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Cliff Wharton

Ten Penh

www.tenpenh.com  

202-393-4500

Cliff Wharton didn't grow up thinking that one day he would become a chef. No, he wanted to be a rock star! But the road to rock and roll glory is a tough one. After several years in a band that made it to the top 10 in Kansas City, but didn't quite place on Billboard's hot list, Cliff decided that maybe he wasn't destined for a life in the music limelight. When a financially rewarding outlet for his creative restlessness wasn't apparent, he worked in kitchens to pay the bills. Little did he know this would be the opening act for a life as a culinary superstar: in fact, in September 2003, Chef Wharton was named one of StarChefs.com’s Rising Stars. His familiarity with the kitchen began in Kansas City, Missouri, the place he called home from the time he was five. As Cliff will proudly report, prior to that the Philippines was home—his birthplace and the country from which his mother hails. In 1992, eager to leave Kansas City and experience the world, Cliff followed his brother to a naval posting in San Diego, California. There, he secured a job in Executive Chef Jeff Tunk's kitchen at Loew's Coronado Bay, working at the hotel's restaurant for a year under the careful guidance of Tunks, whom Cliff now regards as his mentor and the man to foster in him a serious commitment for the profession. But it was not long before Chef Tunks decided to venture to Louisiana to accept responsibility for the dining room at the prestigious Windsor Court Hotel in New Orleans. Tunks requested that Cliff Wharton join him as sous chef. "It was then," says Wharton, "that I realized I had chosen the right career. My desire to prove myself in the kitchen grew. I started to take things seriously when Jeff acknowledged that I had talent." As the evening sous chef at the Windsor Court, Wharton learned how to manage a kitchen. Although he claims no formal training, he insists the three years he spent at the Windsor Court with Jeff were "a formal apprenticeship"—a time to refine the skills he learned on the fly as he made his way from kitchen to kitchen. From the Big Easy, Wharton journeyed to Washington with Jeff Tunks, opening the instantly successful DC Coast restaurant in 1998. "Putting in 80-hour work weeks was bearable,” he says, “because I really like and respect the staff. Jeff has taught me a tremendous amount, especially about decision-making. It's really gratifying to see what can happen when everyone pulls together." In August 2000, Wharton, the young man who wanted to be a rock and roll star, became the leader of the band, rising to the position of Chef de Cuisine at DC Coast's Asian-Pacific inspired sister restaurant, TenPenh. Cooking dishes familiar to him from his childhood, Wharton builds his meals around fresh vegetables and grains, deftly seasoned with vivid spices that are roasted, ground, and blended specifically for each dish. Indulgences such as juicy shrimp and creamy sweet accents provide an occasional lush counterpart. Behind that welcoming smile lurks a visionary ready to lead the band in playing the simple truth. Thanks to Wharton, locals have become acquainted with traditional delicacies from the Philippines such as lumpia, a crispy rice flour roll filled with cabbage, beef or pork, water chestnuts and bean sprouts; an elegant version of Chicken Adobo, a flavorful chicken dish that's slow-cooked with black peppercorns, bay leaf, soy sauce, and vinegar; and Pancit, a noodle dish containing vegetables, meat, and Longaniza (Philippine-made) sausage. Striving to prove his belief that "simplicity sells," Wharton prepares beautifully simple food with complex tastes taken from his native country, the Philippines, as well as Vietnam, Thailand, China, Indonesia, and Malaysia. TenPenh has garnered consistently rave reviews, and in October 2003 it was favored by Gourmet magazine in its Guide to America’s Best Restaurants, which specifically cited a “complexity” “beneath the surface of Chef Cliff Wharton’s Asian-fusion menu.” He is listed in The International Who’s Who of Chefs. And so, the Rising Star has arrived… and he’s rockin’ the kitchen.

Lumpia Recipe - How to Saute Vegetables

Hi, my name is Cliff Warton and I am chef at TenPenh Restaurant. Today we are making a Lumpia, which is a Filipino Asian Spring Roll. I have shown you how to do the ground pork and shrimps which we have cooking right here.

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Lumpia Recipe - How to Saute Vegetables

Ingredients

Green cabbage
Celery
White onion
Water chestnuts
Ginger
Garlic
Mung bean sprouts
Ground pork
Baby shrimp
Spring roll wrapper
1/2 cup of fish sauce
1/2 cup of Soy sauce

Instructions

1. Clean and prepare the celery, onions, snowpeas and waterchestnuts. Mince the garlic and ginger.


2. Add a little bit of oil to a hot pot along with garlic and ginger. Stir it and then add the ground pork. When it is nearly cooked, add the shrimp. By the time the shrimp is cooked, the meat should be ready.


3. Add the onions, water chestnuts, snow peas, celery, mung bean sprouts and chopped cabbage to the meat and mix well. Add fish sauce and Soy sauce and a little salt and pepper. Once the mixture is finished cooking, lay it out on a sheet tray and let it cool down.


4. Roll the mix in spring roll wrappers and brush egg wash on the edges to seal. Plate and serve.

 

 

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Transcripts

Hi, my name is Cliff Warton and I am chef at TenPenh Restaurant. Today we are making a Lumpia, which is a Filipino Asian Spring Roll. I have shown you how to do the ground pork and shrimps which we have cooking right here. Now we are going to add some the vegetables we cut earlier into mixture. We have some onions, water chestnuts, snow peas, celery, little mung bean sprouts, and our chopped cabbage. Once you add all of that, we kind of want to mix that really nice -- mix it through, make sure you get a nice and mix. I am going to add some or about a half a cup of fish sauce and also you want to add half a cup of Soya sauce. We just mix all that up and when you cook, you want to cook down because cabbage -- the vegetables are very tender.

See how its all mixed and nice just want to taste it maybe I want to add a little salt, little pepper to this, it is all up to you its how you want to eat it, and that's how we do that. Once this is cooked, once all the vegetables are tender we want to lay this out on a sheet tray. We will lay this, turn this off we will lay this out on a sheet tray wait I'll cook you, it's not cooked yet. Lay it out on sheet tray we want to cool it down, and once it's cooled down, we will get a mixture like this, its all nice and it's going to be ready to roll. That's how we cook our vegetables and ground pork and shrimp that's how we cook it.

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