East meets West: Caesar salad with crispy shimeji mushrooms, prawn ravioli with salted egg beurre blanc

Seda Vertis North’s executive Chinese chef Hann Furn Chen and executive chef Kerpatrik Boiser plate the first course.

 

When the Chinese restaurant at Seda Vertis North opens by November, fans of Cantonese cuisine might see a familiar face in the kitchen.

 

Executive Chinese chef Hann Furn Chen used to work at Tin Hau, the well-loved Chinese restaurant at Mandarin Oriental Manila before the hotel was torn down several years ago.

 

Chen went on to work in Indonesia, Dubai and Doha before he was contacted by Seda Vertis North group general manager Brett Patrick Hickey.

 

“There was a market for good Chinese food in this area of Quezon City but it wasn’t being serviced,” Hickey told Lifestyle. “Seda Vertis North has a large space on the second floor that we’ve set aside for the restaurant.”

 

The restaurant will seat 120  and will be larger than Tin Hau. “It’s still boarded up, but I can tell you it has a high ceiling. We’ve already chosen a name for the restaurant—a Chinese word for  ‘taste’—but we can’t announce it until we’re sure no one else is using it.”

 

Braised Seafood Soup with Pastry Puff (Old Beijing Style)

 

Meantime, special dinners are held at the Seda’s presidential suite to give diners a foretaste of the new resto cuisine.

 

Last month, Lifestyle went to Seda Vertis North’s “East meets West” dinner featuring dishes prepared by Chen and executive chef Kerpatrik Boiser. The four-hands dinner started with Boiser’s prettily plated Prawn Ravioli with Salted Egg Beurre Blanc, followed by Chen’s Caesar Salad with Crispy Shimeji Mushrooms.

 

His combination of slick garlicky lettuce and crisp battered mushrooms (instead of croutons) was a tumble of flavors and textures. I ended up asking for another serving.

 

Chen then prepared Braised Seafood Soup with Pastry Puff (Old Beijing Style) that arrived with a pastry lid of phyllo pastry. This kind of soup was served the ancient emperors.

 

Chen cooks the stock for six hours and uses sea cucumber, fish maw, shimeji mushrooms, and both dry and fresh scallops.

 

“The dry ones are for intense flavor, while the fresh scallops are for sweetness,” he said.

 

Boiser’s Braised Short Plate with Mashed Potatoes and Seasonal Vegetables was rich and tender, while Chen’s Wok-fried Lobster with Chili Sauce and Golden Chinese Bun (Singapore Style) was spicy and decadent.

 

“Instead of crab, which is the traditional way of preparing this dish, I used lobster meat,” Chen said.

 

Dessert was a playful Mango Sago Collision served over dry ice, whose “smoke” swirled and snaked across the entire table.

 

One can only imagine what Chen will come up with, once the restaurant opens in a few months.

 

Mango Sago Collision

 

Prawn Ravioli with Salted Egg Beurre Blanc

 

Wok-fried Lobsterwith Chili Sauce and Golden Chinese Bun
(Singapore Style)

 

 

Seda Vertis North, tel. 7398888, email dining.vertis@sedahotels.com

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