Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

Author Website

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Events
  • Work
  • Blog
  • Contact

September 14, 2009 By cheryl

Terzo Piano: Where Chicago Is The Art


CIMG9359

Terzo Piano is a restaurant that literally makes your heart skip a beat the moment you walk in.

With its high ceilings, crisp, white furniture, spare decor
and wall of glass windows providing a sweeping view of Chicago old and
new, it’s the embodiment and reflection of the city’s stunning Mies van der Rohe-infused skyline.

On a clear day, when light is pouring in, sending angular shadows shooting across the pristine, gleaming furniture, the space is just breath-taking. This restaurant, which just opened in the Art Institute of Chicago’s modern wing in May, truly does the city justice.

All of this, of course, combines to set some incredibly high expectations for the food itself.

But that, it turns out, is another story.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Chicago, Italian, Restaurants, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Aoili, Art Institute of Chicago, Bacon, Berlin Wall, Brioche, Brussel Sprout Leaves, Caper, Chawanmushi, Chicago, Custard, Frittata, Goat cheese, Greenville, Indiana, Iowa, Italian, Japanese, Kalamata Olive, La Quercia, Lake Erie, Locavore, Marengo, McWethy Farm, Michigan, Midwestern, Mies van der Rohe, Mint, Nichols Farm & Orchard, Norwalk, Nueskes, Palmyra, Perch, Rushing Waters Fisheries, Sheep's Milk Cheese, Squash, Terzo Piano, Three Oaks, Tony Mantuano, Wisconsin, Wittenberg

September 10, 2009 By cheryl

Pluck: Super Easy Sweets


Tea

I’m getting tired of being asked a certain question: Where did you buy that dress?

Recently, I’ve been asked that a fair bit. And recently, my answer has tended to be the same: Pluck, a little boutique along Singapore’s tiny Haji Lane that sells both new and vintage dresses and accessories.

It’s an answer I hate to give because most of the people asking have been my American friends. And with Pluck, well, it isn’t exactly close enough for them to pop in for a quick browse. (As an immediate gratification kind of person, this kind of thing just will not do for me.)

I recently discovered a bit of good news, however — Pluck just started selling online and yes, it delivers overseas as well. So I’m writing about this here so that a) people can stop asking me where I buy my dresses and b) well … a) pretty much covered it.

How does this relate to food? Not as tangentially as you’d think.

Pluck also sells ice-cream and dessert. While I heartily recommend the pear riesling and lychee martini ice-creams, it’s been the little crunchy and sweet nibbly bits that co-owner Aisah sends out with tea and coffee that have piqued my interest.

When I bit into one recently, I immediately thought of the little cookies that mums would set out as snacks for visitors or after-school treats when I was a child. 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Cookies, Dessert, Fashion, Recipes, Singapore, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Aisah, Cornflakes, Domino magazine, Haji Lane, Japan, Korea, Lychee Martini, Malaysia, Pear Riesling, Pluck, Sex and The City, Singapore, Vintage

September 8, 2009 By cheryl

Scissor-Cut Rice: One Handsome (Tasting) Meal


FRP2 377

My New York friend Mark likes to tell the story of how, on his first visit to Singapore, he stopped a group of people near a hawker center, asking them which was the best place to eat in the area. 

“Big scissors!” was the immediate answer.

Which may seem an odd name for a food establishment to some. But in Singapore, the word “scissors” indicates that this is a stall in which you buy a plate of rice, point to a bunch of dishes (usually holding items like tofu, fried eggs or pork chops) and the hawker then piles what you’ve chosen on the plate and snips it all up into bite-size pieces with — you got it — a big pair of scissors.

While this could come across as a rather unorthodox way of serving a meal, let me tell you, places with the word “scissors” in their names often churn out pretty darn satisfying food. In Mark’s case, his meal — which he still regularly recounts with great gusto and yearning — was at Big Scissors Curry Rice at Maxwell Food Centre. 

Recently, I had the good fortune of discovering another gem in the “scissors” category: Beach Road Scissor-Cut Curry Rice. 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Hainanese, Hawkers, Rice, Singapore, So Good It Must Be Bad For You, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Beach Road Scissor-Cut Curry Rice, Big Scissors Curry Rice, Fishcakes, Ikan Bilis, Jalan Besar, Maxwell Food Centre, New York, Pork chops, Red-light district, Shopping Center, Singapore, Tofu

September 3, 2009 By cheryl

Chilled Soup: Those Healing Green Beans


CIMG9074

The Chinese in Singapore are big believers in the healing properties of soups — specifically, “heaty” and “cooling” soups, which either add fire to your body or cool it down, getting just the right balance of Yin and Yang. 

I know it’s sacrilege to say this — and I can already hear the clucking of my Mum and aunts who might actually read this — but I don’t give two hoots about heaty or cooling.

The most important question for me always is, “Does it taste good?”

And with green bean soup, the answer is: Yes, oh yes.

Despite my love for this sweet soup, I’ve never known how to make it. So, when my Let’s Lunch friends, a group of intrepid cooks spread across two continents who’ve been staging virtual lunchdates, suggested that we make a chilled soup for our next meal, I jumped at the excuse to learn my mother’s recipe.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Bacon, Dessert, Let's Lunch, Recipes, Singapore, Soup, Sweets, Tales From the Road, Vegetarian Tagged With: Apple, Bacon, Borscht, Cilantro, Cooling, Curry, Dessert, Gazpacho, Green bean soup, Heaty, Let's Lunch, Mint, Mung beans, Pandan, Paris, Poached pears, Sago, San Diego, Snack, Soup, Strawberry, Sugar, Sweet potato, White grape, Zucchini

August 31, 2009 By cheryl

Braised Duck A L'Aunty Alice


CIMG8611

When I think of the family feasts of my Singapore girlhood, there’s always a duck in the picture.

To say that my people — that would be the Teochew ethnic group from Southern China — adore duck would be a major understatement. During a recent trip to Shantou, the area in China where my great-grandfather lived as a boy, duck and goose were inescapable at every dinner table.

So it’s more than slightly sacrilegious to say that I often avoid duck simply because it isn’t one of my favorites. (Hey, I’m a big hunk of red meat kind of gal — what can I say?)

I do make an exception for some versions, however — and Teochew-style braised duck is one of them.

While I’m really good at eating it, making it is another matter altogether. But this was something my Aunty Alice, the best cook among my mother and her sisters, was intent on fixing right away.

On a recent weekday, she arrived at my Singapore home armed with two ducks and a bag of ingredients and the tutorial began…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Poultry, Recipes, Shameless Promotion, Singapore, Southeast Asian, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Aunty Alice, Braised duck, China, Eggs, Five-spice powder, Galangal, Garlic, Hockchew, Salt, Shantou, Soy sauce, Star Anise, Sugar, Teochew

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • …
  • 27
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 CHERYL LU-LIEN TAN · Site design: Ilsa Brink