Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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September 7, 2010 By cheryl

Asian Feastival: Southeast Asian Cooking Tips


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If one does have to work over a holiday weekend, this is not a bad way to do it: Eating and, well, talking about eating.

On Labor Day, at the Asian Feastival in Queens, I had the privilege of spending a lovely hour on a panel with New York chef and restaurateur Andy Yang (of Rhong-Tiam Express, a tiny Thai takeout place that he opened after closing his one Michelin-star restaurant Rhong-Tiam in January) and Kian Lam Kho, a private chef and caterer who blogs about Chinese home cooking at Red Cook. The food festival, which included tasting booths and cooking demonstrations by experts such as the effervescent blogger Maangchi, was designed to showcase Asian food from all regions.

Outside our cozy conference room, the booths and cooking displays meandered through Taiwan, Korea, China, the Philippines. Inside, however, our panel had a specific angle: Deconstructing Southeast Asian Flavors.

While I had felt that I had already learned a lot in the year I spent traveling to my native Singapore to learn to cook for my upcoming memoir, A Tiger In The Kitchen, I ended up picking up a few handy tips from our lively discussion …

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Filed Under: Queens, Singaporean, Southeast Asian, Thai Tagged With: Ang ku kueh, Asian Feastival, Ayam Penyet, Braised duck, Cilantro, David Thompson, Dragonfly, Elephant, Flying Lion, Helena Soedjak, Indonesia, James Oseland, Lee Chin Koon, Lee Kuan Yew, Lobster Farm, Mae Ploy, Mrs. Lee's Cookbook, Patricia Tanumihardja, Pichet Ong, Rasa Malaysia, Rose's Kitchen, Sesame oil, Singapore, Soy sauce, Squid, Sriracha, Sylvia Tan, Thai food, Thailand, The New Mrs. Lee's Cookbook, The Sweet Spot, Tiger, Tipparos, Umami, Violet Oon

August 13, 2010 By cheryl

Lemongrass Frozen Yogurt: The Joys of Cooking Redux



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Years ago, I heard a sports writer complain about how he used to love sports — until he started writing about it.

Once it became a job, he all but stopped watching games on weekends. The thing that he adored had morphed into stress-inducer.

I remember feeling aghast — you get paid to write about something you love. Isn’t that more than many people dream of?

Recently, however, I’ve started to understand. After spending weeks with my nose buried deep in my book manuscript — which is all about a journey home to my native Singapore told through food and cooking — my time in the kitchen has become, simply, work. Meals have been thrown together out of sheer necessity; easy old faithfuls rather than new creative dishes have been making far too many appearances on the dinner table.

The stress of writing and editing my hundreds of pages on food, sadly, had transformed my love for cooking into a source of anxiety.

But I only realized I’d forgotten how to enjoy the act of making food when my Let’s Lunch friends nudged me back into the kitchen — not to put a meal on the table but to whip up something silly and anything but practical: A decadent chilled dessert.

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Filed Under: Dessert, Ice-Cream, Let's Lunch, Southeast Asian Tagged With: Burgers, Casserole, Dessert, Egg yolks, Frozen yogurt, Ice Kachang, Ice-cream, Jean-Georges Vongerichten, Kitchen sink, Lemongrass, Milk, Pichet Ong, Salt, Singapore, Southeast Asian, Stir Fries, Sugar, Sweet

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