Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

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July 17, 2012 By cheryl

Chicken Cutlets Meunière: A Book Club Find

A lovely thing about writing a book about food: People want to feed you.

There were gifts of chocolate in both Paris and San Francisco. In Chicago, a reader showed up at my Women & Children First book signing with a box of home-made beef rendang (Indonesian-style beef curry) so tender and so delicious that I still think about it with great longing. And in Singapore, a very sweet cookbook author came to my Books Kinokuniya reading bearing a packet of fried carrot cake — so freshly cooked it was still hot! — from a hawker stall so popular you generally have to line up for half an hour just to snag a plate.

Just as thoughtful as the food offerings have been the recipes readers have shared. Some have been in their families for generations; others are more avant garde.

And among them all is a recipe so simple (and terrific) that it’s now part of my regular rotation: Chicken cutlets Meunière, gleaned from a charming little book club in New York City …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: American, Poultry, Recipes Tagged With: Asparagus, Banana bread, Book Club, Chicago, Chicken Cutlets Meuniere, Florida, Haroset, Kinokuniya, Liang's Bistro, Nuts, Omnivore Books, Pesto, San Francisco, Singapore, Slice of Mooncake, Tampa

September 27, 2011 By cheryl

Town House Books & Cafe: A Gem of a Meal

When you are known for your appetite and have spent some months on the road, taking the gospel of Tiger cookery through cities from far west Seattle to down south Atlanta, people invariably want to know: What was the best meal you had?

I have been incredibly well-fed, that is true. There was an unforgettable meal at Thistle, a quaint hyper-locavore place in McMinnville, Oregon, where some of the produce on our table that evening came from a co-owner’s mother’s garden nearby. In Seattle, there was the discovery of a superb rendition of New York-style pizza at food blogger Molly Wizenberg’s Delancey. And then there was the restaurant that made me consider packing up and moving to Houston just so I could eat there every week: El Real Tex Mex, where the ethereal refried beans, crunchy puffy tacos and stacked enchiladas share a sacred secret ingredient: lard, which the kitchen itself renders from heritage pigs.

The meal that stands far above all others, however, didn’t occur in a restaurant of great repute or one of the must-try scenes of any city I’ve visited. Rather, it took place in a darling little bookstore in St. Charles, Ill., a town 40 miles west of Chicago that’s perched by a pretty river. At Town House Books, owners Doug and Dave set out to not just host a reading for “A Tiger in the Kitchen: A Memoir of Food and Family.” No, they were determined to truly bring the book to life.

And so it was that just a few days before my June reading there, I got a call from Doug, asking me how exactly did my Singaporean aunties wrap the bamboo leaves around the bak-zhang (rice dumplings) and did my late grandmother’s pineapple tarts need to be kept in a fridge if they were made far ahead?

Bak-zhang? Pineapple tarts? When Town House had mentioned a dinner pairing for my reading, these ambitious offerings were certainly not what I had in mind.

The pangs for my family’s dishes immediately set in. And suddenly, I just could not wait to get to St. Charles …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Books, Bookstore, Cafe, Chicago, Restaurants, Singaporean, Tales From the Road Tagged With: A Tiger In The Kitchen, Bak Zhang, Chicago, Green bean soup, Illinois, Kalbi, Lychee, Mousse, Pineapple Tarts, Popiah, Singapore, St. Charles, Town House Books & Cafe

October 13, 2010 By cheryl

Taste Good: A True Thing


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Years ago, as a freshman at Northwestern University, I used to trek to the computer lab after classes to log onto a Web site and stare longingly at pictures of Singaporean food that someone out in the ether had taken the care to post.

I'm ashamed to mention how long ago this was, exactly — let's just say that this was the first year the university handed out email addresses to incoming freshmen and well, that this "Internet" thing was still new-fangled.

I've never forgotten the kindness of the person — whom I've never known — who put up that rudimentary site filled with pictures of dishes I desperately missed. The photos became my lifeline during that first bone-chilling Chicago winter — and I would spend the next 10-plus years looking for good versions of Singaporean chicken rice or spicy beef rendang in Southeast Asian restaurants across America.

After years of looking, I've finally found a place that I can whole-heartedly say is authentic: Taste Good in Elmhurst, New York. (And I'm not the only one who thinks so — the Singapore Permanent Mission to the United Nations often uses the restaurant to cater its events.) I won't go into all the details here — you'll have to check out my piece on the meal and my quest in the Atlantic Food Channel today — but I wanted to pay a little homage to that anonymous person who saved my sanity all those years ago.

So here's a little visual montage. Whoever and wherever you are, I hope you enjoy these pictures …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, New York, Queens, Restaurants, Singaporean, Southeast Asian Tagged With: Assam laksa, Atlantic Food Channel, Beef rendang, Char kway teow, Chicago, Chicken Rice, Dessert, Elmhurst, Grandmother, K.K. Thong, Kangkong belacan, Malaysian, Northwestern University, Popiah, Pulot hitam, Queens, Rice, Singapore, Soup, Taste Good, United Nations, Winter

May 11, 2010 By cheryl

The Lion: And On The First Night …


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When a girl leaves town for seven weeks, the City is full of advice for her the moment she returns.

Because she has been known to have an appetite, there is, first and foremost on the minds of many, the issue of where she should eat now. Restaurants have closed and opened in the time she’s been gone, sequestered in the woods of Saratoga Springs, N.Y., finishing a book, making new friends.

“Obviously,” a friend emails, “the Lion in the Village is the place to go.”

And by all accounts, that appears to be right. The West Village restaurant with Waverly Inn chef John DeLucie at the helm and backers like David Zinczenko of Men’s Health magazine has been one of the most breathlessly anticipated new restaurants of spring. In the last few weeks, its private preview dinners have been a Page Six hotbed, reportedly drawing bold-faced names like Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher, Nora Ephron and Mary J. Blige. 

The issue, of course, becomes, well, how on earth to get a table? If you aren’t God, Gwyneth Paltrow or Graydon Carter, that is.

On Monday, the very night that it opened, we decided to swing by and try our luck …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: New York, Restaurants Tagged With: Ashton Kutcher, Beets, Broadway, Burger, Cheddar, Chevre, Chicago, CW, David Zinczenko, Demi Moore, English peas, Gossip Girl, Hazelnuts, Kumamoto, Mary J. Blige, Matthew Settle, Men's Health, Nora Ephron, Oysters, Pasta, Pork belly, Rufus Humphrey, Sex and The City, The Lion, Waverly Inn, West Village

September 14, 2009 By cheryl

Terzo Piano: Where Chicago Is The Art


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Terzo Piano is a restaurant that literally makes your heart skip a beat the moment you walk in.

With its high ceilings, crisp, white furniture, spare decor
and wall of glass windows providing a sweeping view of Chicago old and
new, it’s the embodiment and reflection of the city’s stunning Mies van der Rohe-infused skyline.

On a clear day, when light is pouring in, sending angular shadows shooting across the pristine, gleaming furniture, the space is just breath-taking. This restaurant, which just opened in the Art Institute of Chicago’s modern wing in May, truly does the city justice.

All of this, of course, combines to set some incredibly high expectations for the food itself.

But that, it turns out, is another story.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Chicago, Italian, Restaurants, Tales From the Road Tagged With: Aoili, Art Institute of Chicago, Bacon, Berlin Wall, Brioche, Brussel Sprout Leaves, Caper, Chawanmushi, Chicago, Custard, Frittata, Goat cheese, Greenville, Indiana, Iowa, Italian, Japanese, Kalamata Olive, La Quercia, Lake Erie, Locavore, Marengo, McWethy Farm, Michigan, Midwestern, Mies van der Rohe, Mint, Nichols Farm & Orchard, Norwalk, Nueskes, Palmyra, Perch, Rushing Waters Fisheries, Sheep's Milk Cheese, Squash, Terzo Piano, Three Oaks, Tony Mantuano, Wisconsin, Wittenberg

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