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Eating Authors: Mike Shevdon

8 comments Written on February 4th, 2013 by
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Mike Shevdon

It’s Monday and I’m hoping to sleep in a bit, as I’ve only just returned from the first of two three-day trainings in Conversational Hypnosis. Is it any wonder that I’m sleepy? Fortunately though, my guest for this week’s installment of EATING AUTHORS lives in the UK, and I’m sure the time difference makes it all work out. Or at least I’m going to tell myself it’s so. Shhh.

Mike Shevdon and I started out the same, reading the works of Edgar Rice Burroughs, C. S. Lewis, Robert Heinlein. And then any similarity appears to have ended. His official bio speaks of martials arts such as aikido and archery, and his culinary expertise include something called “squeaky cheese curry” which I can’t help but suppose has no resemblance to the squeaky cheese I used to get in Wisconsin. Since 2009, he’s been serving up novel-length fantasy for the fine folks at Angry Robot, juxtaposing tropes of faerie with the modern world. It’s a balancing act that makes for great reading, so after you’ve had a look at his response to the weekly question, pick up a copy of his first book and prepare to be delighted.

LMS: Welcome, Mike. I can only assume that modesty will keep you from nominating your own squeaky cheese curry, so can you please share with my readers your most memorable meal?

MS: Food has always been important to me, both as a consumer and a creator, and choosing a single memorable meal is almost impossible. There are so many things I would include – from fresh-caught anchovies eaten on the harbour in the village of Thermi on the island of Lesvos, to oysters in raspberry vinegar in a cafe in the outskirts of Paris, from duck with pancakes in the Mandarin Restaurant at the top of the Westin Plaza Hotel in Singapore, to osso bucco with risotto milanese in a small trattoria in Milan.
Rather than a single memorable meal, I would like to choose a memorable place where I had many wonderful meals. In the 1980s I was working for Blackwells the Booksellers in Oxford, based out of Hythe Bridge Street, near the railway station. I was in the IT Department, which meant I wasn’t in the main building, but in the annexe across the road. One of my colleagues was a contract programmer called Pete Taylor, and it was Pete that introduced me to Munchy Munchy, an Indonesian Cafe which was on Park End Street, one block over. Indeed, our offices backed onto their kitchens, so by lunchtime the most wonderful smells of spices were being wafted by the fans from the kitchens into the open windows at the back of our offices on the upper floor.

Munch Munchy was run by a husband and wife team, Tony and Ethel Ow, and had a simple philosophy. It was a cafe, not a restaurant, so you couldn’t book a table. The menu was devised from whatever was fresh at the market, so it varied day-to-day and was written in chalk on a large blackboard – a sight that’s familiar now in gastro-pubs and bistros, but in the 1980s was unheard of in England. The tables were pine with straight plain benches on each side. There was a pot of fiery chilli sauce on the table as a condiment. Cutlery came with the food.

Sixty-One Nails
The Road to Bedlam
Strangeness and Charm

The regular dish was satay – beef, chicken or prawns on bamboo skewers, marinaded in spices and cooked over charcoal, then served with plain rice, a salad of pineapple, tomato and cucumber chunks, and peanut sauce.

Oh, the peanut sauce – it was exquisite. I have never tasted the like, and believe me I’ve tried it anywhere I could. When the cafe finally closed and Tony and Ethel retired to Seattle to be near their family we begged Ethel for the recipe. We tried bribery, we pleaded, we cajoled. It was no good, she wouldn’t tell us how it was made. It was the colour of burnt toffee with rough ground roasted peanuts floating in the mix – viscous, but translucent rather than cloudy. It was slightly sweet, and had a tang and warmth of spices that we tried in vain to identify. My guess is that palm sugar was involved, and possibly ketsap manis, but beyond that I simply don’t know. I have tried every recipe I can find, trying to replicate it, but have never succeeded.

Other dishes were dependent on what was good. It was my first introduction to beef rendang, a thick slow-cooked curry of beef in coconut milk, which is one of my all-time favourites, and the tamarind roast duck was fabulous – rich and warm, with a crust that clung to the duck as it flaked apart on the fork. Vegetables were usually choi sum, or similar, cooked quickly to keep their freshness and bite, and served on a plate to share. Desserts were simple – there was fruit, usually mango, and sorbet or ice cream. Strangely, although you got two scoops of ice cream you weren’t allowed to mix flavours – I never found out why.

By evening the cafe would be packed, and a long queue would form down Park End Street of people waiting for tables – even though there were other good restaurants within a short walk. It was unique, special, and peerless. On my trainee programmer’s salary I could only afford to eat there on Fridays, though the prices were very reasonable, and it became a pilgrimage for Pete and I on a Friday lunchtime.

By eleven o’clock the aroma of rich spices would start drifting through the windows and we could smell the roasting peanuts for the satay sauce. Hints of what might be on the menu would lace the air and we would be salivating long before it was time to walk round and find a table.

Thanks, Mike. I already feel haunted by your description, and I’ve never tasted the food.

Next Monday: Another author and another meal!

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8 comments “Eating Authors: Mike Shevdon”

Ethel Ow, of fondest memories, was a most excellent cook. I have eaten in prestigious eating places all over the world but Ethel,s cooking was never less than sublime and stood comparison with 90% of them. Her bowl of Satay sauce alone was worth the journey. A stroll around the Ashmoleum, a couple of books from Blackwells and then on to Munchy Munchy: what a day out that was.

Just explained to my 14-y-old how exciting it was when something other than Chinese, Italian, Indian or French arrived in Oxford when I was a student in the mid ’80s. (OK there was the Jamaican eating house and Go Dutch but one was out of bounds and the other barely food). She takes all the Asian cuisines and their various fusions in her stride. We’ve come a long way and Munchy Munchy was a big step. Hope the folk who ran it did well. When did it close?

“Genius” is not a word I use lightly. Bach was a genius. Newton was a genius. And Ethel Ow IS a genius!

As a D.Phil. student of Roger Penrose at Oxford in the 1980s, I became completely obsessed with and addicted to Ethel’s utterly inspired creations at Munchy Munchy. Since those days, I have been lucky enough to visit several restaurants with Michelin stars, and countless excellent Asian restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area [my new home], but I have NEVER experienced food that surpassed Ethel Ow’s.

Although Ethel is retired now, it remains my fervent hope that her friends—amongst whom I am blessed to count myself—will one day persuade her to finally reveal her closely held secrets, and preserve them for posterity in the form of “The Munchy Munchy Cookbook”.

I just found this page when searching for Munchy Munchy (like you do when you start dreaming of food) and imagine my surprise to find myself featuring in the article! I remember you as Mike Rumfitt though? So what is that all about?! I take it you didn’t stay a trainee programmer for ever? Pete .T.

It is interesting to read of your passion for the Munchy Munchy. It was mine too, in the 1980s. I ate there with a colleague many times, usually after a very long day at work installing some exhibition at MOMA. There is a flavour of one of the dishes which just haunts me still and I have tried recreating it – failing miserably of course! I think it was a beef dish – but it could have been lamb. It’s hard to remember it was so long ago, but it was a flavour to die for. And of course, I remember the peanut sauce too. I have never tasted anything that comes close to the meals I enjoyed at the Munchy Munchy and I appreciated their modesty and the unassuming style of their cafe. It was a place where you would experience food genius. And of course I remember Tony and Ethel but I do wish they hadn’t retired and left. Pleasant memories. Graham H.

That sounds like the spicy lamb to me! I found it completely irresistible, and the pot of hot chilli sauce that went with it so beautifully has been a life long passion.  (Lee Kum Kee brand Chiu Chow Chilli Oil is a close approximation.)

I used to work as a waitress at Munchy Munchy , whist studying at the university and can confirm the meat dish was Beef Rendangcooked by two chefs using Ethel’s magic ingredients in an electric blender. She wouldn’t reveal her secrets to any of us ! 

I miss Munchy Munchy I first went there in the late 80’s as a kid and I continued to visit as I grew up. I worked at Munchy Munchy for just over 2 years whilst studying my A’levels along with Michelle another long-standing waitress. Also had the luxury as a friend and member of staff of going to their home for dinners on Sunday and many a trip to the cinema in high Wycombe. Still miss the food, it can’t be beat. 


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