The Date and Time: Wednesday July 23, 5PM to 9PM
  The Event: Tastemaker's Event at Little Sister Indonesian Food Bar (2031   Yonge Street)
  The Venue: Little Sister Indonesian Food Bar, Yonge Street
  The Target Audience: opinionmakers and food/wine media
  The Quote/Background: We were served two wines, S Balbo Crios Torrontes   Mendoza on reception, followed by Tierra Divina Reds of Lodi California. Other   white wines on the well-thought out list included Tawse Spark, Henry of Pelham   Cuvee Catherine, Cave Spring Riesling, and Tawse Gewurztraminer. The bar list   had eight cocktails, two of which were showcased tonight: Ubud Hangout (Rangpur   gin, jalapeno black pepper syrup, fresh cilantro, cucumber and orange), and   Little Brother (extra old rum, lime, housemade chai, angostura bitters, mint and   ginger beer). Michael van den Winkel and Jennifer Gittins, co-owners (and they   also own Quince across the street), described the food – The cuisines of Eastern   Indonesia are similar to Polynesian and Melanesian cuisine, with elements of   Chinese cuisine. Spices such as pala (nutmeg/mace), cengkeh (clove), daun pandan   (Pandan leaves), kluwek (Pangium edule) and laos (galangal) are native to   Indonesia. The Indonesian cuisine influenced colonial Dutch and Indo people that   brought Indonesian dishes back to the Netherlands due to repatriation following   the independence of Indonesia. In "The Art of Dutch Cooking" (1962) is written   "There exist countless Indonesian dishes, some of which take hours to prepare;   but a few easy ones have become so popular that they can be regarded as   "national dishes". The author 
  provided recipes for nasi goreng (fried rice), pisang goreng (baked   bananas), lumpia
  goreng (fried spring rolls), bami (fried noodles), satay (grilled skewered   meat), satay sauce(peanut sauce), and sambal oelek (chilli paste). One of the   most well know Dutch-Indonesian fusion dish is the Rijsttafel ("Rice table"),   which is an elaborate meal consisting of up to several dozen small dishes (hence   filling "an entire table"). While popular in the Netherlands, Rijsttafel is now   rare in Indonesia itself, as it
  demonstrated both colonial opulence and the diversity of Indonesian   cuisine. In contemporary Indonesian cuisine, it has been adapted into a western   style prasmanan buffet. Quince serves a Rijsttafel about three times a year, by   reservation.
  The Food: we had samples of just about the entire menu, and all of them   thrilled. Perhaps one of the best was the Balinese spiced chicken (satay lilit),   although the pork satay babi was no slouch, nor was the chicken peanut stay   ayam. These were followed by a selection of beef croquettes with Sumatra spicing   (our next fave) and jakarta beef wontons, shrimp sambal, shredded chicken taco,   and beef pendang taco, another fave. From the mains section, we had samples of   just about everything (the fish was not offered): roasted pork belly babi   panggang, braised beef semur Java, shrimp coconut curry, ayam panggang chicken,   and sambal daging tamarind braised pork. A feast! Just about a scaled-down   Rijsttafel – thirteen dishes in all! Hard to beat this kind of ambience with   delicious cocktails, wines, and a parade of highly charged, spicy (but not hot)   foods. Not to mention some of the people we managed to talk to...We were sent   home with prawn crackers and peanut sauce.
  The Contact Person: shannon@thecanadianoffice.com;   info@quincetoronto.com
  The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade):   93.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment