About

About

Welcome to my website. I am the author of ‘Vietnamese – Simple Vietnamese Food To Cook At Home’. I am a photographer and film maker. You can book into my supper club, Vietnamese cooking classes, buy my book, check out my photography and lots more here.

Please follow me on instagram @loveleluu – Thank you so much for visiting x

Food Styling & Photograhy

My Photography Work

Supper Club

Supper Club

The supper club is held in my home in London Fields, Hackney. It is like a dinner party in the tradition of a Vietnamese feast with homemade Vietnamese food.

Classes

Classes

Vietnamese food is about the balance of flavours, of sweet, salty and sour – there is no measuring device that can ever match your own taste buds.

Subscribe to Blog

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Elder Flower

Elderflower May on trayFor a brief season, between May and June, London is saturated ripe with elderflower. Heads of creamy and white little flowers blossom from Elder trees on the road side, hedgerows, bushes, parks, woodlands and in someone’s front or back garden. Who knew they grew in abundance next to us and not just romantically somewhere in the deep countryside. Anyone can pick elderflower and make cordial, good to drink all summer long as well as pairing it with other delicious ingredients in sorbets, ice-cream, cakes, biscuits, cocktails, smoothies and so on…elderflower champagne!Elderflower May 11 2014=0023I have never foraged anything before, the thought reminded me of being a grumpy and ridiculously embarrassed teenager by my jubilant mother and her ecstatic friends. Instead of building sand castles with their kids they were chirpy and feeling happy-go lucky with picking cockles and the occasional crab on the the beach while other “white” kids looked on screamish-ly, pointing at those “Chinese” people “eating snails” on an open barbecue .

But now that I have passed the age my mother used to be when I was that intolerant crabby girl I understand all of the little joys she had and still embraces. Like the delight of eating something you’ve personally grown or picked. The gratification of watching something blossom and nurturing it to harvest.

Have I started to leave those days of glistening indulgence at party houses and champagne events to the side of inclination? Am I leaning towards plants, gardening, foraging and bagging long walks in the woods? I’m googling about the differences between cow parsley and hemlock, rock samphire and marsh samphire and I feel so excited and enthusiastic to learn about the elder trees whose been standing around watching us grow whilst we have been ignorant to all of its blessings.

It is the whiffs of pungent, creamy yet citrusy jasmine combined with floral grassy elderflower mixed in with the powdery perfume of lavender from trees and bushes, saying, hi, how are you? And thats when we love those summer time nightfalls, the ones where we have felt so good, happy and alive after an evening with fine friends, wine and song.

Elderflower May 11 2014=0036

One of the happiest times of my life is discovering and picking elderflower with James. We spent two days looking at the start of the season when they were only just beginning to show. We were so pleased when we came across a tree filled head to shoulder with creamy buds but it was in front of someone’s house. James went in for some that he could reach anyway but out came an elderly gentleman, as he pulled one off the old tree. Thats elderflower you know, he said. James tried to act cool hoping he wouldn’t get told off for trespassing but the handsome old gentleman carried on saying, this used to be a dairy and they grew an elder tree here because the flowers would keep the milk from curdling. James and I were fascinated! My wife still makes the cordial every summer, its great for puddings! Your wife is behind you, said a beautiful, gracious and elegant lady. They chuckled and he put his arms around her as if there was not a day he could remember that he didn’t love her from top to bottom.

There are many myths and tales about the elder tree, how the blossom and berries are life curing, giving and protecting against bad spirits.

10306634_628989357170351_3131316160168161045_n 10330487_628944110508209_8692310247563661320_n 10176046_628678493868104_8426510809420548917_n 10001550_628198493916104_8696678795001490618_n

Here, my elderflower cordial recipe. I use less sugar than other recipes I have come across.

TIPS: 

Elderflower grow on bushes or trees not from the ground, don’t confuse them with cow parsley or similar blossoms.

Culivate elderflower from non polluted areas.

Pick blossoms that still have a little few buds on, they are the fresh ones.

Leaves ones that are brown and fully blossomed, they are spent.

There are white ones and cream ones, the creamy ones smell and taste better.

Some people think elderflowers smell of cat pee, but I find that some of them do smell pee-ey and most smell beautiful. Leave any funny smelling ones.

Leave some for the birds and insects and for elderberries in the autumn.

Best to make cordial from the blossoms as soon as you’ve picked them.

 

Ingredients

300g elderflower or a carrier bag’s worth, picked at the neck of the stem

3 litres of boiling water from the kettle

2 or 3 lemons/ limes

1 kg of muscavado sugar or caster sugar or rock sugar (you may wish to add more)

Method

Tap on a surface to rid insects from elderflower blossom. I don’t wash them because the goodness is in the pollen.

Find a container with a lid or something to cover. Place sliced lemons and/or lime and sugar.

Bring water to the boil and pour over. (you may need to fill 2 kettles) Make sure the sugar dissolves by mixing it around a little.

Add elderflower heads, submerge in the hot water and cover for 24 hours.

You may wish to add citric acid and/ or campden tablets (what they put in wine to let it keep longer) to preserve the cordial for longer.

After a day, strain off the flowers and citruses and fill sterilised bottles with the cordial. Keep refrigerated or frozen.

Delicious with sparkling water, in sorbets, smoothies etc. Elderflower May 11 2014=0080

Health benefits of elderflower (stuff I read online)

-high in Vitamin A, B & C – A combination of these vitamins and phytochemicals, like flavonoids and quercetin, give elderflower its anti-inflammatory, anticancer and antiviral properties. The herb is also an effective diuretic, laxative, and insect-repellent.

-strengthens the immune system

-clears lymph nodes, swollen sinuses, bronchitis

-high in antioxidants, protecting from radical damage to the skin and body

-treats against asthma, colds, flu and allergies like hayfever

-stops bleeding.

Elderflower May 11 2014=0046

If you’ve over picked, (which I have), you can bag it up and put the flowers in the freezer or dry them out on a tray for tea in the future.

I can’t wait to pick the berries for wine.

Congee with Pork Floss, Kale, Ginger & Dill

Processed with VSCOcam with a6 preset

Quick, easy, healthy and utterly delicious. This fast and soothing recipe is great for breakfast, lunch or dinner. Kale can be substituted with any greens such as cabbage and likewise with the herbs. I do love this combination, when dill is cooked, it is transformed completely and becomes totally addictive. Kale and dill have major health benefits: its full of anti-oxidants, rich in vitamins A, C, K and minerals such as calcium and iron. Ginger boasts many health benefits such as absorption of vitamins and minerals and aids digestion.

It can be vegetarian too without the pork floss. You can substitute fish sauce for salt or soy sauce.

Prep & cook time: 20 mins
serves 4

Ingredients

1 litre water
1 1/2 chicken stock cubes
60g kale, sliced into 1cm ribbons
10g dill, chopped, 5mm in one direction
2 tbsp fish sauce
1 inch of ginger peeled, finely chopped
2 rice bowls of cooked rice
generous pinch of black pepper
40g Vietnamese pork floss (can subsitute for canned tuna, minced pork, chopped chicken, fish flakes)

 

Method

Bring the water to the boil, crumble in the stock cubes, and stir until dissolved.

Add the cooked rice and  ginger, cover with a lid and bring back to a gentle boil.

After 10 minutes add the kale, dill and fish sauce to the saucepan and bring back to a gentle boil.

Before serving add pepper to taste, then stir through half of the pork floss.

Divide between the bowls, sprinkling the remaining pork floss in the middle of each dish.

Indoor Foraging

1544556_623181484417805_2761749053559909205_n

You can be really creative and use up store cupboard and fridge ingredients. Admittedly, I’ve always got a cupboard full of pasta and noodles. There’s always some carrot and peas taking residence in the fridge/ freezer. Sometimes, I would have picked up some bacon at the Farmers Market and its laying dormant on the top shelf or there’s a poached chicken (for chicken stock) or minced pork or sausages  and so on. Then I’ve got some herbs growing on the window sill/ garden so in half an hour or so, something delicious, vibrant and comforting as a pasta soup can be pulled together for a quick lunch or dinner. Even when you’re feeling under the weather or wish to make this for someone who is, they’d be delighted.

Any kind of pasta can be used, just don’t over cook it. Or you can use packets of udon, ramen, mung bean noodles. Anything you fancy.

Any kind of herbs can be used too or spring onions. You can jazz it up as much or as little as you fancy – as long as you have a good quality chicken stock or use chicken stock cubes that you favour. Everything can be poached within the one pot.

With this recipe, I have used a griddle pan to charr the onion for extra depth and flavour and a saucepan to fry off the shallots but you don’t have to. You can purchase pre made fried shallots or not use them at all. Fried shallots adds wonders to your stock so you can make a big batch and save in the fridge for garnishing.

You can read more about my ideas on poaching here

Pasta Soup with Bacon, Peas and Carrots
serves 4

1.5 litre chicken stock
25g ginger finely chopped
1 onion, peeled, halved, charred
200g (4) carrot peeled and sliced into circles
250g peas (fresh or frozen)
3 bacon rashers sliced into 5mm strips
200g pipe regate pasta (or any pasta shape), cooked to packet instructions
30g shallots roughly chopped, deep fry in about 3 tbsp oil
6g rock sugar
1 tsp sesame oil
4 tbsp fish sauce
15g hot mint (can be substituted for parsley, mint, coriander or whatever you have), cut into 5mm strands with scissors
Generous pinches of white and black pepper
1 lime, quartered
1 birdseye chilli finely sliced

Method

Pour the broth into a large sauce pan, add ginger, cover with a lid and bring to a gentle boil.

Bring a dry griddle pan to a high heat while peeling and cutting the onion in half with the ends cut off so it can stand, then char until slightly burnt.

Add the charred onion, rock sugar, sesame oil, fish sauce and carrot to the broth. Bring to a gentle boil.

Cook the pasta according to packet instructions in a seperate pan.

Fry the shallots until crispy in the oil, remove from the pan and dry on a piece of kitchen towel.

When the broth is gently boiling, add the bacon and peas and continue to cover with the lid. Once it has reached a boil it is done.

Drain the pasta and divide between the bowls.

Add a generous pinch of both black and white pepper to the broth and to each bowl of noodles.

Pour the hot broth over the pasta.

Using a pair of scissors cut the herbs into thin strands over each bowl of pasta (approximately 1 tbsp of chopped herb per bowl) and a teaspoon of the fried shallots.

Serve immediately with a squeeze of fresh lime and slices of chillies.

 

With thanks to Jenny Brown at www.bake-online.co.uk for ghost writing the recipe while I am cooking

How To Poach Well

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetLast year, I filmed with Raymond Blanc for his BBC TV series, How To Cook Well (with thanks Rocket & Squash, who was one of the producers of the show). I demonstrated to Chef my way of making pho and how its entire process is all about “poaching” on an episode about, poaching. You can read a little about it hereIMG_9338

It didn’t occur to me before that, that poaching is what I do on a regular basis because when we think of poaching food, we think of something that is blandly boiled in hot water. The result, something overcooked, watery and unappetising.

However in countries like Vietnam, poaching is a way of life. Its an alchemy; something to master. Poaching is an easy art form that sings in the delicious and healthy cuisine we so enjoy. To poach is to create broth, noodle soups, to cook meat and fish to perfection; blanch vegetables, maintaing the flavour & texture of vegetables. To poach is to combine flavours, from meat and fish to intricate complexion of herbs and vegetables. It is about pulling the characters of ingredients together to create and retain wonderful, sensual and textual taste to your palate as while being healthy and delicious. Poaching with different ingredients flavours the meat/ fish / vegetables and in return, they flavour the broth.

Poaching can either be a fast or a slow process depending on what it is being made but it is never a sacrifice on flavour. Everything can be made within one pot, creating two or three meals from that pot. Breakfast, lunch and dinner! For example, a poached chicken can make chicken salads, chicken noodle soups, steamed rice in chicken broth, congee, vegetable soups and so on.  Once  the basic principles are mastered, the choices in poaching are endless.Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetSpices for ph?

If we take ph? for instance, the broth is flavoured by the different cuts of meat and bones or vegetables, the spices blend and mellow out together over time on a gentle simmer. Even when the broth is laddled into a bowl for serving, poaching rare pieces of beef or poach an egg that is cracked in. The hot broth cooks the raw spring onions and thinly sliced onion and saw tooth & coriander herbs tenderly, still leaving bite. When doing a good poach, understanding the temperature of the the pot and the broth is key to what it does to the rest of the dishes’s ingredients.

Consommé
A lot of Vietnamese soups and noodle soups are based on making a good refined consommé with a wide variety of flavours. There may be many techniques to making a clear broth depending on the ingredients used. It can get complicated if you want to get all cheffy but if you just want a delicious simple dinner here are some of my tips:Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Beef (ph?)

If we look at a ph? broth, my technique to making a clear broth is simply cleaning the beef and beef bones in a pre-poach by blanching it in boiling water for 10 minutes and then rid all of the water it sat in; clean all the pieces under running water; rewash the pot and then bringing fresh water back to the boil. By this time, the cleaned meat is ready to be poached with its spices, charred onion and ginger. Once the broth comes to the boil, it must then only simmer for the rest of the time. I usually simmer my pho broth for about 4 hours, taking the meat out after 2 hours.DSC_0035

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Chicken

In the kitchen, so much can be done with chicken stock which boasts many healthy benefits as it boosts the immune system with the minerals it contains from the bones and carcass. Simply put a whole free range, corn fed chicken into a pot and pour boiling water from a kettle to submerge and cook on a low boil for about an hour with the lid on, removing any scum that surfaces after about 15 – 20 minutes.

The broth can be flavoured with many things such as ginger, vegetables, fish/ seafood etc. It can be as complicated or as simple as you wish but for sure, a good chicken broth carries anything and makes everything better than it would be without it.

You can also use the chicken broth to cook rice.

970992_608126805923273_628852373_n

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

Noodle Soups & Congee

Always having a plain chicken broth in the kitchen means you can pull together a noodle soup for breakfast, lunch or dinner at a moment’s notice. You can make congee from left over rice – so that nothing goes to waste and is especially good for your system when you are feeling poorly. It is also so delicious when you get your broth right. Just add finely chopped ginger, perhaps a fillet of fish to poach gently with the stock, season with fish sauce, a tiny rock of sugar, some herbs or spring onions. From the moment they are born, Vietnamese babies are on a congee diet until they can chew.Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetCongee with trout

Congee is a rice soup made from left over rice in stock simmered over time. A small bowl of rice should make congee enough for 2 – 4 people. Its really healthy and smoothing. You can use it as a base to eat with many things. I like my congee still with a little bite from the rice grains, silky and runny. It could also be made way in advance too.

Fish

Poaching fish doesn’t take very long, you can have your congee ready within 15 mins from start to finish. Depending on the size of the fish/ fillets you only need to poach for a couple of minutes, leaving the fish nice and tender. Or you can pan fry fillets and mix it all in with fresh herbs at the end.

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetMung bean noodles with Vietnamese ham and hot mint

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetChinese mustard leaves, tofu & ginger soup

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetWinter melon soup with ginger and coriander

Depth & Flavour
When you start poaching, the spices and ingredients used needs to marry and like with relationships, they need a bit of time to get to know each other in calm climates not a violent storm, so simmer over time and don’t boil! Keep the lid on. Only bring the broth to the boil just before you are ready to serve.

Fish sauce

Using a good fish sauce to season the broth is one of the most fundamental things as it aids the salty and umami flavours of your taste buds. Always use a premium quality fish sauce if you can afford it. You can also use seaweed and radishes like daikon/ mooli or kohl rabi.

Rock sugar

To aid the sweet flavours, add a piece of rock sugar, its not the same as regular sugar, its a milder sweet that makes a broth taste complete.

Stock cubes

Good quality stock cubes can turn something to another and I am not ashamed of using them if I am not in the mood to wait for hours or I just want something quick.

Bones

Fish and meat bones are obtainable from a fish monger or  butcher, most of the times for a cost of a smile. Fish heads are great for flavouring broth as are marrow bones and pigs trotters.IMG_5368Chicken & bamboo noodle soup

Salads

Chicken, seafood, fish and pork can be poached and used in a variety of salads and can be served with rice, in fresh rolls, with prawn crackers or on its own, leaving the broth for other thingsProcessed with VSCOcam with f2 preset

IMG_1676Poached prawns & pork belly for fresh salad rolls

Processed with VSCOcam with f2 presetUdon noodles with chicken & cabbage

Without meaning to be, Vietnamese food is healthy, fresh and light. Whether you’re on a frugal budget or not, poaching is the way forward, it uses chicken, beef, pork, fish and vegetables to capacity and its delicious!

You can follow me on instagram for daily adventures in eating: @loveleluu

THE OBSERVER FOOD MONTHLY MARCH 2014

10013938_606928092709811_845503694_n

UYEN LUU: ‘VIETNAMESE FOOD IS ABOUT EMOTIONAL WELLBEING’

THE AUTHOR OF MY VIETNAMESE KITCHEN ON HER EXTRAORDINARY JOURNEY FROM REFUGEE TO COOKBOOK AUTHOR

By  Sunday 16 March 2014
Uyen Luu photographed at home in Hackney, LondonUyen Luu photographed at home in Hackney, London. Hair and makeup by Neusa Neves at Terri Manduca. Photograph: Alex Lake for Observer Food Monthly

When Uyen Luu – cook, blogger and supper club founder – invites you for lunch, you go on an empty stomach. As we climb the stairs to her kitchen, the smell of herbs and bubbling broth grows stronger. “I wanted to give you an idea of what proper Vietnamese cooking is about.

Luu describes herself as a “typical cook and feeder” – and when she tells you about the importance of food in her family, you understand why. Her cookbook, My Vietnamese Kitchen, is part autobiography. Luu grew up in Hackney after arriving with her mother and younger brother from Saigon in 1983 as refugees from the Communist regime. “People were starving because of the trade embargo,” she says. Up to 1.5 million tried to escape but many, if caught, were sent to “re-education camps”.

She has no memory of the camps, but does remember her grandmother on her father’s side, who opened up her front room as a small restaurant serving an “extraordinary noodle soup” to provide for her family. After her father, one of the “boat people”, was rescued by the British, he sent for them. But he had fallen in love with another woman at sea, leaving Luu’s mother to provide for her children. “Hackney in the 80s was tough,” explains Luu. “My mother sewed blouses that ended up in C&A in an East End sweatshop for 10p per shirt. But she cooked wonderful food on a budget, shopping for the best deals at Ridley Road and Brick Lane markets.”

After studying film and fine art at Central St Martins, Luu started her own small fashion company, juggling designing clothes with running a shop in central London. In 2009, she was forced to close as it proved too stressful. “The overheads were too high and I’d got myself into debt,” she explains, while dropping freshly made vegetable spring rolls into hot oil.

She worked, briefly, as a fundraiser for the Jamie Oliver Foundation and Oliver’s website; Luu even found herself teaching Oliver how to make perfect summer rolls for his TV show. At the same time, she was cooking for friends. “They’d all turn up here and I’d cook. They all said I should try getting into the food industry.”

Luu never intended to turn food into a career. It’s hard to believe, as she expertly mixes delicate dipping sauces, that she couldn’t cook her native cuisine until six years ago. “In 2009 I was cooking a lot of Italian because my mum never allowed me in the kitchen [growing up].” Luu then convinced her mum to teach her and began hosting what was then the only Vietnamese supper club in London. “Once you know the principles: how to balance salty, sweet and sour, and adding heat to that, it’s quite easy to master,” she says. “It’ll always feel like I’m trying to achieve mum’s standard – that’s where the bar is set.”

The rising popularity of Vietnamese food in the UK is not lost on Luu – “although my bugbear is when it’s done incorrectly”. Vietnamese cooking is very precise, she explains, while chopping spring onions so fast that I have to look away. “When I notice corners have been cut – the wrong type of noodles or herbs with the wrong soup – it drives me mad.”

Luu teaches me how to make summer rolls. Hers are expertly filled and rolled within seconds, while mine look like they’ve been through a hot wash. She looks a little disappointed. “Try again! I want you to master it!”

As I give it a go, Luu explains how she believes food affects mood. Vietnamese cuisine, she says, “doesn’t bring you down, it’s light” – in Vietnamese culture, eating is about emotional wellbeing, too. She continues: “Cooking is very emotional for me, it’s tied up into my family’s story” – she thinks for a moment – “and it brings people together.”

“For The Love Of Cooking”

1796615_596731477062806_664362150_n

Hell yes! When I had the bright idea to start my own supper club, it was purely because I wanted to have other people’s homes. I would look into their kitchens and living rooms with green envy. There would be a garden at the front of the house with a pink magnolia tree blossoming over the door. I would see them clink glasses and sip champagne and smell the aroma of lingering garlic and inducing rosemary. I wished so much that it was my house and I were the host and they were my friends. I would think, I am no chef but I can cook. I would think, I am no writer but I can write; I am no photographer or stylist but I can compose and take a picture. So I just said, whats there to lose? Just do it. Fun was the agenda and making new friends while eating well was on top. That was 2009.germanbookfishcakes

Cod Cheeks Fish Cakes With Dill & Chicken Udon Noodle Soup/

Photography By Charlotte Schreiber Copyright 2014

The first set of guests were leaving at 1am as I was doing it with another person at the time and we somehow didn’t really get it together very well although we fast became a much talked about duo. I learnt so much in that time; so much about being a good host and a bad one at some points. I learnt so much about working with other people in the kitchen and the affects that such a change of lifestyle can affect myself and others around me. It was all new and fun and exciting. Things kept happening, out of the ordinary things like how people would help out via Twitter or new floods of opportunities like the legendary Jim Haynes  held an event in my living room. Or that we’d appear in Elle magazine, The Evening Standard in the same sentence as Heston Blumental or that Jamie Oliver was at my front door and we filmed in my kitchen. There were so many extraordinary things that kept happening and it was a complete high. One moment, I’d be on the highest point in heaven and the next, my volatile relationship with the person I started the supper club with got me crammed into the darkest, smallest, lowest point of a rock.

From sharing the most amazing laughters and conversations with some of my guests, there were times that I had to wipe away all my tears, shake my body and pulled a massive smile before I opened the door or deliver a dish to the table. At times, it was the most stressful and heartbreaking time of my life. I paid with my mental and physical health but what is it that my mum always says? What goes up must come down and it is how you balance your life, what you eat and drink, what you give and receive that your qi can be in harmony.

I wouldn’t change any of it and am only richer from it all and I had been doing my own supper club with the help from my wonderful mother since 2010 with much more of a balanced lifestyle. With regards to press and extraordinary things, I continued; I became a professional food stylist; I wrote a recipe book and my life is surrounded by the love of cooking. Every day, I am doing what I love and fulfilling my agenda of having fun and making friends. I most enjoy holding my cooking classes and guiding a group of people around the table in my kitchen about eating light and deliciously well with Vietnamese cuisine.b43bab3ee3d111e2bb1e22000a1fc4f4_71

In a personal honour to what I set out to do in 2009, I held a dinner party for my close friends and new friends I had made because of my work. I didn’t make an announcement or anything, but I told everyone to look into my phone so I can take a picture. That moment, I will never ever forget. I saw in every one of their eyes, a certain contentment, a happiness, a hope and an ever lasting youth, of this-is-the-moment, carpe diem… and I thanked all the stars above me, that I stumbled upon the best place I can be on this earth, in this time, at that moment.

Niewerth_LiebeZumKochen-442x566

On that day, German photographer Charlotte Schreiber & writer, Yvonne Niewerth captured the essence of my need and desire to hold dinner parties and kindly gave me a chapter in their wonderful book, Aus Liebe Zum Kochen which translates as, For The Love Of Cooking, published by Callwey.

The book gives insights to worldwide chefs, authors, critics, bloggers and restaurant owners’ passion for life and their deep attachment to eating. Its about their indulgence of good food and the enjoyment of being together.

You can find some of my recipes for this party there, but currently only in German. Buy here: http://www.callwey.de/buecher/aus-liebe-zum-kochen/

AusLiebezumKochen_Uyen5

germanbooksalad

Chicken Salad with Carrot, Cabbage & Hot Mint/

Photography By Charlotte Schreiber Copyright 2014

Perhaps its an instinctive need to belong to a family, a clan or a community but I love it when we all share stories, a plate of food, a funny joke, slurpings of noodle soup, a song, ice cream from the tub… I absolutely love what I am doing with food. I am incredibly lucky to have so many people help me a long the way and I have met friends for life. Even someone to love. Thank you to everyone whose come to my supper club and those making it such a pleasure to teach at my classes. & my generous loving family and friends.

germanbookcaramel

Creme Caramel & Vietnamese Yogurt/ Photography By Charlotte Schreiber Copyright 2014

Photography by Charlotte Schreiber Fotografie copyright 2014

Photography by Charlotte Schreiber Copyright 2014

 

There is a trailer for this book, you can see it here

https://vimeo.com/80136744

<iframe src=”//player.vimeo.com/video/80136744″ width=”1000″ height=”563″ frameborder=”0″ webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe> <p><a href=”http://vimeo.com/80136744″>Aus Liebe zum Kochen</a> from <a href=”http://vimeo.com/hellolotta”>Charlotte Schreiber</a> on <a href=”https://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a>.</p> <p>K&Uuml;CHENBESUCHE BEI LEIDENSCHAFTLICHEN FOODIES &ndash;<br /> Eine Reise von Yvonne Niewerth &amp; Charlotte Schreiber.<br /> <br /> Ein Film von Charlotte Schreiber (charlotteschreiber.com). Mit Musik von Eric and Magill. (ericandmagill.com)</p>