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- <text id=91TT2568>
- <title>
- Nov. 18, 1991: Spicy Blend of East and West
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 18, 1991 California:The Endangered Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FOOD, Page 100
- CALIFORNIA
- Spicy Blend Of East And West
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Pacific Rim cooking is the latest gourmet buzz
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Duffy
- </p>
- <p> Lunchtime in Beverly Hills. A bold, bright, high-ceilinged
- room with sun streaming through the skylights and a mighty
- bamboo tree thrusting toward the roof. The regulars, mostly
- show-biz honchos, pour into Chaya Brasserie to talk their way
- through low-cal power meals. The plates, sprouting salad greens,
- look conventional at first, but in fact, the fare is novel: a
- combination of the vaunted California cuisine (roughage) and
- subtler accents from Asia--tuna and salmon tartare, lemongrass,
- ginger. Called Cal-Asian cuisine or Pacific Rim cookery, it is
- the latest gourmet buzz.
- </p>
- <p> The idea of Pacific Rim cuisine began taking shape about
- 10 years ago. It can be several things, but it is never merely a
- transplanted ethnic cuisine. Instead it is an unpredictable
- culinary reflection of California's ethnic mix. Typically a chef
- or sous-chef may be Chinese or Japanese and may have trained in
- France or Italy. He or she may mix several Pacific traditions
- into what could be called a pan-Asian cuisine, or perhaps add
- just a few Far Eastern touches to American or French dishes.
- </p>
- <p> The best-known pioneer of Pacific Rim cooking is Wolfgang
- Puck, California's reigning celebrity chef. When it comes to
- dining, he maintains, Californians love novelty. "There are so
- many cultures with exciting cuisines here," observes the
- Austrian-born Puck. "After all, the culinary heritage of
- Thailand is more interesting than Poland's. Californians are
- very open. They're less likely than back East to go for pot
- roast or baked scrod!" When he started up Spago in Beverly
- Hills, he employed young Asians in his kitchen. In 1983 Puck
- decided to look East himself--Far East--with Chinois on Main
- in Santa Monica, now a Cal-Asian temple. His 2 1/2-year-old
- Postrio in San Francisco is also a Pacific Rim hot spot.
- </p>
- <p> Other visionaries were stirring. San Francisco
- restaurateur Jeremiah Tower was teaching Cal-Asian cooking with
- Ken Frank, who opened La Toque in Los Angeles to show off his
- ideas. At the same time, ethnic communities were growing
- rapidly, especially around Los Angeles. The town of Westminster
- in Orange County was becoming a vast Little Saigon, eerily
- reminiscent of Vietnam two decades ago. Monterey Park is now the
- modern Chinatown, where purist chefs from Hong Kong disdain any
- mixed methods--and draw their own faithful crowds.
- </p>
- <p> It was only a matter of time before the impulse to marry
- East to West became irresistible. Says Barry Wine, whose
- Quilted Giraffe in Manhattan is a rare East Coast Cal-Asian
- spot: "You can do this only in America, where there is less
- cultural baggage to lift." Nobu Matsuhisa, whose eponymous
- Beverly Hills restaurant serves masterly food, observes, "Here
- I use French truffles and Caspian caviar. Why not?"
- </p>
- <p> The new menus would not be nearly as popular if the food
- did not appeal to Californians' health consciousness. Thai
- food, in particular, is healthful. The flavors tend to be clean
- and clear, the colors bright, the presentation light and
- graceful.
- </p>
- <p> Cal-Asian cuisine--as distinct from wok and stir-fry
- cooking--is still largely a dining-out rather than a domestic
- phenomenon. Some culinary sophistication is called for. "You
- can't just plop Asian ingredients into French food or vice
- versa," says Tower. "And some Western things shouldn't be
- touched; I wouldn't give up sauce bearnaise for the world."
- </p>
- <p> Still, it probably won't be long before cookbooks crop up
- and more people start experimenting. Asian markets are
- attracting not only their own ethnic shoppers but the whole
- community as well. Tower recalls that five years ago he found
- a supplier of exotic Thai and Indian commodities who every week
- produced something he had never seen before. Now much of it is
- at the local Safeway: fresh turmeric, several kinds of Thai
- basil, gingers like galingale, and strange fruits, including the
- dread durian, which tastes sublime but smells foul.
- </p>
- <p> There are entertainers and purists. Noa Noa, in Beverly
- Hills, is a sort of post-Polynesian circus of a place that
- features oddities like "mashed potatoes with chicken in Asian
- whole-grain mustard sauce." In San Francisco, Bruce Cost runs
- a superserious Chinese-style spot called Monsoon. He prods his
- clientele to try the pigs' feet and the innards, and zealously
- guards the freshness of his food. And when Cost says fresh fish,
- he means alive almost until the fork hits it, "not a dead fish
- that's been sitting around for eight hours."
- </p>
- <p> What no amount of ingenuity or international esprit can do
- is create a dessert menu. The concept is alien to Asia. But in
- California that is a mere detail. Tiramisu, Venice's current
- contribution to international menus, is popular. Creme brulee,
- the chic dessert of the '80s, gets a mild Asian make-over--with ginger, mint, chocolate or mandarin orange added.
- </p>
- <p> Opinions vary on just how far the cuisine will spread in
- the U.S.--but it is definitely traveling westward, back along
- the Rim. In fact, Jeremiah Tower is already singing the praises
- of the best, most balanced French-Asian fare he has ever
- sampled--in, of all places, Adelaide, Australia. California
- may have to start looking over its shoulder.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-