Author Archives: foodgal

My Lunch At Google

Cucumber-seaweed salad, assorted vegetable kimchee, and chrysanthemum greens with tofu.

If you’ve been wondering what happened to that wonderful San Francisco Chronicle food writer, Olivia Wu, she didn’t go far in miles, but she did do quite the about-face in her career.

Wu put down her pen and notepad to free her hands for some bonafide cooking. Since early this year, she’s been an executive chef at one of Google’s famed cafes in Mountain View. At her Oasis Cafe, she oversees a staff of 26, who turn out more than 600 meals a day for hungry Googlers.

A former caterer, private chef, newspaper reporter, music teacher, and yoga instructor, Wu says one reason she took the job was for the challenge to expand the palates and horizons of this young, techie crowd. As one of her wholesale distributors said of her in awe, “She’s cooking Chinese food. Real Chinese food!”

Forget visions of chow mein and egg rolls. Think steamed fresh fish, pork hash with pungent salted fish, homemade lemongrass tea, and fresh juice from young coconuts cracked to order. Or the menu the day she graciously invited me to come for lunch last week: cold salads of chrysanthemum greens and tofu, cucumber-seaweed, cranberry shelling beans flavored with shiso, assorted vegetable kimchee, and 5-spice beef cut from the succulent shin bone. The hot selections that day included: spicy ma po tofu, melt-in-your-mouth crystal pork (steamed pork shoulder drizzled with a soy-garlic-sugar sauce), and stir-fried broccoli. If that wasn’t enough, there was also house-made bubble tea with fresh, peeled lychees bobbing in it.

Ma po tofu, crystal pork, fried rice, and stir-fried broccoli.

Wu uses as many organic ingredients as possible (including the tofu), and only serves sustainable seafood. She’s even added a few traditional big round tables with lazy-susans to the seating area to encourage more synergy among Googlers as they dine.

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Bay Area Chef Mark Sullivan Penning a Cookbook

Mark Sullivan, chef-partner of the Village Pub in Woodside and Spruce in San Francisco, is a self-taught cook who holds a degree in philosophy. Now, he’s turning that introspective nature on a new cookbook.

Sullivan is working on the book with his sister, Katy Sullivan-Morford, a Bay Area food writer. It will be about cooking in restaurants and at home, and about the importance of the shared experience of gathering around the table. There will be plenty of personal stories and photos, too.

What there isn’t yet is a title or a publisher. But given Sullivan’s talent and prominence — he was named one of Food & Wine magazine’s best new chefs of 2002 — one is bound to snap up the project.

Perfect Cookies From The Woman Who’s Nearly Perfect

Brown-butter toffee blondies. Photo by Joanne Hoyoung-Lee.

Perfection – we strive for it, and envy those who come close to it.

Well, at least a little.

Take Martha Stewart. Can the woman do no wrong? She can paint Keds sneakers with intricate paint hues to make them rival glam Christian Louboutin heels. She can arrange flowers like nobody’s business. She can even do time behind bars with class.

Moreover, she can bake. Boy, can she.

Regular readers of Food Gal know that I simply cannot resist a great, chewy cookie. It’s one of the true pleasures in life.

In Martha’s “Brown Butter Toffee Blondies,” I have found nirvana – chewiness of the perfect texture. How good are these cookies? Let’s just say that I made these not once, but twice in one month. I probably would have made them a third time had I not run out of butter.

Speaking of butter, don’t let the added step of browning the butter scare you off. It does add a little more time to cookie-making, but it is so worth it for the superlative nutty, rich, intense flavor it adds. Just be sure to watch the butter closely on the stovetop, because once it starts to color, it happens fast. The last thing you want is burnt melted butter to ruin these fab blondies.

Perfection in life may be impossible. But perfection in baking is only a Martha Stewart blondie recipe away.

Brown-Butter Toffee Blondies

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Food Gal Joins Project Foodie

If you’re like so many of us with recipes tucked away all over the place, ProjectFoodie can be your savior.

It’s like an old-fashioned recipe box — only its online. In this modern version, you can keep track of your favorite recipes from magazines and newspapers electronically so that when you are hunting for them, you need only look one place now.

Yours truly just became an advisor to ProjectFoodie. You’ll find my recipe rankings and cookbook reviews posted there regularly.

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