Alan Wong's New Wave Luau: Recipes from Honolulu's Award-Winning Chef
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Average customer review:Product Description
Nominated as one of the James Beard Foundation's Best
Regional Chefs in 1994, Wong has been featured on NBC's Today Show, his recipes have appeared in Bon Appetit, and he was chosen to represent Team Hawaii in the International Culinary Olympics. The food that won all these accolades is a signature blend of Pacific Rim styles, drawing together the tastes of the Islands and influences from China, Japan, and beyond. [A] leading practitioner of Hawaiian regional cooking, Wong is renowned for transforming island staples...into elaborately presented fare. Bon Appetit
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1037032 in Books
- Published on: 1999-06-01
- Released on: 1999-06-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 224 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Alan Wong's New Wave Luau is a glamorous book full of color photos that convey the complexity of his lush and exciting cooking. It is also alive with Chef Wong's passion for his Asian heritage and that of the Hawaiian Islands, where his restaurant has three times been selected Best Restaurant of the Year by Honolulu magazine.
Chosen Best Regional Chef for the Pacific Northwest in 1996 by the James Beard Foundation, Wong is a master of multicultural cooking. Called Hawaiian Regional Cuisine, his dishes fuse local ingredients and traditions with foods and techniques from Europe, Latin America, and Asia. Taking the succulent meat from whole Kalua Pig, pit-roasted luau style, he uses it in a risotto dotted with corn and crunchy water chestnuts, then enriched with truffle butter. He also features this smoky pork in nachos built on crunchy taro chips, topped with chile-spiked guacamole.
As you feast on the photos, it is almost possible to taste the artistic creations depicted, each one dense with contrasting flavors and textures. His Surf and Turf, for example, features grilled beef tenderloin and a Kona lobster tail wrapped around a scallop. They are served with a roasted potato topped with wasabi-spiked mashed potatoes. This potato sprouts leaves of tat soi, an Asian green, and spiraling antennae of fried linguini. Grilled marinated mushrooms and asparagus add to the plate, which is drizzled with a sauce combining cream, truffle butter, and soy vinaigrette. Then it is ringed with shining dots of basil oil and finished with a sprinkling of chives and diced tomato.
Lest this strenuous cooking intimidate you, it is easy to make Wong's Asian Guacamole flavored with ginger and sake, Five Spice Risotto rich with shiitake mushrooms, and Asian Ratatouille, unexpectedly enhanced with oyster sauce and sesame oil. Each adds immeasurably to a meal of grilled fish or store-bought roast chicken.
Anyone with an ice-cream maker must try the recipes for tropical Guava, Lychee-Ginger, and Mango Lime ice cream, and a quartet of memorably exotic, liquored sorbets. --Dana Jacobi
Review
Wong's Hawaiian cooking transcends what most tourists to the
islands ever experience as native cuisine. Mark Knoblauch -- Booklist, Chicago, IL June 1, 1999
[This book] celebrates the individualistic fusion cuisine of one of Hawaii's top young chefs. The recipes are clear and well written. -- Library Journal June 15, 1999
About the Author
JOHN HARRISSON has co-authored cookbooks with many of America’s leading chefs, including Mark Miller, Roy Yamaguchi, and Hubert Keller. He lives in Hawaii.
ALAN WONG is regarded as one of the best chefs in Hawaii. A winner of the 1996 James Beard Foundation’s award for Best Regional Chef for the Pacific Northwest, he trained with legendary chef André Soltner at New York’s Lutèc before opening his own restaurant in Honolulu.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Customer Reviews
If you only buy one cookbook this year, this should be it !!
There are very few cookbooks worth paying full price for -- this one is worth double the full price! Alan Wong has been WOW-ing local residents and visitors to Hawaii for years and now with this book he will "WOW" you! Chef Wong is of Japanese-Chinese-Hawaiian ancestry and uses this to build on his classical french training (under Andre Soltner at Lutece). His recipes produce foods that "explode" and excite the palate, oft-times blending complex flavors and other times producing multi-waves of flavors. This is food the way it is meant to be and taste! And for those not familiar with Chef Wong's accomplishments, he began his career at Kapiolani Community College in Honolulu, (where he later returned to instruct) did his apprenticeship at the prestigious Greenbrier Resort (West Virginia), worked at Lutece in New York, then returned to the Big Island of Hawaii where he was a former Chef of the five diamond Mauna Lani Bay Resort on the Big Island of Hawaii. Alan is now owner of his own restaurant, Alan Wong's Restaurant, where he showcases local talent and pays tribute to his heritage. Aloha & Mahalo Chef on a much awaited and fabulous cookbook. I miss cooking with you and eating your food !!
Great Dishes require attention to details
Sometimes there are cookbooks that you can taste and then there are the ones that prefer a more clinical approach to cooking . Alan Wong's New Wave Luau is a very good exposition of Pacific Rim Cuisine. This book along with Sam Choy and Roy Yamaguchi give the cook/reader a flavorful and expansive overview of what is the cuisine of the islands and the Pacific Rim. The recipes explore Hawaii's culinary influences and then creates a few influences of his own.
The book is not for beginners. For those who are interested in learning more about contemporary cuisine this is a great read. The ingredients can now be found in most international markets, and if not then with a little research you can find just about everything through an online retailer.
The recipes do work if you follow the directions. There is much to learn from New Wave Luau and all you have to do is read, study the photos, learn about how the flavors interact and then cook your way through them. It's a lot of fun.
I have had the book for several years now and still return to it every now and then for a few inspirations and guides when researching new foods that I am interested in. This is a book for the serious cook. And then, once you get past the hard stuff it is all fun and adventure, really. Hawaiian cuisine is a marvel of color, flavor and aroma. Of course seafood is king in any book of island recipes, and it should be. Alan Wong's New Wave Luau just jumps off of the page inviting the reader into the grocery store and the kitchen, and sometimes into the fishing boat.
What is New Wave Luau? Well, go to page 86 and cook the Steamed Opakapaka and Gingered Vegetables in Truffle Broth, and there you have it. Bringing Japan, Thailand, Hawaii and France together in one recipe without disturbing the wonderful quality and design of the food itself.
The cookbooks of the three great Hawaiian writer/chefs are excellent examples that we must live to eat, not eat to live.
I recommend this book to anyone interested in understanding what makes the foods of the 21st century so in love with life and flavor. What is more important to food than advancing ideas of unity to the table so that others may learn to do the same? Alan Wong's New Wave Luau along with the writings of Sam Choy and Roy Yamaguichi do just that.
very inpirational
i love this book, very inspirational. i recommend this book if you would like to add an asian flair to your cuisine. i dont recommend it if you plan on gathering the ingredients from a grocery store like safeway or fred meyer. it will get very expensive! to a certain extent, you probably wont even be able to find the ingredients like poi(taro). Best if you have a china town near you. he uses many local ingredients, so you will have to draw the chef out of yourself and adjust with your local ingredients. this book is not made for the easy way out home cook. it will take time to pull off these recipes. i recommend using this book as a guide not to replicate unless youre an experience chef or the experience home cook that can find most of these ingredients at a cheap local asian store. based off this book, i would buy all of his collections if he had written more.




