Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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November 2, 2010 By cheryl

Vino Rosina: The New Italian On The Block


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Years ago, I found myself creeping along the quiet streets of a swath near Baltimore's Little Italy, squinting through the darkness as I tried to find Charleston, a restaurant that had been highly recommended.

Even though this roughly eight-block area was flanked by the perennially packed and fratty Fells Point on one side and the touristy Inner Harbor on the other at the time, its streets were still largely undeveloped in the late 1990s. Charleston, a Southern-inflected French restaurant, was an early adopter in the neighborhood and once we'd located it, we were glad we went. The meal was phenomenal and it was thrilling to be at a place that felt like it was on the cusp of something larger.

The husband and I recently returned to Baltimore for a short visit and decided to trek to Charleston to take a look at the place where we'd had one of the first romantic dinners of our courtship. The restaurant, helmed by the talented Cindy Wolf in the kitchen, is still there and hopping but the area around it has since become unrecognizable. Now named Harbor East, the area has sprouted gleaming condiminium, office and hotel buildings and has become as packed with restaurants, cafes and bars as its nearby neighborhoods. (You can check out a piece I wrote for the New York Times Travel section this past weekend on Harbor East here.)

Amid the current hubbub, a new little place caught our eye: Vino Rosina, a modern Italian restaurant in the Bagby Furniture Company Building, a historic red-brick structure that used to be a factory. Outside on the street, we could hear laughter wafting out along with the intoxicating smells of oven-roasted meats. So of course, we decided to step in and give the place a whirl …

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Filed Under: Baltimore, Italian, Restaurants Tagged With: Arugula, Baltimore, Beef, Bison, Blackberry, BLT, Bread, Burger, Cannelloni, Charleston, Cindy Wolf, Fells Point, French, Harbor East, Herb butter, Ice-cream, Inner Harbor, Italian, Jesse Sandlin, Lamb, Little Italy, Mousse, New York Times, Pork, Rabbit, Roast, Rosina Gourmet, Salad, Sandwich, Sheep's cheese, Southern, Spinach, Tart, Top Chef, Vino Rosina, Wine

March 5, 2010 By cheryl

Kitchen-Sink Stir-Fry: Spring Cleaning Your Fridge


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It’s hard to think about spring when there’s still snow on the ground in New York. But one must be optimistic — which we are over here in the Let’s Lunch crowd.

Fresh off our breathless postings on aphrodisiac-laced dishes in February, our thoughts immediately turned to warmer times as we debated what to make next for our monthly virtual lunch date.

How about “spring cleaning (the fridge?)” Stephanie over at The Cosmic Cowgirl suggested.

And so, kitchen-sink recipes to help you springclean your fridge it was.

Now, since I have several solid grocers (and one neat butcher) within a 2-minute walk of my Brooklyn apartment, I tend to buy as I cook. (I’ve never really been one to stock up my fridge like there’s no tomorrow, anyhow.)

Nonetheless, there are a few basics that I must always have in my fridge: Bacon, tofu and some sort of ground meat, usually pork or beef.

Bacon is a wonder that must be consumed on its own, in my book. (Or, in a bacon explosion. Or a BLT. Or … I digress.)

But what to do with tofu and ground pork? The possibilities are endless …

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Filed Under: Let's Lunch, Meat, Recipes, Singapore, Singaporean, Southeast Asian Tagged With: Aphrodisiac, Bacon, Bacon explosion, Brooklyn, Cornstarch, Erlinda, Fridge, Ground beef, Ground Pork, Kitchen sink, Let's Lunch, Mushrooms, New York, Oyster sauce, Pork, Recipe, Scallions, Singapore, Snow, Soy sauce, Spring, Spring cleaning, Stir fry, Tofu

January 8, 2010 By cheryl

Chicken Adobo: Baguio Beckoning


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As we were hunched over the stove, embroiled in some recent kitchen experiment, my Singapore family’s maid Erlinda noted in passing that it’d been almost two years since she’d eaten her own home-made adobo.

Two years? This seemed like an interminably long time for a Filipina not to be enjoying her national dish, cooked by her own hand.

My mother doesn’t stock vinegar in the kitchen, she explained, which instantly makes brewing a pot of the vinegary pork or chicken stew impossible. And the soy sauce that we Chinese use happens to be just a little too sweet for real adobo, it turns out. 

Now, being a massive lover of the stuff, I immediately decided that Erlinda’s adobo drought needed to end. (This had nothing to do, of course, with the fact that my mouth often starts to water the moment I hear the word “adobo.”)

So, with some instructions from Erlinda on what she needed for her adobo, off we went.

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Filed Under: Filipino, Let's Lunch, Poultry, Recipes, Singapore, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Adobo, Baguio, Bay leaves, Brooklyn, Chicken, Datu Puti, Filipina, Filipino, Garlic, Lucky Plaza, Peppercorns, Pork, Recipe, Salt, Shallots, Silver Swan, Singapore, South China Sea, Soy sauce, Vinegar, Water

November 23, 2009 By cheryl

Obao: Panned Asian


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New York is filled with so many “pan-Asian” restaurants that it can be difficult to get excited about yet another one setting up shop.

Vietnamese pork chops? Been there. Summer rolls? So, so done that.

And Obao, Michael Huynh’s newest addition to his rapidly expanding string of Manhattan restaurants, hits these and all the other usual notes that you’ll find at many other similarly billed places in the city.

What’s different? Not much, compared with your run-of-the-mill multi-ethnic Asian restaurant.

There are some hits — anything meaty and/or grilled. And, of course, some misses, namely a “spicy” Singapore laksa (pictured above) that’s so watered down that its broth tastes like hot water with some curry powder tossed in toward the end.

But here’s the thing: Even at Obao’s recession-friendly prices (which put entrees between $9 and $18), for those who enjoy a hearty bowl of noodle soup or a crisp papaya salad now and then, there are just so many other places in the city to go for better versions.

So, why eat here?

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Filed Under: New York, Restaurants, Singaporean, Southeast Asian, Vietnamese Tagged With: Aldea, Arroz de pato, Bun bo hue, Cha ca la vong, Confit, Crackling, Dill, Duck, Eggplant, Fish, Grilled steak, Hanoi, Laksa, Lemongrass, Midtown, Obao, Papaya Salad, Pig's feet, Pork, Pork chops, Skewers, Spare ribs, Sugar cane, Turmeric, Vermicelli, Xie Xie

September 21, 2009 By cheryl

Katsuhama: Pork Cutlets, Gussied Up


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There are few dishes more satisfying than a good pork katsu — a deep-fried cutlet that’s lightly breaded and perfectly crispy on the outside, tender on the inside and all the better if it’s drowned in sweet Japanese curry or just served plain with a side of Tonkatsu sauce, sweet and thick.

Given that I’ll order pork katsu whenever I see it on a menu, I’ve sampled it in restaurants and hole-in-the-wall dives all over Manhattan and Asia.

And I’ve pretty much always had good experiences with the dish — well, that was true anyway, until, I went to the new Katsuhama on West 55th Street.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Japanese, New York, Restaurants Tagged With: Curry, Katsu, Katsuhama, Kikuni, Kurobuta, Menchanko Tei, Pork, Rice, Tonkatsu

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