Manila Bulletin

High steaks: Meaty difference­s at Trump-Kim summit

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HANOI, Vietnam (AFP) – Sanctions and nuclear plants are not the only bones of contention between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un: While the US president likes his steaks well done, the North Korean leader has rarer tastes.

Paul Smart, the executive chef at the Metropole hotel in Hanoi, worked closely with two of the North Korean leader's personal chefs on the meals prepared for the two-day summit.

An intimate dinner on the first day featured marinated tender sirloin served with kimchi-stuffed pear, but the principals missed out on a foie gras and snow fish lunch as negotiatio­ns over the North's weapons programs and internatio­nal sanctions ground to a halt.

The team had strict instructio­ns on how to prepare the meat, Smart said. "Kim had medium-rare to rare, very rare," he told AFP. "And Trump had well done."

The US president is known

for his simple culinary tastes, but Kim's preference for bloodier meat showed an appreciati­on for quality, Smart said.

"He really likes to dine and experience cuisine for what it is."

According to his chefs – both of them called Kim – the North Korean leader has expensive tastes, Smart added. "He likes caviar, lobster, really luxurious products. Foie gras, he really likes to indulge in cuisine."

Each side in the Metropole kitchen prepared dishes of its own, with the North Koreans bringing all their own ingredient­s – including the steaks, carried in a chilled metal container on board Kim's train.

The beef was "very natural and marbled, very red," Smart said, suggesting that – as with Japanese wagyu – cattle may be allowed to roam free in North Korea.

But aside from ox-drawn carts, bovines are a rare sight in the North Korean countrysid­e.

The impoverish­ed country consistent­ly fails to produce enough food to feed itself and according to the United Nations, more than 10 million people – around 40 percent of the population – need food aid.

On Wednesday Trump ate every last morsel of his chocolate lava cake dessert, while the main course was almost certainly the first time the US president has consumed North Korean beef.

Sniffer dogs were brought in to sweep the kitchen ahead of the summit, and food samplers from both sides tasted each dish before it went out to the Metropole tables.

"Everything was individual­ly wrapped, it was very hygienical­ly packed and everything," Smart said of the North Korean supplies.

"They even brought a little alcohol swab to swab down their knives, swab down their chopping boards. In a clinical way they prepared the food very nicely."

They had one culinary blind spot: they had never before seen a shrimp cocktail, the 1980s American classic which Trump requested for the opening dinner.

"They were really intrigued by the taste" of thousand island dressing, Smart said. "So I gave them the recipe and they took it home with them."

In return, they explained how to make kimchi, the fermented cabbage side dish that is a mainstay of Korean cuisine.

For lunch on the summit's second day, the North Koreans were responsibl­e for the apple foie gras jelly appetizers – again providing their own ingredient­s, and carving longbeaked birds out of a white seaweed jelly for presentati­on.

"It was really kind of a masterpiec­e," Smart said.

They were laid out on the table, but the leaders never sat down as the summit deadlocked over Washington's demand the North close its Yongbyon nuclear complex and Pyongyang's desire for relief from UN Security Council sanctions.

The leaders left without a signing ceremony or the scheduled meal, to the disappoint­ment of the culinary team.

Instead, hotel staff ate Smart's main course of grilled snow fish, roasted vegetables and rice pilaf.

"It was delicious," said Anthony Slewka, Metropole's sales and marketing director – and the hotel is now considerin­g offering guests the same menu.

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