As I made a glossary for the novel set in India “Three Bargains”, so I made my own list of the ingredients from these pages. Most are easy
enough to find, but there is usually at least one key ingredient to make the dish special (e.g. Thai chiles, banana leaves for wrapping, fish sauce, jicama,
lemongrass, shallot oil, various mushrooms, etc. – but even those shouldn’t be too hard to
find) so you might want to stock up ahead of time. You want to make sure you
have the necessary kitchenware, too, or usable substitutes. The cocktail
section, for example, has a suggested list of “tools of the trade.” I
personally have little interest in cocktails, but I can appreciate their
dedication to quality, the same attention they pay to their wine, tea, and of
course food, and it is nice to see these colorful photos.
The pictures are on one page (I feel hungry every time I see
them), and the complementing backgrounds behind the plates are really nice, too:
well-worn but clean and appealing surfaces. The full recipe is on the other
side; that is, everything you need is visible at once. For any of the compound
ingredients included in the preparation, the page number is right there for
reference. The section on basics (sauces, etc.) that you can prepare in advance
and store until needed is a great, helpful feature.
One recipe I want to try making is the sticky rice with
sweet potato, a breakfast dish that sounds like it could also make a nice
dessert, and seems relatively easy for someone like me with little cooking
experience. The desserts, more colonial French-inspired than Asian, are
especially involved – I don’t think I’ll try making any of those, except maybe
the cheesecake. The methods are explained well enough that with patience and
the right materials, these can be made as by following any other kind of
protocol. If you really want to make one of these dishes, and are new to
cooking, you will need lots of patience; but if it comes out looking like the
pictures in this book, it will be worth it.
I visited San Francisco in May, and though I didn’t make it
to the Slanted Door (next time, I hope!), I did at least have a very nice lunch
from Out the Door, one of their express locations, also in the Ferry Building.
I was interested in this book not so much because I wanted to try cooking
Vietnamese food, but because I wanted to keep a part of the city with me somehow.
The photography of the neighborhoods and familiar scenes adds another special
touch.
Phan does give a fair warning about dishes that might not be
for everyone, but almost everything in here looks delicious. He gives credit to
everyone else involved – where he got ideas, who came up with the recipe if not
him – and he is a generous person in other ways as well. I recently watched “The
Hundred-Foot Journey,” and Phan’s story is even more interesting, and his food
innovations are more appetizing.
Note: I received a free copy of this title through
BloggingForBooks in exchange for an honest review.

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