own recipe disasters, so if you have any let us know, and I’ll see if I can help you work out what went wrong!

Cheers, and I’m really looking forward to helping you out with your recipes.

Susie.

50,000th Customer

This is a huge week at STREAT...

This week we welcome our 50,000 customer to STREAT. We are also welcoming James, Hayley, Louise, Markita, Phoebe, Tanya, Jamila, Brodie, Aaron, Jessica, Aaron, Tayla & Brendan – our fourth class of homeless & disadvantaged youth to STREAT.  

Over the coming seven months they’ll receive training and employment on our food and coffee carts along with life skills and a bunch of personal support. They’ll each receive a minimum of 26 hours of paid employment each week which includes them serving customers like yourself, working in our production kitchen, or studying for their Certificate II in hospitality.

All of this is possible because you – and many others like you – who buy your coffees and meals from us with 100% of profit going towards making homelessness stop for a young person.

Could you be our 50,000th customer?

This week aim to hit our 50,000th customer and it could be you! Our 50,000th customer will receive a free STREAT t-shirt , signed STOP homelessness STREAT sign, and a buy one get one loyalty card, plus we’ll feature you on our website. So come & share a meal or coffee with us at Melbourne Central or Melbourne University for your chance to be our 50,000th customer.

Other stuff you can do

We frequently get customers asking what else they can do to help. Here’s a few ways:

Anyway, thanks again for your support and we hope to see you again soon.

Bec Scott & Kate Barrelle

STREAT Co-Founders

Take 5 with our 50,000th customers Vicky and Rachel

Today we surprised Vicky at Melbourne Central with the big news that she was our 50,000th customer served at STREAT! After ordering her favourite brew, we piled her arms full of freebies including a signed STOP homelessness sign, free STREAT t-shirt and a spanking new loyalty card. After all of the excitement we decided to continue sharing the love by surprising our 50,100th customer and this happened to be Rachel at Melbourne University! We take 5 with Vicky & Rachel here…

So big congratulations on your win! How does it feel to be STREAT’s 50,000th customer?

V: Ooh I’m so special! I’m going to proudly display this stop sign in my house. I’m very proud!

R: Pretty fantastic!

What makes you come to STREAT for your coffee?

V: I think it’s a great cause, particularly with theloyalty cards, you know the more coffee I drink the more a homeless person will get. I think it’s a great idea, a lot of people drink coffee and the coffee is great as well, so you might as well put it towards a good cause you know.

R: Well it’s good coffee, and its for a good purpose, so you can feel all warm and fuzzy about buying a coffee everyday.

Do you patron STREAT regularly?

V: Yes, pretty much since this cart opened in Melbourne Central I’ve bought my coffee here.

R: Yeah I do, everyday. I’ve been coming to Melburne Uni since I started working here but also Melbourne Central.

This week we also welcomed our fourth intake of trainees to STREAT. Do you have any words of wisdom for them as they start on their journey with us, something that you would have wanted to know when you were 16?

V: Ooh when I was 16… That anything is possible really. The world is their oyster and they’ve got a bright future ahead of them.

R: If hospitality is an industry you like, then really embrace it because it can be really good to you.

Why do you want homelessness to STOP?

V: It’s just heartbreaking when you see the guys out on the street, you hear their stories about how they got there and things like that, and it doesn’t need to be that way. We are all one community and we need to support everyone in that community.

R: Because its cold and its horrible. It’s just horrible and I don’t think its really necessary in a country like ours, people don’t need to be without homes. Whatever we can do to help people, we should be doing it.

Could you finish the following sentences -  

Home to me is…

V: Where my loved ones are.

R: Home is safe and warm and cosy.

Something you may not know about me…

V: I’m a triathlete!

R: I volunteer a lot in the homeless societies.

A moment that changed your life…

V: Probably when I moved to Europe for my first job overseas.

R: The homeless word cup a couple of years ago in Melbourne. I volunteered on that and it was absolutely fantastic. It just opened my eyes and changed my life.

The strangest thing you’ve ever eaten…

V: Ooh I have eaten some strange things! I don’t even know what it was but it was in Thailand, it looked like an insect or something!

R: Um probably bugs. Deep fried bugs in Thailand! You’ve got to try these things!

Congratulations again Vicky & Rachel, thank you for stopping homelessness one meal at a time with STREAT!

Kylie

Molly Pitcher Club

Our awesome urban neighbours Saint & Rogue are stepping back in time to the prohibition era to bring you the Molly Pitcher Club, an event proudly supporting STREAT.

Join Saint & Rogue on Saturday August 27 from 7.30pm and revel in the hot fever of the Molly Pitcher Club with bootleg liquor and badass New Orleans Jazz.

Live entertainment, a large array of canapés, beer, wine and cocktails are all included in your ticket.

Check out Saint & Rogue's Molly Pitcher Club for full event and ticketing info.

Laid back Laos

Laos is famous for being one of the most laid back countries on the planet; however its street food scene is anything but! On my travels through this South East Asian beauty I found myself eating my way around the streets of Luang Prabang, sampling as many of the tasty delights this country has to offer as I could in two weeks.

Laos food is like a burst of fresh flavours that are pummeled together with a traditional mortar and pestle and topped off with a good splash of padaek, otherwise known as the pungent fermented fish sauce used to add a salty zing to dishes. The signature flavours that typify Laos cuisine are galangal, chilies, kaffir lime, lemongrass, lime juice, garlic, ginger, coriander, mint, dill, and a whole bunch of different kinds of basil local to Laos. Taste buds aside, I’d have to say the best part about Laos street food has got to be the way it’s eaten – with your fingers, and rubbing shoulders with the locals!

The dishes on offer have descriptions that are pretty hard to resist. Like marinated fish steamed in banana leaf, or the Laos delicacy dried spiced buffalo meat, and Jaew Bong a thick sweet and spicy sauce made from roasted chillies, tamarind and dry buffalo skin which is best lapped up with a serving of sticky rice.

Mmmm…

Perhaps one of my favourite Laos street food memories was after a night of wandering through the dimly lit night market – a Roti style chocolate and pineapple pancake, cooked on a humble food cart over casual conversations with the lovely vendor, and eaten on the back of a tuk tuk.

The best!

Kylie

We love a good story & so does Wren!

STREAT graduate and freelance pun slinger Serenity Silvertree has joined STREAT as our story teller in residence. Wren graduated from STREAT’s second trainee intake just a couple of months ago and now puts pencil to paper to capture the essence of STREAT through fine line illustrations, and other creative media.

Playful and witty Wren has a talent for injecting a good dose of humour and whimsy into everyday experiences.

Wren’s visual story telling genius will be on display during our State of Design event Home STREAT Home with punchy visuals being projected onto a rather kick arse 12 story wall… Pretty damn cool!

Kylie