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It has, once again, been way too long since my last visit to
Bo Innovation. I've been thinking about going to the "new" location ever since they moved, but somehow the place just doesn't come up enough in conversation with friends.
A few months ago Mama Bear pinged me and asked for her. Bear and his BFF have been working on a
cookbook with recipes from Vancouver area chefs, and the idea was to raise money for a local food charity. They were looking for someone to write the foreword to the book, and Mama Bear asked me whether I had any contacts with Alvin Leung. As a matter of fact, I did have a way to connect with Alvin, and The Manchurian very kindly helped put Alvin and Tigger together. It wasn't long before Alvin very kindly lent his support to the project.
A couple of weeks later, Alvin held a talk for the launch of his book
My Hong Kong. I figured it was only right to show my support by buying a couple of copies and getting them signed - so I could give a copy to Bear. It's an interesting book and clearly a labor of love - which Alvin said has been in the works for some 8 years.
The Manchurian pinged me last week and invited me to dinner tonight. Apparently Bo Innovation is launching a new menu, and as I had turned down quite a few invitations from him, I figured I would try to make it tonight.
The 6 of us were placed in the Aberdeen Room, which is right next to the open kitchen. It's too bad that the lighting here was so poor, because it definitely had an impact on all of my pictures tonight...
The new, concise I ❤️Hong Kong menu was already in front of us, and featured the outline of the top of Lion Rock (獅子山) running down one side. It's pretty clear from everything around us that Alvin is really trying to showcase his version of the Hong Kong story.
Smell my granny - you gotta admit that this is a pretty strange name for a dish... and I cracked a poor joke about what might be coming our way. As it turned out, this wasn't a dish to be eaten, but just the wet naps with which we were to prepare our hands and fingers for what comes next.
So this was to introduce - to young people and those who are not from Hong Kong - the Florida Water (花露水) so often used by our grandmothers' generation. In this case it came from
Two Girls (雙妹嚜) - a brand established in Hong Kong at the end of the 19th Century. And yes, I did see Florida Water in my grandma's bedroom when I was growing up...