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Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Pandan forms

An illustration of the forms:
Pandan "extract". Usually heavily tinted with green food coloring. 

The actual pandan herb. The Vietnamese name is "la dua". There are a number of species. Versatile in application. You can just throw a sprig in a pot of cooking rice, and you can smell the difference. 


Monday, January 13, 2014

Better than the real thing?

Three flavors: wasabi, vanilla, pandan.

What they have in common is what what most people have come to identify as the flavor are really the cheaper, sometimes synthetic, substitutes rather than the original thing. Some may still be shocked to learn that the little green pat of fiery paste in most sushi restaurants isn't wasabi at all, but a mixture of horseradish, mustard, and green food coloring. The real thing may disappoint hardcore wasabi heads raised on the common stuff, because it's expensive, and so labile (it must be grated and used table side due to the volatile nature). True wasabi doesn't preserve well.

Likewise, true vanilla is pretty expensive and heat sensitive as well, so artificial vanilla is likely what most people associate with vanilla flavor. Encountering the variable and heady aromas of true vanilla beans can be an eye opener for novices, but they'd be disappointed to learn that it is destroyed so easily by heat. Thus, for cooking, artificial vanilla is actually preferable. And it's more reliable.

Pandan is less familiar to American or European readers, but it's wildly popular in Asia. The pandanus plant conveys an ethereal floral fragrance that complements coconut and rice powerfully, but is also used in a huge number of applications in numerous countries and cultures. Most often, though, it's associated with green sweet food.

Pandan kaya bread, Singapore
Cendol - a pandan flavored starch noodle served on ice with gula melaka, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Sadly, though, I think what most people have gotten accustomed to is also the synthetic pandan "extract" or "pastes". The aroma of the paste can be pretty intense, and the green color that survives heating is usually a tell tale sign of food coloring (sorry, it's probably not chlorophyll).

I've been exploring the challenge of using real pandan in baking. This is one of my earlier attempts at pandan bread. This used quite a bit of pandan, extracted by using a blender into some water, and strained out, before being used as the liquid in the dough. Note the subtle pale green color. The kitchen was perfumed strongly, but the flavor is quite subtle. And again, those accustomed to the paste may find it lacking.

My most recent attempt tries to intensify the pandan flavor by keeping it in striations in the bread rather than diluted out throughout the bread matrix. To do this, I mixed the pandan extract with some glutinous rice flour (mochiko) which is then folded into the bread. The mochi layers are then cooked inside the loaf by steam. The result is a contrast of crunchy and chewy with hits of pandan flavor. Plus I preserve more of the green color (this time, this is chlorophyll).


Then again, pandan works really well in delicate savory applications:
Black drum, wrapped in pandan leaf, and grilled. Chef Steve Marques, BRC Gastropub, Houston, TX. 
Ok? Go get your green on. And it's not even Irish.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

In praise of flavor among the sweet

I've often decried the meager offerings restaurants in Houston have for dessert (and I am equally perplexed why people wax rhapsodic over another bread pudding offering). But then again, maybe this isn't distinct to Houston - even on "reality TV" cooking shows, contestants are afraid to take on the dessert course. Maybe it's area so riveted in childhood memory, to cook with imagination can  terribly risky.

Once in a rare while, though, something appears that is noteworthy. Chef Steve Marques of BRC Gastropub allowed me to try a new dish he developed. And it's good to see (and taste) a chef letting his imagination fly.

It may not look like much, not carrying the trendy contrasts of "soil", gels and foams, but it delivers a potent harmony of flavor. Underneath this is a spicy chocolate cake, given an umami depth by the use of tomato paste, and that is complemented by the salty punch of peanut butter ice cream. But the layer of caramel sauce on top is redolent with those rich burnt sugar notes and fish sauce. Yes, fish sauce, but not just any fish sauce.


A product of the controlled degradation of fish in high salt concentrations, fish sauce comes in myriad forms and impacts cultures from Vietnam to Italy. Few people directly drink the stuff, but when used as ingredient, it adds a complexity of flavor and aroma that is difficult to match, particularly in savory applications. Red Boat prides itself in artisanal, graded fish sauce production, and the Phamily Reserve 50N is the highest grade they produce. Packaging that evokes tradizionale balsamic vinegar is certainly no mistake. Fish sauce and caramel is a duality that is used in Vietnamese cooking on fried meat items, but to use it in a dessert application in this form is simply beautiful.

I truly enjoyed the clean melding of the flavors. Every item in the dish had a role, played a part, built upon one another, in texture, and in taste. Subtracting any element would've lessened the dish significantly, and I am hard pressed to think of what to add.

I hope this dessert finds great success, and inspires others to diversify the ending memory of a meal.