Salt Sugar MSG
Recipes and Stories from a Cantonese American Home
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
The chef behind the groundbreaking Brooklyn restaurant Bonnie’s shares over 85 recipes that showcase his unique style of Chinese home cooking, a mash-up of Americana and Cantonese classics inspired by the flavors of his childhood.
“Calvin Eng draws on traditional Cantonese techniques and the mixing of Cantonese and American flavors that reflect our own experience. And he does it with a verve and creativity that make us want to run to the kitchen and start cooking!”—Sarah, Kaitlin, Bill, and Judy Leung, New York Times bestselling authors of The Woks of Life
A NEW YORK TIMES BEST COOKBOOK OF THE YEAR
As an American-born Cantonese kid, chef Calvin Eng grew up watching his mother, Bonnie, in the kitchen. Though he shied away from his culture as a kid, he later grew to love and embrace his upbringing, eventually opening Bonnie’s, which was praised as a top restaurant of the year by the New York Times and Bon Appétit.
Salt Sugar MSG is an introduction to Cantonese cooking through an American lens, full of easy flavor boosts and practical tricks, drawing a thread from his mother’s cooking to what Calvin cooks for his own family today. Some recipes stick closer to tradition, like Sizzling Steamed Fish with Seasoned Soy Sauce, Ham Yue Yook Beng (Steamed Pork Patty with Salted Fish), and Ginger Congee, while others upend expectations, like Salt & Pepper Pork Schnitzel with Chinese Ranch, Fuyu Cacio e Pepe Mein, and BLT Fried Rice. While these dishes may not look especially Cantonese at first glance, they certainly taste like it.
Written with his fiancée, Phoebe Melnick, Salt Sugar MSG is full of personal stories and practical tips and tricks as a loving ode to what it means to cook together as a Cantonese American family today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Chef and Brooklyn restaurateur Eng debuts with an inviting and innovative collection inspired by Cantonese flavors and techniques. He starts with a detailed introduction to essential ingredients, noting differences in common types of soy sauce ("Light soy sauce is used for salt and dark soy sauce is used for color," he explains) and recommending home cooks buy jars of fried garlic and shallots to save time and effort. Beef chow fun, clams with black bean garlic sauce, hup to ha (shrimp and walnuts), coconut taro sago dessert soup, and other traditional dishes are sure to please. Eng's ingenuity shines through in original fusion creations, including fufu cacio e pepe mein (bucatini with fermented bean curd garlic butter), mini sweet-and-sour meat loaves, salt and pepper pork schnitzel with Chinese ranch, and congee arancini. Those new to cooking Cantonese food will appreciate Eng's mellow tone ("Recipes are meant to be just a guide, not a constraint") and cultural tidbits ("Ovaltine is a Hong Kong staple by way of British colonization," he notes in the malted chocolate waffles recipe). This is a must for anyone looking to incorporate Cantonese cuisine into their repertoire.