Saturday, August 11, 2012

Local chefs awarded silver

A team of five Siem Reap chefs won a silver medal at their debut appearance in an international culinary contest in Pattaya, despite almost being derailed by over-bearing Thai customs officials.

Siem Reap Chef’s Club coordinator and team leader Chan Sophea, the food and beverage manager at Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa, said the team suffered a setback at the Thai border while travelling to Thailand’s biggest hospitality art competition and showcase, the Pattaya City Culinary Cup 2012, which was held last month from July 26-28.

Chan Sophea said that unfortunately when the Cambodian team reached the border, they were held up for about 3.5 hours by Thai customs who would not allow them to bring all their equipment.

He said, “Everyone got very tired and stressful, but we still managed to get to the first meeting at Pattaya city on time.” And happily the team prevailed, surprising everyone, possibly even themselves, by coming second in the contest and winning the silver medal in their debut performance.

Chan Sophea told Insider, “We are Cambodian and we are proud to win the silver medal for the first cheer.”

He said the five chefs competing in the team were representatives of Cambodia with a mission to show Khmer cuisine to the world. He added, “We tried with our full commitment and all our hearts to succeed. It was very challenging competition. The judges scored not only on the taste of the food we cooked, but also on the creative preparation, clean hygiene, and teamwork activities.

“The competition started at 10am and ran until 3:30pm. We ate nothing that day, but we were full with hope and confidence.” Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa’s general manager Hanno Stamm accompanied the team to the contest, which he said was very professional and tough.

“The competitions were not limited to cooking, but also included housekeeping, waiter, and bar competitions,” he said. “The whole thing lasted three days, with our chefs cooking on the last day. This obviously caused not a little anxiety among our chefs as they watched the other competitors doing their thing the first couple of days.

“I think our chefs did a bloody good job. Although they are all very capable, they had never competed nationally or internationally before. Cooking in front of judges and spectators must have played havoc with their nerves. Personally, I am very proud of all of them and I think it was great how they represented their hotels and Cambodia. But it would have been nice to get some support from the government.

We could not even get posters or brochures from the Ministry of Tourism. “But apart from doing very well, the team also had a chance to see how things are done outside Siem Reap. I think even more important than the silver medal is the experiences they gained.”

The comprised five leading Siem Reap hotel chefs: two from Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa, one from Grand Soluxe Angkor Palace Resort and Spa, one from Sokhalay Angkor Resort and Spa, and one from Ree Hotel. Training took place at the Victoria, and the hotel was the driver in getting the team to Thailand.

Hanno Stamm said, “The whole thing came about as a bit of an accident: the competition organiser, Mr Willment Leong, came to Siem Reap to visit our chef Vuthy – they used to work at the Raffles together.

“Whilst here, he started talking about the upcoming competition and wanted to know if chefs here in Siem Reap had ever done anything like that before. It was at this stage that Vuthy and Sophea, our food and beverage manager came to see me and asked if I was willing to support the idea.

“Sure I was! Not because I thought that they would stand much of a chance to be honest, but because I thought it would be a great learning experience. Subsequently, the chefs came to the Victoria every Sunday for four weeks to practice.”

Credit Text: The entire text obtained from the Phnom Penh Post 'official website
Writer by: Friday, 10 August 2012Peter Olszewski.
Credit Link:
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012081057939/Siem-Reap-Insider/local-chefs-awarded-silver.html
Credit Picture: Things were cooking in Pattaya for the five-chef Cambodian team from Siem Reap. Photograph: supplied

Monday, July 16, 2012

Chumreap Suor

Cambodians traditionally greet with a Sampeah, which involves pressing the palms together before the Chest with a slight bow and greeting with a polite "Chumreap Suor". Customarily, the higher the hands are held and the lower the bow, the more respect is conveyed. Except when meeting elderly people or government afficals, between men, this custom has been partially replaced by the handshake. Women usually great both men and women with the same traditional greetings although it may be considered acceptable for foreigners to shake hands with a Cambodian, it is more appropriate to respect the custome and respond with a "Chumreap Suor".

Text and Picture courtesy: comcam.asia

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Vote Us


Please cast your valuable vote for Grand Soluxe Angkor Palace Resort & Spa in the 2012 World Luxury Hotel Awards. Click the vote button above and you will instantly be directed to the voting poll. Click here to Vote





Friday, June 8, 2012

Limited time offer USD 100 Hotel Credit - Enjoy More

Package included
Luxury accommodation for 2 adults
Full buffet breakfast for 2 adults
Hotel credit of USD 100 per room per stay
Cambodian scarf upon arrival
Free use tennis cours, steam, sauna, gym, swimming pool

Redeem this offer by send email to booking3@grandsoluxeangkor.com
And quote Enjoy More USD 100 Hotel Credit

Terms & Conditions
This offer will be expire on June 15, 2012
Stay period: Now until December 30, 2012
Minimum 3 nights stay required
Rate inclusive all tax and service charge
Hotel credit cannot use to combined with any other package or promotion,
cannot be exchange in cashed, cannot be carried forward for any future stay.
Hotel credit to be used only for Restaurant, Mini-Bar, Laundry and Spa. To be apply at check out.



Wednesday, May 30, 2012

One Week Amazing Deal 63% Save



USD 289 for 3nights instead of USD 479
Enjoy our Added value offer
Accommodation for 2 people with daily breakfast
Upgrade to Luxury Premier Deluxe room
01 day tour with Tuk Tuk to Angkor Complex
Round trip airport transfer

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Redeem this offer by send email to booking3@grandsoluxeangkor.com
And quote Facebook Amazing Deal 63% Save

Send this offer to your friend 

The Offer Expire by thursday, 7th June 2012
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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

The Royal Plowing Day

The Royal Plowing Ceremony is an ancient royal rite held to welcome the beginning of rice-growing season; Farmers shall prepare for their agricultural activities such as: sowing seeds and growing rice, corn, bean, sesame etc. Beside these activities which have been shown as the symbol of farming by Sdech Meak and Preah Mehour, court soothsayers make a prediction on whether the coming growing season will be bountiful or not depending on what the Royal Oxen eat among many agricultural products,

Next, the soothsayers pray for a better weather with regular seasonal rainfall, particularly that all kinds of natural disasters be away from people’s land fields as well as the whole nation.Remarkably, the ceremony has been contented by the King of Cambodia and the King allows a couple of any high ranking figures to be appointed as as Sdech Meak and Preah Mehour for the event.

Text Courtesy: phnompenh.gov.kh
Picture Courtesy: mytripblog.org


Friday, April 6, 2012

Special Offer in Khmer New Year

The Khmer New Year, or 'Bon Chol Chhnam Thmei' in the Khmer language, is commonly celebrated on 13th April each year although sometimes the holiday may fall on the 14th April in keeping with the Cambodian lunar calendar. This marks the end of the harvest season when farmers enjoy the fruits of their labor and relax before the start of the rainy season. The New Year holidays last for three days

We offer couples an intimate hideaway in luxurious room and suite set amidst tropical gardens of Cambodia. A magical experience not to be missed! Booking is valid only for stay any night from 7th April 2012 until 22th April 2012. Minimum 02 night stay is required.

Make a reservation: booking3@grandsoluxeangkor.com
Click here for more information


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Explore The Monks Way of Life

Buddhist monks are easily recognizable with their saffron robes and shaved heads and each of these attributes has deep meaning. They symbolize the monk's commitment to the Buddha'sreachings. Most monks only enter the community or Sangha for a short period, usually a few months but some choose to live their lives as monks. In countries such as Cambodia, especially in rural areas, people regard a man as incomplete if he has not been ordained for a period. One of the reasons young men enter the Sangha is to make merit for their parents and to learn the dharma or teachings of the Buddha.

Text courtesy: Touch Stone Magazine
Picture courtesy: Leng Oudom

Monday, October 24, 2011

Siem Reap shines in culinary competition


Grand Soluxe Angkor Palace Resort & Spa, Siem Reap chef Phaing Sophai waits 
nervously with a colleague during prize announcements.
The chefs from Grand Soluxe Angkor Palace Resort and Spa defeated nine other teams to win the first “Khmer Mystery Black Box” contest, in which participants were forced to quickly improvise recipes from a box of secret ingredients. 

Angkor Palace chef Phaing Sophai confessed he felt nervous before the start of the competition, both by the size of the 300 strong crowd watching him, and from fear of what he would find when he opened his team’s box. 

“It was hard for me in the beginning because I could not see the ingredients.When we opened the closed box, we saw both Cambodian and foreign ingredients inside. Immediately, a Cambodian recipe named ‘Plea’ came up in our minds, so we decided to cook that dish,” he said. 

“Plea doesn’t really need a lot of ingredients but because the competition required us to use more than 16 ingredients for a dish, we invented a seafood recipe by adding more flavours. We also tried using some foreign ingredients too, and it worked!” 

While the Khmer mystery box portion of the competition was the most keenly awaited challenge of the day, hospitality staff also competed in bartending, fruit carving, barista and bed- making challenges, in order to win cash prizes.

Cambodian Restaurant Association President Van Porleng told the Post, he hopes the contest will be held annually in future as a sort of culinary Olympics, where local chefs and hospitality workers can show off their skills to the world. 

“The Cambodia Restaurant Association aims to organise this competition every year, both in order to increase the standard of the industry but also as a first step towards participating in international competitions all over the world. We also want to organise workshops and conferences where hospitality staff can enrich their professional knowledge,” he said.

More than 80 teams from hotels, restaurants, bars, nightclubs and NGOs took part in six different culinary and hospitality challenges during the day, and were assessed on their teamwork, creativity, and speed by a panel of sixteen local and international judges. Many of the challenges were gruelling with several elimination rounds held before a winner was announced. 

Sophai and his teammate Sok Vichetm, credit their long tenure as chefs at Angkor Palace as crucial in helping to prepare them for the mystery box competition. Before starting work in the restaurant business, Sophai said he learned to cook several Cambodian and Thai recipes at refugee camp in Thailand.

“I think the competition made me love my profession more. At first I thought I cannot compete with these other cooks because they are also from the five stars hotels, but we won in the end.” he said.

Straight after the mystery box contest, Gnov Sopheakdey from Samaki Cafe in Battambang, grabbed the crowd’s attention with an impressive performance in the barista section of the competition.

Blowing his competitors away, Sopheakdey took home a $300 cash prize, defending, the culinary reputation of Battambang, during a competition mostly dominated by staff from restaurants and hotels in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh.

Other winners included Long Borey from Riverhouse Lounge, who was unanimously selected as Cambodia’s best bartender, while Hagar Restaurant employee Lay Maly stuck up for smaller establishments with a victory in the fruit carving contest.

A team from Phnom Penh’s exclusive Topaz Restaurant & Piano Bar triumphed in a second black box contest, this one involving foreign ingredients, before Mao Srey Pov and Ngorn Sokhoeun from K-West Restaurant took home the “best bed-making” prize.

Minister of Tourism, Thong Khon, hailed the competition as a success, and said he would like to see it repeated next year as it segues with the government’s goal of promoting Cambodia as a fine dining destination.

“Food, beverage, and hospitality competitions are an essential factor in strengthening the quality of tourism services we provide in Cambodia. Cambodian foods have a special taste, compared to foods in other countries, and with the creativity of Cambodian cooks, they can make tourists remember their dishes and want to return to Cambodia,” he said.

Photo by: Derek Stout
Article by: phnompenhpost.com