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Coconut Caramel Shrimp

Spring is the time of year when new cookbooks land. (Fall is the other.) I check out a lot of them, buy them or get review copies, cooking and baking from them. But itโ€™s always interesting when one cookbook comes along, and as Iโ€™m reading through it, I realize that I want to make every single recipe in it. But I should backtrack for aโ€ฆ

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Shrimp and Chive Potsticker Dumplings

This year seems to be a banner year for cookbooks and there are so many that Iโ€™ve leafed through andย bookmarked, that even though itโ€™s early in the cookbook season, I feel like I already have the next twelve monthโ€™sย worth of great recipes to try on my docket.ย Lately Iโ€™ve been impressed by books that make cuisines that people might feel daunted about tackling, accessible. And evenโ€ฆ

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Thai Stir-Fried Chicken with Chile Jam

I was recently interviewed about cookbooks that I like and when I thought about the ones Iโ€™ve been most intrigued with, a few stood out. They were single-subject books that explore a single topic, which I find useful when looking for a straightforward recipe to try out. But the more complex, thorough books help me understand cuisines that Iโ€™m not all familiar with. For example,โ€ฆ

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Vietnamese Rice Noodle Salad Bowl

One thing I love about traveling is that I get to read. As much as we all love to be connected, itโ€™s nice to be somewhere โ€“ like 5000 feet up in the air, where your biggest concern is who gets the armrest โ€“ where that isnโ€™t usually a possibility. (Although I also spend a considerable amount of time up there wondering if whoever designedโ€ฆ

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Crispy Baked Tofu

Someday, someone is going set up a camera in my place. At least I hope so. Because over the last three years, I can safely say that the craziest things have happened to me. Iโ€™ve often toyed with writing a book about it, but no one would believe me, and it would quickly get tossed into the fiction bin, dismissed as folly. Oddly, Iโ€™ve beenโ€ฆ

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Fresh Ginger Syrup

Many moons ago, I worked with Bruce Cost at the now-shuttered Monsoon restaurant in San Francisco. Bruce is an amazing Asian cook and Iโ€™ve rarely had better Chinese food than what came out of his wok. Early on, he prompted me to make a sharp, gingery syrup that we could serve at the bar, as an elixir, mixed with fresh lime juice and sparkling waterโ€ฆ.

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Kimchi Omelet

Hereโ€™s a quick one, which is perfect because itโ€™s precisely the idea of Jaden Hairโ€™s book, The Steamy Kitchenโ€™s Healthy Asian Favorites, which was just delivered to me (I saw a preview and wrote a quote for the book). Itโ€™s full of pretty amazing ideas for quick Asian dishes that can be made with easily available ingredients โ€“ often ones you already have in yourโ€ฆ

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Teriyaki Chicken

I always feel like a tourist when I got to a Japanese restaurant because if bento boxes are on the menu, Iโ€™ll scan the other choices, but will invariably choose the teriyaki chicken. I know, I know. Itโ€™s the โ€œsafeโ€ choice โ€“ but I canโ€™t help it. I love anything grilled, especially with a salty-sweet marinade punched up with fresh ginger, then charred over aโ€ฆ

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Char Siu Ribs

I was recently chatting with a culinary equipment company about working with them, as I was a fan of their products. After a while of getting nowhere, I was told, โ€œYouโ€™re not the right demographic. Weโ€™re targeting busy, stay-at-home moms, that donโ€™t have time to cook.โ€ Obviously they havenโ€™t looked at my daily planner because they would have seen that time is something thatโ€™s inโ€ฆ

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