Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

Author Website

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Events
  • Work
  • Blog
  • Contact

November 27, 2010 By cheryl

Razor Clams: A Southeast Asian Kitchen-Sink Tale


IMG_6624

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 12, 2010 By cheryl

Winter Melon Soup: Comfort, Simple & Clear


IMG_6138

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 …

[Read more…]

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

November 5, 2010 By cheryl

Birthday Noodles: To Sweetness & Longevity


Sing1010 038

One birthday is good, but two is always better.

Growing up in a Singapore, a country that follows the lunar as well as the Western calendar, celebrating two birthdays each year was always a given. Cake, flowers and presents are lovely for Western birthdays. But for lunar calendar birthdays — or Chinese birthdays, as my family calls them — things are several notches simpler. The star of this show is always a bowl of noodles, symbolic of longevity, a pair of hardboiled eggs, representing fertility or life. And all of this comes in a sugary soup — "so the whole year will be sweet," as my mother says.  

For too many years in America, my Chinese birthday — which I'm fortunate to be able to remember easily because it falls on Diwali each year — passed with little fanfare. Sure, my parents would call New York to wish me well. But the noodles, the eggs and the sweet broth — that always seemed like just a little too much trouble.

This year, however, as Diwali began today, I found myself temporarily stranded in Singapore due to unforeseen circumstances. So for lunch, my mother had a little treat planned: birthday noodles. "You must eat this," she said. "For luck."

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Recipes, Singapore, Singaporean, Soup, Tales From the Road, Teochew Tagged With: Birthday, Diwali, Eggs, Flour, Lunar calendar, Noodles, Sugar, Vermicelli, Western calendar

October 15, 2010 By cheryl

Grilled Cheese Sandwich: Cheddar & Blue With Asian Pears & Rosemary Honey


IMG_5827

There's a lovely little bar near my Brooklyn home that serves the most brilliant grilled cheese sandwiches — the bread is sliced thin and grilled to crisp perfection. And the melted cheddar within is curled around slender slivers of green apples, which lend the sandwich a nice tartness that cuts through the rich cheese.

I think about that sandwich often — and it came to mind again when my Let's Lunch group, a bunch of far-flung bloggers who gather once a month for a virtual lunch date, decided on creative grilled cheese sandwiches for October.

The version I had in mind had a few twists, however …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Let's Lunch, Recipes, Snacks, So Good It Must Be Bad For You Tagged With: Anadama Bread, Asian pears, Blue cheese, Cheddar, Cobble Hill, Dunbarton Blue, Dunbarton Cheese, Grilled Cheese, Honey, Huntsman Cheese, Let's Lunch, Rosemary, Sandwich, Shullsburg, Stinky Bklyn, Wisconsin

October 1, 2010 By cheryl

Doenjang Jjigae: Tofu & Seafood Stew (Commoners' Food)


IMG_5617 

You could say I haven't exactly been the kind of daughter-in-law a Korean mother would have wished for.

I can't speak Korean. (I don't think being able to say "kalbi" and "bulgogi" counts.) And while I'm awfully good at eating Korean food, well, making it is another matter entirely.

I'd never attempted many Korean dishes simply because they seem terribly complex — each stew, each grilled meat I sample is always bursting at the seams with complicated clusters of flavors. How could I ever replicate those tastes in my little Brooklyn kitchen? No, no, it was always far easier to just throw in the spatula and hop on a train to New York's Koreatown.

After spending some time in the kitchen with my mother-in-law in Honolulu for book research last year, however, I started to come around. 

Since she lives in Hawaii and I live in New York, it's been impossible to keep the lessons going. So I've been turning to a blogger whom I deeply admire — and adore — who's essentially a one-woman Korean cooking school: the irrepressible Maangchi.

Many of her recipes are incredibly simple — foolproof, almost — and watching her videos helps you figure out whether you're chopping things the right size or grilling meats to the right doneness. Recently, I had her to thank for a lovely tofu and seafood stew I'd been craving …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Korean, Recipes, Seafood, Stew Tagged With: Anchovies, Brooklyn, Doenjang, Doenjang jjigae, Garlic, Green onions, Hawaii, Honolulu, Kimchi, Korean, Koreatown, Maangchi, New York, Onion, Potato, Scallions, Seafood, Shrimp, Stew, Tofu, Zucchini

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • …
  • 20
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 CHERYL LU-LIEN TAN · Site design: Ilsa Brink