Home      Advertising      Classifieds      Directory      Restaurants      Forums      Writers      Jobs      Contact Us      About Us      Archives        Preview Chanel
    

0
Hosted Ecommerce Solution
Home » Briefs

Spicing Up America!

By: 

Fusion was a word not unknown to Floyd Cardoz, the celebrity chef of Tabla, when he was growing up in Bombay in a Goan family with very eclectic food tastes. "What's known in the West as fusion food - different cultures together on a plate - started for me in the cradle because fusion, was, quite simply, a way of life for our family."

 

Cardoz is the chef partner in Danny Meyer's noted New York restaurant Tabla. Just as the tabla, the musical instrument, explode with the spice of sound, Tabla the restaurant reverberates with spices, transforming American cuisine.

Everyone from Bill Gates to Bill Clinton to Madonna and Harrison Ford, musicians and sports people have dined at Tabla.  It is listed in Adam Platt's 100 Favorite Restaurants of 2006 and was also in Forbes' All-Star Eateries in New York.

Like a spice merchant, Cardoz has given a new zing to American cuisine, creating his own signature New Indian Cuisine, his unique take on food, combing the flavors and spices of India with western cooking techniques and seasonal, local ingredients.

In New York he worked in the prestigious Lespinasse under four-star chef Gray Kunz, and increased the repertoire of Indian spices from four to over 15.  In the Tabla bread bar, Cardoz has introduces ethnic regional dishes including some from Sind, the native land of his wife Barkha.

"My philosophy is more about introducing the western world to the flavors we Indians love," says Cardoz. "We love the sweet, tart, spicy, salty elements of Indian food and in my food I try and bring across all these flavors in all that."

He is constantly adapting American produce with Indian spices. He says, "Asparagus is not really a part of Indian cuisine, but I've been able to cook asparagus south Indian style with mustard and coconut, and it has worked very well."

 
Now he has published a new cookbook, aptly titled One Spice, Two Spice: American Food, Indian Flavor' written with Jane Daniels Lear (Random House), which reveals how Indian spices can transform American food. He says, "This food is also appealing on another level: it's healthful. I use very little butter or cream to enrich dishes, relying instead on good stocks, a whole variety of fresh vegetables, spice (which give many health giving properties, and aromatics such as ginger, shallots and chilies - my holy trinity - to make food satisfying and delicious."

Lobster pan roast with coconut sauce, Kashmiri greens and roast chicken with fenugreek are some of the dishes in the book that fuse American and Indian. He says: "I wrote the book to introduce people to Indian food and to show them that it is easy to cook with spices. The next logical step is to cook Indian food and that's where I want to take them."
little India poll 


Home » Briefs
Articles Toolbar



Post Your Comments:
Please Note: Entering Incorrect Security Code After The Comment Box Will Cause No Submission Of Data. Please read instructions at end before Submitting the comment.

Your name:
Your email:
Subject:
Comment Text:
Limit to 150 words.



Please enter the Case Sensitive Security Code that you see in image in the box above before Submitting the Comment. Upon successful submission, the form above would disappear.

You may submit lengthier letters to the editor using the Feedback Form

Visitor's Comments
More Articles In Category

•  Hot Yoga
•  Gurkhas Win Right To Stay...
•  Cash For Votes
•  Indian MegaCities
•  4 Indians Make Forbes'...
•  Wanna Debate?
•  Your God v My God
•  Quantum Leap
•  Delhi Belly
•  Indian Saint
•  Damn Timing
•  Tata's $50 Million Gift To...
•  Jindal 2012
•  Little Master's Big Record
•  Booker Prize
•  Bride Barred From Contact...
•  Indian Scientist Reprimanded
•  Musharraf On The Lecture...
•  Black Panther Guards
•  Tulsi Slows Aging
•  May I Hug You?
•  Mentally Unstable President?
•  Hari Puttar Wins
•  VOA India Goes Off Air
•  Vegetable Brain
•  Toxic Medicine?
•  Hair This Breast Massage!
•  Record For Continuous Movie...
•  Rat For Lunch
•  Ring Condom
•  iPod Murder
•  NSG Defers Indian Nuclear...
•  2.1 Million Child Deaths
•  Shetty's Bette Noir
•  Yoga Pause
•  Minority Majority
•  Obama: "Not Only Do I...
•  Punjabi Top Foreign Language
•  No Virgin
•  Howzaat! Sachin's Out!
•  Indian BPO's Generate US...
•  US Tops In India Tourism
•  India's Highest paid CEOs
•  Eight New IITs
•  Audit Unnerves Green Card...
•  The Indian Stock Mrket...
•  Sam Manekhaw's Fine Line
•  $1 Million for 3 Hours
•  Travel While Sikh
•  Hacking Their Way To Good...
•  Rambo's Bollywood Roll
•  Phone Yoga
•  Yes, Prime Minister
•  South Asian Hate Crimes
•  Chairman Hanuman
•  Indian Motelier Gets Life...
•  Shivaji To Rival Statue Of...
•  Sports Museum
•  Indians Top UK's Under-40...
•  Three Charged With LSU...
•  Too Smart For Valedictorian
•  Indian Physician Questions...
•  Chastising The Chaste
•  Charged With Child Abuse
•  BigBlog
•  Nepal Abolishes Monarchy
•  Indians Genetically...
•  Professor Threatens To Sue...
•  Window, Aisle Or Toilet...
•  Who Is Starving Whom?
•  Great Khali
•  Komagata Maru Apology
•  Death By Gulab Jamun?
•  Traditional Clothes Good...
•  Don't Go There!
•  Raining Money
•  World Kabbadi League?
•  Berry Bitter Harvest
•  Sri Lanka Is Promoting A...
•  9/11's Last Victim?
•  IAEA on Board?
•  Indian Aviation Industry...
•  Tata Unveils $2,500 Nano
•  Fast Track for NRIs in...
•  What Price Happiness?
•  India Surpasses China In...
•  Gujaratis Lose $1 Billion...
•  Whose Pashmina
•  Reliance Power IPO
•  Scrabulous: Not Fabulous?
•  Hit On The Head. Pain In...
•  Better Than Queen
•  No Millionaire, But Fun All...
•  Canadian Sikhs Rally For...
•  See You Again, Sarkozy?
•  Ticketmaster
•  Suicidal Palm Tree
•  Guess Who's Coming To Dinner
•  IT Doesn't Pay
•  Oriental Hotels Snubs Tatas

powered by scorpio informatics