Sunday Roast / Erchen Chang
Current bun
Originally founded as a market stall in an East London car park, the Bao restaurant group now includes permanent restaurants in Fitzrovia, Borough Market, King’s Cross and Shoreditch (writes Grace Charlton). Co-founder Erchen Chang’s cookery is a playful take on Taiwanese fare, from boiled cull yaw dumplings made with mutton to fried-Horlicks ice cream. Here, Chang shares her weekend plans in Paris, larder essentials and dream Sunday evening, complete with fluffy slippers and a surf-rock soundtrack.
Where do we find you this weekend?
Paris. I’m really looking forward to eating my way around the city, seeing the Ettore Sottsass show at the Pompidou, visiting the Bourse de Commerce and going to Ogata for a tea ceremony.
What’s your ideal start to a Sunday – gentle start or a jolt?
My ideal weekend involves a very lazy Saturday with a pumped Sunday. I like waking up early on a Sunday to get the most out of the day and then resting early to recuperate for the week ahead.
Soundtrack of choice?
Jacques Tati’s Sonorama! is a great way to begin a Sunday – so cheerful and romantic.
What’s for breakfast?
A glass of orange juice in a martini glass, lots of freshly made choux pastries, ham and cheese, and English breakfast tea with milk at a perfect drinking temperature.
News or no news?
None. Sundays are for zoning out.
Any larder essentials you can’t do without?
Fluffy, white steamed baos, aged white soy from Taiwan, Pacina olive oil, baozhong tea from Pinglin and Yakult [a probiotic drink].
A Sunday culture must?
Weirdly, I’ve been enjoying waking up early to go to our bakery to make bao sculptures. It’s a day of (almost) complete solitude, where I listen to music and work with dough. It’s my studio time, where my thoughts are led by my hands and the dough; it’s quite therapeutic and meditative.
Ideal dinner menu?
To get back to my cosy home where I’d be welcomed by the aromas of my husband’s cooking. The table would be laid out with a white linen tablecloth, wine would be poured and we would have a simple hearty stew with velvety mashed potato.
A glass of something you’d recommend?
I’d recommend making yourself comfortable on a leather lounge chair or chaise, pouring yourself a single malt whisky (straight) and pairing that with a pot of hot Taiwanese baozhong oolong tea. Dim the light and let that burning sensation wash away the Sunday sorrow.
What’s your Sunday evening routine?
Silk robes, fluffy slippers, facial mask, Buly 1803 essential oil, instrumental surf-rock playing in the background, laying on my side on my chaise and my husband feeding me grapes.
What are your favourite festive traditions?
Going to Monmouth Coffee and having a slice of Pasticceria Triestina Ulcigrai panettone with a filter coffee. When I finish, I’ll bring home another four to five whole panettones to eat throughout December.