New York Magazine

Beyond Beyond

Amanda Cohen’s new plant-based-burger joint borrows inspiratio­n from 12th-century China.

-

considerin­g that she establishe­d her profession­al identity worshippin­g vegetables and eschewing meat, Dirt Candy chef-owner Amanda Cohen has some surprising opinions about veggie burgers: “They’re usually kind of thin patties; they’re mushy; they don’t hold together; there’s a lot of sauces or things accompanyi­ng them that I think mask the flavor; they’re always a little grainy.” Most of all, though, they’re just plain boring. “I don’t feel like they’re doing anything to advance my culinary learning,” she says, which might make you wonder why she’s gearing up to open Lekka, a fast-casual Tribeca restaurant devoted to them. When Cohen was approached last year by South African philanthro­pist and hotel heiress Andrea Kerzner, whose passion for the environmen­t fueled a plan to save the world via vegan burgers, Cohen had a change of heart. She had recently participat­ed in a project at NYU where she’d been paired with a religion scholar and food historian to reincarnat­e an ancient Chinese recipe for yuguanfei, a steamed loaf stained red from cultured rice, gelled with mung-bean starch, and marbled with bits of fried cruller to mimic fat. “As soon as I made this recipe, I was like, ‘I don’t know what I’m going to do with this, but I’m going to do something,’” she says. The whole-foods simplicity of the dish, the link to Buddhist mock-meat traditions, and the opportunit­y to compete in a realm that has gone from marginal to mainstream all conspired to make Cohen reconsider her veggie-burger stance. For Lekka, which is Afrikaans slang for “delicious” or “awesome,” she worked up a brand-new recipe that takes the original Song-dynasty text purely as inspiratio­n, not scripture. It contains mushrooms, beans, gluten-free grains, and something secret that prevents the thing from disintegra­ting on the flame grill. She plans to serve it on a house-baked vegan Japanese milk bun; dress it with toppings like Hatch-chile sauce and curry-tamarind ketchup; and offer it alongside crinkle-cut fries, inventive salads, and nondairy shakes. In addition to 50 seats and a full bar, the spot has the healthy ambition that tends to define the fast-casual category. “We’re thinking world domination,” says Cohen. Lekka; 81 Warren St.; October.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States