Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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April 16, 2009 By cheryl

Naeem Khan's Entertaining Tips

I discovered something recently when interviewing eveningwear designer Naeem Khan for a Wall Street Journal Tricks of the Trade column on how he throws dinner parties.

I realized: I’ve been a complete clod all these years.

Hearing Naeem talk about the importance of plating and presentation as appetite inducers, noting that he doesn’t like to serve several things on the same plate as it’s a “nightmare,” made me think of my own parties. While the designer prefers to serve small portions on over-sized plates so the dish frames the food nicely, my presentations have been known to look like this …    

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… which, I suspect, would qualify in Naeem’s book as a “nightmare.”

Granted, that picture was from Thanksgiving, a meal that’s often all about more, not less. But still, his advice lit a fire under my tush to step it up in the presentation department. The man designs for Beyonce and Eva Longoria, after all, so he knows a thing or two about how things should look.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Entertaining, Fashion Tagged With: Naeem Khan Beyonce Knowles Eva Longoria

April 15, 2009 By cheryl

A Sicilian Summer Lunch: A Cure for April Winter Blues


This morning, I woke up fantasizing about the glorious January day in New York City a few years ago when it was 70 degrees and out came the open-toed heels.

I know one isn’t supposed to be so gauche as to go bonkers over wintry days that are insanely warm, given that worrisome bit about “global warming” and all that. But it’s mid-April in New York, guys. And it’s 40-something degrees out today. It just will not get warm.

This started me thinking about a perfect summer lunch I had last year in Sicily. It all began with a morning trip to the historic La Vucciria market in Palermo, where for hundreds of years, fishermen and farmers have brought their freshest produce and catches of the day.

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The place was a seafood-lover’s heaven. Massive pesce spada (swordfish) aside, vendors sold squid, slender, silvery fish, oysters the size of your fist.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Food Porn, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Palermo La Vucciria

April 15, 2009 By cheryl

Cheers! (A Navel-Gazing Moment)


CIMG3686 Well, it’s been exactly one week since I inadvertently went live with this blog by posting something and then forgetting that I’d set it up so a notification would go out on Twitter whenever there was a new post. The next thing I knew, emails from new readers started to come in.

Doh.

There’s nothing like getting shoved into something when you’re not quite ready — but, a week later, hey, we’re still alive and kicking!

Big thanks to some early supporters: Liberty London Girl, who did a wonderful item on A Tiger in the Kitchen mere moments after we went live. Jewelry designer Wendy Brandes of the sassy Wendy Brandes Jewelry blog, who totally nagged me to start this blog and continues to teach me oodles about blogging. The Asian American Journalists Association, which did an item on my book deal with Hyperion that also linked to this blog.

Eat Me Daily blogged about the book deal as well, following a nice item about it in Women’s Wear Daily.

Here’s to many more weeks of cooking, eating and waxing lyrical about it all. Thanks to all of you — from Sydney to Salem, Oregon — for checking in so far.

And … the navel-gazing moment ends. Santé!



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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Liberty London Girl Women's Wear Daily Asian American Journalists Association Wendy Brandes Jewelry Eat Me Daily

April 14, 2009 By cheryl

A Little Food Sleuthing


While girls around me wanted to be Nancy Drew or Barbie, the seven-year-old me would have none of that.

Instead, I wanted to be one of The Three Investigators, a group of plucky teenage boys who lived in a fictional Southern California town, solving crimes that flummoxed even awfully smart adults. After voraciously plowing through this American mystery book series, my two first-grade best friends, Jill and Joyce, and I huddled at recess in our French convent school in Singapore, whispering to one another about suspicious happenings we had witnessed, vowing to use our powers of deduction to get to the bottom of things.

Egg I don’t recall us ever solving anything — probably because nothing actually needed to be solved. But years later, the desire to get to the bottom of things lives on.

Last year, the Hubbs and I ventured to Coi in San Francisco — New York Times dining critic Frank Bruni had just named it one of the top 10 restaurants in the country that had opened the year before and our expectations were high. (Coi’s chef Daniel Patterson was just nominated for a James Beard award a few weeks ago.)

Although we rolled our eyes a little at the waitress’s instruction to sniff a dot of perfume oil in order to enhance the flavor of a dish, we concurred that it worked, when we put cynicism aside and actually did it. It was also Coi that served up a dish that I still think about regularly and with great longing more than a year after my visit to the restaurant. It was a simple bowl filled with chard and wheatberries, swimming in a brown
butter-parmesan sauce and topped with a slow-cooked farm egg. The sauce was unforgettable, as were the textures — I adored feeling the juxtaposition of the crisp foam with the gooey egg yolk on my tongue.

Coi But the dish that truly captured our attention was a plate featuring the tiniest sliver of Mimolette cheese, the smallest sprinkling of greens and a sprig of something that resembled a Barbie-sized bouquet of daisies. The waitress instructed us to take a deep whiff of the miniature bouquet and then sip our wine and eat the cheese. The plant’s honeyed fragrance was meant to enhance the taste of our wine and the sharp Mimolette.

We, and the food-loving friends we were with, became instantly obsessed. We could not stop sniffing the tiny blooms, long after the bite-sized Mimolette had disappeared. And when the blooms we’d been given had, sadly, disintegrated from apparent over-sniffing, we implored our waitress for more.

We begged her to to ask the chef, the kitchen staff, what was this plant exactly? We wanted to buy it, grow it in our homes, fill our office cubicles with tiny honeyed bunches. No one, however, had an answer.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Daniel Patterson Coi San Francisco Brooklyn

April 13, 2009 By cheryl

Yes, The Fashion Writer Eats


What does a fashion writer know about food anyway?

If you believe the stereotype, one industry is all about eating while the other is all about, well, not.

I was thinking about this last week when I was on a train, speeding down to Baltimore to speak to the staff at The (Maryland) Daily Record about blogging, journalism and social networking.

Years ago, I’d heard Oprah Winfrey say at one of her “Live Your Best Life” seminars that Baltimore, where she’d worked early in her career, has a special place in her heart. “Baltimore grew me up,” she said as the crowd erupted in claps and cheers. I remember writing it down. But I didn’t really need to — I’ll always remember it because that’s how I feel, too. (Sorry Saint Anthony, but Oprah was a rock star in my book long before you even entered my consciousness.)

Photo(6) At the time, I was a cub reporter at the Baltimore Sun, working in a city I’d romanticized since I’d read Anne Tyler‘s “Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant” as an adolescent. My career lay before me — I knew I wanted to be a features reporter, preferably writing about entertainment and film. But I’d also begun doing reviews of restaurants in Baltimore’s suburban Anne Arundel County. And, while the meals (often involving Maryland crab cakes) in towns with uplifting names like “Parole” were often hit or miss, the food-writing bug was beginning to take.

“J. T. Ashley’s Grille is not a bad place to grab a meal — if you don’t mind average food and slow service,” I penned in October, 1998. “Fireside Inn
is a cozy place to stop by for a beer in an atmosphere where a
4-month-old perches on a table near the bar amid beer bottles and
ashtrays and an elderly man warms his stockinged feet by the huge,
red-brick fireplace in the middle of the restaurant,” I wrote in November 1997.
“But if you’re looking for good food, go someplace else.”

Sometimes, I even fancied myself a Carrie Bradshaw with an acid Cartier pen — and an appetite. From February, 1999: “Dining at Ciao
on West Street is sort of like meeting an intelligent, handsome and
unbelievably wealthy man, then finding out that he steps on ants, lies
compulsively or has some other horrendous flaw.” Do not ask me where I was going with that.

In the end, the call to cover fashion won out and eating and cooking became purely recreational. But, whether it was learning to bake my late grandmother’s pineapple tarts or getting into David Chang‘s Momofuku Ko before most desperate food-lovers in New York City got to, the gastronomical adventures continued.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Food Criticism Tagged With: Oprah Winfrey Oz Chophouse Baltimore Sun David Chang Momofuku Ko Anthony Bourdain Live Your Best Life

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