Monday, 30 May 2011

Cooking Pho With Tim Hayward For The FT

By Leluu
A few months ago, I enjoyed a wonderful grey morning at Tim Hayward's house. Tim  is a food writer and is the Editor of my favourite publication Fire & Knives - not only is it about food but it is written so well, I slot a time in the calendar to enjoy it and only it!

He invited me to pop by his wonderful town house to show him how to cook the delicious and most famous Vietnamese noodle soup, Pho. He wanted to make it from scratch as it was for an article he was writing for The Financial Times.
I was indeed, very honoured! I first met Tim when he came to the supper club in June 2010 when Simon and I worked together. At the time, he was doing a show that featured supper clubs on The Food Programme for BBC Radio 4. He loved the food we served him, his face lit like a beaming sun and thought the combination of the Vietnamese/Spanish menu was "bonkers". It truly was bonkers, as Fernandez & Leluu are!
I demanded Tim pour the Squid Fish Sauce down the sink
...as I bought him Three Crabs Fish Sauce - the only one to use.
I have been cooking pho for quite a while now, frequently for the supper club and cooking classes. It has become one of the signature dishes - it is the staple dish of Vietnam after all. Every pot tastes different depending on the sort of bones, meat you get and the quality, freshness of it. But it also depends on how much you spend nursing and tasting the pot you are making. As Tim says on the article, "its an experience in building and tasting rather than a simple recipe, it will always be astonishing if enough care is applied."
I showed Tim how to do it: you can read it in www.ft.com
Please note, I recommend you should leave the broth for at least 4 hours.
Here is a recipe I wrote a while ago.
(somehow, I forgot to take the money picture of what we made as was too busy enjoying it) here is another bowl I made at home - just to make you drool! Go and make a pot and keep some in the freezer to have anytime you want.
TIP: Remove all the vegetables and spices from the pot after simmer or the broth will go off and you'll be very sad.

Friday, 20 May 2011

Coq Au Vin Recipe By La Petite Boo

By Leluu & Cate Darlison
This week, I have been to two Naked Wines events. They have launched a market place for selling wine on their website - basically, you can come a long, put your wine up on their site and people will bid for it. Its a new revolution in wine selling where customer reviews are what makes your wine sell.

We went to eat at The Hoxton Grill - food was very nice and drank a lot of Naked Wines. Then I was also invited  to Fifteen where Jamie Oliver has his private kitchen and studio for more Naked Wine tastings and food made by Cate Darlison. Cate is a private chef and cooks for many Jamie Oliver.com supper clubs.

It was so utterly delicious! Silky soft chicken with wine and herbs, melting in the mouth!  We are hugely lucky because Cate has written up the recipe to share as a guest on this blog: 
Coq Au Vin Recipe By Cate Darlison from Supper Club- La Petite Boo

Like with all of my recipes I have started with a key ingredient and built my dish around that.  To mark London Wine Week I have chosen to start with a fine wine to be the star of my twist on coq au vin.

I have chosen this full bodied syrah as it can take the hit of the heat from the chilli and the gusto of the garlic, whilst still complimenting the more subtle flavours from the carpaccio of fennel and courgette salad and the light spring flavours from the pistou.

Like with a traditional coq au vin I have marinated the chicken over night but to make it a more economical dish and easier to augment for a gathering I have chosen to use chicken thighs.

It is for this reason that this is the kind of dish that is great for two or in the case of our wine tasting evening can be stretched for a crowd, it is lovely served with crusty French bread to mop all of the tasty juices or to make it more substantial meal, a dauphoioise or seasonal new potatoes would be lovely too.

Bon appetite

Love Petite Boo x


Ingredients:
    •    A good knob of  butter

    •    8 fat cloves of  garlic  crushed
    •    1 red chilli very finely chopped

    •    300 g  shallots, peeled roughly chopped into chunks

    •    250g chorizo roughly cut into chunks
    •     Couple of handfuls of fresh basil, 3 bay leaves, 2 generous handful flat leaf parsley
    •    350g/12½oz button mushrooms
    •    1lb fresh tomatoes, peeled and chopped
    •    1 tin haricot beans
    •    500ml/16½fl oz good  and gutsy red wine (we used syrah)
    •    500 ml fresh chicken stock
    •    2 tbsp white balsamic
    •    6- 8 chicken thighs or one whole jointed chicken (skin on)
    •    salt and fresh black pepper corn

Preparation/ Method
 
     1.    The night before slash the chicken thighs, spike with pieces of 4 of the cloves of garlic, pushing the garlic into the pockets, rub with the olive oil and salt and pepper and transfer to a large dish.  Cover with the wine and soft herbs, shaking the dish to allow all flavours to disperse.  Tear a large piece of cling film and sit on top of the chicken to seal the flavours in, before covering the dish entirely with cling film.  Chill over night.
    2.    Heat a thick-bottomed casserole dish on the stove, add almost all the butter (reserving a knob of the butter) and the shallots. Cook until just browned; then stir in the garlic and chilli. Add the chorizo and some more fresh basil and cook for 2-3 minutes.
    3.    Add the mushrooms until golden brown add the diced tomatoes and turn up the heat and add the red wine, chicken stock and vinegar. Add the chicken pieces, bring the sauce to the boil and then simmer gently for about 25 minutes or until the chicken is tender and cooked through.  Ten minutes before the end of cooking time add the haricot beans.
    4.     Depending on how "soupy" you want the sauce you can either serve as it is with drizzled pistou or for a thicker consistency, you can break the beans down a little and turn up the heat (having removed the chicken and keeping warm)  Cook the sauce over a high heat until it has reduced by half and return the chicken to the pan.  For a lovely glossy sauce add your remaining butter and the rest of the fresh herbs salt and plenty of fresh black pepper.
    5.    Serve with a dressed green salad, (I knocked up a fennel and carpaccio of courgette salad, and a warm puy lentil and feta salad) and olive oil mash or crusty bread.

Here are some of the wine we tried:
Croix Du Chêne - The Rhone Valley, South Of France.
Reserve Pierre 2007 - The Rhone Valley, South Of France
Closerie Saint Hilaire 2008
Domaine O'Vineyards, Trah Lah Lah, South Of France 2005
Domaine O'Vineyards O'Syrah 2008
Reserva 2008, Lagar De Bezana, Chille
Grand Reserve 2008, Lagar De Bezana, Chille



Ryan from Domaine O'Vineyards
Some views from Jamie Oliver's private kitchen & Cate Darlison.
 Thank you to Danny McCubbin for the invitation. All photos are by Leluu.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

Steenbeck 1976 Seeks Good Home

On the brink of the digital age, when I studied at Central Saint Martins, we used to cut 16mm film on Steenbecks. This way of editing is entirely unique and different to the way we edit today on computers. It is much more disciplined, you actually cut film to move it about - to make a story, you don't just drag it around with your mouse.

This is a 6 plate Steenbeck with 2 soundtracks and an optical sound. It has been sitting in my house for years. As much as I love it, I need it to go to a temporary home (as I would like to adopt it back again if and when I have a bigger place). I would love to work on this machine again - it was my favourite thing in the world, to sit in the dark room and create image and sound.

If you would like to house it for a few years, please get in contact.
It is in perfect working order, a great display piece, sound is great - I love it, I will probably cry if it parts with me.

Wednesday, 11 May 2011

Flying Home: My Trip To Vietnam 2011

By Leluu

Again, I find myself in Saigon sitting on a red plastic kid's chair at a red plastic kids' table, slurping steaming hot beef pho. The broth is laced with warm fragrant spices of star anise, coriander seeds, cinnamon and cloves with top notes of fresh herbs, spring onions and lemon. The noodles flick on my face and I wipe my brow off the beads of sweat that sprout on my face to cool me down. I am exhausted from the flight and jet lagged. My senses succumb to the sensation of heat and noise of sun and a hundred million hondas in view.   But my excitement for the perfect balance of flavours leads me to a second bowl of perfection in the mouth.


I have been traveling to Saigon almost every year for the past 10. As soon as I arrive, my cousins are ready with a full supply of fresh coconuts; the softest and sweetest of mangoes; the crunchiest dragon fruits; the fleshy sweet and sour mangostines; the juiciest, most succulent rambutan and at least two noodle soups are force fed for a major indulgence. "Everything is in season," they would say, "eat it while you can, you can't get this back in London." And then, for the entire trip, it is all about eating and more eating.

Restaurants, cafes, street food stalls are everywhere, one after another, and they continue to blossom in every nook and cranny of the cosmopolitan Saigon. The city is crammed with hungry people in helmets on hondas - buzzing around to the flashing neon lights of 'the best' soups or rice dishes such as com tam (broken rice & barbecued pork ribs with the trimmings) in town.
The best food you can eat comes from the street where you can buy banh mi (meat and herb filled baguettes), che (all kinds of desserts), banh (all sorts of sweet and savoury cakes/ buns) to fried bananas and soups- you can find almost anything you would want to eat on the street. If you can't see it, you can hear it.

The atmosphere is dancing with a sonic landscape of spoons scrapping on glass or ladles hitting the sides of vats, the chopsticks gathering every grain of rice on porcelain bowls and chatter and natter among the hums and drums of the city.
There will always be a woman who bounces along with the traditional Vietnamese hat and baskets on wire balancing off a stick. She is like clockwork and passes through all the streets and alley-ways. She calls and chants out whatever she is selling, singing like an ice cream van, only stopping when stopped but sometimes she takes a rest in the shade, for the sun, the sun is strong and harsh.

Sometimes little girls and boys will walk along the same streets, beating a beat, making a tune, with a spoon on a metal stick. If stopped, he or she will deliver to you a bowl of noodles from their house.

Everybody is always eating or talking about eating. Even in when talking about other things rather than food, the term – an – to eat is always used. To eat and pray, eat and love, eat and work, eat and play, eat and steal, eat and obey, eat and run away etc.

After decades of war, poverty and malnourishment, the Vietnamese' love affair with all things new and plastic continue to progress. Development means prosperity, jobs, better living conditions and a good way of life. In a city of more than 9 million people, a lot of people can get hungry and a lot of people make a living in feeding other people.

I was born, in Saigon, into a family who loves food, though who doesn't. In the late 70s and early 80s after the war, the country fell under extreme poverty, and most people had their businesses, livelihoods, land and properties taken away from them by the communist. To top it off, there was an embargo.
My grandmother, the mother of my father, was a great entrepreneur nevertheless. In order to support her family, she opened up her front room which mainly leads onto the street, to sell bun bo hue - a noodle soup - the best I had ever eaten, from Hue, the city of temples, emperor's palaces and dynasties in central Vietnam. It is a breakfast dish to arouse the senses, the stock is concocted with fragrant lemongrass, chilli and garlic; simmered with pig's trotter and beef. The spicy and bold soup consists of thicker vermicelli noodles, slivers of meat and served with fresh herbs and banana blossom.
I have savoured my earliest childhood memory of this taste and the character of the soup. Being in love with it my whole life, I fly out to the beautiful Hue to try and chase the same tang I discovered from my grandmother but it wasn’t the same.
My cousin and I recreate it in the kitchen, after buying all the fresh ingredients in a busy, tight and narrow market. The soup, turned out to be very good, but it still wasn’t the same as my grandmother's. As well as it being a guarded recipe, only she could ever have the wisdom, the experience and the love and tenderness to perfect the broth.

When I eat this soup, I am happily transported back to being four years old again and sitting on my grandmother's lap. I left Vietnam for London at the age of five and missing my grandmother, I go to visit our old family home in Saigon. As soon as I enter, floods of emotions engulf me as I identify and verify my memories with every step I take. I walk through the house as an adult entering from another world but with the same eyes of a child I used to be.

Everything remained the same. I walk bare feet on the same tiles of the floor where I used to run and play. The light that pours through the windows with a decorative grill and green curtains in brings flashes of memory forward into the present. The same tree have grown higher and wider in my absence, witnessing all the secrets I missed.
I imagine what it would have been like to live a parallel life where I would stand there and never have left. What would it have been like to be able to stay? My family are no longer there in that house, we have all dispersed around the world like birds but just by being it in, in the place where I was born, I immediately figure out that I flew home.
From Saigon, I travel 5 hours to Phan Thiet by road on a 12 seater mini bus - with 23 people crammed into it. Phan Thiet – is the town where fish sauce is made and it pretty much smells like rotting fish there. There is only one main highway in Vietnam and most parts consists of only one lane and every driver is overtaking other vehicles from the left, right and centre and even from the other side of the road. They drive with a stopping distance of about 30cm even at 60 miles per hour. There are no seat belts, head rests or rules about safety.

Buying a bus ticket in Vietnam is like buying a ticket to your grave. It was proven not to be a myth when my grandfather, the father of my mother tragically died in a mini bus accident. He was a great entrepreneur and also a pioneer of fish sauce, which he was one of the first to start selling commercially. Fish sauce discovered when it was accidentally left to ferment and turned into nuoc man as we know it today.
Among a spring of businesses including being one of the founders of Vinh Hao mineral water (in the 70s, no one was impressed by something sparkling and tasteless - he sold it on) and a salt farm, my grandfather, bought many giant wooden barrels, filled it with his own concoction of fish, salt, anchovies, sugar and water, left it for months/ years to ferment and turned it into his own brand of fish sauce, named, Song Huong.
Back then, people would come to his place with their own bottles and bought from the tap of the barrel.  When he passed away, no one wanted to carry on the fish sauce business and nowadays, more premium fish sauces are made from wooden barrels but cheaper fish sauce is normally fermented in clay or terracotta vats.
Living in one of my grandfather's many properties is my aunt. This is also where his shrine is placed, because all people worship and pray for their passed ancestors so that they are prosperous, happy and healthy in the afterlife. The house is inside the depths of a market by the river where the fishing boats come in to give him fish for the sauce. She taught me how to make banh cuon which is a thin steamed rice pancake, folded into rolls. The perfectly white mixture is a very fine blend of water, rice and salt, poured onto a stretched canvas over a pot, over a fire. You can add any filling you like, the favourite being with just deep fried shallots or pork, prawns and wood ear mushrooms.

Her wonderful husband gets up at 330am (usually not so many men help their wives businesses as well as their own) to make the coal or wood fire for the steamer and she starts to sell them from 430am to local fishermen, school children and market vendors, in a day making about £3 profit.
They are the most utterly delicious silky things on earth, and what makes the difference is having a very good nuoc cham - fish sauce with water, lime, sugar, chilli and garlic - mixed to the supreme balance of sweet, sour, salty and hot.

Coming back to civilisation in the town centre where all the kids are cool, I get requests for my famous, 'Mi Y', spaghetti bolognese. "You make the real thing," says a cousin of mine, "everyone here tries to imitate it! Its fake! Even when you sent us the recipe, we couldn't make it taste like yours."
"Did you out soy sauce in it?"
"Yeah.."

I love my Italian food and so do the Vietnamese. As my cousins eat my spaghetti with chopsticks in silence as if in solitude, sometimes throwing in a bit of chilli sauce or soy sauce instead of parmesan, I see the realness of pleasure with food. This is why I love to cook so as to have these moments of food euphoria.
To eat is to live, to live is to eat, to eat in union but to also eat in absolute indulgence, when food is made with love and care from someone you love, it always tastes amazing.

I leave my homeland every time with more layers of roots, opening and closing chapters of life over noodle soups and rice buns. When I was little, I tried so hard to deny my origins just so that I can fit in at school. But nowadays, my deep passion for my heritage and it’s cuisine will see me on that red plastic stool over and over again slurpling pho.