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The Basics: Blue Ginger restaurant information

Blue Ginger

583 Washington St.
Wellesley, MA 02482
781-283-5790

Blue Ginger restaurant information
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Since opening its doors in 1998, Blue Ginger has been impressing diners from Boston and beyond with its harmonious combination of East and West. Designed by Ming and Polly Tsai in conjunction with a Feng Shui Master, the restaurant features an open kitchen, warm cherry woodwork, Italian granite floors and a soothing water sculpture. Diners can enjoy the theater of the open kitchen or focus purely on the innovative and East-West cuisine, which has earned Blue Ginger high praise from the Boston Globe, Esquire, Boston Magazine and the James Beard Foundation, which named Tsai 2002’s Best Chef Northeast.

News and Events at Blue Ginger restaurant

Stop and Sip the Rosé at Blue Ginger
Head for Blue Ginger on Monday, May 21st when the wines of Chateau D'Esclans take center stage. 

Cooking Live
Join Ming Tsai as he gathers a gaggle of his chefly friends for an evening of - what else - cooking. 

Knights Bridge at the Round Table
Sip through the wines of California when Blue Ginger hosts the Knights Bridge folks for a special wine dinner.

Ming Tsai

Chef at Blue Ginger

Chef Ming Tsai at Blue Ginger

Chef Ming Tsai was raised in Dayton, Ohio, where he spent hours cooking alongside his mother and father at their family-owned restaurant, Mandarin Kitchen. His love of cooking (and eating) great food was ignited in these early years; he also gained valuable experience in front and back of the house. Tsai headed east to attend school at Phillips Academy Andover. From there, he continued to Yale University, earning his degree in Mechanical Engineering. Tsai spent his sophomore summer at Le Cordon Bleu cooking school in Paris. After graduating from Yale, he worked in kitchens around the globe. He trained under renowned Pastry Chef Pierre Herme in Paris and in Osaka with Sushi Master Kobayashi. Upon his return to the United States, he enrolled in graduate school at Cornell University, earning a Master's degree in Hotel Administration and Hospitality Marketing, where he continued to learn varied styles of cuisine, holding positions in both front and back of the house at establishments in Chicago, Atlanta, San Francisco and Santa Fe.

In 1998, Tsai opened Blue Ginger in Wellesley, Massachusetts and immediately impressed diners from Boston and beyond with the restaurant's innovative East-West cuisine. In its first year, Blue Ginger received 3 stars from the Boston Globe, was named Best New Restaurant by Boston Magazine, was nominated by the James Beard Foundation as Best New Restaurant 1998, and Esquire named him Chef of the Year 1998. The James Beard Foundation crowned him 2002 Best Chef Northeast and, since 2002, the Zagat Restaurant Guide has rated Blue Ginger the 2nd Most Popular Boston Restaurant. In 2007, Blue Ginger received the prestigious Ivy Award from Restaurants & Institutions, for its consistent achievement in meeting the highest standards for food, hospitality and service.

In celebration of its 10-year anniversary, Blue Ginger was revitalized with a Rockwell Group-designed addition doubling its size. Enhancements include three private dining rooms accommodating everything from business meetings to bar mitzvahs and a beautiful 40-seat, walk-in only lounge with a 10-stool bar. The lounge menu is an Asian tapas menu featuring Ming's Bings, his take on the classic Asian street food xiar bing. The newly expanded Blue Ginger opened in May 2008.

Tsai is a national spokesperson for the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network (FAAN), working to further education and research on food allergies. He is proud to have developed the Food Allergy Reference Book, first used at Blue Ginger, a pioneering system that creates safeguards to help food-allergic people dine safely. He has worked with Massachusetts Legislature to help write Bill S136, which will require local restaurants to comply with specific food allergy awareness guidelines.

Tsai is currently the host and executive producer of the public television cooking show, Simply Ming. His video podcasts, the first of their kind, feature tutorials on everything from filleting fish to food allergy basics. Tsai began cooking for television audiences on the Food Network, where he was the 1998 Emmy Award-Winning host of East Meets West with Ming Tsai. Ming's Quest, his popular cooking adventure series, also aired on Food Network. In the summer of 2008, Tsai traveled to the Beijing Olympics with NBC's Today show to provide viewers with insight into food customs and traditions that define his Chinese heritage. In addition to television, Tsai is the author of three cookbooks: Blue Ginger: East Meets West Cooking with Ming Tsai, Simply Ming, and Ming's Master Recipes.

In addition to Blue Ginger, television and print endeavors, Tsai is also a prolific designer and creator of various products. For the past decade, he has used Kyocera Advanced Ceramic cutting tools. His Blue Ginger line of East-West meal solutions launched in Target and SuperTarget stores nationwide in 2000 and has continued to expand. He co-designs, with Tru Bamboo, an eco-friendly line of bamboo cutting boards and serveware. The sushi boards, satay plates and various cutting boards are available at grocery and home stores across the US. He is a founding member of Chefs For Humanity and a proud member of Common Threads, the Harvard School of Public Health's Nutrition Roundtable, Big Brothers Big Sisters, The Cam Neely Foundation, Squashbusters, and the Denis Leary Firefighters Foundation.

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Aïoli
1. noun A blend of ail (garlic) and oli (oil) in the parlance of the Provence region of southern France. Around here, we'd call it a garlic mayonnaise.
Ancho chile
1. noun The reddish brown, dried version of a poblano chile. Generally mild but can pack a punch.
Carpaccio
1. noun Wafer-thin slices of raw beef served cold; named after the Renaissance Venetian painter.
Charcuterie
1. noun The French term for delicatessen-style items.
Chorizo
1. noun Crumbly, spiced pork sausage.
Confit
1. noun Meat (usually goose, duck or pork) that is slowly cooked in its own fat and preserved with the fat packed around it as a seal.
Coulis
1. noun A thick puree or sauce.
Couscous
1. noun Granular semolina popular in North Africa.
Emulsion
1. noun The mixture of two liquids that cannot normally combine smoothly (e.g., oil and water). Mayonnaise and hollandaise are two familiar emulsions.
Foie gras
1. noun Expensive, silk-textured goose or duck liver that has been enlarged by a process you don't want to read about if you're going to eat this dish.
Ganache
1. noun A rich mixture of chocolate and crème fraîche frequently used as a filling for cakes.
Jicama
1. noun Used in Latin American cooking, jicama is a member of the potato family. The bulbous, brown root has a thin brown skin and crunchy and sweet white flesh.
Lemongrass
1. noun A lemon-scented herb used liberally in Thai and Cambodian cooking.
Mascarpone
1. noun Ultra-rich, soft cheese known best for its role in tiramisu.
Panko
1. noun Coarse breadcrumbs used in Japanese cooking.
Panna cotta
1. noun Egg-less Italian custard.
Pilaf
1. noun A seasoned rice or other grain dish in which the rice is sautéed before the liquid and other ingredients are added.
Quinoa
1. noun These small, round, pale-brown grains look similar to millet and have a mild taste and a firm texture. Quinoa is considered a complete protein because it contains all eight essential amino acids.
Rémoulade
1. noun A cold mayonnaise sauce flavored with mustard, gherkins, capers, anchovies and herbs.
Rillettes
1. noun Meat, usually pork, slowly cooked in seasoned fat and made into a smooth paste, then packed and sealed with a thin layer of fat. Served cold.
Risotto
1. noun Italian dish made from rice cooked by intermittently adding small amounts of stock or broth. Other ingredients are added as required.
Shank
1. noun The front leg of beef, pork, veal or lamb. Often a very tough cut of meat, the shank requires slow-cooking methods like braising.
Shiitake
1. noun Bold and meaty, these are called "black mushrooms" on Chinese menus.
Shumai
1. noun Filled Chinese dumplings that look like tiny, just-opening flower buds.
Tamarind
1. noun A bittersweet spice made by drying and pressing the pulp from the fruit of the tamarind tree native to Asia and northern Africa.
Tartare
1. noun Ground or finely chopped, seasoned raw meat (traditionally beef). May or may not come mounded, and with a raw egg.
Terrine
1. noun An earthenware container, or the dish cooked therein.
Torchon
1. noun Method of cooking foie gras by which it is placed in a towel (torchon in French) and poached.
Wonton
1. noun A small dumplings made by filling thin sheets of dough with a mixture finely chopped meat, seafood or vegetables.
Yuzu
1. noun A tangy citrus fruit with flavorful rind.