A Tiger in the Kitchen (3 page)

Each of my father’s stories had a point. He was determined not to be the father that he had had. He wanted to show me the world and all its possibilities. And while he had a tremendously successful career—at one point becoming the director of marketing for Vitasoy, one of the largest beverage companies in Asia—he was even more determined that his firstborn would go further than he himself had, having had the advantages of a loving, supportive father that he had so craved. But as I got older, I broke my father’s heart and chose journalism over law. Then I broke my mother’s heart by insisting on coming to the United States for college. My family protested. I would be too far, I was a girl, and why journalism? But my father had always told me I could be and do anything, and he wasn’t going to stop me. He simply asked, “How much will it cost?”

On occasions such as these, my mother often would sigh, shake her head, and blame the fact that I was born in the year of the Tiger. “Why did I have to have a Tiger daughter?” she would lament. “So stubborn and rebellious. If you were born in the olden days in China, you would have been killed at birth!” Sometimes, however, faced with my horrified looks, she would end on a reassuring note: “You know,” she once said, “with Tiger girls, they used to pull out one of her teeth so she wouldn’t be so fierce and eat up her husband. But don’t worry, I didn’t do that with you.”

Once I moved to the United States, my father visited me at least twice a year. We didn’t have the fried shrimp noodles, but we started having a beer after dinner some nights. Now, during my college years, my Singaporean male friends—and even less so my female ones—were hardly ever granted the privilege of bonding with their dads over a beer. (Nice girls didn’t drink.) But in my father’s eyes, my independence in school, in building my career, had given me the license. Even so, our bar visits often began with “Your mum would kill me if she knew,” and “I won’t tell her if you won’t, Dad.” (We also never told her about the cigarettes we would smoke surreptitiously.)

As I built my own career, my father’s ambitions became my fuel. And I could never shake the feeling that he was disappointed, somehow. In my early twenties, as I grappled with the guilt I felt over having chosen to stay in the United States, where I saw far greater opportunities in journalism than anywhere in Asia, I looked forward to his trips all the more, for the smallest sign or assurance that I continued to do him proud. The lectures continued—how was my job at the
Baltimore Sun
going? Was I writing stories often enough? Why was I covering something inconsequential (in his eyes) like police or county politics when I could be writing substantial stories about the world of finance? “How come you still don’t know how to cook?” he once asked, as he surveyed the suspiciously pristine kitchen of my Odenton, Maryland, apartment. “You cannot just eat
gongzai meen
[ramen] for dinner all the time, you know?” My father knew that while I loved food, I had a checkered past with the act of actually putting it on the table. I’d never cooked as a teenager in Singapore. And when the fourteen-year-old me had persuaded him to let me get a summer job waiting tables at Ponderosa in Singapore (instead of taking summer art classes or studying) because the notion of earning extra pocket money had become fashionable among my friends, my experience had not been entirely stellar. After one too many times in which I’d brought soup to a diner with the tip of my uniform’s skinny red tie still making laps around the bowl, and one busy lunch hour in which I successfully delivered a plate of fried chicken to the table . . . only to watch the chicken slide right off onto the customer’s lap, I was reassigned to salad bar duty. My father had taken my sister to lunch at Ponderosa shortly after this job change. Silently, they sat at a table near the salad bar, shushing me when I tried to make eye contact or say hello to them—because it just wouldn’t have been professional to chitchat with customers while I was on duty, he believed. I watched my father’s pride melt away when he saw that my “job” consisted entirely of refilling tubs of corn and canned beets. And since salad wasn’t a popular lunch choice in Singapore at the time, any such action was actually a rare occurrence. Mostly, my father and Daphne just sat there watching me stand in the salad bar island, shifting from foot to foot.

Even so, I couldn’t help but feel that I was letting him down in my Maryland apartment. On the last night of that trip, we sat at the rickety IKEA table I had somehow assembled so that one leg was shorter than the other three, my father with his glasses off, sipping a beer and looking back on the days he had just spent, visiting my desk at work—“Why is it so messy?”—and getting to know my life in Maryland—“Make sure you always put the chain on your door when you come home.” After a few moments of silence, as I wondered what he was really thinking of this life away from my family that he would never have chosen for me but that he had allowed me to choose, my father finally spoke. “You know, years and years ago, my grandfather left his family in China as a young man to travel to Singapore and seek a better life,” he said, squinting hard at the bare white walls of my cheap rental apartment as if looking at something in the distance. “And now, years later, here you are. My daughter left Singapore to travel to America and seek a better life.” My father smiled and reached over for his glass, raising it, saying, “Our family’s journey continues.”

Somewhere in the midst of my American life, I began to heed my father’s advice and look beyond ramen in the kitchen. My initial early obsession with American food was a surprise: meat loaf. The first time I encountered meat loaf, I wasn’t sure what to think. It was a loaf. But made of ground beef? How had I not tried this before? This was a revelation amid the cloud of yearning for Singaporean food that set in the moment I entered college, in the mid-1990s. Any Singaporean will tell you that we don’t eat to live, we live to eat. Food—or
makan,
as we call it—is a national obsession. My friends and I can spend hours passionately debating where to find the best chicken rice on the island. In a 2007
New Yorker
piece about Singapore cuisine, Calvin Trillin observed of Singaporeans: “Culinarily, they are among the most homesick people I have ever met.” In the fifteen years that I’ve lived in the United States, I’ve often said to American friends that, when it comes to Singapore, I miss the food first and then my family. They think I’m joking.

My fondest memories of growing up in Singapore all revolve around eating. On special Sundays, my parents would take the family out for
bak kut teh,
a mouthwatering, peppery pork rib broth that’s nearly impossible to find in the United States. And when I was a primary school child, my neighborhood friends and I used to sneak out to a nearby hawker center for ice
kacang,
a dessert of sweet corn, red beans, and jelly topped with shaved ice smothered in evaporated milk and syrup. In fact, food is of such importance to Singaporeans that many restaurants and hawker centers have become landmarks. Even now, people know exactly where my family lives when I tell them it’s near the old Long Beach Seafood, a seaside eating hole that hasn’t been at that spot in more than twenty years.

The complex flavors of Singaporean food stem from British colonization in the nineteenth century. The country on the tip of the Malay Peninsula, near Indonesia, was once a quiet island of fishing villages. In 1819, the British discovered the island and established a bustling trading port, attracting settlers from India, Europe, and China. Today, Singapore remains one of the world’s busiest ports. However, some might argue that the more significant consequence of this colonization unfolded in the kitchen. As the years passed, Chinese, Malay, Indian, and European cooks took cues from one another, stirring together methods and spices culled from distant homelands such as Gujarat, India, and Xiamen, China, while sprinkling in culinary touches brought over by British and Dutch traders and their families.

The flavors meshed, giving rise to new dishes. A plethora of seafood and a love of spices gave birth to
chilli
crab, a signature Singaporean dish of crab fried in a vermilion, egg-streaked gravy. The influence of the British—whom the locals called Johns when Singapore was a colony—inspired the Malay dish of roti John, which features a baguette topped with beaten eggs, minced mutton, and onions that’s then quickly panfried and served with a spicy tomato dip.

As a college freshman in Illinois, I spent many a night dwelling on the long, cold months I’d have to endure before my next taste of roti John or
chilli
crab. In early 1994, when we were all discovering the Internet, an enterprising Singaporean somewhere out in the ether set up a Web site where he posted a handful of pictures of foods like satay and Hainanese chicken rice. Immediately, e-mails with this precious URL raced around the world from one homesick Singaporean to another. I began braving glacial lakeshore temperatures to trek to the computer lab after classes, logging on just to stare with titanic longing at these pictures of dinners far, far away.

At the same time, I was getting a good schooling in a new genre of food. In the heart of my first Chicago winter—and a whopper of one at that, with windchills pushing seventy below one memorable day—I was getting well acquainted with the “classics” of American food. Pancakes, sloppy joes, pizza, buffalo wings—my dorm cafeteria pushed them all. I’d sampled some of these before, of course, Singapore being fairly cosmopolitan. (It even had a Denny’s, although I never did find out whether a Singaporean Grand Slam is the same as a Grand Slam in Peoria.)

Meat loaf, however, mystified me. I’d never even heard of it. But from my first bite, I was smitten. Crusty, juicy, moist, and meaty all at once—this brick of red meat was heaven to me. For the first time, I was gripped with the urge to cook something—something that wasn’t ramen or instant porridge, that is. I’d hardly eaten beef while growing up in Singapore—pork is generally much more widely used in Chinese home cooking there. So beef held great sex appeal to me. And having never tried meat loaf before, I was hooked.

The meat loaf I began making was basic. After I had dabbled with various mixes, Lawry’s became my brand of choice. Jazzed up with an egg, a generous stream of soy sauce, and milk instead of water, this meat loaf mixture remains my go-to recipe even today. In the years since, I’ve experimented with elaborate meat loaf recipes that have graced the pages of glossy food magazines, perfectly delicious gourmet or ethnic versions conjured up by chefs like Ming Tsai. And yet, this is the one meat loaf that I make when a craving sets in. In fact, it was over this very meat loaf that I fell in love with my husband, Mike.

A rudimentary cook in my twenties who still often made dinners built on the salty shoulders of a can of Campbell’s soup, I didn’t actually turn a culinary corner until Mike entered my life.

In the summer of 2000, I flew to San Francisco for the Asian American Journalists Association’s national convention. I’d been attending the convention since 1995—so had Mike, it turned out. We had many of the same friends in the organization; we’d been to many of the same parties. But somehow, we’d never met—until one evening, when he walked into the lobby of the Hyatt Regency in San Francisco and spotted me talking to one of his colleagues at
The New York Times.
Mike didn’t know who I was, but he was pretty sure that if he walked across the lobby to say hello to his colleague, Merrill would introduce us. The next day, Mike and I met at a panel on covering the transgender and gay communities. And coffee. Then drinks. Then dinner. Not long after, he began traveling down to my home in Washington, D.C., to see me on weekends.

A bona fide food lover who’d grown up watching his stepmother make pancakes and pork chops in their rural Iowa kitchen, Mike soon began teaching me little things—how best to melt chocolate, what a food processor actually did, the importance of, oh, lighting the burner before putting the pan on so you don’t burn your eyebrows off. For a gal who’d grown up being instructed to stay out of the kitchen, these were key revelations.

We soon began cooking together whenever he hopped on a train from New York City to visit me. One of our earliest collaborations involved making creamed spinach from scratch with a generous sprinkling of freshly grated nutmeg—to go with my Lawry’s meat loaf, of course. It was a simple side dish. Nothing special to most cooks, I’m sure. Except that, until that dish, I’m not sure I was fully aware of what nutmeg looked like, much less that it had to be grated. (I’m almost certain I’d not grated anything before then.) Heck, the notion of being able to put creamed spinach on the table without first opening a frozen box had been unfathomable to me until that point.

I fell in love—and not just with the idea of actually being able to make delicious, restaurantlike dishes from scratch.

CHAPTER TWO

There are two New Yorks that coexist twice a year. There is the mad, glittering swirl of models, photographers, fashion editors, movie stars, champagne, thumping sound tracks, silken gowns, five-inch stilettos, and endless air kisses that takes over the city during New York’s Fashion Week. And then there’s the rest of Manhattan, which tends to fade in a blur of relative grayness during this time.

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