2015 Recap: Knife Fight KO Part 1
Knife Fight is Esquire TV's hairier and punkier answer to the more groomed Iron Chef and Chopped. For their then-upcoming season, their Instagram launched an 8-week competition to win a trip to New York and dinner at the newly transported The Gorbals. Each week, an ingredient was designated for contestants to craftily use in their Instagrammed dish. Harana was not yet, but almost. This was actually the final charge that realized Harana and yet, I hadn't covered it here or in since I entered the competition pre-Harana and had to post with my personal Instagram. So over half a year later, here are my entries for the first four rounds:
05-26-2015 PUMPKIN: Mashed pumpkin-shrimp croquette balls on fresh basil boats. Crusts: Panko, chicharron, and paprika. Parmesan dusting + balsamic. Even as the first go, I'm probably more happy with this entry than most of the eight by the marks it hit:
- No-frills ingredients.
- The ingredients gelled while maintaining clear hierarchy.
- Brag alert: I think this dish was a witty and original take.
- Yummy.
R.I.P basil plant. You served 2015 well.
06-01-2015, BEEF BRISKET: 1.Pulled brisket in pear and garlic hoisin. 2. Tender lime leaf brisket with coarse sambal and tallow + ale roasted corn. I would have loved to smoke a slab of brisket for this round but that wasn't really in the picture with my work-commute schedule last year. With the help of a pressure cooker, I had these two dishes plated in a little over an hour. The pulled brisket was a killed—prime for any starch you could plop it onto. For the juicy lime leaf slices, the bold sambal and beer-tallow corn was perfect consolation for having to pass on the smoke.
06-08-2015, BEETS: 1. Beet flan with lychee, mint, and jasmine flower. 2. Beet-scallop gin ceviche with shiso leaf. That flan was pleasantly mild while the lychee provided a cool jolt to punctuate the dessert nicely. I would say that the ceviche was my weakest entry in Knife Fight KO. As with the flan, I was jumping off that light fruity sensation that beets give and dovetailing that with a floral component (gin) and adding a non-overpowering protein with the scallops. That was nice and all but in pushing the ceviche bent, I added the onions and the seemingly reasonable umami of salmon roe. Those latter elements were just too harsh to go with the whole light and floral party going on. Oops.
06-15-2015, MUSHROOMS: Ground black beech mushroom and liver spread 50/50 and pistachios in red pepper-caul fat cassettes, grilled asparagus in quesillo braids, yogurt, and ajvar. Successful or not, you could say that the pumpkin croquette entry sought originality and creativity. This entry however, overshot and became the bizarre-o entry. It was my excuse to force new ingredients into my pantry and try some weird packaging stuff out. Things soon wound up far from how I intended. The cassettes became triangular, the caul fat was ripping, the braids were limp... it looked a lot different in my head! It was this kind of clumsy ordeal BUT the flavors worked surprisingly well together. Maybe this mix would be better off with a focaccia or a sandwich.
*Working in West LA, I frequented Aroma Cafe for killer ćevapis, which acquainted me well with ajvar (a versatile roasted eggplant sauce). Also to my delight, the area is keen on Oaxacan cuisine. As a result, many Mexican food lovers in the area like myself find themselves tangled in quesillo (Oaxacan string cheese) at least a few times a week. It's fun stuff.