-
- Oh, [ _ ]! Why is it smoking?
-
- Huh?
-
Oh my god!
-
(screams)
-
- In this episode,
we are doing things
-
a little differently.
-
We will be cooking
a beautiful dinner
-
for all our hard working
producers here
-
at The Fat Kid Inside Studios
and FEATR Media
-
and hopefully inspire you all
in the type of dishes and food
-
that you can cook
for your family and friends
-
during this holidays.
-
So from us to you—
-
- [Everyone] Happy Holidays!
-
- So it's been
a logistical nightmare, apparently,
-
all these tired,
beautiful, happy faces.
-
We did a lot of the preps,
you guys did the preps yesterday.
-
- Yes.
-
- So they prepped
in the studio yesterday.
-
I was coming from a shoot
so I had to prep at home
-
last night.
-
This is the first time
we're actually properly cooking
-
for each other.
-
I feel like we cook
in a studio format
-
so when we do taste our foods
and each other's foods
-
is really kind
of just like standing,
-
you know, two bites,
and then kind of go
-
to the next thing,
there's always something happening.
-
So this is the first time
we're actually
-
all sitting down together
as a big dysfunctional family
-
and feeding each other.
-
So I'm personally very excited
to try Trish's food tonight.
-
I've heard magnificent things.
-
Trish, how are you feeling?
-
- I'm feeling good. Thanks.
-
Thank you for asking.
-
- Seth is our showboater
so I feel like
-
he's been really excited
to kind of showcase, like,
-
his true talent
and kind of break out.
-
- There he is!
-
- Yeah?
-
(laughs)
-
- Break free, baby!
That's what I'm going to...
-
- Nica, what are you making,
dessert?
-
- I'm making a cake.
-
- Okay.
-
Ynna, Sam,
how are you guys feeling?
-
- I'm excited.
-
- And then, Martin,
feeling like death as usual?
-
- Yeah.
-
(laughs)
-
- All right. So we're going
to be doing
-
last minute preps here,
getting the food ready
-
for everyone,
and then you're going
-
to basically come
with each pair,
-
except I'm the solo one,
and we're going to explain
-
kind of the food that we did,
the preps that we did,
-
and eventually
have everyone taste it
-
and be really honest
about each other's food.
-
- Hi! I'm Sam and I'm
a food content creator
-
for TFKI.
-
- Hi! I'm Ynna
and a junior food editor.
-
We are in charge
of the appetizers.
-
- Yeah.
-
- And what we will be
making today?
-
- Deviled eggs.
-
So normally when we talk
about deviled eggs,
-
it's just simple—
egg yolks mixed
-
with mayonnaise
with the egg white on top.
-
But today, I'm going
to be making it something special.
-
How about you,
what are you going to be making?
-
- Okay. So for appetizer,
I will be making
-
a tropical crunch ceviche,
because first thing,
-
when you eat, you need
to open up the palate
-
so I opt to making
something fresh,
-
something light.
-
So I really love ceviche,
I love kinilaw,
-
and that's what I thought
of making.
-
So I'm using pomelo
for my ceviche
-
because personally,
I love all the tropical fruits.
-
- Okay. So while Ynna
is doing that,
-
I'm actually making
my egg yolk cream mixture.
-
So I'm just using Hellman's
Real Mayonnaise,
-
cream cheese,
-
mustard,
-
and then we're going
to put some spices over here.
-
And then, while this is going,
I'm going to check
-
on my roasted bell peppers
that I roasted off-cam.
-
I'm going to return these back
'cause what we're looking for
-
is this black coloring.
-
When you achieve this,
it's easier to peel.
-
Around 15 minutes,
and then we're going
-
to be mixing it.
-
We are going to put
the egg yolks here,
-
and then egg whites,
we're going to separate them.
-
We're going to fry them
à la minute,
-
which means
we'll do it on-site.
-
So we're just dunking
the eggs in ice cold water
-
to shock the eggs,
to stop the cooking process
-
and for you to be able
to crack it without getting burned.
-
So with the whites,
I am just going to make a brine.
-
Brining is actually for extra flavor,
but not only that,
-
it also acts as a preservative.
-
- I'm getting frustrated
with this pomelo.
-
- You want to switch preps?
-
- Really, you want to?
-
- Yes.
-
- What do you want me to do?
-
- I'm already done.
-
- Huh?
-
- You'll be left here.
- No!
-
- Okay. So we're going
to cut the eggs now.
-
Separate.
-
The yolks are going to go here.
-
Just be careful on dunking them
'cause sometimes
-
the egg whites break.
-
I started cooking
when I was a first year college,
-
that was 10 years ago.
-
But started
cooking professionally
-
in 2019 when I was in Australia
for a fine dining restaurant
-
which was specializing
in Filipino food still.
-
It was there that I actually
had a passion for Filipino food,
-
is because of that restaurant.
-
Fast forward 2020,
I came back to the Philippines
-
because of the pandemic,
then I put up my restaurant
-
in Dumaguete.
-
Then, my restaurant failed
because I was so clueless.
-
(chuckles)
-
- What happened?
-
- Then, I did content creation,
and Papa E (Erwan) was hiring.
-
I don't know,
I brought some food here,
-
and maybe that's
why they hired me.
-
- Yes, the food
he brought were amazing.
-
- I'd rather have it thick
than loose
-
because if it's too loose,
then I'm going to need
-
more yolks.
-
- Oh, guys. I'm done
with my pomelo.
-
First prep done.
Let's go with mangoes.
-
Oh my god, there's so much!
-
I'm just going to get
all of the cheeks out.
-
So I started cooking
when I was grade 2 or 3.
-
I was just watching my mom.
-
It looked like she was
having so much fun,
-
and I wanted to do it too.
-
And then, my interest in cooking
developed further
-
when I started watching
cooking shows—
-
like MasterChef, Food Network,
Asian Food Channel.
-
Those were my
go-to channels growing up.
-
- All right. So this is our
Nuoc Cham buffalo glaze.
-
It looks runny now
but when it thickens
-
due to the sugar content...
-
When it's heating up,
it's going to be really,
-
really tasty.
-
We're going to put
a lot of cayenne
-
'cause I want the guest
to actually enjoy the spice,
-
to the point where it tingles
in your mouth.
-
When it comes to the main course,
you'll eat a lot.
-
- Oh my god, guys.
I'm done with the mangoes.
-
I have here mango
that I cut into like
-
really small cubes.
-
Now, I'll just do juicing
of the lemons first.
-
- Again, still prepping
egg whites.
-
God. Why did I pick this recipe?
-
(grunts)
-
- Is this right? Or like this?
-
- Okay. Let's trade.
-
The eggs should be smooth.
-
- You really need muscles for this.
-
What am I going to do?
-
- Just deshell everything.
-
This is almost everything
that we can do here.
-
We want to keep it fresh
on-site also.
-
So we will see you guys there.
-
And for the meantime,
the main course
-
will be prepped here.
-
- Yup. Let's go.
-
- What is up, guys?
My name is Seth.
-
- And I'm Trish.
-
- And we are food
content creators of—
-
- FEATR Media.
-
- And The Fat Kid Inside Studios.
-
And today, we are assigned with—
-
- The main dish!
-
- All right. Let's get on with it.
-
For me, I'm making
a Thai-flavored,
-
inspired-ish pork belly.
-
So it's going to be crispy skin,
roasted, enough to feed
-
the whole family.
-
And you?
-
- Yes. So we took inspiration
from Thai flavors,
-
so he's making the pork belly
and I'm going to be working
-
on the salad and the rice pilaf.
-
The rice pilaf is going
to be Mojo Verde.
-
Oh, fancy, right? Fabulous.
-
- Fabulous.
-
With that, we wanted
to go something different,
-
we want to be
a little more fun with it.
-
So we're going to go ahead
and start.
-
As you can see,
I have two pieces of pork belly.
-
Oh, shocks.
-
And if you can see,
these have dimples,
-
it's because
I already punctured it
-
with my knife.
-
So I wanted to make holes in it
and I wanted to help
-
that dry as much as possible.
-
- I just want to say
this is so exciting
-
because Seth and I
have known each other
-
for quite some time now
but it's our first time
-
to work together on a dish.
-
- So what I'm going
to be doing is I'm going
-
to be cutting
this pork belly in half.
-
I do want it to have more
or less an even cooking time
-
and I want also to have it
more surface for it to dry.
-
I'm just going to do
a light score at the bottom
-
to make sure that the flavors
go in later.
-
So we're just going to do
something really, really shallow
-
just to ensure that a lot
of flavor gets into our pork.
-
How about you,
how's your salad going along?
-
- It's still mango.
-
(chuckles)
-
So I'm still prepping
the mangoes.
-
I'm just going to blend this
and make a simple
-
mango vinaigrette.
-
- So first, we want
to make sure that we make
-
our marinade for the pork.
-
The faster we marinade,
the longer time it has
-
to actually have
the ingredients come in.
-
- I'll help you with that.
-
- So I'm just going
to do a rough chop on these.
-
So I want you to just
quarter them
-
'cause we're going to put them
in a food processor later.
-
Put it on the pork
and before cooking,
-
we're going to scrape it out.
-
- Okay. I'm the sous chef
here, guys.
-
- You can also do
a rough chop on this ginger.
-
- Okay.
-
- And I'm going to do
just a little quickie smash
-
on this garlic.
-
- Strong.
-
- If you want to peel
your garlic,
-
a nice quick little way,
-
so just put them around,
between your hands
-
and then just...
-
And it comes right out.
-
Okay. So I'm going to teach you
how to devein...
-
"devein" or destem
the kaffir lime,
-
'cause we're going to blend this
and I don't want that
-
tough stem in the center
to ruin it.
-
So what you want to do
is just pull back.
-
- Okay. I can do that.
-
- And then, keep...
-
- Is this the same one
they use for curries?
-
- Yeah. This is actually
the same one they use
-
for curries.
-
- The quick chop
of the lemongrass
-
to really give this pork belly
a fragrant aroma.
-
- You like lemongrass, Seth?
-
- I love lemongrass.
-
- Okay. 'Cause I know it's kind
of an acquired taste, right?
-
Not everyone really likes
lemongrass on their food.
-
- That's true.
-
Kaffir lime.
-
Our lemongrass.
-
I'm going to add
a little bit of salt to this.
-
- Okay. So while he's already
working on that,
-
I'll go back to my dressing,
so all I have to do
-
is just cut the acid
or the citric fruit.
-
I'm using lime in this case.
-
I'm just going
to slice it in half
-
so later I can easily
juice it out.
-
- So I'm going to grind
our paste that we're going to...
-
that we're going to rub later.
-
Give it a few pulses.
-
- How about
you plug it in first?
-
- I knew that. I knew that.
-
- That’s just how it is
when you’re flustered.
-
- Don't show them!
-
(giggles)
-
Let me just plug this in
'cause I knew that
-
it was unplugged.
-
- Of course, he knew that.
-
Oh, oh.
-
Is the extension cord plugged in?
-
- Yeah.
-
Here we are.
-
- All right. Take three.
-
- Take three.
-
- Press it!
-
(screams in shock)
-
I can already imagine it
with the pork belly.
-
- I don't want
to beat them up too much.
-
- It smells so good.
-
Wait. There's a leaf here.
-
- Oh, [ _ ]! Why is it smoking?
-
- Huh?
-
Oh my god!
-
(screams)
-
- Unplug it.
-
- Why is it smoking?
-
- 'Cause that's 110V.
-
- Smelled like fire.
-
(chuckles)
-
- It’s hazardous when we’re together.
-
Okay.
-
I'm just going to blend
my mangoes.
-
Put a little bit of some acid.
-
I'll put a little bit of olive oil
-
and some honey.
-
You might be thinking
I'm making a fruit juice, but no,
-
not even close.
-
Okay.
-
- I'm going to start seasoning
my pork belly with some salt
-
to get it started.
-
This will help it
have more flavor.
-
Hey, I want to try.
I want to try.
-
Put some over here.
-
- Where?
-
- Here on my wrist.
-
- What do you think
does it lack?
-
- Hey!
-
- Just kidding. It's delicious.
-
(chuckles)
-
- So after I blend this actually,
I might cook it
-
over low heat just because
we work with pork
-
right beside it,
just for sanitary
-
and hygienic purposes.
-
- So what I'm doing here,
I'm really working
-
the salt into those scores
that I made.
-
This will help ensure
a flavorful meat.
-
And I'm going to rub in
our blended herb vegetable
-
spice mix.
-
So come join me, Trish.
We're going to boat this.
-
- Oh, I thought we were done.
-
- No, we're going to boat them.
-
So I'm going to be covering this
with foil at the bottom
-
but leaving the skin exposed.
-
I'm just going to set this aside
and we can set up
-
whatever else you have to do.
-
- Yeah. I'm just going
to clean up the kitchen counters
-
so we won't contaminate
any food.
-
All right. So I realized
that the Mojo Verde is best done
-
when it's fresh to avoid
the herbs from browning,
-
so I'll just do that tomorrow.
-
And then right now,
I'm just going to make
-
the simmer, and then
you can make your sauce
-
and we'll call it a day.
-
- Yeah.
-
I am making a nice, like,
spicy, garlicky Thai sauce
-
to top off with our pork later.
-
So I'm going to be just mincing
some red onions.
-
- This is actually really,
really simple.
-
All we have to do is just wait
for it to simmer
-
just so we can kill
any bacteria or any germs,
-
and then we can turn off
the fire and let it cool.
-
It's already simmering,
I'm just going to turn it off
-
and set this aside to cool down.
-
- So guys, what I'm putting here,
just garlic, onion,
-
I'm going to add
some fish sauce, sugar,
-
lime or lemon to taste,
-
you can add chilis
if you want it spicy,
-
but it's also very,
very important
-
to do this maybe a day before
'cause you want those flavors
-
to really, you know,
get to know each other.
-
I think we just got
to keep this in the fridge,
-
cover it so it doesn't stink up
the whole place
-
'cause it is fish sauce.
-
- We just have to clean up
and we're done.
-
- Get ready for tomorrow, right?
-
- Let's go.
-
- I'm going to completely break
the treatment of this video,
-
and I am so sorry about that.
-
I had an absolutely crazy day.
-
I just came from a shoot
with Dahlia
-
and which I'm super grateful for.
-
Like, this video is all
about being thankful.
-
And that was such a great shoot,
and it's just great
-
at this age—you know,
I've been doing this
-
for a long time—
to kind of still do these projects.
-
It's really great.
-
But now, as you can see,
it is 9:30 p.m.,
-
I am absolutely exhausted.
-
And tomorrow is when
we'll be cooking for everyone.
-
And I feel this dinner
that we're doing is really special,
-
and that's why I'm putting in
the extra hours
-
and the extra effort
to serve good food.
-
By now you know what I'm making,
so I'm going to go ahead
-
and start the prep.
-
So really important tonight
is to cook the beef cheeks down
-
for about 12 hours.
-
And then after that,
I'm going to start
-
my lobster stock,
and then figure out
-
how to bring
those two sauces together.
-
The dish is really inspired
by a mechado,
-
very loosely
in terms of flavors,
-
and just kind of cleaning that up
and thinking of ways
-
how would I serve it
in a very special
-
but still kind of very homey way.
-
And I really hope
that people like it.
-
It's in my head now.
I haven't executed it.
-
But hopefully,
it turns out pretty good.
-
So the idea here is to play
with the classic flavors
-
of what makes a beef mechado
and kind of like turn it
-
on top of its head.
-
And I'm going to be making
the beef cheeks
-
with your aromatics.
-
But I'm not going
to be using those aromatics,
-
I'm going to be discarding
them later.
-
But I'm going to cook
everything together
-
for about 12 hours in the oven,
and that's just going
-
to give it so much great flavor,
-
and then I'm going to put it
in the fridge
-
and then I'm going
to sear them again
-
to retain that sauce,
and then just clean it up,
-
sieve it, mix that
with the lobster broth
-
that we're making,
and that's just going
-
to make a really thick,
kind of like almost
-
au jus like demi-glace sauce
which will carry all the flavor
-
from all the elements
that we're adding there.
-
And then, I have to work
on a few other things.
-
Like, tomorrow,
I'll be making an onion
-
and ube soubise,
so it's just kind of like a...
-
Imagine a mashed potato
blended with caramelized onions.
-
It's beautiful.
I've done that before.
-
And I think that's it.
-
Okay. New day, new apron.
-
Feeling slightly rested.
-
Got about five hours of sleep.
-
Let's check on our prep.
-
So here is our lobster stock
that's reduced
-
for about three hours.
-
This thing was full till here
so we really reduced it down,
-
and it is so intense
and beautiful.
-
Yum.
-
While that's going,
we're basically going
-
to take our lobster tails
right here
-
and I'm going to poach that
in some butter,
-
but I'm going to basically do it
in a water bath
-
so the temperature
is controlled.
-
I think I'm going to go
for about 54°C
-
for about 20 minutes,
so this should get
-
nice and tender
but not like breakaway tender
-
and that's just going
to infuse all the butter
-
into the lobster tails
which would be fantastic.
-
- We are both assigned
to the dessert,
-
so we’re in charge
of the finale.
-
We have to finish...
what exactly?
-
- I actually am planning
to make a carrot cake,
-
but then I've watched something
on TikTok, Chef,
-
wherein he put
the whole cheesecake
-
in between two layers
of carrot cake.
-
So I was like, ooh, that's cool.
-
Okay. Perfect.
I'm going to do that
-
but I'm going to make it
five layers
-
so that'd be around
roughly this height,
-
so it'll really be
the centerpiece.
-
- So when you see it,
you won’t know
-
if there's a wedding
or a birthday—
-
no clue at all.
-
What's the frosting going to be?
-
- The frosting is going
to be cream cheese as well.
-
But it's a light
cream cheese frosting,
-
so not too overwhelm
the cream cheese
-
and the cheesecake
on the center.
-
And then, I'm planning
to have a sauce
-
that would go with it.
-
And then,
maybe like individual...
-
- Sweet and sour?
-
(laughs)
-
- Or barbeque, teriyaki.
- Adobo. Humba.
-
- A spiced butterscotch sauce.
-
- My only request
is there'd be no raisins.
-
- No, it's okay.
I don't like raisins either.
-
- That's why we're a pair.
-
So for me...
-
She's going to be making
the centerpiece—carrot cake.
-
She's going to make it
beautiful for sure.
-
For mine...
-
I don't know if I'm going
to say it right.
-
I'm sure I'm saying it wrong,
so Erwan can just
-
correct me tomorrow.
-
It's called Vacherin Au Citron.
-
So basically it's a...
-
- Fancy.
-
- Fancy.
-
- Fancy.
-
- That's why it's very...
-
It looks complicated
but it's only complicated
-
because there
are multiple components to it.
-
So I'm going to be making
lemon sorbet,
-
lemon curd, meringue,
and some lemon syrup.
-
So it's all going to go together.
-
- I love how fresh it is.
-
- Right?
-
So some are fresh
and some are not fresh.
-
(laughs)
-
- Okay. So the beauty
of this recipe that we'll do
-
is that you can actually
make this ahead of time.
-
So this is sour cream,
just for added acidity.
-
You can use heavy cream
if it's not available.
-
- How do they add the acidity?
-
- If you only have cream,
you can actually add, like,
-
for a cup of cream,
a tablespoon of your acid,
-
so lemon or vinegar.
-
And then, I have here
three blocks of cream cheese
-
and some white sugar.
-
And then, vanilla,
it depends on what you want,
-
you can also use lemon extract.
-
And then, two eggs.
-
- All right. Cool.
-
- And then, just cream
everything together,
-
and then that's it.
-
- So the first thing I can do
is actually the lemon curd.
-
It's not the easiest.
The easiest is the lemon syrup.
-
And so for this one,
I need a lot of sugar.
-
It would be enough.
-
And it’s like making
pastry cream
-
but with more of that
sour tingling style.
-
Plus the lemon juice
we squeezed earlier.
-
- So I'm just adding
my sour cream, Chef,
-
to this one.
-
And then, we're going
to whip this again
-
while I prepare the eggs.
-
- I love it.
-
So while you're preparing
the eggs...
-
So this process,
it's called tempering.
-
It's usually not done
for lemon curd.
-
Usually, for lemon curd,
it’s all in one go.
-
Just one pot,
mix everything together
-
until they form the thickness
or consistency you prefer.
-
Then, slowly,
so tempering cooks your eggs
-
without coagulating everything,
making the temperature equal
-
for both liquids.
-
And then from there,
put it back.
-
Right. So the texture
that I want isn't there yet
-
but at this moment,
I'll add half a cup of butter.
-
So yeah, lemon curd
is full of sugar and fat,
-
but you don't eat a lot of it
when it's put
-
into the pastry.
-
Usually, just dot it
or a tablespoon.
-
- So one egg at a time.
-
Then, I'm going to add
our vanilla flavor.
-
- So my consistency,
I don't want it to be like
-
the spread curd.
-
So I just want it
to be sauce consistency
-
which is this.
-
I'll finish it up
with some zest.
-
All right. So that's it.
This is my first component.
-
For this one, my batter is done.
-
- Okay. We'll make
the lemon sorbet.
-
So equal parts of lemon
and water.
-
Lemon juice.
-
So noisy. What is that?
So annoying.
-
- So I'm going to do
a bain-marie for my cheesecake.
-
If there's no bain-marie,
it's going to rise quickly
-
and that's going to crack,
and then it's going to burn.
-
- Who is Marie?
-
So ice cream,
obviously it comes from...
-
It has to have a base
called crème anglaise.
-
Crème anglaise is milk-based,
sometimes cream,
-
and you usually thicken it
with egg yolk
-
and sweetened with sugar,
flavored with vanilla beans,
-
or whatever flavor
you might prefer.
-
Now, sorbet is more
of just the juice.
-
So let's say lemon sorbet—
lemon juice, water, sugar.
-
So the thing is,
it doesn't freeze like ice cream.
-
With sorbet,
it's like you're making ice.
-
It’s like making ice candy,
but fancier.
-
People usually say,
"There's so much sugar."
-
You're not going to eat
the whole cake, right?
-
I'm not mad.
-
Because!
-
(laughs)
-
What I like about
this machine thing,
-
it's really just like
you're making ice candy
-
and it'll handle it.
-
Cover this, put it
in the freezer,
-
and hopefully, it solidifies.
-
So next, we're going
to make meringue.
-
- Meringue.
-
- And I just wanted it
to provide the texture
-
on our whole dessert.
-
Just helps stabilize
the egg whites.
-
Add a pinch of salt
and we'll mix it on medium.
-
Now that I have microbubbles,
I'll gradually add my sugar.
-
We don't dump it in
all in one go,
-
that's because you're going
to destroy all the bubbles
-
that you've made.
-
So just do it slowly.
-
All right. So this is
the right consistency
-
I'm looking for.
-
- Wow!
- It's stiff but soft.
-
- So now, it's time for frosting.
-
Cream cheese.
-
I'm going to cream this first.
-
Oh, shoot. Wait.
-
I'll check my cake first.
-
- I'll take care of this.
-
- I'm back.
-
- And better than ever.
-
- Time to add the butter.
-
This is softened,
so I prefer the butter
-
to be softened
rather than the cream cheese
-
because we need the cream cheese
to be more stable
-
than the butter.
-
We're just going
to cream both together.
-
So we're going to add
our vanilla for flavor.
-
Okay.
-
This looks better now.
-
It's now time to assemble
our cake.
-
So I love to add glucose
at the base
-
so this acts as a glue
later on to our cake.
-
So this is now the first layer.
-
Thank you, Chef.
-
So just that.
-
Second layer in.
-
Then, it's time
for the cheesecake.
-
See, it's so tall already.
-
Is this already
centerpiece-worthy, Chef?
-
- Attraction.
-
- One tip that I like
for the top layers to not fall,
-
especially since
the carrot cake is heavy,
-
is to use dowels.
-
So my favorite type of dowel
for this type of cake
-
is boba straws.
-
Two dowels.
-
Push it using the excess dowel.
-
Another one. Push it.
-
Then, we're going
to crumb coat our cake
-
with the rest of our frosting.
-
Experts, like my mom,
she doesn't do crumb coat,
-
just that.
-
- So after this,
just the crumb coat and...
-
- A light crumb coat,
and then I'm going
-
to finish everything tomorrow,
and then that's it.
-
- Close the door, please.
Is this how you are at home?
-
- I'm sorry.
-
(chuckles)
-
- That should come right off.
-
Aw!
-
- You thought I was mad.
-
(sobs)
-
- It's delicious.
-
(laughs)
-
- Okay. So to start
and to awaken the palate,
-
I present you
my tropical crunch ceviche.
-
It features lapu-lapu
and shrimp for seafood
-
and it's marinated in a mixture
of citrus mix
-
which is calamansi and lemon.
-
And it's then tossed
in a vibrant mix of pomelo,
-
mangoes, cucumbers,
tomatoes, and red onions.
-
Then for the crunch,
I made some crispy wanton chips.
-
You can either dip it
or crumble it,
-
however you like. So, enjoy.
-
(applauds)
-
I'm really thankful
for the guidance, support,
-
and your brilliant creativity.
-
Being around
such talented people
-
makes me feel inspired everyday,
and I just can't wait
-
to learn more from you all.
-
Thank you.
-
Thank you so much.
-
(applauds)
-
- As a fan of retro cooking,
this is a 70s inspired
-
deviled eggs.
-
So pan-cooked fried egg whites
at the bottom.
-
You have a roasted bell pepper
cream mixture on top,
-
followed by a Nuoc Cham
buffalo glaze that's kind
-
of like a fusion between Thai
and American cuisine.
-
Then, it's finished off
with tarragon and chives.
-
(applauds)
-
I am really thankful for...
-
maybe the opportunity
that I am able to work
-
with a team that is driven
with a vision to promote
-
Filipino cuisine/heritage
in general.
-
(applauds)
-
- Oh my gosh.
-
- Oh, yeah.
-
Try my pork belly.
- Yummy?
-
Not too much?
-
- It needs the fish sauce.
-
Juicy, tender?
-
- That's good.
-
- Whoa!
-
- Wow.
-
- So here I have
a whole roast pork belly
-
with Thai-inspired flavors.
-
So I flavored it
with a kaffir lime,
-
lemongrass, ginger, garlic,
and season it with salt,
-
dried it for about two days,
and cooked it really nice
-
and slow.
-
On the side, you have
Thai fish sauce.
-
I'm really thankful
for your patience
-
and your motivation,
and just your spirit of work
-
really inspired us
to just become better
-
at our jobs and just try
to deliver what you guys
-
see in us.
-
And we believe, and I believe
that you see greatness
-
in each and every one of us.
-
So I'm very, very thankful
for that.
-
- Amen.
-
(applauds)
-
- So I've made a Mojo Verde
rice pilaf,
-
so it's basically herbs
that were blended together
-
and we cooked the rice in it.
-
And then, we also have
a side salad to go with it,
-
so you have your vegetables
for the day.
-
And it's topped
with the mango dressing. Yes.
-
For that Thai-inspired flavor.
-
So 2024 was
a different year for me,
-
probably one
of the beat years of my life,
-
and it started off
very differently,
-
I didn't think
I would be here today.
-
And I'm thankful for each
and every one of you—
-
producers, videographers,
editors, everybody,
-
including those who work
on and off camera,
-
I'm so, so, so grateful
because of your patience.
-
And 2024 is full
of big milestones for me
-
and you guys are definitely
one for the books.
-
So thank you and I hope
we continue to work together.
-
(applauds)
-
- Oh, wow.
-
(laughs)
-
- That's Jennifer Coolidge.
-
- Only in the bedroom.
-
That's good.
-
- Whoo!
-
(applauds)
-
- That's the go signal, guys.
Let's eat!
-
- Yeah. The pork's next level, Seth.
-
- That is so good.
-
Wow.
-
- So my dad knew him.
-
So we would go on his boat.
-
- So, guys, what do you think?
-
- Woah, so confident.
-
- You were crying.
-
- Hey!
-
(laughs)
-
- You know that rice cake
in front of the...
-
- So obviously my favorite
is the kinilaw, or ceviche.
-
I finished one entire bowl.
-
- Wow.
-
(laughs)
-
- But everything's so good.
As in. Seth, the sauce
-
is super gamechanger.
-
Super delicious. Promise.
No joke.
-
I'm thankful for the growth.
-
I'm just super lucky
to be surrounded by people
-
who are very passionate
in what they do,
-
and it's always
another learning experience
-
everyday with the team.
-
- Don't hurt yourself.
-
- So the dish
that we made today,
-
the idea was
how can you put together
-
two dishes that I grew up with
that I really
-
have strong memories with
which is a beef mechado
-
and the only dish my dad
ever taught me
-
which was Homard à l'Armoricaine
which is the only dish
-
he ever taught me how to make
but it's absolutely delicious.
-
And I found those flavors
to be very kind of synonymous
-
so that's what I kind
of played with.
-
So you have veal cheeks,
I added 'Nduja.
-
And then, Homard à l'Armoricaine
is a tomato-based stew,
-
a lobster stew
from France as well.
-
Both of those stocks
came together,
-
and then cooked down
into really thick,
-
kind of like fatty sauce.
-
That's why I didn't put
too much of it
-
'cause it's quite intense.
-
And then, I sous vided
and poached...
-
butter poached the lobsters,
and I really cooked down
-
the veal very nice and tender.
-
And that's served
with betel nut.
-
Betel nut is what they use
when they make nganga
-
in like Visayas and stuff,
and they chew tobacco.
-
So that's the leave
I used to kind of deep fry.
-
So that's another Filipino element
on the plate.
-
And yeah. So the idea
was to kind of present
-
those two cultures in one dish.
-
And then, we have soubise.
Soubise is a French sauce
-
of caramelized onions
that's kind of blended
-
at a high speed
with cream and milk
-
which is really nice.
-
And then, I added
natural ube to it;
-
there's no coloring there.
-
So it's kind of like a mashed...
-
It looks like ube halaya
but it's not,
-
it's a savory version.
-
So it's soubise mixed
with an ube mash.
-
So those two things
come together nicely.
-
- So what are you grateful for?
-
(laughs)
-
- Whoo!
-
- In my life, I've never
really believed so much
-
in something that I was doing,
and that belief
-
would not be possible
with the team
-
that we've built over the years.
-
Yes, that team has grown,
has changed,
-
the dynamics are always
more complicated
-
the more the number
of people that you bring
-
into a team, but I really
do think that
-
the instinct, the flexibility,
and everything
-
that we started with
is still very much at the core
-
of what we do.
-
I really believe in kind
of all the work
-
that we're doing.
-
I think it's fantastic.
I think we're doing something
-
that's never been done
in the Philippines.
-
And you know, I've always hated
when people said,
-
you know, "Ah, it's good enough
for the Philippines."
-
Like, that was always something
I kind of nod at,
-
that pissed me off,
and I think we're proving
-
that quote wrong in general.
-
And that's something
that wouldn't be possible
-
with anyone...
-
everyone at this table
and everyone that's not
-
on this table,
that couldn't join us today.
-
So thank you very much
for kind of believing
-
in this journey with me as well.
-
I know we operate
at a very high pace
-
and at a high speed,
but I think it's something
-
that we can all agree that,
you know, we're very lucky
-
to be put in this position as well,
to do things
-
that we're passionate about.
-
So thank you all.
-
(cheers and applauds)
-
- Delicious.
-
- I can eat the ube, like,
by itself.
-
- So I super love this dish
'cause I can taste the flavors
-
of Filipino and French.
-
I can eat it as is.
-
First, I'm grateful
for the kitchen team
-
for working so hard
and preparing everything
-
that's on the table right now.
-
Everything was so good.
-
I'm also grateful
for the whole TFKI team
-
'cause everyone is so passionate
and it's actually
-
super inspiring,
and it pushes me
-
to become better each day.
-
- Yeah!
-
- I’ve been in the industry
for over 10 years,
-
and out of all the shoots
I’ve been to—
-
so many shoots—
this is the only production
-
that I’ve truly
taken great care of.
-
(applauds)
-
(cheers)
-
So looking forward
to more years to come.
-
(cheers and applauds)
-
- All right. So we are team dessert—
Nica and Marts.
-
So the first one
in front of you,
-
it's Vacherin Au Citron.
Is it correct?
-
- Vacherin.
-
- Vacherin Au Citron.
-
Basically, it's like
an ice cream cake
-
but with all lemon.
-
So it's meringue,
it's lemon curd,
-
lemon sorbet,
and mint and basil syrup.
-
All house-made,
all sour but sweet.
-
And whenever I make dishes
for people,
-
it always comes from...
-
Sorry, Seth.
-
It always comes from memory
and experience.
-
So this was the last recipe
I developed
-
with a good friend of mine
before he passed away.
-
And things like that,
I love serving to people
-
I really like.
-
So this one's for everyone here.
I hope you guys like it.
-
- What are you grateful for?
-
- I am thankful for each
and every one of you here.
-
You guys are very patient
with each other,
-
you always listen to,
you know, instructions,
-
criticisms, or even affirmations
which is great.
-
- Thank you, Chef!
-
(applauds)
-
- The centerpiece.
-
- Okay. So after
a refreshing dessert from Chef,
-
so we want to close
and end this wonderful
-
Thanksgiving dinner
on a warm and sweet note,
-
so that's why I chose
a merry cheesecake stuffed
-
carrot cake.
-
So in the middle
of our carrot cake,
-
there's a whole cheesecake.
It's frosted with
-
a very nice and light
cream cheese frosting.
-
Just to have it
all come together,
-
there's a spiced
butterscotch sauce
-
that you can drizzle on top.
-
So I'm very grateful
for the entire team
-
because you believed in me
even if I had doubts
-
with myself.
-
And I'm just very thankful
for each and every one of you.
-
And hopefully, it's going
to be a fruitful 2025.
-
(cheers)
-
- What I'm grateful for...
-
Someone once asked me,
“Your family is amazing,”
-
they said.
-
My answer to that was,
it all boils down
-
to where you came from.
-
Of course, before you built
that family, you had work,
-
and through that work,
you fought for your family.
-
That’s what people
see now, right?
-
What people see now goes back
to where I came from,
-
and I’m grateful for myself.
-
Like, Hans,
I’m grateful for myself.
-
You know why?
-
Because I arrived
an hour and a half early
-
to shoot BTS for Erwan.
-
That one and a half hours—
when the camera operator
-
was late, the DOP said to me,
-
“Monn, can you handle
this camera?”
-
And from that day on,
I’ve been grateful for myself
-
because that’s the day I met E.
-
And on that day, he asked
if I had a passport.
-
That same day, I locked in
my flight to Taiwan
-
for my first job with Erwan.
-
Because I showed up so early,
I got that opportunity,
-
and that’s the reason
I’m here today.
-
So the lesson for everyone is,
whatever opportunity
-
comes your way, be grateful.
-
And I’m grateful
because we’ve grown so much.
-
When I walk into the office,
I’m greeted warmly—
-
everyone is welcoming.
-
There’s no one in a bad mood,
no one complaining
-
about their life,
because we’re all putting out
-
the same positive energy
for each other.
-
And I’m grateful because
we all lift each other up—
-
not drag each other down,
but help each other rise.
-
Thank you, Erwan,
because wherever this attitude
-
comes from, for sure,
it’s because of our boss.
-
If he were a jerk,
we’d all be jerks, right?
-
For sure. E, thank you.
Love you, man. Thank you.
-
And we’re going to grow
even more, for sure.
-
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
-
(applauds)
-
- You gave me the chance
to fulfill my dreams.
-
Oh, sorry.
-
(laughs)