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OF THE COOK

Monday, November 1, 2021

 

The essential thing in a poet is that he builds us his world.    —Ezra Pound


I met a girl (a fellow traveler) on the bus from Gilroy, Ca., and she pointed on the GPS of her phone the route from the airport where we boarded together (before that borrowing a buck for bus fare) to Chinatown. Why did you want to get off there? curious. To want to eat dim sum and congee, I said. And you don't have that food where you came from? No. She wasn't particularly impressed; if only she knew this decision of mine to do first thing after landing was the stuff that stirred my soul. You're here. And just at the stop was the Golden Palace, the doors were open (it was almost 11am; opening time for Sunday dim sum service), and the timing couldn't be more perfect - the silver carts were being prepped by elderly Chinese women in aprons carrying bamboo steamers of har goa and shumai and rice congee, I was showed at my table and immediately hot tea was served, the usual condiments were at the table - hot sauce, mustard, soy sauce - the demi saucer was there of course for this trinity, I poured tea, relaxed and looked around, an aquarium of live fish (very typical), round tables and large family groups are coming, accents bespoke of the natural accounting of the dim sum varieties and a stamp of your order as pointed was left on your table to track. I think the invention of dim sum is a compelling evidence why food matters to sustenance and comfort. One high-level dim sum I've had was at this dirty (in a sense sweaty staff and unkempt room, the floors sticky) restaurant in Shanghai moons ago, and it's called the xia long bao: there's captured soup in the shu maui and what you do to release it is to bite on its side to puncture the dough cavity and then immediately slurp, drain out the juice - and then dip the morsel in vinegar soy sauce laced with pickled ginger and you're in heaven! food heaven, that is, with a Far East register. The rice porridge is an elevated experience of a traditional silky soup with a hearty punch, not to mention the umami given the garlic and scallions bouquet garni emotional temperature of the congee. A "century egg" is typically found sunken in the congee, I remember growing up and the kid in me thought the egg had a funky taste and smell to it, but I realized with education from my traditionalist family that the century egg was like aging cheese in its mold and the resulting creaminess to the palate exposed a devilish good quality to it to shake your appetite senses and open them up. I use food to write poetry when I need to make my world a little bigger, especially for my heart. I've been away from my New York City for a while now, and it's like this absence was going on so long a vacation and I never returned home. My travels overseas - which is "existentially" part of what I call "home" (I have a nomadic nature, in the sense journeys of the soul one takes to find it) - have also been deferred. Ezra Pound had translated into English a great armada of Oriental literature works at the turn of the 20th century for the Occidental audience, like Japanese haikus, and importantly, Chinese ideograms (kan-gi), and of course their poetry. Poetry gives, and this man builds.  (PS. I couldn't write my blog yesterday; I was at the "Golden Palace" and writing, out of respect to eating there, wasn't allowed. But here it is.)  

“CHRYSALIS”

Sunday, October 24, 2021


 

So I was watching an indie film yesterday by director Dolly Wells about the life of a recluse famous writer as observed (third person) outside her "chrysalis" by an unexpected guest living with her in Brooklyn, NY.  The guest was not quite a stranger - in fact in the story her most recent published novel Good Posture, which also happens to be the title of the film, she had actually written about her when she was just a toddler held affectionately by her mom (her good friend),  and that maternal bond quite stayed within the writer's eye as some high epitome of beautiful love. This child, however, grew up to be a bad cook (she was staying with the famous writer for free in exchange of house chores; her widower dad was in Paris with a new woman and she was temporarily between homes) yet she was clever and artistic and she didn't mind her being around (remember that their relationship through affinity, or otherwise literarily, goes a long way). Her job was to take food up to her room and knock on the door and announce she was leaving the lunch outside on the floor (her first attempt at cooking turned out to be a rubbery pasta and salad greens with a mayo dressing and it was "grisly," although the young teenager would improve de rigueur later in the film). One of the most memorable lines in the film is this: A writer needs solitude as quiet as a womb chamber; art's development is from feeding the pupa into butterfly

...

At the farmers market this morning Nida said of the permissions set aside and bagged, "Hey, hey, those are for you!" They're grown in Kula upcountry, and I was a bit surprised about them being around this early in the season (back on the East Coast, or West, they come out December or January; in S. Korea midwinter long), but I was happy to take them - when ripe, which is just about, seeing those blushed orange skin soft to touch, peeling the permission with a pairing knife is like unveiling a miniature sculpture with its sweet juice intact inside for your bite to catch. Persimmons also remind me of a favorite auntie in So. California with a lovely so very So. California backyard garden (meaning so very Mediterranean in visual effect - bluer than blue sky backdrop through topiary trees, fruits and herb beds, marble white tiles). I can see her pruning and harvesting wearing a straw hat with a large brown bow on the back. It is an intimate picture of tending and giving. She loves sweet potato shoots growing in her side bed under her calamansi shrub. She picks the tender shoots and washes them in rose petals water and steams them over the cooking rice when it's almost done. In a bowl she adds tomatoes and persimmons and that's lunch with ginger tea. I am dedicating this beautiful tableau of a beautiful lady who knows her food well and more than that becasue she is beloved. In writing, if writing matters as bountiful divining words for life, then let it be food for this chrysalis - and may poetry come. 




CHALLAH BOY

Sunday, October 17, 2021

(Making challah in my NYC kitchen, ca. 2017.)

The pastry chef-owner of Breads Bakery at Union Square Park in Manhattan gave me a starter yeast dough (twisted by hand a small portion from his master batch) and said deliberately: use those for your future bread baking. One of the best results of that "inheritance" was this heavy and densely festive, aromatic dried fruits and nuts challah bread (it was after Thanksgiving that year that I had started making bread from scratch and anteing up my game for the holidays coming and thinking of gifting to friends and family something homemade and something perfect for the season). Challah is not presumptively a "New York" staple. But the tradition it brings is deeper, honorific and permanent for the New Yorker set. My food love for challah on the same note is not perfunctory, and I celebrate challah because it is beautiful straight out of the home hearth, or make a morning à la mode by serving challah french toast with huckleberries, maple syrup and a dusting of caster sugar lavender. Autumn in New York is a classic blues song slightly jazzed up to melancholic temper. Central Park is a dreamy scenery I imagine now with falling leaves on lover’s lane dotted with lamplights in dusk singing this tune. Madison Square Park is pretty, too, on autumn nights having a tall candle in the vicinity called The Empire State Building. Union Square is a maze-decorations of food booths favoring Austrian waffles and winter jams. And coffee never tasted more exquisite because you are wearing a roundup scarf walking back to your apartment from this park carrying a long bread. The air smelled of apricots, acorn and allure. When I made challah that autumn morning in New York I was in the mood for love— a kind of matinée idol swagger in the kitchen both semi-existing in New York and in a manga comic book series but far occidental with sonic intentions to feed the day! I remember stuffing the braids of my challah before baking in the oven ricotta cheese and coco nibs and more salted butter and a final rubbing down of good luscious olive oil on its bumpy body. The other night (fast forward to today in Maui) a foodie acquaintance, having spent time with him at his house, mentioned the Book of Salt, a fiction novel set in Paris about the hired home chef of Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas, had they had one that could be imagined by a food writer living up to the expectations (and palate!) of a socialite-literati-bon vivant-genius poet and fine art attaché like Ms. Stein who, assuming, ate well by virtue— and our conversation kept going and more interesting over rosé wine until way past sun down, cashews and sliced apples on our plates.     

BEST CURRY YOU WILL MAKE

Sunday, October 10, 2021


Ingredients: 

Uncooked french lentils and black beans 1/4 cup each, 1 med. yam root (with skin), cherry tomatoes 1/2 cup, young ginger root 3 nodes peeled and minced, garlic 3 small cloves peeled, shishito peppers 1 cup pitted, 3 small waxy potatoes, 2 lg. orange carrots with skin and quartered, turmeric powder 1 tsp., and 1 nail of clove. 


Garnish: cilantro herb cut like small flowers.

Side condiments: pickled pear onions and toasted shallot flakes.


How to:    

Combine all ingredients in a tall pot with 4 cups of homemade vegetable stock and bring to vigorous boil covered. Then reduce to med.low heat after that boiling point and simmer for about 45 mins. until all is tender (occasionally stir pot to collaborate the mix of flavors from the curry ingredients and halfway through cooking sprinkling a tad of salt and pepper). Remove from heat when done and let cool to room temperature (to expedite this process put bottom of pot on ice pack). When ready carefully transfer this chunks-liquid pre-curry sauce to food processor/blender and whip:whirr to a thick smooth puree consistency is achieved, licking to taste from your finger. Chill in fridge until time to eat. Make sure you use a silver gravy boat to pour over curry sauce to your steaming rice waiting on your Japanese artisanal painted plate.


Foodnote:  

So this is "the" sauce or the "mole" of the curry you will make. Smother as you like. My comfort is over white rice with the recommended side condiments (see above) - an homage to my favorite curry house in New York City. The "heat" is already in the curry so no need of chili kickers. The substance of this curry is deeply stocked in its ingredients melding all their flavors to a natural cream fluidity and their mouthful goodness is senses elevating, think it as the house food of an izakaya in a suburb of Tokyo, and you are experiencing a quintessential asiatic sitting while dining on the floor with friends. This vegan dish is the base food for that ethos of nutrition. But use this base to your appetite's satisfaction - curry could be universal with culinary keenness. How about add taro tempura over your rice? You name it. Just don't forget the recommended condiments and the cilantro flower on top. Take a picture souvenir of your food milieu. And send it to me. 



SURFING

Sunday, October 3, 2021


 

SURFING


Salad days.
These are his fins.
Hokusai big wave athelete.
His roommate reading Ezra Pound.
Two souls.
Off the plate.
Green macadamia and
Advanced Christmas lights on rocks.
They understand their 
difference is a reflection  
to cross. 
The same thing to ride.
The same thing to write.
Arugula commons, strawberry halves.
What is he thinking?
What is he thinking?
Not to be
a question 
to be consilience. 
Forking for the sherry vinegar
lifted  
the greens.

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