Alt Economy returns to Monday Night Foodball
[READER]( [Food & Drink]( Jennifer Kim was just gonna let things ripen. âSometimes you gotta sit and let shit get good,â the chef told me just days before she closed her restaurant two and a half years ago. âLet it do what it needs to do to turn into something else.â Kim wasnât exactly talking about her own future after the closing of her acclaimed Korean-Italian [Passerotto]( (though she might as well have been). [She was instead referring]( to the pantry full of vinegars, pickles, syrups, and other assorted ferments sheâd put up in her apartment pantry during the first six months of COVID. Plenty of those have been released into the pop-up wilderness over timeâthough lately not so much. Kimâs been busy teaching fine dining to the kids at Kendall College and, via [AltEconomy]( organizing [mutual aid continuing education]( for industry workers and microbusinesses. Sheâs slowed her once-prodigious pop-up output, but the inexorable sugar conversions of Lactobacillus cannot be stoppedâunless theyâre eaten, that is. So the time is nigh for Kimâs Frenchie Liquid Funk Fermentation Bistro at the next [Monday Night Foodball]( the Readerâs weekly chef pop-up at Ludlow Liquors. In 2014 you could say Kimâs shit had just started to get good. Sheâd just come off three years on the line at Blackbird to spend a summer in the south of France, mostly cooking at the Michelin-starred Bistro de Saveurs in Castres. âMy day-to-day at the restaurant was interesting and challenging, but overall, I was extremely lonely during my time in France,â she says. âWhen I think back on that younger version of myself and how unhappy I was living and working in that picturesque village, the me of here and now wants to reconnect and rebuild those memories through food. Comfort and nurture through food. If these two parts of my past and present could cook a meal together, what would that look like? Would the past version look at where we ended up almost a decade later and find relief? Joy? Connection? I'd like to think that lonely young cook, working wistfully as they counted down the days until they were back stateside, would find deep hopefulness and anticipation. That she would find permission to explore and shape herself outside of societal and professional standards.â So how do they, the Kim of then and the Kim of now, cook together? Theyâll start with a Lyonnaise-type salad of cured Catalpa Farms lamb belly lardons with red plum, pickled apricot, and chestnut miso. Kimâs working on a potato pave with white asparagus soubise, pickled asparagus spears, and kombu oil (âThink cheese fries,â she says). There will be brie swaddled in duckâfat puff pastry with maple kombucha syrup, poached pear, and black apricot; and a showstopping duck a lâorange, âa la Sun Wahâ: dry-aged breast and confit leg with cara cara orange miso, calamansi vinegar, and pillowy steamed bao to deliver it all to your mouth. Les desserts: crunchy cookie puffs piped with fermented rhubarb mousse; and Kimâs diabolical subversion of the classic Ferrero Rocher bonbon: hazelnut-crusted chocolate ganache orbs filled with foie gras mousse. Kimâs [return to Foodball]( is dine-in only, mes amisâand first-come first-served starting at 5:30 PM, Monday, April 24. So have a seat and investigate Joelâs natural wine pairings or the French 75 riff heâs working on with hard kombucha and Kimâs fermented chamomile syrup. âI'm excited to cook and share in this menu because it's an opportunity to reflect on the ways this industry has changed meâfrom then until now,â says Kim. âAs well as how I have changed the way I choose to interact with the industry.â Meanwhile, look upon a summerâs worth of Monday Night Foodball:
[Two Jennifer Kims will cook at the Liquid Funk Fermentation Bistro for the next Monday Night Foodball](
Alt Economy returns, en français, this Monday at Ludlow Liquors. by [Mike Sula]( | [Read more]( â [Whisper no more](
The CHAAD Project advocates for workers in Chicagoâs hospitality industry. by [Tesneem Elewa]( | [Read more]( â March 2017 [Why Chicagoâs once-promising food truck scene stalled out](
The mobile food industry in Chicago has been systematically immobilized by legislative opposition, onerous red tape, and the pro-restaurant lobby. by [Julia Thiel]( | [Read more]( â January 2021 [Giving myself a break: on oyatsu](
How a snacking ritual makes the Chicago winter bearable by [Nina Li Coomes]( | [Read more]( â
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