Monday, February 5, 2018

Meet the Chinese-Born Chef Bringing Japanese-Italian Food to San Francisco

Joe Lin, the chef and owner of San Francisco’s Pesce e Riso, had no idea that his destiny was to craft Japanese-Italian cuisine. Born and raised in Shanghai, Lin ate the food his mom cooked while he was growing up, but, by his own admission, never cooked a meal for himself until he was sent to Canada to pursue a Western education. As a child and young man, Lin loved painting and drawing and, upon his departure to Vancouver at 18, dreamed of becoming a fashion designer in New York.

To support his fine art habit, Lin took a job at a family friend’s sushi restaurant. He launched his culinary career as a dishwasher but his eyes did not linger on the dirty plates. Instead, he looked to the other side of the kitchen. As he moved up the ranks, Lin became intrigued by the process of how food, in the hands of the trained sushi chefs, transitioned from humble ingredients to a form of culinary art on the plate. In food, he saw fluidity, a type of moving art form. “Like art,” Lin said, “cooking involves the general environment, social change, technology, and the way people are thinking.”

San Francisco's Pesce e Riso chef Joe Lin with one of his paintings

Pesce e Riso chef Joe Lin with one of his paintings by Kristen Loken

He was hooked. Though it was coincidence that brought Lin to a Canadian sushi restaurant, Lin found Japanese cuisine unconventional and loved the newness of the flavors to his as-yet untrained palate. While in Canada, Lin discovered chefs such as David Chang and Nobu Matsuhisa and savored the cutting-edge approach these and other chefs brought to Chinese and Japanese cuisine. “They were doing brand new things,” said Lin.

After an opportunity to open an Italian restaurant in Shanghai failed to launch, Lin secured an opportunity to live and cook in Tuscany. Again, Lin was hooked. “Italian cooking is like Impressionism,” said Lin, who loved the cuisine’s reliance on the simplicity of the ingredients rather than on mastery of a certain technique. It was while living in Tuscany that the concept of an Italian-Japanese restaurant awoke in him. The cuisines from these two disparate countries, Lin found, had much in common. Not only did Italy and Japan produce amazing beef (Fiorentina and Wagyu, respectively), both countries embraced rice with equal ardor to noodles and were diehard about seafood.

More San Francisco Treats

Marco Polo Noodles with Stir-Fried Minced Pork
Belcampo's Pulled Lamb Belly Sandwich
Michael Recchiuti's Burnt Caramel Custard (Pots de Crème)

But where to build this temple to Japitalia? Why the frontier of Asian and Italian cooking—San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood, of course.  Located on the corner of Grant and Columbus, Lin’s latest venture, Pesce e Riso, or fish and rice in Italian, is at the crossroads of San Francisco’s historic Chinatown and the Italian neighborhood next door, North Beach. It’s an apt location for Lin’s cooking style which reimagines classic Italian and Japanese dishes with a spoonful of Chinese influences and a nod to San Francisco norms. Say what?

Open since July 2017, Pesce e Riso’s menu changes every four to six weeks to stay in tune with what’s available at the market (so San Francisco) and insanely fresh fish and seafood.  Like all of Chef Lin’s imaginings, the new Emilia roll is a Japanese idea vamping as a classic Italian dish, prosciutto e melone. Japanese rice, wrapped in prosciutto de Parma, is itself the wrapper for fresh melon and just-in asparagus. Served up like a sushi roll, the dish gets a pop of color and a hit of umami from a swipe of the pesto sauce with which it is served.

Emilia roll at Pesce e Riso in San Francisco

Pesce e Riso’s Emilia roll by Kristen Loken

Or take the just-added chazuke, a dish beloved in China and Japan. Known as “overnight rice,” Lin’s chazuke bridges China, Japan, and Italy with local seafood and bok choy alongside Corona beans from Lazio, Sicilian-cured tuna heart, and a subtle, warming Genmaicha tea broth.

chazuke at Pesce e Riso in San Francisco

Pesce e Riso’s chazuke by Christina Mueller

There is a refinement to Lin’s cooking that, in this age of Sriracha everything and fermented everything else, may be lost on a palate uninitiated to the quiet intensity and subtle fire of Japanese and Italian flavors. But if you sit still for a moment and savor the experience of this soft-spoken restaurant, you will soon discover its depth of character, its essential soul. This is a restaurant and a chef who is cooking with passion and heart in an intensely personal way. Pesce e Riso belongs exactly where it is, connecting Asia and Europe in a fresh new way in a neighborhood that could do with more of the same. The tourists may find it first but Pesce e Riso is a place for seekers of the one-off, unique San Francisco dining experience, a place that will help this town cement its standing as a welcome home for culinary innovation and great food.



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These Brooklyn DJs Built a Dance Party That Celebrates Food, Drink, and Inclusivity

How to Throw a Mardi Gras Party

All hail Rex, or Bacchus, or whatever scheduling entity has thrown single people the ultimate bone this year by situating That-Saint-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named’s Day squarely mid-week, and just ahead of it, a festival for the relationship-challenged among us, Mardi Gras.

Even if you are amorously paired, what sounds more fun anyway—choking down your significant other’s once-yearly attempt at surf and turf in the dim candlelight of your studio apartment kitchen, or celebrating your love for humankind in a broader sense by letting the good times roll with a Cajun-inspired feast? Bead throwing? Optional. Hurricane drinking? Mandatory.

So you know what you have to do. Inoculate yourself against excessive displays of romance and assemble the goods for a Bacchanalian (but classy) affair to remember that will have even your most infatuated friends lacking in V-day energy for anything more than Netflix and chill.

Step 1: Set the Scene

I don’t recommend staging a full-out parade in your living room, but if it evolves or devolves into that naturally (see Hurricane Punch, below,) that’s your business. A few colorful and clever flourishes are all it takes to establish a festive, irreverent atmosphere evocative of the Big Easy.

French Quarter Street Signs

Amazon

Delineate different party zones with these French Quarter street signs. Only you will know why one room or another got designated as Bourbon Street…

Beads

Amazon

I mean, you gotta have them. It’s Mardi Gras. But you can flip the script on predictable party antics by encouraging their distribution as rewards for exceptional behavior such as attention to costume detail, service to the host, acts of chivalry, or impeccable storytelling. Or you can just scatter them around the place and whatever happens, happens.

Flambeaux

Amazon

In the pre-electricity era of Mardi Gras, flambeaux (i.e. torches) were carried alongside the parades so that revelers could see the spectacle. Over time, they became part of the spectacle, as torch-carriers eventually turned a matter of practicality into a matter of performance. These tabletop torch candles add an element of nostalgia to the atmosphere with less threat of setting off your smoke alarm. Or if you really don’t trust your friends, try these adorable battery-powered torches.

Masks

Amazon

Along with your party invite, send a link to these elegant (read: sexy) lace masks to let your invitees know you are not kidding around thematically.

Tunes

Half the tunes have “blues” in their title, but the vibe from this collection of vibrant, brass-driven jazz bands is anything but. Plus the other half of the songs have cheekier titles like “Climax Rag,” “Snag It,” and “I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate,” so you know it’s bound to be a good time. Get the playlist here

Step 2: Feed the Crowd

Let’s be honest, you’re mostly in this to show off your culinary skills, and even if you would never admit it out loud, you secretly hope it might score you a valentine for next year. But you never heard that from me. (What do you mean it’s in writing?) Anyway, New Orleans is abundant with Southern, Creole, and Cajun dishes that are easily adaptable for a cocktail party.

Hurricane Punch

Bread Booze Bacon

Let’s begin, as all memorable festivities do, with a libation to get those good times rolling as quickly as humanly possible. As un-fussy as cocktails get, basically a vehicle for rum and fruit juice, (not this year, scurvy!) the Hurricane begs to be served in punch form. Keep it authentic with the appropriate elongated tulip-shaped glassware. Get the recipe

Mini Muffaletta Bites

My Gourmet Collection

Not to be overshadowed by the French Creole population, the Italian immigrant community in New Orleans mightily staked its culinary claim by putting forth the biggest, baddest sandwich: the muffaletta. Stacked with charcuterie, provolone, and a spicy olive salad, this miniature version does the original from Central Grocery credit. Get the recipe

Boudin Balls

A fried pork and rice ball with Cajun attitude. Now that’s a spicy meatball that will have your guests returning to the punch bowl for reprieve. Get our Boudin Balls recipe.

Po’ Boy Sliders

The Candid Appetite

You can fry the shrimp earlier in the day and warm them up just ahead of assembly for easy party time management. In contrast to the ostentatious muffaletta, the magic of the po’ boy is in its fresh simplicity. Have a bottle of traditional Louisiana hot sauce nearby for maximum authenticity. Get the recipe

Jambalaya Stuffed Mushrooms

Here’s an ingenious way to serve one of New Orleans most ubiquitous dishes by giving it an edible bowl, without any need for forks, to keep everyone hands-free and parade-ready. Get the recipe

Creole Deviled Eggs

The Gourmand Mom

There’s an old Creole saying: Anything worth making is worth making into a deviled egg. Okay, that’s not a real thing, but so long as they already have “devil” in their name, might as well get hella spicy. Get the recipe

King Cake

I’m Not the Nanny

Traditionally, a King Cake is served whole, and the lucky recipient of the one plastic baby tucked inside becomes obligated to the host. Try this clever cheater recipe for individual cakes, and go ahead and tuck them babies into each one and see what you can make your friends do. Get the recipe. 

Step 3: Commemorate

Amazon

All you need is a corner, some colorful fringe, a handful of props, and a spare phone or tablet with remote control or selfie stick and you have a makeshift photo booth. The ultimate host or hostess, you’ll have excellent souvenirs for your guests, as well as top-notch social media fodder to ward off even a hint of self-pity during Single Awareness Day.



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Can McDonald’s French Fries Cure Baldness?

If you’re losing your hair and want an excuse to eat fast food, look no further. McDonald‘s french fries may help prevent baldness. Well, sort of, maybe, if you’re a lab rat, at least.

Professor Junji Fukuda, a Japanese researcher at Yokohama National University just published a paper in the journal Biomaterials announcing the discovery of a new method to help maintain hair follicle germs. A crucial ingredient to this method, according to the paper, is dimethylpolysiloxane (DMPS). The chemical also happens to be a key ingredient in the oil McDonald’s uses in its french fries and most of its fried food. Who could have seen that one coming?

But what exactly is DMPS? And why isn’t it found in homemade fried cooking? Well, probably because it’s not sold at the grocery store, at least in an edible form. See, here’s where things get kind of gross. It’s actually a type of silicone that’s commonly used as a caulk or adhesive. Also, it’s in Silly Putty! We all know how delicious that toy is. It’s way tastier than Play-Doh, at least.

McDonald’s doesn’t even technically mention the chemical among their list of product ingredients. (And given its frequent use as aquarium sealant, we can’t really blame them.) Instead it’s listed on their website as in the context of this description, which is further proof you should always read the fine print:

“Our fried menu items are cooked in a vegetable oil blend with citric acid added as a processing aid and dimethylpolysiloxane to reduce oil splatter when cooking.”

No word on whether or not McDonald’s will add that it’s also a great aid for promoting hair growth on their site, but they probably can take all the good press they can get. At this rate, Ronald McDonald will never go bald.



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The Best, Worst, and Weirdest Food Commercials from the Super Bowl

Every year millions of us watch the Super Bowl, not just for the game, but for the commercials. This year’s batch was a mixed bag, giving us a non-stop parade of celebrity cameos, fancy cars, crappy beer, and awkwardly corporatized social consciousness. When it came to ads for our favorite food products, the results were just as jumbled. We break down the best, worst and weirdest food and beverage commercials of the night. So grab some M&Ms and Doritos Blaze, ditch your Bud Light, and check out rankings below.

The Bad

Let’s get the worst out of the way. While Bud Light has only been using the “Dilly Dilly” campaign for a few months now, it already feels like a relic from 2014. The catchphrase tiresome, annoying, and tailor-made for frat bros who who want to feign chivalry while picking up one-night stands. Go ignore the Bud Knight and watch some Monty Python instead.

On a more mediocre note, Bill Hader and Owen Wilson marveled at Pringles stacks, but AHEM, the Chowhound Staff did it first AND better months ago when we ranked all 25 flavors and made our own combos. Sorry guys, we’re way ahead of you.

The Famous

As hinted at with the above Pringles clip, the biggest trend of the night, by far, was celebrity appearances. Some cameos worked better than others, but here are a few that stood out.

Chris Pratt was super endearing as the smugly naive, almost-pitchman for Michelob.

Peter Dinklage and Morgan Freeman rap-battled it out for Doritos and Mountain Dew Ice. In the end, we are all winners. It’s got almost enough fierceness to hold us over until the next season of “Game of Thrones.”

The Best

And in perhaps the best casting choice of the night, Danny DeVito plays an M&M turned human. DeVito is a natural master of physical comedy and he taps into his nihilistic Frank Reynolds persona in his performance. It’s a perfectly apt character to channel, given the results of the game. It is indeed sunny (and utterly chaotic) in Philadelphia.

The HUH?

Avocados apparently aren’t popular enough. They now require commercials. And really weird ones at that. People are trapped inside a dome without chips and wifi. It’s a living hellscape complete with Chris Elliott shilling autographs. Someone please tell us what is going on here.



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Double Caramel Sticky Buns

Double Caramel Sticky BunsGet Recipe!


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Pressure Cooker Chinese Pulled Pork

Pressure Cooker Chinese Pulled Pork

Five fragrant spices and a honey hoisin sauce give this pulled pork a ton of flavor in every bite. And oh hey, it takes just a little over an hour in the pressure cooker, too!

Continue reading "Pressure Cooker Chinese Pulled Pork" »



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