Let's start this off right.....people, if you ever find yourself in vegas and if your palette is adventurous then I suggest before u gamble all your money away, look up in the air and locate the stratosphere and head directly towards it because just right across the street houses the BEST THAI FOOD in LAS VEGAS!!! The restaraunt is named Ocha Thai cuisine. I have to make a visit at least once anytime I go home to vegas. My usual quick treat to feed the need is as follows: a thai iced tea, thai beef jerky with a side of sticky rice and the best sauce I have ever tasted in my life til this day(pictured above)! I initially thought it was Nam Prik Num but when I asked one of the workers there, all they would tell me is that it was called Jaew...well whatever it is, it is off the chain!!! Smokey, Sweet, Spicy....man, my mouth is watering right now as I type...Go check em out y'all.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Ocha Thai
Let's start this off right.....people, if you ever find yourself in vegas and if your palette is adventurous then I suggest before u gamble all your money away, look up in the air and locate the stratosphere and head directly towards it because just right across the street houses the BEST THAI FOOD in LAS VEGAS!!! The restaraunt is named Ocha Thai cuisine. I have to make a visit at least once anytime I go home to vegas. My usual quick treat to feed the need is as follows: a thai iced tea, thai beef jerky with a side of sticky rice and the best sauce I have ever tasted in my life til this day(pictured above)! I initially thought it was Nam Prik Num but when I asked one of the workers there, all they would tell me is that it was called Jaew...well whatever it is, it is off the chain!!! Smokey, Sweet, Spicy....man, my mouth is watering right now as I type...Go check em out y'all.
Family
So I had the opportunity to drive up to vegas to meet up with my big bro & family. This was a much anticipated trip because I got to see my nephew and the boys got to see their uncle earl, their auntie nikki and their big cousin earl and for my youngest, this was his first encounter in person with uncle earl. Needless to say all parties involved had a blast....I will post more soon. Until then, check out the pics.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
How To Make Sorrel
alright, let me clarify something about this post. This is indeed sorrel that you will see in the video BUT the preparation is closer to what mexicans call Agua de Jamaica. Basically the same thing just less ingredients. Unlike sorrel it does not include: cloves, cinnamon or orange peel. It is in a category of drinks they call Agua Frescas(Fresh Waters). But if you watch the preparation steps, it's prepared just about the same way. Now that that's cleared up. enjoy the video and if anyone wants me to record a video specifically geared towards Sorrel preparation, just let me know.
Friday, March 06, 2009
How To Make Dhal: Trinidadian Style
So I decided to tap into the indian side of my family and culture and share with you the process of how to make dhal(Trini-Style). I will hit you with indian,creole, Portuguese recipes that are indigenous to trinidad. I just got to film them all and post em. So keep an eye out for that. Jevon
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
New Year, New Approach
Alright everybody, I have been continuing with my mission to preserve the cuisine of Trinidad & Tobago in my own little way. I have come up with a way to approach this, that is different compared to the normal, post a recipe and pictures thing. I figured, why not actually record myself demonstrating the recipes so the viewer can have a visual reference to refer back to when they hit a road block?! So anyways, here is the first video recipe focusing specifically on trinidadian food. Hope you enjoy, let me know what you think.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Update for 2009(Enlightenment)

Alright, as you may have noticed, I've been pretty M.I.A. on this blog or have posted some things/recipes that weren't so "trini." Well, the goal for 2009, is to get back to the roots, my roots and tackle some topics and recipes that are 100% TRINI. Stay tuned cuz I am in the process of mastering some recipes to post. They will hopefully include:
Stew Chicken
Curry Chicken
Callaloo
Macaroni Pie
Pholouri(I been at this one for a minute,lol)
Dhal
Doubles
Pepper Sauce,etc.....
Friday, January 02, 2009
New Year's(Part Deux)
Thursday, January 01, 2009
Happy New Year!!!
So it's officially the year 2009 and it also means, I'm about to be a year older. So since 2008 was not the best year for me, I figured I would go back home to ring in the new year and start fresh for once. So I got off work and hit the road in route to vegas. I arrived in vegas around 9:00pm and began my night by visiting some old friends that I haven't seen since we were kids back in 1994! After that concluded, I in turn met up with some of my current homies and went to a new years eve house party(If you haven't attended a vegas house party then you ain't knowin for real!). I concluded my night around 5:45am.
Next,I went to sleep and 3 hours later I'm back up and makin the necessary calls to see what's on the agenda for the day. After all the calls were made, my boy steve and I decided to go have our first meal of 2009 in style, so we headed out to chinatown(yes, vegas has a china town). We landed at Cafe Noodle & Chinese Barbeque. Our order consisted of chinese broccoli with a garlic-wine sauce, Chicken & Salted Fish fried rice, a WHOLE Peking Duck and Barbeque duck, Wonton & Egg noodle soup with 2 large thai iced teas! It was definitely a proper invite for 2009! LAstly, we went to see my boy June who was working a double at The RockHouse Bar(He bartends) and that fool was already trying to get me faded with a "Katrina(Category Five: meaning it had at least 5 types of rum in the mix)"Now we went back to crash out in preperation for tonight's endeavors...Part Two coming soon..
Monday, December 15, 2008
Trini-Style Split Pea Soup...
Well, I have to clear up something here first. This version is not 100% trini-style split pea soup but it is indeed, TASTY!!! Hahaha, anyways, with that aired out let's get started.
I remember the first time my mom made split pea soup for us and how I swore I would hate it just due to the name "pea" being included in it's title alone. Man, was I about to be proven very wrong. So I took that first bite of that warm, silky, yellow-colored soup and I was blown away as to how damn good it was...I must have devoured that first bowl within 5 minutes flat, hahahaha!!!!! And it didn't stop there, my mom made dumplings that she put in the soup, they were dense yet slightly chewy(in a good way) with a hint of sweetness that balanced out the entire thing. I love those dumplings sooo much that I used to fish them out of the pot and try to add as many to my bowl as I could. I had just met my newest culinary addiction and loved every second of it.
Split Pea Soup(Rough Draft):
4 strips bacon, minced
1 medium onion, diced(about 1 1/4 cups)
1 carrot,diced(about 1/3 cup)
1 celery stalk,diced(about 1/2 cup)
1/3 cup chives, minced
8 cups chicken broth
2 yellow or white potatoes
1 lb. split peas yellow(about 3 cups,you can substitute with green or lentils)
1 smoked ham hock( or salt pig tail)
6-8 ears of corn, cut in half
1 bay leaf
2 garlic cloves
salt, to taste
freshly ground black pepper, to taste
(Basic pureed soup method)
Cook the aromatic vegetables in the rendered fat.
Add the liquid and long cooking ingredients; bring to a simmer.
Add additional ingredients at the appropriate time and simmer until all ingredients are very tender.
Puree the soup and adjust the consistency and seasoning.
Method:
cook bacon on medium-high until fat is rendered and bacon is cooked through. Next, add the carrot, celery, chives and onion to the bacon fat and cook on medium-low until the onion is translucent. Now add the split peas and if using, smoked ham hock. Bring to a boil, stir to incorporate then drop to medium-low heat and simmer, stirring occasionally until peas are softened(about 1 1/2 to 2 hours).When ham hock is finished cooking, remove and dice meat. Strain the other solids through sieve, reserving the liquid. Puree the solids, return to pot with enough of the reserved liquid to achieve a thick but smooth consistency. Blend well. Garnish with minced chives(if you have any left over).
*Note: If you wish to give the soup more body but without the potatoes, take a can of corn and pour the entire thing(water and all)into a bowl and puree with an immersion blender or alternately, use a blender or food processor. Once pureed add to the soup.
Dumplings:
2 cups flour
1 tsp. salt
2 tsp sugar
3/4 to 1 cup of ice cold water
Method:
Place all ingredients in a mixing bowl. Slowly add all water and knead to a stiff dough. Divide dumpling dough
into two pieces. Roll each piece into a long rope about 12 inches long. Cut into two-inch lengths and drop into boiling soup or pot of boiling water. boil for 4 minutes. Serves six to eight.
Total yield:
8 servings.
Monday, December 08, 2008
Canele de Bordeaux


This has to be one of my all-time favorite things to consume alongside a parisian macaroon. The jewel I speak of is a canele'...My first experience with this exquisite pastry was when I was working at Osterio del Circo/Le Cirque at The Bellagio in vegas. i have been on a quest to find a proper recipe and I may have found one.
The canelé de Bordeaux (a.k.a cannelé bordelais) is a magical bakery confection, a cake with a rich custardy interior enclosed by a thin caramelized shell. It's a brilliant construction developed long ago by an anonymous Bordeaux cook, whose innovation has been subjected to 300 years of refinements.
Nearly black at first sight, bittersweet at first bite, the crunchy burnt sugar canelé-shell makes an exquisite complement to its smooth, sweet filling, fragrant with vanilla and rum.
Small enough to eat out of hand, these little cakes have recently gained cachet after years of neglect to the extent that they may one day rival the popularity of crème brûlée in the category of caramelized French sweets.
Many recipes don't carry a tale; the canelé carries many. One of the oldest refers to a convent in Bordeaux, where, before the French Revolution, the nuns prepared cakes called canalize made with donated egg yolks from local winemakers, who used only the whites to clarify their wines. Any records that might verify this were lost in the turbulent revolution, thus relegating the convent story to legend.
But the alternative tale may be even better: residents of Bordeaux, who lived along the docks, gleaned spilled low-protein flour from the loading areas, then used it to make sweets for poor children. The small canelé molds, fluted and made of copper or brass, were nestled in embers to be baked.
Whatever the actual derivation, the popularity of canelés has risen and fallen numerous time over the years. Twenty five years ago, when I first started working in Bordeaux, I never heard of these little cakes. No local guide or notable cookbook published since the start of the 20th century even mentioned them. Later, I heard that a few Bordeaux bakers were working to revive their local specialty.
Soon, the little cakes, described by a local culinary historian as shaped like "a Doric column without a base," began cropping up in all sizes and flavorings throughout France. In 1985, stunned by this surge in popularity, 88 Bordeaux patissiers formed a confrérie, or brotherhood, to protect the integrity of their canelés. They staged a "linguistic coup d'etat" by removing one of the n's from the old spelling (cannelé) to differentiate their cake, with its secret method of preparation, from bastardized versions. Today, canelé de Bordeaux is the official cake of the city, while cannelé bordelais is a generic name used in Paris, New York City, Osaka, Los Angeles, etc.
"Our canelé de Bordeaux had to be protected and promoted as our own," says Daniel Antoine, a jolly, stocky patissier who operates patisserie Antoine in Bordeaux. "Recently, chocolate and orange cannelés have appeared," he tells me. "We don't want them confused with the real thing."
The official recipe, he told me, has been written down and locked in his vault. All 88 patissiers have sworn to protect its secrets. This much is known: the general recipe calls for a cold batter to be poured into an ice-cold fluted, tin-lined copper mold, then placed in a very hot oven and baked for a very long time. After baking, the canelés are firmly tapped out onto a grill while still hot, then left to cool while their exteriors harden. They're at their most glorious one hour out of the oven; within five or six hours they begin to turn spongy. patissiers have all sorts of tricks to revive them, ranging from putting them back in a hot oven for a few minutes, to flaming them with quality rum to crisp the shells. I believe they're so delicious that they're worth the expense of buying the special copper molds. (See below in recipe notes.) Silicone-coated Gastroflex molds are also available although I don't think they produce as good a result. On the other hand, the Cannele Silicon Flex 2.2" x 1.9"Ý mold available at Bridge's Kitchenware.com is a decent substitute for the copper molds. I brush the insides with a thin coating of "white oil" before using.
"The canelé is an artisanal product, so sometimes it doesn't come out perfectly," Antoine says. When I tell him that my canelés sometimes have pale yellow spots on their tops, he replies, "Oh, sure, I know that problem well. It's due to the puddling of oil in the crevices of the molds. When they come out that way, we say they have 'a white ass'!"
Antoine then compliments me on having figured out one of the major secrets, the special method of combining flour and butter. I had based my findings on a letter I received from him several years back. He smiles as I tell him how I finally succeeded in making delicious canelés with a custardy center. "Yes, I see you understand," he says unbegrudgingly.
Many patissiers line their molds with a film of "white oil" containing beeswax, a messy and highly flammable substance that may deter home cooks. In my opinion, this step is helpful if you want to successfully make canelés (see Cooking Notes below on an easy handling of beeswax).
To fully understand the fabulous quality of a true canelé de Bordeaux, eat it out of hand as a snack, with a glass of wine or a cup of coffee.
Yield 10 - 11 canelés
2 cups whole milk
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, chilled
3/4 cup cake flour
Pinch of salt
1 cup minus 2 tablespoons baker's sugar
4 extra-large egg yolks
1 Tbsp. dark rum
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
"white oil"
(see Cooking Notes)
1. Rinse a saucepan with cold water; add the milk; set over low heat; heat to 183 degrees F
2. Place butter, flour, and salt in the bowl of a processor; pulse until combined. Scatter sugar on top; pulse once or twice to mix.
3. Add egg yolks; process until mixture begins to tighten.
4. With the motor running, quickly and steadily pour hot milk into batter; stop motor; strain through very fine sieve into clean container; press any congealed yolk through; stir in rum and vanilla extract; cool to room temperature; cover; refrigerate 24 to 48 hours.
5. About 6 to 7 hours before serving, lightly brush the interior of each copper mold with lightly warmed white oil; set on paper towels crown side up to avoid pooling of oil in crevices; set molds in the freezer at least 30 minutes before baking.
6. Heat oven to 400 degrees F; SEE STEP 8 IF USING A CONVECTION OVEN.
7. Place chilled molds 1 1/2" apart on baking sheet; gently stir or shake batter; fill each mold almost to the top; place on lower oven rack; bake 1 3/4 to 2 hours, or until canelés are deep, deep brown in color, or if desired, almost black.
8. If using a convection oven, bake at 375 degrees F for 1 hour, 15 minutes for deep, deep brown canelés.
9. Remove the molds from the oven. Unmold as quickly as possible. To unmold, use an oven mitt to grasp a hot mold; firmly rap the crown side against a hard surface to loosen the canelé; tip out onto a rack; cool to room temperature before serving (about 1 hour); repeat procedure with other canelés while they're still hot (if any canelés resist, bake 5 to 10 minutes longer; OR if necessary, use a toothpick to loosen).
Notes:
Canelés de Bordeaux is the "politically correct" name for this recipe. Additions or alterations to the recipe will run afoul of the "canelés gendarmes," transforming the baked product into cannelés Bordelais.
To season new molds: heat oven to 350 degrees F; wash the molds in soapy water; rinse; dry thoroughly; heavily grease the interiors with vegetable shortening or oil; place on sheet tray; place in oven 1 hour; remove from oven; place upside down on a rack; return to oven; heat 15 minutes; turn off heat; leave in the oven until room temperature.
After baking, don't wash or scrub the interiors of the molds. To remove baked debris: place the molds in a moderate oven; heat until debris burns; remove debris with paper toweling.
Store lightly oiled molds in a cool covered place.
To make "white oil": Place 1 ounce round of bee's wax in a 1 pint glass measuring cup; melt in a microwave; while still warm, gradually stir in enough safflower oil to make a whitened mixture, light enough to coat the back of a spoon); cool to room temperature; store in the glass container at room temperature.
To coat pre-seasoned canelé molds with "white oil": use dabs of warmed oil to coat the interior and shake out excess.
Canelé batter can be frozen up to two weeks; defrost in refrigerator.
Canelés turn spongy and heavy after 5 to 6 hours. To refresh: heat (without molds) in 450 degrees F oven 5 minutes; remove from oven; let cool until exteriors hardens.
Leftover baked canelés can be frozen up to 1 month; to freeze, wrap individually in plastic wrap; to serve, remove from the freezer; while still frozen, bake unwrapped in 500 degrees F 5 minutes; remove from oven; let rest 30 minutes; bake 5 minutes; remove from oven; cool until exteriors harden.
Canele Molds: The copper, tin-lined molds can be ordered from J.B. Prince (800/473-0577; jbprince.com), which carries three sizes (1 1/2" round by 1" high, 1 oz. capacity; 1 1/2" round by 1 1/2" high, 1 1/2 oz. capacity; 2 1/4" round by 2 " high, 3 oz. capacity), or from the Parisian culinary equipment store Culinarion (011-33-141-90-09-11; culinarion.com). Culinarion carries only one size, the three-ounce capacity mold, because it is the only one that is "politically correct."
Beeswax can be ordered from J&N Sales (765/459-4589 ; jandnsales.com.)
Note: You can substitute Nordic Ware's mini-bundt molds available at cooking.com. You will not need to use the "white oil."
From The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen: Recipes for the Passionate Cook
©2001-2003 Paula Wolfert, All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Still compiling....
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Govind Armstrong: A Chef I Respect
Along with Marcus Samuelsson, Chef Armstrong is the man!!
Table 8 Restaurant in Los Angeles with chef Govind Armstrong
Govind Armstrong interviewed by John Gabaldon
Table 8 Restaurant in Los Angeles with chef Govind Armstrong
Govind Armstrong interviewed by John Gabaldon
Monday, December 10, 2007
Compiling/Creating/Adapting


I am in the process of Compiling/Creating/Adapting family recipes in order to preserve them for future generations of my family. I have tried to convince my mom for a few years now but I finally decided to take matters into my own hands in order to accomplish this task. You see my mom wasn't against the idea but she isn't one for stopping along the way to compose a recipe. She is one who improvises her dishes on the spot. So you could just imagine how it was when I would stop her during cooking in order to figure out the measurements used for a particular dish. HAHAHA, she could have strangled me for that!!!
My next conquest is to compile our family recipe for pelau and my grandmother's calalloo.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Diggin' through the archives(To all the people who have posted comments)

First off, my bad, I am still kinda new to the bloggin' ting and I just spotted all the comments today...lol, I been under a rock I guess. Anyways, My bad and I appreciate the comments and I will do my best to respond in the future. Now, as for the sorrel from my original post, I wish I could find sorrel that fresh in july but i found that flick online y'all. I hope y'all like the recipe I posted and if ya have additional ideas, holla at me. Until then.....
Jevon
Sorrel(My Favorite Drink, continued...)


So, I finally got around to making some sorrel. Well, mom gave me a refresher course on the fine art of sorrel brewing. Sorrel is actually a member of the hibiscus family, and it is used in red zinger tea by a well known tea company as well. So technically, sorrel can be classified as a "tea." I can't express how much I love sorrel but let's just say, I usually can't wait until christmas before I have to get my sorrel "fix." I mean, how can one resist the tempting siren's call of that familiar crimson nectar that most trini's consume during christmas time?!? I for one cannot...as a matter of fact, as I type this, I have a nice cold glass within arms length, LOL! Anyways, I am posting the recipe for my mom's sorrel for you guys to try your hand at. You will first need to brew what I call the concentrate. Once you have made that, you can dilute with additional water in order to cut down on some of the sweetness(before doing so, see my side note below). Enjoy.
Note:
If the sorrel, you end up with is a bit on the sweet side, that is ok. because the reason we brew it a bit sweet is because the ice you put in the glass will weaken it's potency significantly. Another thing to keep in mind is, the longer you let your freshly brewed sorrel sit, the more potent it will become. in other words, the flavor's will be much more pronounced. It is a two-part process(but a simple one, so don't be alarmed y'all).
.::Part one::.
Sorrel Concentrate:
- 8 qts. water
- 4 1/2 oz. Sorrel, dried
- 2 tbs. cloves
- 4 cinnamon sticks(if long) or 8 cinnamon sticks(if shorter)
.::Part Two::.
Additional Flavorings(when preparing to serve):
- 1 tsp. Angostura Bitters
- 2 cups. Sugar
Method of preparation:
- Strain off sorrel, cloves and cinnamon sticks until you are left with approximately 8 cups of sorrel "concentrate"
- Next, add sugar and angostura bitters to "season" your sorrel.
- Finally, sample and adjust/dilute according to your taste preference.
Yield: 2 quart pitcher.
Note#2:
you will have, sorrel concentrate left over to make additional pitchers as you need them.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
I missed you mommy...


So, it's been almost six years since I last saw my mother. I am still uncertain why it took me this long to have her come visit or to hop on a plane myself. But all I know is that now that she is here, I really understand how much I've missed her. Now, another thing that any homesick trini misses is........her "sweet hands(cooking)." So I have went down the list of things I've been craving and couldn't cook myself. The one meal that truly hit the spot was sunday dinner! It consisted of Stew chicken, Calalloo, Macaroni pie, Lentils, White rice & a side salad(trini style: seasoned tomato & cucumber). Tonight I had some roast bake & buljol. Tomorrow, we shall feast on Pelau!!!!!!!!!!! Now, saturday, I will be making Sio Pao("POW") for my mom to freeze and take home. All I can say is thank you mommy, thank you.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Hip Hop Chef
I created this 3-d version of myself at http://www.meez.com/
So here's how it currently stands. I am looking into some new continued education classed at The French Pastry School out in Chicago for next year BUT I am also, considering enrolling at The French Culinary Institute to get a formal education on "hot foods" in order to pursue my dream of one day putting west indian food(especially trinidadian food) on the culinary map in a major way...but my dilemma is parting with $38,000 dollars. I fear debt y'all and in a major, major way! Any opinions are welcomed...
Monday, October 15, 2007
Long Lost Me
I know, I know, I know....it's been a loooooong time since my last post. My appologies, 2 kids is harder than many think, especially when one is teething. i haven't forgotten about my sorrel post by the way. That recipe is still on it's way. Let me catch you up to speed on my happenings. I am currently debating which culinary path to take concerning my career that I put on hold to spend time with my children. I am looking at two schools in particular. the French Pastry School in Chicago, Il. or the French Culinary Institute in New York, Ny. My long term goals are to be happy, have a prosperous career and to introduce the rest of the world to trinidadian cuisine on a grander scale. I just need to get my college funding together first and these goals shall be attainable. Until then check out a few chefs who inspire me.
Govind Armstrong:
Marcus Samuelsson
Anthony Bourdain - Leftovers
Govind Armstrong:
Marcus Samuelsson
Anthony Bourdain - Leftovers
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
My favorite drink
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