Showing posts with label Restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Restaurant. Show all posts

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Insider Cambodia

The menu is clever and contemporary, with plenty of nods to the seasonal produce of the region. Picture: Susan Kurosawa

March 22, 2008
The Australian

TABLES: Susan Kurosawa discovers a surprising oasis in Siem Reap, the gateway to Angkor Wat

WE have come to Siem Reap with two objectives. The first is, of course, to thoroughly explore the temples of Angkor Wat. The second is to try Khmer cuisine; will it be as spicy and fragrant as Thai, as layered and minty-peppery as Vietnamese, as French-influenced as the meals we have enjoyed for the past week in Laos?

We ponder such matters as we sit eating an unlikely schnitzel and spaghetti in a dining room so groovy it could slip into a lifestyle magazine spread with no need for further dressing. Between the ruins, the walking, the calf-strengthening climbing, the downtown sorties by madly weaving tuktuk and a new addiction to holy basil, we are having a day at rest. I am feeling supremely guilty; at any second, my high school principal, the stout-shoed Miss Claridge, surely will appear, tut-tutting about my bare legs and insisting I stand very straight and recite, in perfect order, the kings of the Khmer empire.

We are at Hotel de la Paix in the centre of Siem Reap; the architecture is faux art deco, very white and blocky in a Miami South Beach kind of way. Outside there are tuktuks tooting and dust whirling, but here all is as peaceful as the property's name suggests. The drawcard restaurant is Meric, its name taken from the renowned pepper grown in Cambodia's southern province of Kampot. Tables and upholstered chairs are arranged under cover along a cool colonnade off a central courtyard and there is further seating inside.

Noon temperatures are at the pointy end of the 30s so we opt for the arctic-chilled interior with its chocolate and mustard stripey decor, leather banquettes, columns and voluptuous deco lights. On the white-clothed tables sit perfect furled lotuses in tiny stone pots.
MENU SAMPLER
  • Sesame-crusted prawns, papaya and ginger relish with feta cheese tahini dressing ($US8)
  • Foie gras terrine on roasted mango and walnut crumble ($US12)
  • Spice-crusted Australian beef tenderloin with braised puy lentils and port glaze ($US24)
  • Baked New Zealand salmon with roasted fennel sauce and salad, finished with gnocchi ($US22)
  • Sabayon gratin with exotic fruits and pina colada ice cream ($US7)
  • Pomelo and rambutan salad with lemon basil gratinee ($US6)
(Dinner menu)
Tasmanian-born executive chef Cassandra Zukauskas's credentials include Sydney's Rockpool, South Africa's Makanyane Safari Lodge and a host of Australian resorts. Her Meric menu is clever and contemporary, with plenty of nods to the seasonal produce of the region (pounded green mango, peanut sauce, salads tossed with dragonfruit and zesty pomelo) but includes lots to satisfy travellers who are hankering for, say, a comfort stop of mint-marinated lamb rump with mashed potatoes on the side.

I order spaghetti with blue swimmer crab, lemon, green onion and chilli, $US10 ($10.75). It's a sizeable, confetti-coloured portion of halved cherry tomatoes, diced red and yellow peppers, wilted basil and curls of green onion tossed through the al dente spaghetti (spaghettini, perhaps, given the very slender straps) with shreds of sweet crab, a good dousing of lemon and a polite hint of chilli. It is very good indeed.

My partner goes on an eccentric journey in the direction of Morocco with his choice of Middle Eastern beef schnitzel with coleslaw ($US12). There are red and yellow spices and a hint of nuttiness to the tender beef's thinnish covering and the coleslaw is continents removed from the over-mayonnaised Australian barbie variety. Amid the shredded red and green cabbage are roasted pine nuts, currants and finely chopped coriander. The dish wears a jaunty hat of crisped parma ham and a side plate of fresh green beans with almonds completes a bistro meal that is more Melbourne than Marrakech.

We wonder if we consider the meal so fabulous because it is such a change from the Asian food we have been eating for weeks. I realise I have been craving pasta; at home, I long for gallons of chilli and spice. I travel with a squeeze tube of Vegemite yet rarely eat it in Australia. This has been security blanket food; tonight it will be back to the heart of Siem Reap for green papaya salad, coconut-rich soups and dishes flavoured with the real bite of Cambodian meric.

The thing to do after dining at Hotel de la Paix is to head for a swing bed on the side colonnade, facing the big old ficus and pink frangipani of the courtyard. You could dine on these four-person swaying lounges, too (staff bring the food on trays), or just drop in for a martini (chamomile and honey or lemongrass and kaffir lime) or a Perfect in Pink fresh watermelon, papaya, lime and carrot juice. We kick off our Angkor-dusted shoes and drink the best coffee we've had in a fortnight.

Then we skulk guiltily back to our lovely little hotel, the Residence d'Angkor, as busloads of tourists roar past. We feel like truants but at least we are not coach potatoes.

All Tables visits are unannounced and meals paid for.

Checklist
  • Meric, Hotel de la Paix, Sivutha Boulevard, Siem Reap, Cambodia. +855 63 966 000; www.hoteldelapaixangkor.com.
  • Open: Lunch and dinner seven days.
  • Cost: About $US80 for two for three-course dinner; about $US55 for lunch. Sides are $US3; meals come with a large bread basket.
  • Drink: Perfectly palatable Sicilian house wine by the glass ($US5) or Asian-inspired martinis ($US6); mixed drinks, beer and full wine list also available.
  • Reason to return: To try Zukauskas's seven-course Khmer seasonal degustation dinner menu ($US28).

Friday, November 23, 2007

CNMI firm affiliate to build big resort near Angkor Wat

Friday, November 23, 2007
Saipan Tribune (Saipan)

An affiliate of a CNMI company will build a major resort-entertainment venue and water park near the world-famous Angkor Wat in Cambodia.

Creative Entertainment, an affiliate of Bridge Capital LLC, announced it has obtained a lease of 35 hectares of land the necessary permits and licenses to operate a new attraction to be called the “Kingdom of Dreams.”

The development will be located in the town of Siem Reap, Cambodia.

John Paul Calvo, manager of the project, said the Kingdom of Dreams Entertainment Complex would be built in two phases. The first phase will include an outdoor water park that spans two hectares and is themed to complement the ancient city of Angkor.

“Instead of the traditional Angkor moat, our water park is surrounded by an interactive raft and tube ride that includes a series of rapids, lazy river sections, water blasters, and landings,” Calvo said.

He added that the complex will have a large slot machine game room with an unlimited number of slot machines allowed, a grand 1,500 seat buffet restaurant serving Asian an international cuisine, and a festival village with carnival games, handicrafts, and shopping.

Also part of the initial phase is the construction of a state-of-the-art IMAX theater that will feature an IMAX film to be produced by Creative Entertainment.

The second phase will include a 400-room hotel and roller-coaster amusement park.

Creative Entertainment is affiliated with Bridge Capital, LLC, a financial services company based in the Northern Marianas.

Bridge Capital specializes in real estate acquisition, development, financing, and corporate lending. Although the firm primarily provides bridge financing, sometimes called hard money loans, Bridge Capital also offers financial advisory services to assist clients in corporate restructuring, project finance, and capital planning.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Camexican or Mexibodian fusion cuisine?

Thursday, May 3, 2007
Culture clash isn't on menu

By Aaron Beck
COLUMBUS DISPATCH
(Ohio, USA)

Almost 10,000 miles separate Mexico and Cambodia, but a West Side restaurant unites the countries in one colorful and cozy room.

At Lindo Mexico and Cambodia, where full-size flags of the nations battle for attention on opposite walls, enchiladas share the menu with curried eggplant.

Two televisions show muted Mexican soap operas and soccer games, while smooth jazz provides a soundtrack for diners seated at aqua booths (seven), barstools (four) or glass tables covered in white tablecloths (four).

An always-smiling Sypha Ham greets customers: "How are you, dear? Sit, sit."

At the table, the mood turns Mexican when Ham produces a red plastic bowl of tortilla chips and three salsas: hot, hotter, hottest.

From there, free will reigns: Will you go to Cambodia or Mexico for your breakfast, lunch or dinner?

Can’t decide? There’s always Cam-Mex.

Lindo boasts more than 80 Cambodian and Mexican entrees, along with appetizers, soups and drinks. Diners uncomfortable with the vast array might try closing their eyes and pointing at the menu.

Such a tactic assumes, of course, that one’s mind is open to, say, samlor chnaang pleung: pork-and-seafood soup with mushrooms, pork skin and fish ball (and optional pork liver and intestines).

My supper party recently concocted this: an entire deepfried red snapper covered with the "chef’s special sweet-and-sour chili sauce"; chicken enchiladas; a Big Gulp portion of shrimp cocktail; fried fish cakes; rice-paper rolls with cooked pork; a skinless catfish; and, of course, an order of guacamole.

When Cambodian refugees Ely and Sypha Ham and Mexican emigrant Demetrio Hernandez opened Lindo (or "pretty") in 2002, they created the menu with their respective homespun recipes.

Chef Hernandez has since returned to his homeland, and the Hams’ 27-year-old son, Eliya, leads the cooking brigade.

Mexican standards — enchiladas, tacos, burritos — sell best on the Mexican side of the menu, Eliya said, and ginger-and-green-onion stir-fries and pan-fried noodle dishes top the Cambodian side.

Before long, he said, Lindo Mexico and Cambodia might have to put another country in the restaurant name.

"This summer, we’re adding pizza fries and chicken baskets to the menu."

abeck@dispatch.com