Monthly Archives: January 2004

Vancouver Sun relishes Gung Haggis Wun-Tun!!!

Read Mia Stainsby in today's Vancouver Sun, Wednesday, January 21,
2004.  We made the top banner + the front page of Arts and Living
on page C1.  The picture was taken by my friend Don
Montgomery.  Check out: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/archives/story.asp?id=B8C3CA44-CA46-4BD8-887E-5E051F0C5421 (Here's the PDF of Mia's story)

Mia focusses on fusion cuisine.  The Haggis Wun-Tun is really making the rounds and capturing people's attention.

NEWS STORY
Have a taste of 2004
Umami foods are savoury, pungent, delicious and meaty
 
Mia Stainsby
Vancouver Sun
Linda Meinhardt's hot chocolate is the new 'in' beverage.
 
CREDIT: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun
 
Rob Clark of C restaurant shops for the freshest ingredients, such as this halibut.
 
CREDIT: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun
 
Todd Wong pioneered Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year.
 
CREDIT: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun
 
ADVERTISEMENT

This is the year of umami, a taste you probably didn't know you had.
It forms a pentagon of taste along with sweet, salty, bitter and sour.
Umami has been a seamless part of Asian cooking and has been present in
western cuisine, too, only it's been nameless.

Scientists at the University of Miami recently pinpointed umami
taste receptors on our tongues, making it legit in the West.
Translations of the word umami from Japanese have included savoury,
essence, pungent, delicious and meaty. A direct translation is
“delicious (umai) essence (mi).”

In science-speak, umami foods are rich in glutamic acid and
nucleotides. In food-speak, they include cheeses, aged beef, soy sauce,
green tea, fresh tomato juice, sun-dried tomatoes, peas, dried
shiitake, rich red wines and beers, Asian fish sauces, condiments.
Dried, cured, aged and fermented foods are umami mines.

Describing umami in Wine Spectator magazine, Shirley Corriher, a
food science maven, could only say: “It makes the taste receptors go
'ding-ding' in our brain and say 'this is good.' “

Not surprisingly, the Japanese scientist who first discovered and named it in 1907 also created monosodium glutamate (MSG).

The theory is, umami makes us crave protein, just as our sweet
receptors dream of carbohydrates and salt receptors cry for salt and
minerals. As the new year dawns, a restaurant called Umami just opened
on Davie Street, offering a fusion of Japanese and Mediterranean
cuisines and loads of umami potential.

This is the year when you'll hear someone sip some red wine or take
a bite of Saltspring Island cheese and say: “Mmmm. Such umami!” And the
year when we begin to expand knowledge of how taste works, how salt
improves dessert (add it to cake and it lessens the sweetness but gives
it a more complex and enhanced finish) or how a tiny bit of bitterness
— such as from bitter orange, coffee or chocolate — makes a sweet
dessert less cloying.

As passé as it may seem, fusion remains the soul of food in
Vancouver. Cuisines continue to co-mingle and canoodle, forming unique
edible tableaus of this fascinating city.

Take, for instance, Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year.
It sounds like a Monty Python skit but it is, frankly, the natural
evolution of Todd Wong's life. His fifth-generation Vancouver family is
a mix of many races. He used to cook for his non-Chinese friends on
Chinese New Year and seven years ago, they decided to celebrate Robbie
Burns Day and Chinese New Year in a grand-slam event. It was a riotous
party involving a 12-course Chinese banquet, Scottish kilts, bagpipes,
songs, highland dancing and haggis with plum or sweet and sour sauce.
The event is now open to the public.

This year, they introduce what's probably a world first: the haggis
won ton. Who in their right mind would have thought of it previously?

“The Chinese cooks from Flamingo restaurant are working on it right
now,” says Wong. “We're going to wrap the haggis in won ton wrappers
and deep fry it and serve it with a special sauce. They'll be
bite-size. I think it should fit in very well with dim sum lunch, too,
which literally, means pieces of the heart.” Haggis, as any Scot would
know, contains lamb heart as well as lamb liver, onions, and oatmeal,
stuffed in sheep's stomach.

“Taste-tested by some of the best Scottish and Chinese clan chefs,
it was declared the 12th wonder of the world,” Wong jests. (Toddish
McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner will take place Jan. 24
and 25 at Flamingo Restaurant. For information, call 604-987-7124 or go
to www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com)

Alongside this meta-cuisine, the cult of micro-cuisine is also
heating up. Chefs like Rob Clark of C restaurant hunt for cooking
ingredients with smart-bomb precision, as close to home as possible.
“I'm very conscious of where food comes from. Personally, I've gone
from worrying about how I put food on the plate, all sexy and fancy, to
spending most of my energy on how I get the food to the plate, sourcing
quality environmentally friendly organic foods. It's so ironic but
quality is closely connected, like a Siamese twin, to sustainability.”

Clark works with individual fishers — the tuna fisher, the sable
fisher, the salmon fisher, the sardine and scallop fisher; they all
pass his quality test. The same applies to his hunt for perfect
produce. He knows the farmers who specialize in different fruits and
vegetables. His cheeses are from Poplar Grove in the Okanagan, David
Wood on Saltspring and Moonstruck, also on Saltspring.

And all this talk about food quality bolts nicely into the slow food
movement, which, contrary to its name, sprints along, gathering speed
and advocates. In the U.S., the movement, which celebrates quality
foods, artisanal producers, traditional and regional methods of
cookery, has grown twenty-fold in the U.S. in the past three years. It
blows a raspberry to homogenized, industrialized, technologized,
mass-produced foods.

Slow food keeners in B.C. have much to celebrate with our wines,
cheeses, chocolates, heirloom produce, organically grown meats and
poultry. I draw the line, though, at fireplace cooking. For the
purists, there are now fireplaces with where you can hang a pot of
simmering soup or stew. Uh-unh!

And that brings us to farmers' markets, where the true slow foodie
would shop; they're getting more and more successful each year.

Wild salmon will be in high demand. Some restaurants played up their
“I Switch” move to wild salmon in the past year. Margaret Chisholm,
executive chef at Culinary Capers Catering, has switched. “I feel like
finally, we've reached the critical mass that's required for people to
accept the additional cost. It's gone over very well and it's related
to the slow food movement.”

She predicts Spanish-meets-Moroccan-meets-Tunisian food will be big.
“We've got a long way to go in terms of recognizing the potential in
spices — cinnamon, fennel seeds, cumin seeds, saffron, mint and lots
of others. These countries appreciate vegetables in a way that's
different from the French and Italians. Vegetables play an important
role.”

In the restaurant industry, the tapas trend still has legs,
especially when it comes to Japanese restaurants, a welcome change from
the carbon-copy Japanese restaurants of previous decades.

The low-carb craze, the Sherman tank of all food trends, will ramp
up even more, with low-carb replacement foods coming at us from every
direction — chocolate, pastas, baked goods, beer, wine. As long as the
pounds keep dropping, the low-carb business will be fertile with ideas.
Restaurants are hopping on the bandwagon one by one.

There's also the idea of “metro” food, a syncopation of refined
urban and retro comfort food. Here in Vancouver, it's epitomized by Rob
Feenie (the prince of culinary posh), who put Feenie's Weenie, a
gourmet hot dog, on the menu at Feenie's, right alongside shepherd's
pie made with duck confit, great burgers with great fries, and, if you
wish, foie gras.

In trend-setting New York, the big boys of haute cuisine, like Alain
Ducasse, has succumbed to macaroni and cheese; Daniel Boulud serves a
$50 US burger; Alan Miguel Kaplan at Salon Mexico played Henry Higgins
to the burrito, glamourizing it with filet mignon and truffle burritos
and charging $45 for it.

Meanwhile, our high-velocity lifestyles have spawned sophisticated
fast-food outlets. Rangoli, Vikram Vij's swish deli-style Indian
eatery, set to open any day, is but one. Linda Meinhardt, of Meinhardt
Fine Foods, opened Picnic; Mad About Food on Fourth Avenue and Home
Plate on Arbutus also cater to hurried middle-class lifestyles; Sean
Heather of the Irish Heather opened Salty Tongue next to his popular
Gastown eatery with take-away for hurried nearby condo dwellers (pay no
heed to carbs and try his delicious soda bread). Is Feenie's Take-Out
or Drive-Through next?

Mints might take a skyrocket this year, if only because Esquire and
Vogue magazines both carried articles on them. And pomegranates, too,
since studies have shown they contain natural estrogens and are a great
source of antioxidants. Style, O, Time and Saveur magazines chimed
their approval (despite the fact you'd have to eat 700 to 800 a day for
the estrogen benefits).

I think consumers are now aware of fair-trade coffee, enough to
consider buying from companies such as Vancouver-based Origins, which
sells nothing but fair-trade beans. The concern of the fair-trade
movement is to ensure that poor farmers are paid a fair price for their
harvests and that they are produced under fair labour conditions.

And on a northerly note, Scandinavian foods might enjoy a spotlit
moment thanks to award-winning wunder-chef Marcus Samuelsson of the
acclaimed Aquavit restaurant in New York. He recently published
Aquavit, a ravishing cookbook, showing Swedish food to be chic and
glamorous — more molten foie gras ganache with truffle ice cream than
herrings and lingonberries.

Chocolate has really gone crazy thanks to availability of quality
chocolate. Hot chocolate has become the “it” New York beverage — and
so we will follow. Meinhardt, at Picnic, serves a classy hot chocolate,
replicating her favourite from Angelina's in Paris.

Cindy Evetts of the Tools and Techniques kitchen store in West
Vancouver adds smoked paprika to the foods to watch for. “It just
boggles my mind how many people are experimenting with it,” she says.
Spaghetti sauce, for instance, can be vamped up with it.

And the home cook now loves demi-glace (a rich meat stock) as it's
available at places like the Soup Meister at Lonsdale Quay. “A couple
of tablespoons of demi would be transcending in shepherd's pie,” Evetts
says.

At her store, silicon-based kitchen items are big. She sells pastry
brushes, baking tins, oven mitts and baking mats made from the durable
heat-resistant material. “It's so easy to clean, you don't have to
grease the cookie sheets or baking pans. If you get goo on the baking
mitts, just wash it off in five seconds. It really makes life a lot
less complicated in the kitchen.”

Just remember, trends are not law. Some are ideas whose time has
come. Some are confection and fashion made to evaporate. Buy the
fair-trade coffee and the B.C. cheese, but you'll still make the hip
list without pomegranates and mints.

– – –

VANCOUVER SUN RECIPES

Looking for a recipe from past issues of The Vancouver Sun? Recipes
from 1987 to the present are now available through INFOLINE. Call
604-605-2607 or send e-mail to infoline@png.canwest.com. Search fees
apply. Recipes will be mailed, faxed or e-mailed to you.

© Copyright 2004 Vancouver Sun

We made Malcolm Parry's column in Saturday's Vancouver Sun!

Wow… we are making the Arts and Cultural Society pages now.  Jim Wong-Chu is president of ACWW, and my arts and cultural mentor.  He has been instrumental in helping to guide Gung Haggis Fat Choy from the first fundraiser dinner in 1999.

From Malcolm Perry's Vancouver Sun column, Saturday, January 17, 2004)

JIM WONG-CHU, the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop sparkplug, says the Robbie Burns Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner and concert is such a hit, it'll run two nights this year — Jan. 24 and 25 — to benefit ACWW and the Gung Haggis Dragon Boat Team.

Sino-Caledonian gourmets may relish a new dish: deep-fried haggis won tons. No word on the traditional accompanying bashed neeps (mashed turnips).

More at www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com or 604-987-7124.

Win Gung Haggis Fat Choy tickets on CBC's Canada Now

Watch the CBC news program Canada Now at 7pm each day this week for a chance to win tickets to Sunday night's dinner performance of Gung Haggis Fat Choy!

Lucky winners will be seated at two ringside tables with CBC news anchors attending the dinner also! 

Watch for CBC ads for the television performance special Gung Haggis Fat Choy featuring Silk Road Music, Brave Waves, The Paper Boys and George Sampson.

Also in the media this week:

Urban Rush – doing the taping on Wednesday, airing later this week.

CBC National News – filming on Tuesday, airing Wednesday or Thursday?

City Cooks on City TV, 12 noon, Thursday, with host Simi Sara , Toddish McWong and Flamingo Restaurant owner/manager Joseph Lee, learning to make haggis wun-tun, spring rolls and stuffed tofu!

Early Edition, CBC Radio One 690 – win tickets on “690 to Go” – Thursday Morning 6-9am

The Afternoon Show, CBC Radio One 690, Catch Toddish McWong on a panel discussion about Chinese New Year and multiculturalism – live at the Aberdeen Centre in Richmond BC. 4 to 6pm

Gung Haggis Fat Choy, CBC television performance special.  7:30pm. Friday, January 23rd.  Prime time television! repeating Saturday evening following Hockey Night in Canada

The Origin of Toddish McWong & Gung Haggis Fat Choy


Who is Toddish McWong?  And how did you come up with Gung Haggis Fat Choy?

“Toddish McWong” was born on a snow covered day in the highlands
surrounding Vancouver, way back in 1993.  It was on Burnaby
Mountain, at Simon Fraser University that mild-mannered psychology
student and SFU tour guide, Todd Wong, was asked to help out with the SFU's annual Robbie Burns celebrations.  Wong first
declined but the tour guide leader later begged Wong to reconsider.
“You're my last hope,” she said.  Wong relented.

Wong was befuddled with the idea of a Chinese guy (him) wearing a
Scottish kilt and having to show his bare knees out in the snow. 
But with a background steeped in Asian Canadian history, community
service and multiculturalism, Wong quickly realized that he was having
an epiphanetic multicultural moment.  He, a 5th
generation Canadian was learning about Scottish-Canadian culture
with its strange traditions of men wearing skirt-like attire, carrying
swords, playing funny sounding musical instruments and eating exotic
foods.

On top of that, the Chinese Lunar New Year fell on January 27th only
two days away from Robbie Burns Day, which is always January 25th in
celebration of the Scottish Bard's birthday.  “Gung Haggis Fat
Choy!” said Wong, “I can celebrate two cultures at the same
time.”  And thus was born the persona of Toddish McWong with his
growing appreciation of Scottish Canadian history and culture.

Flash forward to 1998, and Wong was putting together a Chinese New
Year Dinner party for about 12 friends.  Lo and Behold, the Lunar
New Year again fell two days away from January 25th, Robbie Burns
Day.  Dinner plans were quickly made to incorporate both Chinese
New Year and Robbie Burns Day traditions as Wong scurried off to the
Vancouver Public Library to research Robbie Burns Day and discover
Scottish songs for himself to play on his accordion.

A dinner of 16 in a friend's living room was the setting for the
first Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner hosted by Toddish McWong,
along with co-host Gloria Smyth.  Todd cooked and organized most
of the dishes.  Gloria hired the bagpiper.  They invited
their friends.  Fiona brought a haggis.  Margot toasted the
lads and lassies.  Others brought poems related to Scottish and
Chinese culture, or songs and food.  It was a smashing
success. 

The following year in 1999, Wong decided that for the dinner to be
recreated – he no longer wanted to cook 8 courses for 16 people. 
The dinner was moved to a small Chinese restaurant and turned into a
fundraiser for Wong's dragon boat team.  40 people
attended.  A raffle draw was created.  A bagpiper was
hired.  People read poems… Wong played his accordion and led
singalongs to Scottish songs… 

And each year, the dinner grew in size… practically doubling each
year from 40 to 60.  First it outgrew the New Grandview Szechwan
Restaurant at 100, then it outgrew the Spicy Court Restaurant at
200.  In 2003, the dinner found a home at the Flamingo Chinese
Restaurant on Fraser Street (named after Simon Fraser – the same chap
that the university was named after, and the same tartan that Wong
first wore as a kilt), and the dinner size reached 390 people.

In 2001, Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop became a beneficiary of
the dinner as Wong became an ACWW board member.  This also
recognized the contributions of ACWW president Jim Wong-Chu, who
had guided Wong in organizing the dinner event since 1999.  It is
Wong-Chu's poem “Recipe for Tea” that has become a Gung Haggis Fat Choy
classic read along with Robbie Burns' own Address to the
Haggis.

Each year the quality of the musical entertainment has improved and
expanded.  Highland dancing was added in 2002.  Pat Coventon
led a small sized house band in 2003 with friend pd wohl on guitar,
vocalist Karen Larson on drums and another friend on violin.  Jazz
bassist Harry Aoki did duets with vocalist Margaret Gallagher. 
And 12 year old Alex Sachs played solo violin and then a band
accompanied duet with Toddish McWong on accordion himself. 

For 2004, the dinner grows every upward and onward. 
Actor/director Adrienne Wong will co-host with Toddish McWong. 
Joe McDonald returns with an expanded Brave Waves lineup featuring
Andrew Kim on sitar.  Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault from Silk Road
Music will also perform.  Special guests soprano Heather Pawsey
performs on Sunday, and violinists Mark Ferris and Alex Sachs on
Saturday.  Award winning highland dancing teen-aged brothers
Vincent and Cameron Collins perform on both nights.

Also on Robbie Burns Eve, CBC television in BC, premiered a regional
television special titled “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.”  It featured
performances by:
The Paper Boys with chinese flautist Jing Min Pan set in the Dr. – Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens,
Silk Road Music Ensemble in Vancouver's Chinatown,
George Sapounidis singing in Mandarin accompanied by the Vancouver Dance Academy
Joe McDonald's Brave Waves with LaLa on vocals
+ origins of Toddish McWong and Gung Haggis Fat Choy
+ mini features on Robbie Burns, Chinese New Year and haggis.


2004 closed when Toddish McWong
was invited to chat with Peter Mansbridge on CBC TV's The National,
when The National started its Road Stories in Vancouver.

In 2005, the dinner moved to
the largest Chinese Restaurant in North America – Floata – in
Vancouver's Chinatown.  CBC Radio's Shelagh Rogers host of “Sounds
Like Canada,” came to co-host an intimate dinner of 600 with Toddish
McWong and Tom Chin.  Haggis Lettuce Wrap made it's debut.

Vancouver
Mayor Larry Campbell attended dressed in kilt with Chinese
jacket.  The Scottish and Chinese Canadian MLA duo of Jenny Kwan
and Joy McPhail switched cheongsam and tartan.

City TV features Gung Haggis Wun-Tun etc on City Cooks

CityCooks did a taping for Gung Haggis Fat Choy today. It will air on January 22, Thursday – actual Chinese New Year Day. Flamingo Restaurant owner and manager Joseph Lee did the cooking. He proved his ability to perform under pressure, particularly when CITY Cooks producer Manual Fonseca asked him to come up with a third dish at only 3pm yesterday – less than 20 hours before we would appear in the CITY studios.

Joseph appeared on CITY cooks with me last year. Normally he is never in the kitchen, as his main role is as Manager for Flamingo House Chinese Restaruant on Cambie St. But Joseph was present when the Flamingo on Fraser St. prepared the Gung Haggis Wun-tun and Spring Rolls on Monday evening in preparation for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Poetry Night. Joseph altered the recipes slightly so that they could be more easily prepared at home.

CITY Cooks host Simi Sara really seemed to enjoy the blend of Chinese Haggis Fusion cooking happening on the set. Last year, she managed to avoid tasting haggis with plum sauce but this time around she actually tried eating the haggis spring rolls and stuffed tofu. “It's quite good!” she exclaimed. After the taping was over, the production crew swarmed the set and quickly devoured the haggis-stuffed tofu, haggis wun-tun and haggis spring rolls.

more interesting news…

CBC National News left a phone message for me to call them… Gung Haggis Fat Choy may be going national again in the media – but this time on tv!

Gung Haggis Wun-Tun is a Tasty Winner!

Gung Haggis Wun-Tun was a hit with the performers at the Gung Haggis Poetry Night – held Monday, January 12, at the Central Branch, Vancouver Public Library.  After each performer read their poems, they picked up a haggis wun-tun that had been ceremoniously piped into the room by piper Joe McDonald, and dipped it into the special plum sauce.

“It's really good,” declared Harry McGrath, Director of Scottish Studies from Simon Fraser University.  “I would have eaten half the bunch if nobody else was standing there,” he said following the Gung Haggis Fat Choy poetry night.

This was only the second time that Gung Haggis Wun-Tun had made a public debut.  The first time was at a September reception for Shelagh Rogers at CBC studios, when GHFC host Todd Wong welcomed her to Vancouver with the culinary present.

“Your haggis wun-tun and plum sauce compliment each other like Bogart and Bacall.  What a beautiful marriage of cultures,”  praised CBC radio host Shelagh Rogers when asked to comment.  She also took the plate of haggis wun-tun home with her.

It was a special preview of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event that not only featured a taste of haggis wun-tun and spring rolls but also five performers that will indeed be performing at the January 24 & 25 dinners.  Piper Joe McDonald, poets Trev Sue-A-Quan and Jim Wong-Chu, native Scotsman Neil Gray, and host Toddish McWong.

For your taste of the special recipe for Gung Haggis Wun-Tun – come to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner on Jan 24 & 25.  Pick up tickets at Firehall Arts Centre 604-689-0926.

Photos: GungHaggis Poetry Night 2004

Here are my photos from the 2004 GungHaggisFatChoy Poetry night. It was a great evening. I enjoyed it all including the overly dramatic but strangely appealing stylings of this poet. Lots of magical moments from many cultures in many languages.

I need to go to more poetry readings! The power of the spoken poem straight from the author is something that everyone should experience live.

January 23, 7:30pm is Gung Haggis Fat Choy CBC tv special

The date is set, the time is set… sit back on Friday, January 23 at 7:30pm with your haggis wun-tun and the haggis potato chips and get ready for the unexpected.

What will happen on the tv screen, I cannot say…  but it will included juxtapositions of Scottish Canadian and Chinese Canadian cultures that will make you marvel at the marvel we call Canada.  Everything was filmed in Vancouver, BC.  On locations, performers and props were in Vancouver – with the exception of George Sampson from Ottawa.

More info in my previous post about the Gung Haggis Fat Choy TV Special.