If Hong Kong was a dish, what would it be? Top chefs plate up their answers


Pizzas, hamburgers and sushi โ€“ these are just some of the foods that have come to define certain cultures. But a cuisine is about more than an iconic dish, and every dish contains much more than its ingredients. It can reflect not only a historic time and place, but also modernity and a chefโ€™s creative flair.

So if Hong Kong was a dish, what would it be? That is the question put to Luke Armstrong, head chef of Lโ€™Envol restaurant at The St Regis Hong Kong, and Alicia Castillo, pastry and bakery chef at The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong.

โ€œIt would be something vibrant,โ€ Armstrong says, acknowledging the cityโ€™s multicultural dining scene and availability of the finest ingredients. โ€œBut what defines me is saffron and white asparagus.โ€

He continued: โ€œIf Hong Kong was a dish, it would be charcoal-grilled Japanese Wagyu beef from Kagoshima with Loire Valley [French] white asparagus cooked en croute and a nice spring bearnaise. A distinct influence of Hong Kong, Japan and France.โ€

Luke Armstrong, head chef of Lโ€™Envol restaurant at The St Regis Hong Kong, acknowledged Hong Kongโ€™s multicultural dining scene and global selection of ingredients in the dish he created to represent the city.
Luke Armstrong, head chef of Lโ€™Envol restaurant at The St Regis Hong Kong, acknowledged Hong Kongโ€™s multicultural dining scene and global selection of ingredients in the dish he created to represent the city.

Originally from Perth, Western Australia, Armstrong โ€“ who arrived in Hong Kong last November after working at acclaimed restaurants in Europe, Singapore and Japan โ€“ has developed an affinity for the cityโ€™s mix of calm and frenetic energy.

โ€œI like to live my life with order and chaos,โ€ he says. โ€œThatโ€™s what you see when you walk through the city; some parts are chaotic, and some parts are very peaceful.โ€

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