Lina Goldberg
foodandwine@scmp.com
I'm careering around the dusty roads of Siem Reap in
the back of a tuk-tuk. At the wheel is Joannes Riviere, the chef from Cuisine
Wat Damnak. As we slow down to make a turn, I notice a group of Cambodians
standing around a street-side food stall, watching us and giggling.
It's not clear whether they're laughing because
they've never seen a foreigner - or as Khmers call us, barang - at the wheel of
a tuk-tuk, or because they know that Riviere is a famous chef who probably
shouldn't be driving one at all.
The Frenchman, who moved to Cambodia in 2003 and who
speaks almost fluent Khmer, is credited with being one of the few chefs in the
country who is cooking "real" Cambodian food.
Joannes Riviere |
While his restaurant is popular with foreigners, more
and more of his customers are Khmer. Riviere's partner, and the restaurant's
co-owner, Carole Salmon says: "After eating his food Cambodians are
sometimes surprised that the chef is French. They are sure he must be
Cambodian."
Cambodian cuisine, Riviere says, is all about the
ingredients. "It's a complete mistake to reduce Cambodian food to a bunch
of recipes," he tells me, explaining that many dishes traditionally rely
on ingredients that are fresh and locally grown. "Cambodian food is all
based on produce."
After travelling around Asia he became convinced that
one thing that sets Cambodia apart from its more developed neighbours is the
country's ingredients, from fish and shellfish from Tonle Sap and the Mekong,
to wild game and herbs that are rarely seen outside Southeast Asia.
Although much of what's consumed in the country is
imported, there is also an incredible variety of local and wild-grown foods. It
is these that Riviere obsesses over.
He shows me his collection of books related to
Cambodian cooking; his two favourites aren't cookbooks, but a field guide
released by the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation, Fishes of
the Cambodian Mekong, and The Dictionary of Plants Used in Cambodia, a 915-page
tome self-published by a Cambodian botanist.
Cuisine Wat Damnak is one of the best restaurants in
Cambodia, and its mission is to showcase Cambodian ingredients. Riviere
believes that food, like wine, is defined by terroir - the place it's grown,
raised and gathered.
So the menu, which consists of a four-course meal for
US$19 and a five-course meal for US$26, changes every two weeks because it's
all locally sourced. Everything that goes into Riviere's food is seasonal, of
course, and even when a product might be seasonally available, it is often in
short supply. For example, Riviere's source for Cambodian quail can only
provide enough to supply the restaurant for a few weeks at a time.
Most good restaurants are based primarily on
ingredients, Riviere says, not techniques or recipes. "That's how
Cambodian restaurants for Cambodians work," he points out. "You'll
never find a Thai chicken breast in a Cambodian restaurant."
You'll never find one at Cuisine Wat Damnak, either.
Riviere's insistence on using only locally grown produce means that his recipes
don't include onions, carrots, cabbage, potatoes or coriander. He makes an
exception for shallots out of season, and for a few things he uses in desserts.
But by and large, everything on his menu is from
Cambodia. This results in a characteristically Cambodian taste that makes his
Khmer guests nostalgic for the food they grew up with. "It reminds them of
their childhood, even if they've never eaten it before," Riviere says.
"They feel like this is something they could have eaten in the past."
Although his dishes are distinctly Cambodian, they are
also his own. Riviere combines traditional Cambodian ingredients in a way that
Cambodian chefs would not. He says his status as an outsider has given him the
freedom to combine ingredients in unusual ways, and be experimental.
Sometimes he uses substitutes, as with his delicious
marinated calamari salad. Made with a traditional plea base, a lime dressing
that is usually used to marinate fish or beef ceviche-style, Riviere's dish features
squid instead, but also prawns and coconut tree hearts, a rare ingredient.
"No one grows it for sale," he says. "It only shows up at a
market when someone cuts down their tree to build a new driveway."
A recent menu item, "rice paddy crab yellow curry
with Mekong langoustine and tamarind shoot", is based on a rustic Khmer
dish, samla prahal khua k'dam, made from small freshwater crabs from the rice
fields. The traditional preparation uses green tamarind shoots in the curry,
which look unappealing.
Riviere's version, as beautiful as it is tasty, piles
the shoots on top of the langoustine and kabocha squash, so that they cook
immediately when stirred into the steaming curry. Says Riviere, "When
Cambodians see it prepared this way, they ask 'Why didn't I think of
this?'"
Riviere is sometimes described as someone who is
"rediscovering" Cambodian cuisine. He scoffs mightily at this idea:
"Cambodian food is everywhere," he says.
Cuisine Wat Damnak is between Psa Dey Hoy market and
Angkor High School, Wat Damnak Village, Siem Reap, Cambodia, tel: +855 (0) 6396
5491. cuisinewatdamnak.com
No comments:
Post a Comment