Skip to Content
  • Tue May 22 2012
  • Welcome Guest!

Live Users (last hour): 1,414
Registered Users: 169,809

2010 Apr 20 Lam Fine Duck: Duck de Chine’s Father-Son Chef Team

During their stints in high-end restaurants and hotels from Japan to Malaysia to the United States, Chef Lin Jinsheng (林金胜) and his son Lin Jiahao (林家豪 Wilson Lam) introduced upscale Chinese cuisine to an appreciative international audience. Along the way, they encountered a variety of global cuisines and incorporated some of those elements into their own refined Cantonese dishes. Now, as executive chefs at Duck de Chine, the father and son work together to please the Beijing palate.

How does your duck compare to the birds served at other restaurants?
We tried every Beijing duck restaurant in town when we created our menu. We wanted to keep the advantages of all the various Beijing ducks that we came across, but we also wanted to create something new and more down to earth in our own version. Our goal was to take out the fat while keeping the juice, so the meat will be moist and tender, but not greasy. We also created a Cantonese-style dipping sauce as an extra accompaniment.

Lam Senior – What was working as a chef like when you first embarked upon your career? How did you become interested in cooking?
The Hong Kong economy wasn’t very good many years ago, and being a chef was seen as a low-class career. People thought cooks were dirty and uneducated. I started cooking just as a way to make money. Someone once told me that a chef can live as long as there is fire, so I thought it might be a good way for me to survive the bad economy. Now chefs are much more respected and well regarded.

Did you encourage your son to become a chef or was it his own decision?
Because I worked in the kitchens, my son spent a lot of time there, and gradually, he became interested in cooking as well. I never really considered whether it was a good job. I just thought that as long as he’s interested, he should pursue it step by step, and maybe one day it will be good for him.

Lam Junior – how did you first become interested in cooking? When was the first time you cooked?
When I was hanging out in my father’s kitchen, I thought it was amazing how the chefs worked their magic, and I started to play around with the tools and everything. Eventually, I became really interested in cooking. I worked in a kitchen for three years before they let me cook the first dish. From then on I started to learn all kinds of dishes.

Did you learn most of your cooking skills from your father?
My father was my very first teacher, as well as my most longstanding teacher. When we are in the kitchen together, he is only a teacher – and a very strict one at that! We’re only father and son outside of the kitchen. He taught me a lot of great cooking methods, as well as how to manage staff, control material costs, etc. He is my biggest inspiration, and I’m very glad to have a father like him.

Do you find it fulfilling being a chef?
Yes, very much, because it can be so different – different diners at different places in different seasons. It’s also challenging, which is a lot of fun.

What advice would you give to people who wish to pursue a culinary career?
Make sure they really are interested in cooking. Also, I’d tell them it won’t be an easy job.

Duck de Chine Daily 5pm-2.30am. 1949: The Hidden City, Courtyard 4, Gongti Beilu (behind Pacific Century Place), Chaoyang District. (133 1126 1949) 全鸭季,朝阳区工体北路4号院(盈科中心背面)

You might also be interested in :

  • The Veggie Table’s Laura Fanelli’s Tips on Eco-Friendly Living

    Staying healthy and going green in Beijing might seem like a Herculean task, especially in a city where health and safety guidelines take the back seat to develop the economy. Nevertheless there are those idealistic souls who persevere to do their part in saving the environment and leading a healthier and more natural lifestyle to boot. Laura Fanelli of The Veggie Table is one such stalwart, and gave us some practical tips on going green in Beijing.

    For more tips on living green or just staying healthy in Beijing, check out the full interview at Agendabeijing.com.

  • The New Wave of Fusion - Chef Kerry Hui of Chao Restaurant

    For more than 20 years, Kerry Hui has been honing his skills in the kitchen, and is now whipping up Fusion dishes in Chao, an open-concept restaurant that serves French-inspired fusion dishes. Agenda met up with Kerry to find out where he learned his chops.

  • Solid as Oak - Food and Beverage Manager Eduard Ruppel and Chef Phillip Robinson of Mediterraneo

    In an out-of-the-way spot in the Oakwood service apartments lies the latest incarnation of Mediterraneo, an authentic Mediterranean restaurant known for fresh, classic dishes. Agenda caught up with F&B manager Eduard Ruppel and chef Phillip Robinson to learn more about their cooking style, and how they keep Oakwood’s residents in a state of culinary bliss.

  • Terraforming the Dining Landscape. Restaurateur Gaby Alves of SALT and TERRA

    Gaby Alves is a veteran of the Beijing restaurant scene, and one of its most respected players. Since coming to China from Brazil seven years ago, the former professional volleyball player has opened a series of acclaimed restaurants and emboldened scores of adventurous chefs. Beginning with Alameda in 2003, and followed by SALT in 2007, her South American-inspired menus have earned her a consistent stream of “best of” awards, as well as a horde of dedicated customers. Her latest venture, TERRA, opened in Sanlitun earlier this year. The welcoming and energetic Alves met up with Agenda to share the secrets behind her success.

  • Teutonic Tastes: Ritz Carlton Beijing Executive Chef Andreas Krampl

    A seasoned world traveler and chef, Andreas Krampl has worked in numerous kitchens around the world, including that of renowned German Chef Heinz Winkler. Agenda caught up with him to learn more about love of ducks, his international career, and why working with the best is, indeed, the best.

Copyright 2009 True Run Media. All Rights Reserved. 京ICP备11039980
Powered by CANDIS Infrastructure Services