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Yeah, What HE Said!
It’s gratifying to hear people with more knowledge, experience and authority than yourself say the same thing you’ve been saying all along.
Today I participated in a teleforum with James Oseland, editor of Saveur magazine and author of Cradle of Flavor: Home Cooking From the Spice Islands of Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia, who spoke on researching and writing on foreign food cultures and how to respect people and their traditions while doing so. Having spent some 25 years living and traveling in Indonesia and writing on its cuisines, he knows a fair amount about the subject.
And he made the same point that I constantly explain to those who question me about the significance of culinary travel: that when you show curiosity about and enthusiasm for the food and food traditions of another culture, you honor the people of that culture.
Ask anyone, “What’s your favorite food your mother used to fix you when you were growing up?” and you’re almost guaranteed to send that person down a singularly happy path of remembrance. I can’t think of a better, more personal way to build good will with people of other countries and cultures or even other regions of our own country than to take a genuine interest in their foods and their food traditions.
The Lone March Blog
March is almost over (fewer than three hours left in the Pacific Time Zone), and I’ve been a lazy bum and written no blogs whatsoever this month. In fact, I see that my last entry was in celebration of Chinese New Year. Sheesh!
So I’ll get busy and share a few food observations from my end-of-the-month bargain bin:
► I catered an Oscar party for my friends, James and Jeff, who each year open their lovely home—and lovely home theatre—to their friends for an evening of voting, opinionizing and feasting. And I’m honored to be the supplier of the feast, which this year was inspired by Ratatouille, winner for best animated film. I even paused at the door so that as the best animated Oscar winner was announced, I could make a grand entrance carrying Jeff’s honkin’ big, honkin’ heavy but oh-so-lovely blue enamel-covered Le Creuset seven-quart cast iron pot (groan!) filled with enough ratatouille to feed all of Los Angeles County (double groan!). (That’s it in the left center of the table.) That sent the guests scurrying to the buffet to find out just what ratatouille actually IS. Uber-chef Thomas Keller, who was primary adviser to the moviemakers and who created the menu, developed a splendid ratatouille recipe which I used that night and which I will use for the rest of my life. I’m convinced I’ll never find its equal elsewhere. Thank you, Chef Keller!
► I balanced an egg on its end in a tip of the hat to the spring equinox. I don’t know why, but it’s one of those irresistible holdovers from my youth, like picking buttercups and putting them in glasses of water with food coloring and watching the dots and veins of red, green and blue magically appear in those happy first flowers of spring. And then I’d take a knife and split the stems longways and put each stem half in a different glass with a different colored water, so the flowers would be a different color on each side. I remain quite easily entertained.
► And just today I admired a nice bit of baking artistry:
At first glance this looks like a t-bone steak, right? It’s actually a red velvet cake fashioned to look like a steak, complete with hunks and slices of pear situated in the appropriate places to replicate veins of fat. I love seeing what creative people do when their medium is food. The cake’s creator is a surfacing artist at DreamWorks, where my husband, Andy, also works in visual effects.
Maybe I’d best save the rest of my observations for April . . .
Kung Hei Fat Choi!
Happy Chinese New Year, the Year of the Rat!
Last night as Andy and I feasted on crispy duck in steamed buns following the Chinese New Year’s Parade in Los Angeles’ Chinatown, we looked back over the day’s events and discussed our favorite moments. Mine, as always, were the same two:
1. Admiring the dragons in the parade. There were more this year, all fearsome and frolicsome and resplendent in an array of colors and designs. I loved every one of them, from the gargantuan ones powered by at least two dozen people whose legs were all we could see beneath the flashy, satiny bodies, to the tiniest, being tugged and tossed this way and that by small children who had yet to understand what all the fuss was about.
2. Feasting on red bean paste cakes and sweet sesame balls when we first hopped off the Metro and strolled up the hill into Chinatown. While the meal of Peking duck and braised tofu was tasty, there’s nothing quite like the “welcome back to Chinatown” feeling I experience when I stop by one of its numerous bakeries for these simple pastries which have no Western counterparts. They’re uniquely Asian and quite good. The red bean and lotus pastes are so richly, sweetly dense that once you have a mouthful, you have to stop for a moment to savor before swallowing. And while you’re doing so, you pause and look around at this chip of real estate that transports you to another country, across the ocean. It’s a great way to slow your step and begin to breathe in the atmosphere that pervades Chinatown. Plus these protein-packed sweets carried us through the rest of the day, shopping, sightseeing and parade watching, until it was time for dinner.
As much as I look forward to those sweet, dense pastries, I could return to the bakery and pick up more for dinner, and just forget all about a sit-down meal. To my mind, they’re a great way to begin a new year, Chinese or otherwise.
A Sushi Chef of One’s Own
It’s great having your own hair stylist, someone who knows your preferences and who understands what cut and color look best with the structure of your face and the tone of your skin.
Well, I guess it’s great for some. As for Andy and me, we enjoy having a sushi chef of our own, and he’s conveniently located right in our neighborhood at our favorite place to eat in all of Los Angeles.
If there’s any red snapper in the house, it always finds its way to our table,
whether we ask for it or not!
whether we ask for it or not!
Kuru Kuru, a little sushi restaurant in a strip mall, is nothing fancy, but it’s the pot at the end of our dinnertime rainbow. The portions are generous, the prices reasonable, and the fish, indisputably fresh and lovely. We often see the same people there, whom we know by face if not by name or occupation. The staff is friendly, and the lady at the door hugs us each time we come and go, holds our hands, pats our backs and speaks to us all the benevolent English she knows. On Andy’s birthday, she trotted out a dish of green tea ice cream with a candle in it and sang to him.
And the sushi chef . . . ah, the sushi chef! He knows our tastes and our penchant for adventurous eating. We sit at the bar most every time we go and chat with him as he works. If he isn’t terribly busy, we’ll say, “Fix us something good, John. Use your imagination.” And he will, without fail, present us with a dish that is amazing in its balance of flavors and textures and elegantly simple in its presentation. He seems grateful for the opportunity to flex his creativity and quite modest about his achievements.
Once when we said, “Fix us something good, John!” this is what he came up with: an octopus and cucumber salad with a sweet and tangy sesame sauce and a delicate seaweed garnish. Yum!
We don’t take this bit of good fortune for granted. Not only do we enjoy a healthy, satisfying and reasonably-priced meal, but we get the opportunity to learn more about sushi and sashimi than we could on our own, short of becoming sushi masters ourselves. Wouldn’t it be great if all education could be so pleasant, effortless and delicious?
Every sashimi plate includes only what’s best the day we’re there.
To this rare group of people at Kuru Kuru in Burbank, and to all who run business the way they do, we raise our nigori and say, “Kanpai!”
Tagged chef, fish, Japanese, kanpai, neighborhood restaurant, nigori, restaurant, sake, sashimi, sushi, sushi chef
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Hog Wild
At Sunday night’s Epiphany party our group convened to cap off the Christmas season with a potluck and to catch up on everyone else’s holidays. My good pal, Chuck Taggart of Gumbo Pages fame, brought his amazing Pork & Pork & Pork & Beans to share. Have this even once, and you’ll never settle for mere pork and beans again. In fact, if I ever find myself on death row, that dish will be one of the components of my final meal.
As Chuck and I compared notes on the contents of our luggage when we returned to Los Angeles after Christmas, he from New Orleans and I from Memphis, we concurred that an awful lot of pork was involved. My suitcase was stuffed with packages of country ham and bacon and a big ol’ hamhock. His haul was similar, but included tasso, the secret ingredient in many fine Cajun and Creole dishes, along with Zapps potato chips and lots of booze.
In case you’re wondering, yes, you can buy pork in Los Angeles, but those mass-produced packages of Uncle Tater’s or Little Willie’s bacon will be essentially flavorless and injected with water, which is why it shrinks to nothing when you cook it and tastes like nothing when you eat it.
As we cooed over our devotion to pork, I said, “There’s only one thing better than bacon.” Chuck looked at me as if I’d lost my marbles. I paused for effect, then said, “Bacon topped with bacon.” He sighed and said, “Thank God! I was about to ask, ‘Who are you and what have you done with my friend, Carol?’”
The challenge is in reconciling a love of pork with the need to eat more healthfully, and this is where the good stuff comes in. Andy and I refuse to cast out pork like some demon bent on our destruction. Instead, we hold to the wisdom of Pete Wells, who contends in the pages of Food and Wine magazine that bacon isn’t a meat but rather a condiment.
He certainly has a point, especially as it relates to good quality bacon. The flavor is distilled smoky, salty, sweet porkiness, which we savor as we would any fine wine or food: a tiny bit at a time, over a long period of time. In fact, since Christmas we’ve been sharing one strip of bacon about every other morning.
Half a strip?! That sounds rather spartan, but when you eat the really good stuff—like what Chuck and I packed back to Los Angeles from home—and enjoy it over the course of a meal, it’s amazing how satisfying a mere half strip of bacon can be, how the flavor lingers and how the aroma and the memory goes with you. Truth be told, I enjoy a smaller portion much more, because I don’t mindlessly wolf it down.
According to Aesop, “Better beans and bacon in peace than cakes and ale in fear.” He must have been buying his bacon at a chain grocery.
There’s a fable in there somewhere, I’m sure.
Tagged Aesop, bacon, Chuck Taggart, Epiphany, food, Gumbo Pages, ham, hamhock, Memphis, New Orleans, pork, pork and beans, tasso, Zapps
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