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Profile of Philip Mimbimi at Nutmegs
In between easing slices of fuchsia watermelon onto his flaming
grill, warming a roast tomato soup and popping a pappadum,
Nutmegs’ chef de cuisine Philip Mimbimi at Nutmegs, the in-house
restaurant at Bali institution Hu’u, has a few secrets and tips
to share. When he’s dining out at a new restaurant, for instance, he
routinely likes to order the Caesar salad and the carbonara.
“That’s like my test of a restaurant. If you can’t make a decent
Caesar salad, then that shows the quality of the rest of the
kitchen,” he says, adding that a restaurant needs to put its own
unique twist or touch to the dish. “It’s like bread: If you don’t serve a good bread then the
rest of the dinner isn’t really going to go anywhere.” And on Mimbimi’s new 30-plus dish menu, about his fourth
redesign in the near two years he’s been at Nutmegs, the Caesar
take is highly innovative. “I do it as a grilled romaine. We take the baby romaine head
and split it in half, grill it and serve it with a dressing of
lemongrass and chilli,” he says. White anchovies and shaved
pecorino romano complete the dish. The focus on Balinese ingredients on his menu is deliberate,
with Mimbimi particularly proud of the tuna dish he’s about to
assemble. “This is one of my favourites because it’s all local,” he says
as he eyes smoke wafting from a cast iron pan. “Cooking is: You’ve got to smell it, taste it, touch it, and
you gotta hear it. When the tuna goes in the pan if you don’t
hear that noise of searing, you’re a shoemaker, as I call it,
which means you’re not cooking right.” The thick steak of tuna, plucked freshly from the waters off
Bali, has been marinated in fish and oyster sauces, salt and
pepper, speared with lemongrass and tied with a pandan leaf.
“I actually don’t carry imported fish on my menu. Salmon I
usually don’t run, I run tuna, swordfish, garupa, barramundi.
These are all fish that are swimming five minutes away from
here.” The tuna is done in a matter of minutes and plated over mashed
Balinese purple potato and alongside wok-seared Asian greens.
It’s served with a warm passionfruit vinaigrette which features a
touch of saffron and uses local Hatten wine. A sprinkling of
lemongrass salt, made by Mimbimi using Balinese crystal salt,
sits to one side. “The nice thing about this is there’s really only one
ingredient in the whole dish that’s not local and that’s the
saffron,” he says, garnishing the plate with a snap of fresh
basil and a few careful drizzles of chilli oil. Mimbimi believes one of the best things about working in Asia
are the unique ingredients it produces. “The herbs are quite
incredible and if you just talk about just Indonesia itself, the
spices of Indonesia are just amazing,” he says. Chef friends back
in the United States plead with Mimbimi to take them back organic
pyramid crystal salt and Javanese comet’s tail peppercorn. Watermelon, ubiquitous in the tropics, takes centre stage in
another dish on the latest Nutmegs menu. The bright pink and
yellow of the fruit become even more vivid as the sugars slowly
caramelise over the grill, and Mimbimi, gliding around his
kitchen like a captain in control of his ship, explains that he
takes his inspiration for dishes such as this largely from the
seasons. “We’re moving out of the rainy season, we’ve gone into the end
of it, so I think it’s the weather... That’s pretty much what
normally inspires me.” One of the watermelon slices are spread with a sundried tomato
tapenade, a mixture of in-house prepared tomatoes, garlic,
parsley, balsamic vinegar, capers, black olives and fresh herbs
from Bali’s cooler mountainous north. Topped with the second
watermelon slice, this is another dish almost completely local. Mimbimi, who has worked in Singapore, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur,
Las Vegas, Jamaica’s Montego Bay, Thailand’s Phuket, St Thomas in
the Caribbean and his home town of New York, typically gets
inspired to create a particular dish by beginning with a single
ingredient. “I challenge my suppliers a lot to bring me new items. My
seafood suppliers really don’t like phone calls from me!” he
quips. A supplier must have delivered the calamari we sample only
hours earlier: the polenta-crusted flesh is exquisitely tender.
It comes nestled on a bed of Thai-style spicy salad with a bit of
a kick, a great compliment to the calamari. Seafood makes another appearance in the form of tandoori
prawns locked together on a plate, then surrounded by a lake of
luscious curried tomato soup, normally plated at the table for
diners. A crunchy pappadum completes the dish. Beef is one item Mimbimi notes isn’t quite up to scratch in
Indonesia, and “oxtail soup is different to a sirloin steak.”
“A few things you can’t source locally, so you have to be
flexible, and you have to be willing to adapt to your
surroundings,” he says. “In my experience I’ve been fortunate
enough to work in places like Kuala Lumpur where no pork or pork
products are allowed in the kitchen, or even cooking with wine,
so you learn how to work without an ingredient.” His beef take sees braised boneless short ribs served with a
beetroot mash, vegetable stack and a shiraz wine reduction. It’s
a plate of rich, seductive colour, with the meat melting in the
mouth as its flavour melds with the scrumptious beetroot and
wine. Vegetarians will be pleased to hear that for two years,
Mimbimi was a vegetarian after being underwhelmed by the quality
of meat in the Caribbean. He went back to eating meat when he
left the Carribean... to go and work in a steakhouse. “Now I have vegetarians come in and I have a thousand
different things I am able to do for them.” Finally, those seeking a dish whose recipe is of local
provenance should go directly to Mimbimi’s nasi hu’uduk, which
comes in lunch or a more exotic dinner form: sambal lobster tail
(prawns at lunch time), coconut rice, wagyu beef rendang (drop
the wagyu when you’re in at midday), chilli omelet, and
condiments such as crunchy veggie pickles. Who could possibly order carbonara at a restaurant like this? |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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