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.

Congee For The Soul

Romas Foord for the Observer

Romas Foord for the Observer

Click here for my recipe: Seabass Congee with Kale, Dill & Ginger from The Observer Food Monthly

As featured in The Huffington Post

Want chicken soup for the soul? Give congee to your soul! 

Congee is all about well-being and vitality. When eaten, it really feels like it heals all that is bad in the world. It is comfort food like being in bed on a miserable day with a warm, soft cosy blanket and your favourite TV show. Its like something you get from your grandmother or your mother.

Anyone at any level in the kitchen can achieve a congee. Everyone should learn about congee, cook it, enjoy it as often as possible and tell one and all how great it is.

We always make too much rice, don’t waste it! Add a small bowl of left over rice, perhaps scraps from a roast, forage a fridge and use up any herbs and vegetables going to about 6 cups of chicken stock and you’ve got one quick, healthy and delicious meal under 15 mins.

What is congee?
Light, delicate, easy to digest and soothing, congee is a rice based soup, similar to porridge or risotto. It is a favourite among many Asian countries ranging from Japan (okayu) to China (jook), Vietnam (cháo) to Myanmar (hsan byok), India (kanji) to Indonesia (bubur). Every country, region or person will make congee according to how they like it. There are no rules, it is hard to go wrong and you decide how simple or extravagant you want to go.

How to make congee
Simmer cooked rice in water or seasoned broth until the rice grains have expanded to your liking. It can be consumed thick or watery. Its up to you! To make a utterly delicious congee, it is important to use a good quality stock- using free range meat and bones from poultry, pork or good quality fresh fish and seafood. A good broth is the secret to an excellent congee.

2015-02-23-carouselcongee.jpg
Chicken congee with sprout top, pork floss, fried shallots, ginger & dill – Photography by Uyen Luu

Pimp it up
Season with a little bit of rock sugar, premium fish sauce or soy sauce and depending on how you’re feeling, garnish with an abundance of fresh herbs and a pinch of black or white pepper. Add a little minced pork or chicken, slices of cold cut ham, pork floss, caramelised shallots, fish cakes,eggs, green leaves, root vegetables or pickles. The congee is your blank canvas, your oyster.

Add texture
Tally up favourite ingredients like crunchy pickles, fried onions, crispy fried ham or wontons. I love mine with fish fingers too.

When is congee eaten?
An exquisite congee, rich with fresh and vibrant flavours is great for breakfast or a late night supper. But when you’re feeling under the weather, a plain and simple congee is the thing most South East Asians will whip up without a doubt because its much better to endure something warm, gentle and merciful on the stomach.

The body needs to be recovering, not digesting. Congee helps with all the fortifying goodness of chicken, fish or vegetable stock. Adding finely chopped ginger helps cleanse and aids digestion. Gifting someone a bowl of congee is one of the best things you can do to help someone get better. In many countries, hospitals will serve patients congee, like your mother would.

Great baby food
After breastfeeding, babies are brought up on congee because of its soft, oozy texture. It is a platform to slowly introduce flavours, meat and vegetables into their diet before they can eat solid foods. Adding bone broth and mashed vegetables provides babies with all the nutrients like calcium for strong growth.

From rags to riches
Congee is considered a poor man’s meal (and never eaten in times of celebration like at the start of lunar new year because it symbolises poverty and hardship). Those who can not afford to buy a lot of rice have to make do with only a little – expands one portion of rice to serve at least four. Any additions to the congee, like ground pork configures to a small modest amount. It is a frugal and un-wasteful way of eating without much sacrifice on the palate.

However, congee is such a loved peasant dish because of its many health benefits as well as its flavoursome qualities, congee can also be be luxurious, for example, duck congee or lobster and scallop congee which are favourites at a Vietnamese table with invited guests.

2015-02-23-Duckcongee008.jpg
Photography by Clare Winfield
Duck Congee recipe from My Vietnamese Kitchen here

Congee is great for you. Taste the healthiness. This is what eating well is all about.

You can find congee recipes and many more in My Vietnamese Kitchen by Uyen Luu, published by Ryland Peters & Small

Follow Uyen Luu on Instagram @loveleluu

Riding The Carousel

Uyen Luu10 Carousel JamesOJenkinsI have the chef bug. I loved my week at Carousel at the beginning of 2015. Carousel is a restaurant which has a continuous change of the best chefs from all over the world taking residence for a couple of weeks at a time in London’s West End, Marylebone.

When she planted the idea and suggested I do a short stint there, Melissa Hemsley had to endure my backwards and forward eagerness and reluctance. I am not a chef, I kept saying, I don’t know if I can do it! Being a chef is so different from being a home cook! Plus I was in acute distress at the idea of people coming to eat my food and judge it. What if I just muck everything up? What if something happens and everything I have built will fall apart?

Nights of fear and apprehension plagued my sleep.

Feel the fear! Said Melissa. And do it! Do it anyway!

Ok, I said, biting the bullet. I’ll do it.

Uyen Luu12 Carousel JamesOJenkins

Uyen Luu9 Carousel JamesOJenkins

Being a chef, (only for a week) was one of the most tiring times of my life, even though I had a couple of chefs helping and a KP and my assistant Jenny Brown (and thanks to Rosie Birkett for 2 nights help too). It was exhausting and laborious. It is work for strong, robust people with stamina and strength of youth and vigour.

At home, I would make things in small batches, at Carousel, I learnt how to make army batches in massive pots and pans that weighed ten fold of densities I am used to. I watched Rebecca crack 50 eggs, she doesn’t mess around, she makes things in mammoth sizes as well as multitask the constantly ignited flaming stove.

Carousel LondonRead More

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.

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