Friday, May 18, 2012

Ember Room - Photo Essay


I love having friends who work in food journalism because I get to go to restaurant menu tasting events. Love it! My friend Will who works with The Daily Meal as a recipe editor and invited me last night to a menu tasting at the Ember Room in Hell's Kitchen, NYC. Chef Pongtawat "Ian" Chalermkittichai invited a few publications to come taste their new menu items. Despite having just arrived back in New York after a visit to Thailand and waking up super early to do a morning show on CBS, Chef Ian was gracious, welcoming and nice enough to by our table a few times to talk about his food and travels. Ember Room is not his first restaurant in the city, his first restaurant, self-titled Kittichai, is actually one of my favorite places in the city so I had high hopes for the food. I certainly wasn't disappointed. 

 Crispy Rock Corn Shrimp - tempura battered shrimp, roasted melting eggplant, sweet tamarind dressing, shredded hard-boiled egg

 Thai Tacos - shredded chicken, bean sprouts, chives, peanut, tofu, coconut, sweet chili sauce

 “Yum Hoi” Pomelo Scallops - seared “diver” scallops, chili jam glaze, pomelo salad, roasted pepper-lime dressing

 Koi Tuna Tartare - fresh tuna, roasted ground rice, crispy tortillas, chili-lime dressing

 Had Yai Volcano Chicken - oven-roasted turmeric-coconut marinated chicken, green chili sauce (IT'S ON FIRE!)

 Korean BBQ-Beef Fried Rice - wok-fried rice, kimchee, bbq beef, topped with raw egg.

 Crispy Whole Striped Bass - whole fish, sweet/sour/spicy sauce, crispy basil 

 Red Curry Crispy Duck - lychee, pineapple, cherry tomato, eggplant

 Mango with Sticky Rice & Toasted Coconut Ice Cream

 Pandan Pot de Crème with Waffle and Pandan Ice Cream

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Bun Rieu - Vietnamese Crab Tomato Soup

Ingredients:

5-6 pounds tomatoes
2 tablespoons dried shrimp
2 tablespoons garlic, chopped
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1/3 cup tamarind paste (dried and condenses with seeds)
1 small can minced shrimp with spices
1 large can minced crab with spices
6 eggs

Directions:

In a small pot, add tamarind and add 2 cups of water and bring to a boil. In large (6 or 8 quart) stock pot, heat oil over medium heat. Add dried shrimp to hot oil and fry for for 2 minutes, then add garlic for another minute. Strain the liquid from the boiling tamarind into the stock pot. (The seeds of tamarind pods are dried with the flesh, but the seeds are bitter so we only want the tamarind flavor in the liquid.) Add more water to the seeds and bring to a boil again. Continue this process of extracting the flavor from the tamarind until the water start to run more clear and you've extracted as much flavor as possible. (This process goes much more smoothly if you have already hot/boiling water on hand, i.e. in a kettle.) When you've finished with the tamarind, dispose of the leftover flesh/seeds. Add more water to the pot until about 3/4 full and bring to a boil.


Quarter the tomatoes making sure each quarter has a part of the head attached to it. This keeps the tomatoes from completely falling apart. When the broth approaches a boil, carefully add the tomatoes. (Don't splash yourself with the hot broth, I've done it once or twice. Not pleasant!) Simmer for an hour.



Empty both cans into a mixing bowl and beat together with eggs. Turn the heat on the stock pot to low and pour the egg/spiced seafood mixture into the pot slowly in circles making sure the mixture has room throughout the pot. Slowly simmer for another 30 minutes. Serve over vermicelli, traditionally accompanies with a spread of Vietnamese herbs, lettuce, lime, bean sprouts, and other unidentified items. So good and a great way to make use of tomatoes when they are in season, ripe, and cheap!


Thursday, May 3, 2012

Chinese Watercress Soup

I grew up on soup. My mother made sure we had soup with every dinner. On the days when we wouldn't, dinner seemed incomplete. The slow-cooked taste of simmer low-fire Cantonese, or lou fo tong (老火湯, lǎohuǒ tāng), is a smell and flavor that brings me back to my childhood. Some people have chicken pot pie, others have roast beef. Cantonese soups are my comfort food, this being one of my favorites. 

Ingredients:

1 lb pork neck bones
2 bunches watercress, washed and drained
3 dried honey dates (蜜枣)
6 dried red dates (红枣)
3/4 cups Chinese South Almonds ( 南杏)
Salt to taste

Directions:

Take your soup pot and fill three-quarters (3/4) full with water and put it over high heat. Bring a second (smaller) pot of water to a boil. Put the pork neck bones into the water and let it boil for 5 minutes; this helps get rid of all the bloody water and any excess fat and discharge from the meat. Your end product will be a clearer, cleaner broth.

Turn off the heat and drain the water from the bones. Rinse several times with water until the water runs clear and all the grit is off the bones. Then add the bones to the large soup pot. Add the dried honey dates and the Chinese south almonds to the pot. Wait for the pot of water to come to a boil. If the pot is already boiling, give the ingredients 5-10 minutes in water before adding the watercress.


Lower the flame to a medium/medium-low heat and simmer the soup for 30-40 minutes. The watercress will turn brown and less appealing than the vibrant green when it first enters the pot but the soup you are left with is full of earthy flavor and super delicious!

Monday, April 30, 2012

PUBLIC Sunday Supper - Photo Essay


 Chilled Diver Scallop, Fried Shallots, Cucumber Yuzu Dressing

 Oyster Rampafella - Baked Hama Hama Oyster, Ramp, Parmesan

 Tasmanian Sea Trout with Spring Cassoulet -  Braised Artichoke, Fresh Fava Beans, Garbanzo Beans & Peas

 Long Island Duck, Foie Gras Butter, Ash Roasted Ramp, Buttermilk Puree, Pickled Bean Sprouts

 Cinnamon Waffle, Nutella Crema, Chocolate Spiced Ice Cream, Banana Caramel Sauce

Monday, April 23, 2012

Shinbashi

Lunch in midtown usually comes in a bag and is eaten at my desk in front of my computer screen. My coworkers often ask me why I don't leave the office and the answer is usually because its just more convenient to eat at my desk and continue working. But every once in a while I will treat myself to an actual lunch hour. And when those occasions come up, I try to make the effort and spend that time outdoors if possible.

Last Friday was one of those glorious days - perfect weather, outdoor seating, great company, and delicious food. Shinbashi is a little gem in the middle of crowded midtown. When spring comes around, all the restaurants in the city that have the sidewalk space bring out chairs and tables. The insides of their restaurants clear out and the patios are packed to capacity as New Yorkers try to get as much sun as they can in the few warm months we have.

  Ladies' Set Lunch

Dahsi Kabocha Pumpkin, Charshu, Random Avocado Concoction on a Ritz Cracker?

Chawanmushi
 
Mini Chirashi

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Caramelized Onions

I truly do not understand when people say they don't like onions or garlic, both add the most wonderful flavors to food. One of my favorite condiments is caramelized onions. Slowly cooking onions over a low heat brings out all the sweetness and takes away the bite. They are great in sandwiches, pizzas, pastas, and I'm willing to try it on most other things too. Always make more than you need and bump up the flavors in your food for a week.

Ingredients:

2 lbs onions, sliced
2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/4 cup white wine
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
salt & pepper

Directions:

Melt the butter in a pan with the olive oil over medium low heat. When the butter melts into frothy goodness, add sliced onions to the pan. Add salt to the onion to draw moisture out. As the onions begin to soften, lower the heat to low to prevent browning.


Cook the onions over the low heat for about 30 minutes. Stir the onions every 5 minutes or so to make sure they are cooking evenly. When the onions get a slight caramel color to them, turn the heat up to medium. Add wine to de-glaze the pan and season with salt and pepper.


 As the wine evaporates, cook for another 5 minutes. Add the balsamic vinegar and cook for another 5 minutes over medium/medium-high heat. This gets the sugar to have maximum carmelization at the end without burning over the long cooking time. Turn off heat and cool the mixture. Store in an airtight container and keep for up to a week in the refridgerator. (I don't think they will last that long though.)


This recipe multiplies easily so make as much as your heart desires! Happy cooking!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

La Biblioteca

By 4:00pm on any given weekday I'm just about ready to leave work and the first thing on my mind is.... happy hour. Where is the best place around here to meet up with a friend for a quick drink and small bite of food before heading home and relaxing? It's a weekday so you can't stay out too late with work in the morning. Working in midtown manhattan means there are a lot of nice restaurants around and plenty of bar choices but not necessarily good happy hour options that have good drinks and food at a reasonable price.


I have a few favorites but my top-choice at the moment is a little basement bar, La Biblioteca. It's a discreet little bar tucked underneath Zengo that specializes in tequila. Anyone who knows me at all knows tequila is NOT my drink of choice, but the seductive charm of this place is undeniable. The dim lighting, the plush leather chairs. The antique shelves full of labeled tequila that composes their 'library' and even the 'librarian' of their collection, a leggy blond who knows more about tequila than I would ever want to. Their short happy hour menu keeps me happy and satisfied after a long day at work.
 
 Library Cards

Tequila Lockers for those who buy bottles - free storage until your next visit

 Mahi Mahi Tacos - 2 for $5 during happy hour

 Tuesday Tequila Tastings - every week a different distillery

Monday, April 9, 2012

Muk Eun Ji

As seen through my recipes, a love all my food with a little spice. I have to say that there aren't any cuisines that master the art of spiciness better than Asian cuisines and Korean food is among the best along with Thai, Vietnamese, Sichuan and others. Whenever I feel the least bit poorly I know that a hot bowl of spicy broth, chili noodles, or hot pepper fried rice will clear up all my issues. 

I was feeling a severe need for spicy food all of last week and finally on friday that need was satisfied. I got off early from work because of 'Good Friday' and headed to the Korea-Town neighborhood of New York on 32nd St between 5th and 6th Avenues.

“Muk Eun Ji,” one of over 400 different kinds of Korean kimchi, gets the title when kimchi is fermented over a year at the minimum. This Korean traditional aged kimchi, has fed since ancient generations till now with its unique and rich flavor which is almost addictive once tasted. At Muk Eun Ji restaurant in the K-town  neighborhood of NYC, one can experience the authentic Korean aged kimchi that the restaurant is named after. They directly and exclusively imported from Jinan Maisan in South Korea. We got there around 2pm so it was still their lunch special hour.

 Ban Chan - Korean Appetizers

Seafood Soondubu

 Kimchi Jjigae

Signature Kimchi Stews using Muk Eun Ji 

With plenty of options for under $10, I wanted to order everything on the menu. Will definitely have to come back for their JjamPong (spicy seafood noodle soup) and JajangMyeon (Noodles in Black Bean Pork Sauce) combo. Also after staring at what other tables were trying their kimchi stews using the Muk Eun Ji is very popular as well as Korean BBQ options. So many things to eat, so little time...