Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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April 8, 2011 By cheryl

Breakfast Tacos: Lunch of Champions

Breakfast has always been my favorite meal of the day. In Singapore, where I grew up, this first meal is not taken lightly — plates of spicy noodles and dishes of coconut rice paired with fried chicken or fish, eggs and flaming hot sambal sauce are common ways to start your morning.

So it’s no surprise, then, that I’m all about the hearty, savory breakfast that works just as well for lunch. When my Let’s Lunch bunch suggested tackling “breakfast for lunch” for our April lunch date, I jumped on board right away.

Leafing through my friend Joe Yonan‘s new cookbook “Serve Yourself: Nightly Adventures in Cooking for One,” I had spied several delectable-looking recipes in his chapter on tacos. One called out to me more than the others: Austin-Style Breakfast Tacos, which Joe began whipping together as a college student in Austin years ago.

With some eggs, chorizo and cheese in hand, I was ready to give this a whirl…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Books, Breakfast, Brunch, Let's Lunch, Mexican

February 21, 2011 By cheryl

Susan Feniger's Street (Los Angeles): Kaya Toast Fail

As anyone who knows me will tell you, I have spent the better part of my life rebelling, pushing the boundaries, and, often, breaking rules.

There are some things I consider sacrosanct, however — and supreme among them is Singaporean food.

When a dear friend told me this weekend of going to Susan Feniger’s Street in Los Angeles for a kaya toast meal — a popular breakfast in Singapore that involves runny soft-boiled eggs doused with dark, sweet soy sauce and white pepper, and slices of toast generously slathered with kaya, a sweet coconut jam — I was thrilled. I always feel such pride seeing the homespun dishes I grew up with making their way onto American menus.

And then I opened the picture of this “kaya toast” meal. The egg, firm and yellow, was certainly not soft-boiled. The vegetables were disturbing — greens have no place in a kaya toast meal. And the toast didn’t look nearly charred enough.

This, alas, is what Americans are discovering as kaya toast.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Breakfast, Los Angeles, Restaurants, Singapore, Singaporean, Southeast Asian Tagged With: Breakfast, Chin Mee Chin Confectionery, Kaya Toast, Los Angeles, Singapore, Street, Susan Feniger, Ya Kun Kaya Toast

January 4, 2011 By cheryl

Lan Fong Yuen (Hong Kong): The Perfect Breakfast

There are far too many mornings in New York when I wake up with a pressing question: Where is my pork chop bun?

Flaky croissants, fluffy pancakes and hearty breakfast casseroles are perfectly delightful but one of my absolute favorite breakfasts is something far more basic — a soft white roll filled with a hot pan-fried pork chop.

It’s a classic Hong Kong breakfast — one you’ll find in coffeeshops all over the country. There are variations on the dish — the pork chop is sometimes breaded, the bun is sometimes sweet.

During a recent trip to Hong Kong, however, one place called out to us above all others: Lan Fong Yuen, a little shop in Central that is so beloved you’ll have to elbow aside throngs of starving locals for a place to sit …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Breakfast, Chinese, Hong Kong, Restaurants, Tales From the Road

November 21, 2010 By cheryl

The Shop at Andaz Fifth Avenue: Style, With Some Substance


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As hotel restaurants go, the shop at Andaz Fifth Avenue tries pretty hard.

Determined to cast itself as a New York restaurant, it likes to broadcast just how local it is. Its Web site rattles off a litany of New York purveyors — eggs hail from Feather Ridge Farm in the Hudson Valley; lox comes from Russ & Daughters on Manhattan's Lower East Side, which has been providing New Yorkers with smoked fish since 1914. And there's even a self-conscious little area that sells snacks made by small, lesser-known brands in New York.

This is all in line with the in-the-know feel that the hotel, part of Hyatt Hotels & Resorts' chain of boutique properties, tries to give off. It's a pretentiousness you can already sense from the fact that it is the shop — spelled all lowercase, the hotel insists — and not, well, The Shop. (You'll have to check out my review of the hotel in the New York Times Travel section for more on this Andaz.)

How would the food stack up against all this posing? We decided to find out …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Breakfast, Brunch, Hotels, Locavore, New York, Restaurants Tagged With: Anchovies, Andaz Fifth Avenue, Apple, Berkshire pork, Bloody Mary, Bolognese, Bone-in Virginia Ham, Books, Breadcrumbs, Breakfast, Brioche, Brunch, Cafe Des Artistes, Capers, Chicken Schnitzel, Cinnamon, Coffee, Compote, Crema, Eggs, English peas, Feather Ridge Farm, Fish, French toast, Greens, Griddle bread, Hotel, Hudson Valley, Hyatt Hotels & Resorts, Manhattan, Meatballs, Mimosa, Mint, New York, New York Times, Orange marmalade, Pastries, Raison, Restaurant, Roberto Alicea, Russ & Daughters, Sam Sifton, Schaller & Weber, Tarragon, The Shop, Thyme, Tomato, Travel, Wall on Water

November 19, 2010 By cheryl

Lin Heung Tea House: Hong Kong Dim Sum, The Old School


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Because we are in Hong Kong, dim sum is a must.

My dear friend Jeanette and I — two women who have been driven by our stomachs in the 20 years that we have been the best of friends — we wake up in the cool grayness of Hong Kong bleary-eyed and starving.

Even in the fog of sleepiness, our mission is clear — we stumble out into the dusty bustle of mid-morning Hong Kong and make our way toward Central. On a corner of narrow Wellington Street lies our destination: Lin Heung Tea House, a dim sum place that has been around since 1928 and is packed most mornings with regulars who head there for a morning dumpling fix, strong pu erh (or po lei as it is known in these parts) and some quality time with the day's newspaper …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Breakfast, Brunch, Cantonese, Dim Sum, Hong Kong, Restaurants Tagged With: Beef balls, Beef tendons, Bun, Cantonese, Cart, Central, Char siew bao, Cheong fun, Chicken feet, Dim Sum, Dumpling, Egg yolk, Har gow, Hong Kong, Lin Heung Tea House, Lin yong bao, Lo mai gai, Lotus paste, Po Lei, Pu Erh, Roast pork bun, Shu mai, Sweet soy sauce, Tea, Wellington Street

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