All posts by Marlena Spieler

Going to Gourmand Cookbook Awards in Macau!

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World Gourmand Cookbook Awards are in Macau this year, and my book A Taste of Naples is nominated for a Best in the World Award. As part of the festivities I am doing a cooking demonstration and have been wracking my brain trying to think of something to make where I could find the ingredients, do it i the time allotted, everyone could have a taste and because it is on the fourth of July, it would be very American.
If you haven’t gotten your copy yet click on the book to order yours today!


But what would it be? What what what what what. Finally it hit me: GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICHES. very American, even though its eaten in various guises all over much of the world.

And also: I wrote a book about it! Chronicle Books, 2012!

click on the foto to order from amazon

I will bring bread! Many types of bread! Many cheeses, lots of condiments and fresh things too, and we’ll layer and brown and fry and melt, and I’ll cut everything up and we can nibble and nosh to our hearts content!

We won’t leave until everything is melted!

July 4, Macau, Gourmand Cookbook Awards, Macau Bookfair

taste naples book

Taste Naples- New book is released

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Am so pleased to share my lastest book with you, Taste Naples.( my amazon account, and yes, i get paid a small amount for each sale.).  I have long been in love with this vibrant, boistrous Mediterranean ode to life.

It is many contradictions: cultured, noble, and opulent; also poverty stricken tenements.  Whether its wide boulevards and narrow alleys, the streets are filled with the chatter of life and interaction; the air is filled with the smell of delicious things cooking.

And the people are so lively you might not even recognize them as the same species but once their entusiasm rubs off onto you, you will never be the same.Plus there are 26 traditional recipes to get you started tasting Naples

So take a bite: a big fat joyful bite. And maybe just maybe we will hear opera in the street, and smell tomatoes cooking on a pizza, as we scamper through the pages. Gotta go, I smell the garlic and tomatoes of a marinara pizza, on via Toledo, and I can wait no longer.

(remember: this is the amazon link:  Taste Naples).

taste naples book cover

Green Curry-Corn Fritter/Pancakes

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We’re entering a phase of recipes without photos here on my blog; the reason is that my tablet–which i use to snap the pictures–stopped communicating with my laptop which i used for posting, so you see my dilemma. I’m sure someone amongst my brilliant friends will rescue me from the situation. But meanwhile I just want to share the dishes that I make along the way.

Such as tonights green curry-corn fritter/pancakes.

Inspired by the Indonesian corn pancakes of a famous Indonesian food writer who no longer speaks to me for some crazy whacked out reason that i won’t even go into, let me just say: she may have ended her friendship with me, but she left me with the ability to make fabulous corn fritter/pancakes. And to love them to bits.

Mine are different from my ex-friends, though they started with her basics: chile, coriander leaves, aromatics (did she use ginger? garlic? onion? I no longer remember.). Her corn fritter/cakes reminded me of the happiness I had as a child tasting good old fashioned corn fritters, dipped in maple syrup. Perhaps I had them once; i remember them to this day.

My corn fritter/pancakes start when I see a couple of nice big fat ears of corn; if the ears are small and delicate, double the amount. I roll my way through my choice of herb, every so often discovering a new one that I like better than the old one. And I skip around the world of Asian flavourings because when I rediscovered corn fritter/pancakes I discovered that I love them the best with the punchy salty-umami-spiciness of Asian flavours. (In honesty, I played around with Mexican and Latin American flavourings too, and always came back to Asian ones.Though one never knows: my next batch? could easy be heading south of the border.

Tonight, seeing as how I had about 3 tablespoons of a mild though flavourful green chile paste on hand, that is what I used. And when I looked around for a fresh herb, I spied a big bunch of dill. Here is the result.

Green Curry Corn Fritter/Pancakes
Makes enough for 2 as a first course or greedy snack, to four if appetites are less…..exhuberant
All amounts of somewhat aproximate: the finished mixture should be like a thick batter, this side of dough. Almost like ricotta cheese with corn kernals in it.
2 big corn on the cobs; 3-4 small to medium ones
3 tablespoons mild but flavourful green curry (storebought)
About a teaspoon freshly grated ginger (optional)
1 egg
About 3 tablespoons fine polenta/cornmeal
1-2 green/spring onions, thinly sliced
About 6 tablespoons self-rising flour
Large pinch salt
About 1 teaspoon sugar, or more to taste
About 3 tablespoons coarsely chopped fresh dill
Enough water–a few tablespoons–to make a thick batter
Splash hot pepper seasoning depending on the heat of the green curry paste
Olive oil for frying

Cut the kernals off the corn cobs using a knife; scrape as much of the milky substance from the cob as you can. Place in a bowl

Add the curry paste, the ginger if using, the egg, then stir in the polenta, green onion, and self rising flour. When its pretty much together add the salt, sugar, dill, and enough water to make a thick batter.

Heat a tiny amount of olive oil in a nonstick or stick resistance pan; when it smokes, make fritter/pancakes by dropping several tablespoons of the mixture into the pan. Lightly flatted with the back of a spoon or spatula but do not flatten thinly: you want them to be reasonably thick: perhaps 3/4 inch. If they are too fat you can lightly pat them flatter when you turn them over.

Over a medium high heat cook on one side until golden brown, then flip over and cook the second side. Remove to a shallow pan or baking sheet.

Eat right away or reheat in medium hot over for five to ten minutes.

They don’t really need anything to dip them into, though i did think that there must be the perfect thing for the job. Truthfully, they are good just as is.

They make a great appetizer or first course to any spicy, Asian-taste meal. We followed ours with a Japanese chicken stew, sukiyaki-style, and rice rolled into balls, in shiso leaves.

On the Beach across the way from North Korea

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After Michelle Brachet presented a tasting session on Cognac–her book and column in a Chinese wine publication (in other words, her expertise) being the reason she was at the Gourmand Awards)–anyhow, after our tasting there was still a bit of Cognac left in the bottle. And since it was Frapin: oh so beautiful, fragrant and evocative–and since we had been walking distance of the sea for several days already but hadn’t spent any time on the beach, Michelle decided that in the sand, next to the sea, was exactly where we should finish up the Cognac.

She coralled a small posse of myself, the vibrantly hair-coloured Bruna from Brazil and James McIntosh from Northern Ireland who is also the pin-up cookbook western cooking guy of China.

The weather was warm and pleasant, sunny but not so fiercely hot that we would feel fried sitting on the sand.

Since Yantai Wine Bay Resort is on a slight hill, to get there we just had to follow a cobbled stone path headed downward, past various galleries and artisans

creating the traditional pottery of Shandong from local clay.

creating the traditional pottery of Shandong from local clay.

There were gardens with bridges over small lakes, one garden themed Ye Olde English, another with interesting sculptures, such as a much-larger than life bright orange squirrel that we all fell in love with.
Here is Michelle Brachet with the very very large bright orange squirrel (sculpture).

Here is Michelle Brachet with the very very large bright orange squirrel (sculpture).

a beautiful garden that we passed along the way

a beautiful garden that we passed along the way

Once we reached the sand we discovered a row of cabanas looking every so like a beach resort in the UK, selling all the things you might need for the beach: sunscreen, inflatibles, sunhats, as well as spicy noodles and bags of chewy dried fish treats. Then we found the bumper cars! Of course we wanted to ride them, but alas we were too tall–ie adult– so we could only watch the children bump and crash their cars, screaming with glee. But it was okay, we had our Cognac. Then James decided we needed ice cream: I mean what is a holiday at the beach without licking an ice cream on a stick, trying furiously to keep up with it’s melting as droplets run down your arm and you don’t want to miss a single delicious swipe of the tongue? Michelle and Bruna chose vanilla ice cream, covered in chocolate and stuffed on the inside with a jammy fruity mixture. I chose a chocolate fudgesical-looking ice lolly and despite James’ warning: i know i know it looks like chocolate but its probably some sort of sweetened bean flavour, it was, in fact: chocolate! wonderful chocolate! After last years ice cream on the streets of Beijing I had decided never again. But here we were on the beach in Yantai, and really: i was eating the bed fudgsical ever!

another beautiful garden along the way down the hill.......

another beautiful garden along the way down the hill…….

We plopped ourselves down in the damp sand on the edge of the shore and stretched our feet into the little waves as we sipped our Frapin and licked our ice creams. The air smelled of the sea, the soft sand was like California or the Mediterranean, the misty half sunshine half fogginess reminded me of Lima, Peru, the clear water was like Mexico or Malaysia. Yantai beach is very long, miles long, and very beautiful; along the way are promenades and a few hotels–more are being built. Right now the locals seemed to be at that marvel-at-the-miracle stage; they wandered along the promenade, strolled the sands, ate the ice cream and gazed out to the sea. Just as we were doing.

To the right of us was a pier that jutted into the water in what at first seemed a serendipitous way but on closer inspection was shaped like a huge musical clef note, finished only a few months earlier in honor of the developer’s son’s wedding. And because we were happy, and possibly also because of the Cognac, we got philosophical–possibly a result of the Cognac–thinking about how the beaches, the sea, how they are all connected, all people of the world touching the sea, on a beach somewhere…..

But gazing out to sea, before i could wax too lyrical about how we are all one, no matter where we might find ourselves, I saw a shadow of mountains on the horizon, just the other side of the channel. “Whats that James?” I asked. “That?” James answered; “is North Korea”.

an eyes-closed selfie;if you look closely, behind the pier you'll see a shadow of North Korea.

an eyes-closed selfie;if you look closely, behind the pier you’ll see a shadow of North Korea.