So Dessert Bowl has come up with a double shot option for their durian mousse which includes...*cues Dave Lombardo drum roll*.... another lump of durian pulp. So that's two there instead of just one. Still a guilty pleasure, albeit costlier than before.
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Monday, May 30, 2016
Durian mousse double shot from Dessert Bowl
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Chomping @ Chomp Chomp
Been a really long time since I last ate at Chomp Chomp (20 Kensington Park Rd). I recall that there was once upon a time when we would have visited at least a few times a year. This visit was probably the only one in quite a number of recent years. I'm not sure if it's just me but it has gotten a lot more smokier than I remember.
Here's a plate spinach wanton noodles from Swee Heng Wanton Noodle (#01-12). Pretty decent plate and what made it really palatable was their chilli sauce which packed some umami heat. Wantons were smooth skinned, had rather tasty stuffings and I liked those caramelized bits from their char siew. If they had been located somewhere else more accessible, I could see me eating this more regularly.
At the entrance of Chomp Chomp is a shop called I-Chai (#01-19) that is known largely for their poh piah, kueh pie tee and Fuzhou oyster cakes. The roll with visible stuffings is known as their sushi poh piah. They've added a seaweed wrap around the skin and some cheap but deliciously creamy melty plastic wrapped cheese. The other roll has century eggs in the stuffings. You know what? Both spring rolls were pretty good. But as poh piah went, this stall was also kinda pricey.
We ordered a dozen skewers from Chomp Chomp Satay (#01-34), the stall that was selling at 60 cents a stick when the rest of the other stalls were going at 50 cents. We told ourselves that we've interpreted that as confidence but honestly, I have no idea why these guys costed more. In retrospect we had no complains. Those satay was quite nice but we hadn't any idea if the others were as good since we haven't tried any of them.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
Saturday, May 28, 2016
Revisiting Sandaime Bunji
It's been quite some time since the last visit.
There was 50% off for their mixed sashimi and we took advantage of it. What they served was actually pretty good. There was akami, otoro, shime saba, some white fish which I didn't recognize, sake harasu and tako. The quality of the fishes were pretty decent and they provided grated wasabi.
Hmmmm...what have we here? Gyu tenderloin katsu set from the lunch menu? To displace Ginza Kushi Katsu's claim as the only gyu katsu shop in town? This was cheaper and on hindsight, a much more satisfying option than the one from Ginza Kushi Katsu. Personally, I felt that the tonkatsu sauce here was also more agreeable and we too get the sea salt option for the meat.
While they didn't allow a specified doneness for the meat, their gyu tenderloin was well cooked, not dried out and still tender.
Sandaime Bunji has a black pepper ramen. A bowl that came with minced bits of peppery beef that tasted like it was some sort of corned beef and an oxtail broth. The white round thing on the side is not a ball of mozzarella but an egg. This was actually quite pleasant.
And because it was Sandami Bunji, we didn't pass on a plate of their yummy grilled gyutan.
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese,
ramenation
Friday, May 27, 2016
Ji De Chi (記得吃), Plaza Singapura
We must have walked by this shop (#B2-53 Plaza Singapura, 68 Orchard Road) a hundred times and have never done more than a cursory glance at their menu. Something steered us in today and wow, have we been missing out. The durian sago & pomelo thing was pretty good. The mousse-like base was thick - much more viscous than the ice blended puree that Dessert Bowl makes. Both are good in their own ways, but if you're looking for something richer, this one is it. At the bottom is their ginger milk pudding or also commonly known as 姜汁撞奶. Basically warm milk that's curdled with ginger juice. The texture of this bowl was ethereal and the prickly heat from the ginger juice rocked. Will be back.
Thursday, May 26, 2016
More good lunching from Old Airport Road Food Centre
We don't come by Old Airport Road FC (51 Old Airport Road) very often so every time we're here, we're spoilt for choice simply because there are so many things that look good.
I quite like the mutton soup from Hougang Jing Jia Mutton Soup (#01-123). While I don't patronize local Chinese mutton soup often, I remember liking this one as the balance of flavours from the herbs and the mutton work out for me. My stand is that the mutton is allowed to dominate the flavours, but the herbs should not. A balance is of flavours between the two is a compromise I'm willing to accept. Here's a bowl of the $10 portion of mixed parts which they claimed is for two, but I'm pretty sure I could finish it by myself.
I'm not generally a Hokkien mee person. There's usually too much sauce for my liking and while I don't actually dislike them, it's never on the top of my list. Nam Sing Hokkien Fried Mee (#01-32) works for me because their plate of noodles is not wet. The flavours from the stock are pretty good and there's more bee hoon than mee which creates a texture that I find pleasing.
I've been asked by a friend to give Western Barbeque (#01-53) a shot so here's their pork chop. This was actually quite nice. The meat was tender and juicy - the latter was certainly not something that one can claim of most pork chops from our local Hainanese styled western food stalls. It comes with their signature garlicky sauce (which is ladled over pretty much everything they sell) and a plastic bagged old school bun spread with margarine in between. Nice. I'm going to give their other items a go someday too.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese,
local western
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Ebi katsu season is back at Saboten
Yes, the ebi katsu from Saboten (#B2-02/03, 313 @ Somerset, 313 Orchard Road) has been back for a while now till the end of the month I think. The last time they had these didn't seem to be at this time of the year. This time round, I've found that based on the law of diminishing returns, my threshold for enjoying them should end at about two prawn cakes.
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Sunday, May 22, 2016
Nanbantei Japanese Restaurant, Far East Plaza
This was our first time dinnering at Nanbantei (#05-132 Far East Plaza, 14 Scotts Road, tel : +65 6733 5666). The previous times which we had been here were for lunch. Those were a pretty long while back. This dinner almost didn't happen since we were wandering around Far East Plaza and we did not have reservations. Surprisingly, we managed to get a table from walk in. On a Friday night, no less. Little blessings in life not to take for granted.
Digested Pages :
japanese
Saturday, May 21, 2016
The Wagon, Tras Street
I couldn't find much information about these guys (55 Tras Street, tel : +65 6221 6369) apart from being owned by a Japanese food and beverage group AP Company Co who's also responsible for the collagen hotpot chain Tsukada Nojo. I ought to give that a go someday. The food here by their chef Makoto Deguchi can be described as French styled by Japanese with small plates that are presented on wagons. And hence they name of the restaurant. There's a bunch of items that can still be ordered from the menu though.
Digested Pages :
dessert,
french,
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Hitting another sweet spot at SweetSpot.
Notice the evolution of the pastrami/corned beef sandwiches from SweetSpot. It used to be bigger back in the day when they were located at The Shoppes. Even the pickles were larger. Little if any escapes the downward spiral in our food industry. Anyways what I really wanted to mention was the availability of Thai milk tea on menu. It's a little expensive (or rather expensive depending on your frame of reference but...) and one can certainly get much cheaper elsewhere. So why did I even bother to mention? Because this one is pretty good. Try it, these guys made the effort trying to get it right.
Digested Pages :
between sliced bread,
burgers/sandwiches
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
A second visit to Tampopo this year
It happened to be the season for hotaru ika during this visit so I got a bowl just like the other time. This actually went pretty well with the la-yu (辣油) and a dash of shoyu. The other thing that got our attention today was their wafu steak jyu, an evolution into a rice bento from their regular wafu steak that had appeared on their menu in recent years. Check out all those delicious bits of carcinogenic burnt ends on the beef. We didn't even mind that it was overdone from what we had requested.
The sad news is, their foie gras tonkatsu with truffle has been taken off the menu. Why?!
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Monday, May 16, 2016
Savour 2016
| foie-ffle (Artichoke) |
| Artichoke Fried Chicken |
| carabinero - cauliflower, raisin and almond (Buona Terra) |
| home made tagliolini, Parmesan, shaven back truffle (Buona Terra) |
| wagyu striploin (Bar-a-Thym) |
This was our first time visiting Savour. While I was tempted by the ones from the previous years, the thing that really put me off was the need to purchase tickets for admission and food. So I’m pretty pleased that they’ve done away with that nonsense this year. If any of the Savour folks are reading this, please improve on the shelters for the next one. The blistering sun and having to eat underneath that scorching heat took away a lot of fun and after a while, we gave up and sought sanctuary in the air conditioned Market.
We managed to try from a few stalls. The stuff from Artichoke was pretty nice. We liked both the syrup-ed crispy skinned fried chicken and the foie-ffle though it was really that foie gras butter and light & crisp corn waffle from the latter which I found more memorable. Both the carabinero shrimp and pasta from Buona Terra were tasty too but the portions were really measly. I did kinda like the wagyu from Bar-A-Thyme. It was some nice striploin and delicious vegetables on the side, but that meat was not wagyu good if you know what I mean.
Digested Pages :
confectionery,
from Davey Jones' locker,
fusion,
international,
pasta,
western
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Northern Thai Restaurant (泰北), Peace Centre
| northern Thai tom yum |
We've stumbled past this shop in the past, but hadn't realised that it was the Northern Thai (#01-46 Peace Centre 1 Sophia Road) place because it had been located inside Isle Cafe. The shop didn't look like much and the menu's pretty small. Sadly the mango salad looked like it had been just taken out not too long ago. Which left me disappointed. But I suppose people don't come here for variety.
| pad hoon sen |
The main draw to Northern Thai is their northern Thai styled tom yum soup. The creamy orange one on top that you see with no chilli oils. I've got to admit that I liked it quite a bit. There wasn't so much heat as there were those appetizing tanginess which kept us spooning one after another. There was fried fish in the bowl which soaked up that delicious soup. Those green bits one the side are kaffir lime leaves and for the eagle eyed & initiated, this bowl was requested for without coriander.
| pineapple fried rice |
Their pineapple fried rice and pad hoon sen were okay I guess. Sufficiently flavoured, simple and straightforward; well done enough that I wouldn't mind having them with some regularity if I had to but it wouldn't be something I'd travel the distance for. I would come back for that northern styled tom yum again though.
Friday, May 13, 2016
A mentaiko mayo mazesoba from Kajiken (歌志軒)
Here's a bowl of the mentaiko mayo mazesoba from Kajiken. It was noticeably dryer than their Nagoya bowl but still delicious. The main difference between eating this and the former bowl was that I didn't use any extra chilli oil or vinegar because I really wanted that mentaiko flavour to come through. I thought it would have been a more enjoyable eat if they portioned more of the roe. From what we've observed so far, the toppings are pretty good portions only if one took the regular portions of noodles. Upgraded portions, free as it is would certainly benefit from additional toppings which is chargeable.
Digested Pages :
japanese,
ramenation
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