I have always been fascinated with the colour of black (darkness) since my university days studying Architecture. I even once painted a place I used to live ALL in black!
Black reveals as much as it's concealing things. It reminded me to a very old conversation I had with Tom from New York about the city at night. That conversation later became my design philosophy for an architectural design project at the university...
- Loong: I thought light reveals things, but it can also hides things.
- Tom: Beautiful
- Loong: If you look at the street during the day, you see the street, but not the internal spaces. But at night you see nothing on the street but the internal spaces visually extended into the street.
- Tom: I’ve always gotten out on the chaos theory of how offices are lit at night
- Tom: .....random Christmas tree. Brilliance.
- Loong: I thought isn’t it the case that internal spaces are private and at night we want privacy?
- Loong: .....but then at night we reveal our private domain more than during the daytime.
- Tom: I am going to think of that tomorrow night when I leave work
- Tom: .....you have added to the way I will see my city
- Loong: . . . . . . . (pondering)
- Tom: I work in midtown and love the night time skyline
- Tom: .....how it fluctuates with every step
- Tom: Now I will see the internal is leaking out. Virtual real space in the city
- Tom: I was serious about how I will see a little bit different tomorrow night.
I can think of only two natural ingredients that is black in colour - the black glutinous rice flour and squid ink.
I am sure there is a proper way to make squid ink risotto, but I thought I should just make it up! For this experiment, I cooked the risotto the normal way with gently fried garlic, onion, leek. stock and seasoned with salt and pepper. Just before the rice is cooked, I then add in the squid pieces and the ink.
Meanwhile, I deep fried the squid pieces coated with the combinations of corn flour, pepper, salt and turmeric powder.
Just before serving, when the rice is still hot, stir in a generous amount of grated parmesan cheese.Garnish the rice with the turmeric calamari pieces and spring onion.
I love how the lightly blackened (It might look more intense if the rice is darker) rice highlight brilliantly the bright golden calamari. It is almost has a "Photoshop" effect.
I am very pleased with the colour combinations! What colour combinations next?!