FriedChillies – Love Your Street Food Campaign

P1040076

I love the folk behind FriedChillies because they’re really passionate about food.   In all my years of knowing them, I don’t think we’ve ever spoken about anything other than food.  So when they decided to organise a Love Your Street Food Campaign, I felt that they deserved all our support for wanting to promote one of Malaysia’s best assets – our street food.  Hop over to their site – the campaign ends on 30th November – and vote for your favourite street food.  As an incentive, they’re giving away RM50 to one random voter a day.  Imagine how many char koay teows (tambah see hum) you can get with that amount!

Happy weekend, everyone!

P1040086

P1040070-1

P1040083

P1040075

P1040085

Hennessy X.O Appreciation Grows Gastronomy 2010 with Chef Alvin Leung

IMG_1028

We had just come back from Bali the day before, browner than normal and exhausted from the days of doing…well…almost nothing, except for eating and lazing by the pool with martinis in our hands.  The weather gods were not on our side.  Despite the sunny days which allowed us to get our tan, the evenings were wetter than a striptease bar and we were thus compelled to enjoy our sunsets huddled in claustrophobic spaces.

*********

IMG_1499

I used to sink into severe depression at the end of vacations. I’d cry myself to sleep because I’d always have left a part of myself miles away in some foreign land.   My most meaningful holidays are usually the ones spent with people who matter, and I’m not perturbed about not having time to see famous sights.  You can’t carry those in your heart, but people…you can.

*********

P1030767
Glass Garden

On my last trip to Hong Kong, I was rather devastated about not having time to dine at Alvin Leung’s Michelin-starred restaurant, Bo Innovation.  I had researched his cuisine and printed out information in anticipation of a mind-blowing experience, but it never happened, and so I was quite ecstatic when the PR company for Hennessy X.O Appreciation Grows series, Milk PR, contacted me and asked if I’d be interested to attend the event and sample Alvin Leung’s cuisine.   I did several leaps of joy in my rather subdued accounting office, then sent off a reply immediately saying Yes Yes Yes!

Meeting Alvin Leung was like a dream come true.   Not all my wishes materialised, though – I had wanted to try his molecular xiu long bao, but it wasn’t on the menu.   I had no cause for complaint, though, as the menu for the two nights that I was present managed to put a big smile on my face.  Two menus were offered to guests – the non-vegetarian and vegetarian menu.   Like me, many others sniggered at the idea of opting for a vegetarian menu for a dinner that was worth RM800 per head.  No foie gras?  No wagyu?  How cannnn…?

I grew up in a household where we were vegetarians one day a week, and although I am averse to certain types of leafy green vegetables, I wholeheartedly approve of vegetarian cuisine.   Nevertheless, it took me some convincing to opt for the vegetarian menu by Alvin Leung, but I figured that I’d do myself a favour by eating just a little less foie gras for a change.

Some of the items were similar for both menus.  The opening dish, called Glass Garden, seemed aptly named with withered branches in an electrifying green and brown soil, entirely edible and immensely enjoyable.   The menu had described this dish as “an avant garde Hong Kong interpretation of a garden dish, made from baked morel soil, dehydrated enoki, braised caterpillar fungus and green onion puree.”   As unattractive as it sounded, the green onion puree was heavenly.   It had a silky, buttery texture which seemed to lightly graze the tongue, but we learnt later that no butter was used in this dish and it was extremely healthy.

Everything was close to perfection.   The pan-fried foie gras on my first night was good but not exceptional as it was a little too mushy and lacked a crisp surface, but my second time trying it (off a friend’s plate) showed a vast improvement in the dish.   Likewise, the dessert of kikorangi blue cheese, milk, cream and dried longan granita seemed disproportionately doled out with the piquant taste of the blue cheese overpowering every other flavour, but this was quickly rectified the next night and it finally occurred to me why the good chef would pair a seemingly chinese dessert with blue cheese.  The resultant dish with the ingredients combined was a creamy iced dessert with a mild sharpness in flavour from the cheese.

One other dish that caught my fancy was the Kukomi Intrigue, a dish created from boiled chicken soup, sous vide egg white, foie gras and julienned truffle.  The flavour was like a pure extract of chicken essence, and the texture was a thick, curdled consistency from the egg white, foie gras and truffle.  The vegetarian version of the soup was less attractive in appearance but every mouthful was extremely pleasurable.   The ingredients seemed rather similar.   The egg white was present, as was the julienned truffle, but the vegetarian version was bursting with the flavour of mushrooms.   Fans of mushrooms would also have been thrilled with the vegetarian menu, where an assortment of fungi such as enoki, morels, black truffles and ceps were used in the cooking.

Only two types of beverage were served together with the specially planned menu – water and Hennessy X.O cognac.  The pairing of the food with the cognac was excellently done.  Hennessy X.O could very well be my tipple of choice in the future!  Halfway through the meal, we were given the opportunity to savour the Ultra Limited Edition Hennessy X.O Mathusalem created by master blender and secret keeper, Yann Filloux.  Speeches were aplenty, and Alvin Leung was a delight to listen to.

The event was held for six nights in September at a specially built “dome” in Bukit Kiara Equestrian Club with constantly changing 360 degree visuals on the walls with every new dish.   Tables were adorned and spilling with flowers and crystals, and guests were dressed to the nines in line with the black tie theme.   Service moved like clockwork.  It was absolutely beautiful.

P1040016
Table setting

P1030730
Hennessy X.O

P1030936
Har Mi – A perfectly executed crouton of carabinero, sauteed capellini, roasted cherry tomatoes and deep-fried sage

P1030930
Mystique Morel – A distinctive delight made from sauteed morels, braised Korean vermicelli, onion foam, dried morels and ceps

P1030712
Bloggers in action hehe – BabeKL, Lyrical Lemongrass and Nigel Skelchy

P1030731
Bloggers in action Part II – Alison Victor, Alilfatmonkey and Fatboybakes

P1030784
Palate Fantastique – With pan-fried foie gras, metilcellulose and xantana

P1030946
Puntalette risotto

P1030779
A different table setting

P1030955
Beautiful people

P1030808
Kukomi Intrigue – An umami dish created from boiled chicken soup, sous vide egg white, foie gras and julienned truffle

P1030976
Vegetarian soup created with egg white, mushrooms and truffle

P1030964
Bald Eagle with the Mathusalem

P1030953
Regional Brand Ambassador Arnaud Mirey with Paprika

P1030827
Wagyu Wonders – Sous vide wagyu striploin, cheong fun and black truffle

P1030988
Risotto Relish – A dish of sauteed cauliflower, preserved duck egg sauce and sauteed yak cheese

P1040007
Managing Director of Riche Monde Malaysia, Frederic Noyere on the right

P1030992
Eastern Ascent – kikorangi blue cheese, milk, cream and dried longan granita

P1030846
Tiramisu with X.O

P1030714
FBB is pleased

P1030952
Great job, guys!

P1030907
Beautiful

P1040010
Me and Alvin Leung and everyone else

Thank you, Adeline, Janis and Wei from Milk PR, and Andrew and Frederic from Riche Monde Malaysia for inviting us and for making our dreams come true.

1. Yummy Hari Raya cakes by Just Heavenly; and 2. Hennessy X.O presents Appreciation Grows Gastronomy 2010 with Chef Alvin Leung

IMG_0280

1.

You’ve got to try Just Heavenly’s Indonesian Spiced Marble Cake and Sugee Fruit Cake, two of the specially packaged Hari Raya offerings this year.  The cakes are moist and flavourful and guaranteed to add inches to the waistline because you just can’t stop at one slice.  The Sugee Fruit Cake is Nigel Skelchy’s family recipe, made of semolina mixed with sugared wintermelon, citrus peel, nuts and golden raisins.   The Spiced Marble cake is quite similar to the Indonesian layer cake (but this has swirls, as opposed to layers, of colour), with hints of cinnamon, nutmegs and mixed spice in a moist butter cake.  These are all packaged in a lovely gift box.

IMG_0269

There are other gorgeous specialty Hari Raya cakes as well. Details and pricing are available on Just Heavenly’s website.

IMG_0276

**********

2.

When I was planning my Hong Kong trip which took place a couple of months back, top on my list was a visit to Two Michelin-starred restaurant Bo Innovation headed by Chef Alvin Leung.  I was attracted to his different approach to modern Chinese cooking – glamourising and reinterpreting many familiar Chinese dishes.   Several turns of events decided my fate and I never made it to that restaurant, and I was haunted by dreams of uneaten molecular xiu long bao.  Luckily for me, Alvin Leung will be in Malaysia soon, from September 20 to 25, 2010 specifically, and cooking at a specially constructed “dome” on the grounds of Bukit Kiara Equestrian Club.   His visit to Malaysia is part of the Hennessy X.O Appreciation Grows series.   Tickets are priced at RM800 per person.

For further information, please call 03-2178 0230 or log on to http://www.hennessyxo.com.my/.

Hennessy X.O Chef Alvin Leung