Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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November 27, 2010 By cheryl

Razor Clams: A Southeast Asian Kitchen-Sink Tale


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The dinner gathering has been impromptu and Chef Simpson of Cafe Asean is feeling a little guilty that he hasn't had time to plan what to cook.

Calmly but quickly, he zips about his spacious Manhattan kitchen, pulling out bags, inspecting his fridge. "This is a good time to eat razor clams, you know," he stops to say, showing us the big bag he acquired from the farmers' market that very morning. "They taste really good right now."

Now, while I've eaten razor clams — or bamboo clams as they're called in some parts of Asia — I've never even thought to cook them at home. A slab of steak, pieces of chicken, a whole turkey — those I can comprehend. Razor clams? They had just always seemed a touch too exotic for my abilities.

Simpson, however, shares none of my apprehension, looking at me like I'm crazy and then shrugging when I ask, "How are you going to cook them?"

"It depends on what I have in the kitchen," is his simple answer. With that, Simpson fires up his stove and away we go …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Recipes, Seafood, Southeast Asian Tagged With: Bamboo Clams, Bread, Cafe Asean, Fish Sauce, Galangal, Garlic, Lemongrass, Marinara, Razor Clams, Simpson, Southeast Asian, Tom Yum Paste, Water, West Village

November 15, 2010 By cheryl

Lantern: A Tranquil Beacon


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Singapore can feel so densely packed and swathed in concrete that it's hard to find a place that's truly tranquil.

The moment we stepped out into Lantern, the rooftop bar at the newish Fullerton Bay Hotel, however, we knew we'd found one. The 360-degree view of the city — with the Marina Bay waterfront on one side and Singapore's towering skyline on the other — was breathtaking. The blue glow emanating from the hotel pool was immediately calming. I could almost feel my heartrate slowing as I heard the sound of the live band's strumming guitars drifting over. 

Just minutes before, I was outside the hotel, tiptoeing between cars and nudging my way past financial district pedestrians to get to the hotel. But now, just minutes later, my friend Vino and I found ourselves in idyllic waterfront bliss.

We decided to stay for a moment to check out the scene…

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Filed Under: Boites, Singapore, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Angostura bitters, Bar, Bay, Clifford Pier, Cocktail, Cointreau, Cucumber, Financial District, Fullerton Bay Hotel, Honey, Lantern, Lime, Merlion, Pomelo, Red Lantern, Sang Nila Utama, Singaporean, Skyline, Tequila, View, Water, Watermelon

November 12, 2010 By cheryl

Winter Melon Soup: Comfort, Simple & Clear


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Among the many Cantonese-style soups of my Singaporean girlhood, the one I find myself craving once temperatures start heading south in fall is a simple one: Winter melon soup.

This broth, dotted with cubes of soft winter melon and bits of mushroom and pork, isn't an elaborate or fussy soup — it's what the Chinese call "cheng," or clear. The flavor is subtle; the experience is all about warmth and comfort.

So, when my Let's Lunch friends suggested doing a fall soup for November, I immediately started badgering my mother for her recipe …

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Filed Under: Asian, Cantonese, Chinese, Let's Lunch, Recipes, Singaporean, Soup Tagged With: Acorn, Baked, Cantonese, Carrot, Dong cai, Fall, Habanero, Minced pork, Mushroom, Oven, Pans, Pork, Potimarron, Pots, Recipe, Roasted tomato, Singaporean, Soup, Soy sauce, Squash, Vegetable oil, Water, White pepper, Winter melon

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

February 18, 2010 By cheryl

Prosperity Cakes (Fatt Gou): Ushering In A Rich Tiger Year


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You will have to excuse the radio silence on this blog. 

Between stuffing myself with pineapple tarts and cooking up a storm in Singapore, there simply hasn’t been a spare moment since the Chinese year of the Tiger began on Sunday to sit down and pen an intelligible sentence.

Amid the bacchanalia, however, some lessons have been learned. The deeper ones — about family, love and the enduring power of ancestral lore — I won’t go into. (You’ll just have to buy the book.) 

But the Chinese new year recipes — usually designed to conjure success, prosperity or love — now those, those I’m more than happy to share.

Over the last few days, I’ve had the good fortune of spending quality time in the kitchen with Auntie Hon Tim, the Colorado-based mother of my dear Auntie Donna in Singapore. Now, Auntie Hon Tim used to own and run a Chinese restaurant in Lakewood, Colo. — so she’s got some serious cooking chops. 

Besides teaching me the quickest way to skim fat off a pot of stew and how to rapidly chop carrots without slicing off my fingernails, Auntie Hon Tim has been showing me how to make some of her favorite lunar new year recipes.

On her must list every year is fatt gou, or prosperity cakes — cupcake-sized desserts that she makes to send friends wishes of riches and sweetness in the new year. 

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Filed Under: Cake, Cantonese, Chinese, Dessert, Holidays, Recipes, Singapore, Southeast Asian, Sweets, Tales From the Road Tagged With: All-purpose flour, Auntie Hon Tim, Brown sugar, Cake, Chinese new year, Chinese restaurant, City, Colorado, Cupcake, Dessert, Dragon, Fatt Gou, Good fortune, Lakewood, Luck, Lunar new year, Pancake mix, Pineapple Tarts, Prosperity, Red dates, Singapore, Steam, Sweet, Tiger, Water, Year

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