All about bucatini, doner kebabs and yak butter tea
By Christopher Blaszczyk
0Apr 1, 2011 4:00 pm
+ ENLARGEPhoto credit: PixieVisionProductions
Margaret Cho
Every comedian wants to be a rock star, or so the story goes —
but when one is able to enlist talented friends to assist and outsource
strengths they may be lacking in attempting to weld the two mediums
together, an opportunity for something truly unique arises. That's the
magic behind Margaret Cho's Grammy-nominated comedic musical album Cho
Dependent, a fantastic collection of comedy music that boasts collaborations
with high-profile musicians such as Fiona Apple, Tegan and Sara, Andrew
Bird, Ani DiFranco and more.
Margaret's raw-honest standup appeal and unabashed sexuality is in
full bloom on Cho Dependent, be it on "My Puss," the Mickey
Avalon parody song, or "Calling in Stoned," which features
Ben Lee and legendary stoner Tommy Chong. While some tracks focus more
on the fun and humor of the material, a few songs are downright fantastic,
particularly "Baby I'm With The Band" (featuring Brendan Benson)
and the beautifully dreamy "Hey Big Dog" with elusive chanteuse
Fiona Apple.
Food Republic caught up with Margaret in Los Angeles to discuss her
culinary philosophy and relationship with food, as well as her favorite
eating spots in the world.
Not too long ago you mentioned on Twitter that you had pasta in Rome
for the first time in four months. How was the experience?
Oh my goodness, it was really good. I had bucatini, which I have never
had before. It's like a thick spaghetti with a tiny hole in the center
so the sauce - which was a very thin but sweet tomato base with lots
of pancetta - would flavor the pasta from the inside out. The place,
the spectacular Roman treasure is named Bucatini - for the dish. It's
one of my favorites in Rome. Unfortunately, right after I ate dinner
I had to walk up a huge hill to get back to my hotel, so that part wasn't
fun, but the eating part was great.
Are you a pasta aficionado?
Yes, I love it, but I have been trying to stop eating it because it
isn't the healthiest for me. But it's my favorite! I am such a penne
queen.
Name your three favorite restaurants and why you love them.
Bucatini - Rome - best place to break a pasta fast. They have an antipasto
bar that's tremendous and it's really old fashioned Roman specialities
like chicken with peppers and of course delicious bucatini.
Perilli - nearby on Via Marmorata in Rome - this was Fellini's favorite
restaurant. It's very hard to get a table so reserve way ahead of time.
The food is amazing, especially if you are way into Roman cuisine. It's
fancier than Bucatini but so delicious. Beef knuckle with tiny onions
will haunt you in your dreams.
For Italian in Los Angeles I always go for Farfalle on Hillhurst. It's
very basic, very delicious Italian that's not such a huge big deal and
they haven't changed the menu in ages which I truly appreciate. I love
the farfalle salmone and usually only need to order that as the portions
are huge.
What's your version of heaven on a plate?
There's all different kinds of heavens, as many as there are religions!
I love something simple really - perfectly roasted meat and vegetables
paired with the right wine - if I am cooking this is what I will do.
Not too showy, but surprisingly difficult to pull off for 4! The world's
greatest cuisine is Moroccan, although I haven't found a restaurant
outside of a traditional riad in Morocco that serves it up right. That
is heaven on a plate! 'The Imam Faints' eggplant salad, pigeon bastilla
covered with powdered sugar and raisins, lamb tagine with prunes offered
up with an illicit bottle of merlot from the Meknes Marjane (which is
like Wal-mart of the middle east) and then finished off with oranges
dusted with cinnamon – that's heaven. But you can't really get
it in a restaurant, you have to go to a riad! Or make it yourself.
Do you have any particular dietary habits, such as veganism or vegetarianism?
I have done both in the past, but now I eat everything - except too
much pasta! I have done really extreme diets too like raw food, juicing
only – I would even travel with a blender and a juicer and a set
of knives!!!
What do you love to cook most, and how do you prepare it?
I think the most beautiful, simple, poetic thing to make is a roasted
whole chicken. Just rub the thing with cut lemons and good oil AND butter,
stuff the cavity with the same lemons, stick in a hot oven - make sure
to cover the top of chicken loosely with foil for the first 30 min so
it doesn't burn. It's easy and really delicious and satisfying. Selene
Luna puts a half empty beer can inside the chicken too! That's a fantastic
trick! It flavors and moistens the meat as well as cooking it faster
from the inside!
What food will you absolutely not eat?
I don't know yet, but anything with eyes kind of bothers me.
Name your most ideal dinner date.
Someone who loves to eat as much as me, because usually if they love
to eat they are alright.
Jesus Christ, Julian Assange, Glenn Beck and Axl Rose are your guests
for a dinner party. What do you serve?
Lots of wine, or maybe just water and Jesus can make some. This may
take the edge off the fighting as well.
You've been around the world, and you don't seem the type to shy away
from new experiences. What's the best culinary surprise you've found
while traveling?
I think what I have discovered is that even though cultures are vastly
different, everyone (no matter where you are) is super excited about
dinner! My favorite discoveries have been street foods in places like
Berlin- where doner kebab rules. It's kind of like shawerma, chicken
or lamb pieced together on a giant spit and cut off with a huge knife
and wrapped in a crispy flatbread and served with a tahini-yogurt sauce.
That is amazing with a side of fries and curry ketchup. There's nothing
better in my opinion.
The worst?
Oh easily Tibet. I love Tibet, but I really cannot deal with the food.
It's very different. The yak butter tea kind of tastes like vending
maching chicken noodle soup - for anyone old and unfortunate enough
to have had that. It's really gross, and you have to drink it when you
are offered a cup in the monastery. The people are really poor and so
when they offer it to you, it's a huge big deal. And it's nasty. Boy,
I really don't like that tea.
The most bizarre?
I think this has to be Tibet too - where the breakfast is yak butter
tea served with tsampa which is basically just flour and you pour the
tea into the flour and make doughballs and eat it. That's very weird
to me but better than drinking the tea on its own.
Also, there are great restaurants in Mexico City that serve Aztec specialties
like ant eggs and corn smut (which is the mold that grows on corn),
which I absolutely love but it is weird.
My favorite weird thing is pollack roe, which is a salty, spicy preserved
fish egg sac that's served in soondooboo, which is a hot Korean tofu.
Best!