Burma Superstar: Addictive Recipes from the Crossroads of Southeast Asia [A Cookbook]
Burma Superstar: Addictive Recipes from the Crossroads of Southeast Asia [A Cookbook] book cover

Burma Superstar: Addictive Recipes from the Crossroads of Southeast Asia [A Cookbook]

Hardcover – March 28, 2017

Price
$21.96
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Ten Speed Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1607749509
Dimensions
8.26 x 1.01 x 10.28 inches
Weight
2.57 pounds

Description

“Finally! In this beautiful book, Desmond Tan and Kate Leahy bring one of my favoritexa0Bay Area restaurants, Burma Superstar, to the world. From the Tea Leaf Salad toxa0Chicken Coconut Curry, the book demystifies the ingredients and cooking techniquesxa0of Myanmar, opening up the restaurant’s incredible flavors for everyone to enjoy. Thisxa0is a book to read from cover to cover, and to cook from forever.” —Amanda Haas, author of The Anti-Inflammation Cookbook: The Delicious Way toxa0Reduce Inflammation and Stay Healthy "Informative recipes and concise historical background set an educational yet approachable tone, while the occasional misty mountain vistas or bustling Burmese city street scenes (captured by John Lee) provide a reason to slow down and consider Burmese culture as a whole. Already, I'm eyeing the classicxa0mohinga, a noodle soup thickened with toasted ground rice and mashed catfish, seasoned withxa0gingerxa0and lemongrass." —Alex Testere, Saveur "The rare restaurant edition you’ll actually want to cook from, starting with the tea-leaf salad." —"This Season's Best Cookbooks", Bon Appetit “Thexa0eponymous San Francisco restaurantxa0is making quality Burmese food even more accessible than before with this insightful, thorough cookbook. Take mohinga, for example, the breakfast noodle soup you've probably never heard of that's considered Burma's national dish. And in between coconut chicken curry and tea leaf salad, you can read all about Myanmar's struggle for democracy, as well as the people and ingredients that make up this rich culture.” —"Best New Cookbooks," Tasting Table "Is Burmese the new Thai food? Plenty of San Franciscans (disciples of the city’s beloved Burma Superstar restaurant) would say yes. The hot spot’s first cookbook illuminates the spicy, savory food of Myanmar, from chili lamb to pork and pumpkin stew to the popular tea leaf salad." —Rebecca Shapiro, PureWow "Burmese food is highly underrated—especially where fightingxa0inflammationxa0is concerned, thanks to thexa0generous use of spices likexa0turmericxa0and cardamom. In his book, Tan reveals that the meals include ingredients that are beautifully colored and textured, meaning that even salad can be exciting. " —Felicia Czochanski, Well + Good "Despite what some may consider unfamiliar ingredients and cooking techniques, “Burma Superstar” (the book) is incredibly accessible and, more importantly, fun. Fans of the restaurant will be happy to see a some of its most popular dishes, but the cookbook is more than just a rehashing of the menu. [...] There are short snippets on the history, political and otherwise, of the country, and photographs, all by San Francisco’sxa0John Lee, bring the food into context with the country." —Kate Williams, Berkeleyside DESMOND TAN was born in Burma and came to San Francisco when hewas 11 years old. He has grown Burma Superstar into four thriving, uniquelocations (with a fifth on the way). In 2014, he launched Mya Foods, the first BayArea company to import Burmese ingredients--most notably laphet, Burma'sfamous fermented tea leaves. KATE LEAHYxa0is a San Francisco-based cookbook author. She wrote A16 Food + Wine (Ten Speed Press, 2008), the IACP 2009 Cookbook of the Year, Cookie Love , an NPR Best Book of 2015, and Lavash , a book about Armenia due out in 2019.xa0A line cook turned food writer, she has written for Eating Well , CNN Parts Unknown , Food52 , Chicago Magazine , Epicurious , and Plate. For information on recipes and cookbook projects, visitxa0 kateleahycooks.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. What is Burmese Food? If you head down Pansodan Street in Yangon’s historic downtown district, the view of the century-old colonial architecture is often obscured by makeshift stalls serving samosas, hand-mixed noodle salads, and steaming bowls of mohinga , a fish noodle soup that is, for all intents and purposes, Myanmar’s national dish.This scene of street stalls is repeated all over the city. In the morning and late afternoon, tea shops fill with workers downing their first cup of tea brewed the color of burnt caramel and lightened with condensed and evaporated milks. For lunch at a popular restaurant like Feel, customers point at dishes set out on the counter and then sit down and wait as servers bring small plates to the table in rapid-fire fashion. To escape the afternoon heat, locals pop into shops serving sweetened yogurt drinks or a “heart cooler”—coconut milk served over agar jelly, tapioca pearls, and ice. Before dinner, people line up in front of vendors frying up the Burmese answer to tempura. Like the rest of the country, the city grows quiet at night, with the exception of 19th Street, which turns into an open-air market where you can pick and choose from stalls offering skewers of whole fish, squid, pork intestine, or mushrooms. Pitchers of Myanmar beer tide over groups of customers while the stalls grill selections.Eating in Yangon means sampling a range of culinary traditions, from regional ethnic foods to dishes adapted from neighboring countries, especially China and India. No matter which heritage hits the table, one thing is certain: it’s easy to find a dish—or several—that you can’t wait to eat again. GARLIC NOODLES Some form of this comfort dish is made in nearly every corner of Asia, and it has long been a popular item both in Myanmar and at Burma Superstar. While the noodles, which get their flavor from fried garlic and garlic-infused oil, are respectable on their own, some like to beef up the dish with shredded duck, barbecue pork, sautéed shrimp, or stir-fried mushrooms and broccoli. Anything goes. The trickiest part of making garlic noodles is ensuring the garlic doesn’t burn. In this recipe, the garlic is pulled off the heat and left to cool in the oil. If you want to safeguard the process a bit more, set up a heat-proof bowl with a mesh strainer. When the garlic reaches a deep golden color, pour the garlic through the strainer to stop the cooking. SERVES 4 1/4 cup canola oil 4 tablespoons minced garlic 3/4 cup sliced red onion or shallot, soaked in water and drained 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1/2 cup sriracha 1 tablespoon minced ginger 1/4 teaspoon sugar 1/4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons water 12 ounces fresh wide wonton noodles or dried Chinese wheat noodles 1 (5-inch) cucumber (or half an English cucumber), thinly sliced 3 green onions (white and green parts), thinly sliced In a small pot, heat the oil over medium heat. Add 3 tablespoons of the garlic, set the heat to low, and fry, swirling the pot frequently, until the garlic is nearly golden in color, no more than 3 minutes. (If the garlic starts to darken too quickly, pull the pot off the heat, swirl the oil, and let the garlic continue to fry off the heat for 30 seconds before returning it to the heat.) Because the garlic can burn quickly, watch the pot the whole time while the garlic fries. Immediately pour the oil into a heatproof bowl and let it cool. The garlic will continue to cook and turn golden as it sits. If the garlic is already golden brown before you take it off the heat and it looks like it might burn if left in the hot oil, all is not lost. Pour the oil through a fine-mesh strainer into a heatproof bowl to remove the garlic from the oil and stop it from cooking further. Once the oil has cooled a bit, return the garlic to the oil. Add the onions and soy sauce to garlic. In a small serving bowl, stir together the sriracha, the remaining 1 tablespoon of garlic, the ginger, sugar, salt, and water. Bring a pot of water to a boil. Add the noodles and cook, stirring often with chopsticks, until nearly soft all the way through, about 4 minutes or until tender but still slightly chewy. Drain in a colander and rinse briefly under cool running water. Give the colander a shake to remove excess water. Return the noodles to the pot. Pour in the garlic–soy sauce mixture and add the cucumbers. Give the noodles a good stir with a pair of tongs, then divide among bowls. Top with the green onions. Serve with sriracha sauce. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the beloved San Francisco restaurant, a mouthwatering collection of recipes, including Fiery Tofu, Garlic Noodles, the legendary Tea Leaf Salad, and many more. Never before have the vivid flavors of Burmese cooking been so achievable for home cooks.
  • Known for its bustling tables, the sizzle of onions and garlic in the wok, and a wait time so legendary that customers start to line up before the doors even open—Burma Superstar is a Bay Area institution, offering diners a taste of the addictively savory and spiced food of Myanmar. With influences from neighboring India and China, as well as Thailand and Laos, Burmese food is a unique blend of flavors, and
  • Burma Superstar
  • includes such stand-out dishes as the iconic Tea Leaf Salad, Chili Lamb, Pork and Pumpkin Stew, Platha (a buttery layered flatbread), Spicy Eggplant, and Mohinga, a fish noodle soup that is arguably Myanmar’s national dish.
  • Each of these nearly 90 recipes has been streamlined for home cooks of all experience levels, and without the need for special equipment or long lists of hard-to-find ingredients. Stunningly photographed, and peppered with essays about the country and its food, this inside look at the world of Burma Superstar presents a seductive glimpse of this jewel of Southeast Asia.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(208)
★★★★
25%
(87)
★★★
15%
(52)
★★
7%
(24)
-7%
(-25)

Most Helpful Reviews

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SO SO SO DISAPPOINTED

I’m not one to write reviews in general, but this one hit me hard. Living in San Francisco for over a decade, I ate regularly at Burma superstar. Like every week. If not multiple times per week. I CRAVE their samosa soup like nothing else. Sadly, i moved out of state a couple of years ago. I literally cannot find samosa soup anywhere. Not on the Internet and not in any restaurant. I was completely overjoyed when i found out that they made a cookbook with my beloved samosa soup it it. Do not be fooled by this tantalizing cookbook!! I’ve made this recipe to the letter numerous times, hoping that I had somehow messed up the previous times. I am a well practiced home chef in international cooking so I was pretty sure that I hadn’t done anything wrong. I was just praying that by some fluke that I had messed up. After 3 times, I am certain, without a doubt that this recipe is a fake. It is NOTHING like the recipe that they make in the restaurant. This soup recipe is FLAT, BLAND, completely VOID of that amazing rich flavor that I crave so much. I remember exactly what the soup tastes like in the restaurant. My mouth waters at the the memory of the puckering rich developed layers of flavor. This recipe doesn’t even remotely taste like it. I have zero interest in trying the other recipes with this one being so far from what it’s supposed to taste like. HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT. HUGE.
94 people found this helpful
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Disappointing

My family and I made 5 recipes from this cookbook for our New Year's Eve dinner. We are all pretty good in the kitchen and followed the recipes but the results were very disappointing. Three of the recipes -- pea shoots, spicy eggplant, and chili lamb -- were nothing like the dishes we had in the restaurant last week. The photos in the cookbook look exactly like the dishes in the restaurant but nothing like the dishes we made at home. It seemed like some of the recipes were incomplete or completely different from the pictures shown in the cookbook. I would not purchase this book if you are hoping to replicate the restaurant flavors in your home kitchen.
56 people found this helpful
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All in one COOK BOOK ! Best one I have ever owned !

By far this is the best Asian cookbook I ever read , and I am a cookbook collector . My husband is Burmese and I cook a lot of Burmese food and I saw the recipes for the Mohinga ( fish soup) and the oh no kawshwe (coconut chicken curry noodle soup) and I was so excited to find out that everything written there is exactly what we do at home , but with these recipes I can actually make them more consistently! I already purchased another book for a gift . If you like cooking, reading , travelling , photography, and eating good food , you would enjoy this book a lot. Kudos to Desmond Tan and Burma Superstar !
42 people found this helpful
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Useful 🍳🥚🌶🍠🥗

Easy to follow. Wish the book includes final pics of each recipes instead of just some recipes.
14 people found this helpful
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Absolutely luscious.

If you've eaten at Burma Superstar and gotten a longing for their food when you can't be there, this is the book. Easy to follow recipes, sources for ingredients, gorgeous photography. If you've never eaten Burmese food, try it with the help of this wonderful book.
11 people found this helpful
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More than just recipes

Temperatures for the oil when frying split peas for tea salad would be helpful. Otherwise I might have done five stars! That is why I bought this book.
After eating tea salad from Irrawaddy restaurant in Cerritos, California, I spent a day researching the recipe. That lead to learning about Burma superstar and the Burmese people. By the time I had ordered this book, my heart was filled by God's love for them.
One delightful bonus here, is the wonderful pictures of people and all the information that goes far beyond mere recipes. It makes a connection with people.
9 people found this helpful
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Mouth watering

Disclaimer: I received a free ecopy via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

If you're like me, you probably wouldn't think you know anything about Burmese cooking. There are a lot of familiar elements to these recipes though. It draws on elements from Indian, Chinese, and other Southeast Asian cuisines. There is a lot of flavor packed into these recipes. I've only had a chance to make one of them so far (the Coconut Chicken Curry, which is featured on the Amazon page for the book), and it was delicious. I marked so many recipes in this book that I wanted to try that I will have to pick up a physical copy to add to my bookshelves.

Beyond the recipes, this book has a lot to offer. It begins with the story behind the restaurant, Burma Superstar, in San Francisco. Added to this is some Burmese history and culture. The writers go beyond the culinary history of the region, while remaining true to the spirit. The photos are gorgeous. Every single picture of the food looks delicious. The pictures of the people and the locations add to the feeling of the book.

I also loved the way it is laid out. It felt a little backward at first, but after a brief introduction, they jump right into the recipes. Information on hardware and ingredients is included at the back of the book. I think this is a good move because having it up front might seem intimidating, especially if you don't have many of the items. There are enough recommendations for substitutes on certain ingredients throughout the book that its easy to get comfortable with things first. This book hooked me and I'm looking forward to getting an opportunity to explore it in more detail.
9 people found this helpful
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Magnificent cookbook!

Wish I could give it seven stars! Recipes from my favorite restaurant, which I can now make at home. The book itself is gorgeous: beautifully-bound and printed, and on excellent-quality paper. The numerous photos are luscious. The writing is heart-felt, unpretentious, and crystal-clear. Recipes are very easy to follow. Terrific ingredient glossary. The photos of the staff add extra sweetness. Have purchased several cookbooks in the past year-plus. This one is by far the most beautiful. I will cherish it, and use it very often. THANK YOU Desmond Tan, Kate Leahy and Ten Speed Press for a job phenomenally well-done!!!
8 people found this helpful
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recipes from a wonderful Burmese restaurant

Burma Superstar is an amazing restaurant, and I'm very excited to try these recipes! I love Burmese food, and I can also eat most of the dishes despite food intolerances/allergies to dairy, soy, and wheat.
7 people found this helpful
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A Visually & Gastronomically Satisfying Cookbook

I was intrigued after hearing an interview with the book author who described fermented tea salad. My local library doesn't have a copy of this (yet). I ordered this in hard-copy. I read through most of the book over two hours while in a waiting room at an auto-glass repair shop. I was taken to a far away place via words and photographs and then the corresponding recipes whetted my appetite. So far, I've prepared two of the recipes (chayote squash, beef &potato curry). Neither was difficult to prepare and both were delicious. The photography and narratives provided a visit with the culture places and people who contributed to the offerings of the book. If you enjoy savory-salty-sour food profiles, there will be a lot of winners in here for you. I am neither near the venue that inspired this book, nor planning a visit to Burma any time soon, and now can create dishes to enliven made-from-scratch meals and experience a culinary adventure. I intend to make more recipes from this book. It was worth the investment for the coveted shelf-space in my personal cookbook library.
6 people found this helpful