Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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October 12, 2010 By cheryl

Anadama Bread: A Very Good Place To Start


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Among the lessons I've learned while baking bread, this, I suppose, could have been the most predictable: Baking bread is not like riding a bicycle. If you haven't done it in a long time, well, don't count on being able to do it again.

I won't go into it, but there exists a recent valiant attempt at making multigrain bread extraordinaire, which many bakers in the Bread Baker's Apprentice challenge had pronounced a breeze. In my Brooklyn kitchen, however, this turned out to be anything but. And the end result was a flat dense brick that was as saggy in the center as it was dry and mealy.

"You're out of practice," the husband noted. (Which earned him extra dishwashing duties but — I had to admit — was not untrue.)

How to solve the problem? An old Julie Andrews song instantly came to mind.

Perhaps, I thought, it might help to go back and start at the very beginning …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Baking, Bread Tagged With: Anadama, Bagels, Bread Baker's Apprentice, Bread flour, Brooklyn, Cornmeal, Facebook, Julie Andrews, Lethally Delicious, Loaves, Massachussetts, Molasses, Multigrain, New England, Peter Reinhart, Pinch My Salt, Polenta, Salt, Shortening, Water, Wife

September 3, 2010 By cheryl

Portuguese Sweet Bread: True Crack Bread


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There has been no small amount of grumbling in this household recently.

The complaints are rather monotonous — they all go something like this: What happened to the bread baking?

It is true that not too very long ago, there had been great ambition on this front. The idea had been to make a bread every week along with dozens of bakers around the world in a quest to bake our way through The Bread Baker’s Apprentice.

But then, of course, life intervenes. (In my case, that would be the months spent traveling for research and then writing The Book.)

Gradually, my smoke-filled kitchen (thank you, ciabatta) and bygone bagels were becoming faded adventures in our memory.

During a break in the hubbub, however, I decided this nonsense had gone on long enough. The bread-baking bible was dusted off and my trusty KitchenAid mixer was resuscitated.

On the docket was a bread I’d been curious about: Portuguese sweet bread, a type of loaf, lovely, soft and sweet, that’s popular in Hawaii and New England. (It was introduced to those regions by Portuguese immigrants.)

Now, in the times that I’d tried it, it had always reminded me of the slightly sweet buns and loaves I grew up eating in Hong Kong and Singapore. It was time to see how this recipe would turn out in my own kitchen …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Baking, Bread Tagged With: Baking, Bread, Bread Baker's Apprentice, Butter, Hawaii, Hong Kong, Immigrant, Jam, Milk, New England, Peter Reinhart, Portuguese, Powdered milk, Rising, Shortening, Singapore, Sugar, Summery, Sweet Bread

January 21, 2010 By cheryl

Poilane Miche: Tackling A Legend


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As usual, I had bread on my mind the moment I returned to New York from my latest trip to Singapore.

After weeks away from my oven, I always touch down just itching to bake something. And this time, a quick check with my fellow Bread Baker’s Apprentice challenge bakers revealed that they were mired in a difficult spot in the bread lineup.

“We are in Sourdough right now,” said Daniel in Berlin (a.k.a. @MisterRios of the Ährelich Gesagt blog). “Everyone is tRYEing their best.”

Ahh, bread humor. Gotta love it.

After the laughter subsided, however, I started to get worried. Sourdough in the hands of lesser bakers can be a massive pain in the tush. 

I should know.

Just last month, bolstered by a successful pane Siciliano and wondering what to do with a bowl of sourdough starter, I brazenly decided to take on a legend: Poilane miche — the Holy Grail of breads.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Baking, Bread, France Tagged With: Boulangerie, Bread Baker's Apprentice, Concorde, Croque Madame, Egg, Gruyere, Ham, Holy Grail, Manhattan, Miche, New York, Pane Siciliano, Paris, Peter Reinhart, Poilane, Singapore, Sourdough, Starter

December 31, 2009 By cheryl

Top 10: The Memorable Eats Of 2009


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You know it’s been a good year when you are able to say this: 2009 was when I began to eat for a living.

I’d always been a devotee of affairs of the stomach. I may have written about fashion and other lifestyle areas for a living but baking, braising, trying new recipes, eating out — those were what consumed me when weekends rolled around. 

Luck has its ways of finding you, however. Now, on the precipice of 2010, I’m beginning to close out a lunar calendar year of cooking and eating with my family in Singapore as research for my book, “A Tiger In The Kitchen.” 

My journey so far has taken me many places — France, where I had the loveliest gingery champagne cocktail with friends old and dear; China, where my father and I went in search of my great-grandfather’s footprints in the village of his birth. And, of course, Singapore, where my aunties and maternal grandmother have been plying me with meals, recipes and much, much love along the way.

With all that I’ve packed into 2009, it’s hard to decide what the highlights have been. But, inspired by some stellar Top 10 gastronomic lists out there (definitely check out Sam Sifton’s list of Top 11 dishes in New York in the New York Times), I decided to give it a go.

Here, in no particular order, are my 10 memorable eats of 2009. 

Enjoy, buon appetito and listen, let’s do this again in 2010 …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Bacon, Baking, Bread, France, Hainanese, Hawkers, Italian, Let's Lunch, Malay, Meat, New York, Poultry, Restaurants, Seafood, Singapore, Singaporean, Southeast Asian, Tales From the Road, Vietnamese Tagged With: Anthony Bourdain, Ayam Masak Merah, Bak Zhang, Baking, BLT, Bread, Bread Baker's Apprentice, Cancale, Caviar, Chinese, Crab Noodles, Dumpling, Grandmother, Gunther's, Indian, Malay, New York, New York Times, Oysters, Peter Reinhart, Sam Sifton, Singapore, Tiger In The Kitchen

November 27, 2009 By cheryl

Pane Siciliano: One Sexy Bread


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The same thing always happens when I’ve been on my weeks-long trips for book research in Singapore.

When I’m away, I find myself overcome with intense longing for something in my Brooklyn home. By the time I return, it’s all I can do to keep myself from running toward it (cue slow-motion romantic comedy music here) and getting it all hot and, well, hot.

My family home in Singapore doesn’t have an oven, you see — so when I’m away from my trusty hunk of stainless steel, a major itch to bake starts taking over.

When I returned this time, I was determined to jump back into the Bread Baker’s Apprentice challenge, where bakers around the world are making a bread each week from Peter Reinhart’s “The Bread Baker’s Apprentice.”

On the docket that week was pane Siciliano, a beautiful, golden Italian bread formed in a voluptuous “S” shape.

It seemed like just the thing to scratch my itch.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Baking, Bread Tagged With: Baguette, Baking, Bread, Bread Baker's Apprentice, Cheese, Italian, Pane Siciliano, Panettone, Pate fermentee, Peter Reinhart, Prosciutto, Recipe, Sicily, Singapore

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