Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Deep dish egg tarts from Sun Moulin
Digested Pages :
pastry
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Trattoria Lafiandra Al Museo, Singapore Art Museum
The starter of the buffalo mozzarella and parma ham ($25) was passable. I felt that those was more nicely done at Stiff Chilli which used rockets instead of lettuce which was hidden underneath the cheese. What I felt about the pizzas was that their toppings needed work. The word that came to mind was threadbare. Their pizza con porcini had so little porcinis. A slice of mushroom pizza from Da Paolo Gastronomia had more mushrooms than the whole pie here. I shit you not. The diavola was quite ordinary featuring salami that was mildly spicy, prosciutto e fungi ordinary with pathetic portions of ham and I couldn't really get into their prosciutto crudo which was recommended. I had the feeling that everyone was expecting to
There was some sharing going on and I managed to try some of what was going around. The ossobuco was an odd curiosity, appearing like a stumpy phallic tower of undulating sedimentary build up of something that looked like chai por (Chinese pickled radish). The meat was very tender. Very. At certain points, I wasn't sure if I was chewing on the meat or the mash on top of it. This bone definitely didn't have the marrow which I was hoping for. The saffron risotto tasted fine and did have the saffron flavour.
Their recommended seafood soup turned out to be quite unpleasant. Not trying at all to pick on the food unnecessarily, but the smell was weird and rather off putting. It arrived with a generous portion of seafood which included clams, mussels, squid and prawn. Ingredients did not taste fresh. One seafood soup and eight people at the table, it was left mostly unfinished. I think you get the point.
Having been in operation for some time previously at Princep and also now with the capability to be in the business in the Art Museum, I had thought better of Trattoria Lafiandra. Pretty sure I can take this place out of my list now since I'm never returning after this today.
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
More from Ma Maison
Here's a mentaiko spaghetti tossed with onions, mushrooms and some prawn topped with nori strips from Ma Maison (#03-96 Central, 6 Eu Tong Seng Street, tel: 6327-8122). What I like about it was the blend flavour from the mentaiko and seaweed. Gotta love that smoky edge that they gave to the pasta. If anyone has any good mentaiko pasta to recommend, please let me know.
This was fried Camembert cheese. Had an unexpectedly light crispy batter. Cheese was soft and gooey inside. Liked it much better than I had thought. The sauce on the side was lemon honey with a sprinkle of coarse grain pepper. Works with the cheese but they were also good on their own.
The beef stroganoff ranks somewhere on the top my list of comfort food. The scrambled eggs over the buttered rice was so good. Don't know if it's anything close to original Russian versions, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's a Japanese interpretation of the dish.
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Sho-U, Central
I admit that a number of the items from the menu did sound appealing; which was what prompted me to give them a go. The actual delivery however didn't leave a similar impression.
Tried mame soup which was described to be a creamy soup made from edamame. I thought that it might be something akin to chilled green pea soup. The actual soup wasn't quite like what I had in mind. Spart from being cloudy green, I wouldn't attribute the word 'cream' to the taste or consistency. At all. It tasted like a shio broth with only a slight hint of edamame.
This was something that one can actually finish in 2-3 big mouthfuls. The photo doesn't but the bowl was actually thick and shallow.
As intriguing as it appeared on the menu, the uni avocado tempura didn't quite do it for me. Granted, it was sea urchin and avocado encased in a light batter and lightly fried as well, the dish arrived lukewarm. Both the uni and avocado actually turned up pretty dry. The green powder on the side as informed by the server was green tea salt. I couldn't really taste any of it. The tempura came in 3 bite size pieces and there's probably enough uni to make just one good uni sushi in there.
This squid tempura filled with egg was probably the best thing that was served. The server had said that they eggs were half boiled so I was thinking that they would be still somewhat runny, but the yolks were actually almost solid. Despite that, these were quite tasty, if pricey.
The foie gras brown rice was pretty tasty, but for $22, I would pick on the foie gras being thin and in small pieces. What's more, they were overcooked. So it we didn't get any with creamy insides that dissolved in your mouth. Brown rice was pretty fragrant and came with some brown sauce which was poured into the stone bowl of rice and tossed before eating. The portion was enough to fill up two small bowls.
No doubt that effort has been put into the dishes in Sho-U and that the quality of the dishes are far from mediocre, but for the prices and pathetic portions, I will not be returning. I didn't even feel like dessert after the insubstantial food.
As intriguing as it appeared on the menu, the uni avocado tempura didn't quite do it for me. Granted, it was sea urchin and avocado encased in a light batter and lightly fried as well, the dish arrived lukewarm. Both the uni and avocado actually turned up pretty dry. The green powder on the side as informed by the server was green tea salt. I couldn't really taste any of it. The tempura came in 3 bite size pieces and there's probably enough uni to make just one good uni sushi in there.
This squid tempura filled with egg was probably the best thing that was served. The server had said that they eggs were half boiled so I was thinking that they would be still somewhat runny, but the yolks were actually almost solid. Despite that, these were quite tasty, if pricey.
The foie gras brown rice was pretty tasty, but for $22, I would pick on the foie gras being thin and in small pieces. What's more, they were overcooked. So it we didn't get any with creamy insides that dissolved in your mouth. Brown rice was pretty fragrant and came with some brown sauce which was poured into the stone bowl of rice and tossed before eating. The portion was enough to fill up two small bowls.
No doubt that effort has been put into the dishes in Sho-U and that the quality of the dishes are far from mediocre, but for the prices and pathetic portions, I will not be returning. I didn't even feel like dessert after the insubstantial food.
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Fisherman's Wharf, New Bridge Road
Last dinner for the year of 2007 came in the form of (North Alantic) cod and chips down at Fisherman's Wharf (27 New Bridge Road, tel : +65 6532 6468). Been quite a while since the last time we were here. Things haven't changed much - just a wider selection of fishes. I don't remember so much from the last time though the cod today was a little dry. Still enjoyable though. It was still a viable option compared to the breaded variety which seems to be everywhere.
Having tried the Halibut and the snow fish, the conclusion I drew were that they were only different in texture. I think. I'm not good at telling. What I didn't see coming were their mashed peas which were surprisingly very dry, nutty and enjoyable.
Having tried the Halibut and the snow fish, the conclusion I drew were that they were only different in texture. I think. I'm not good at telling. What I didn't see coming were their mashed peas which were surprisingly very dry, nutty and enjoyable.
Happy New Year!
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker
Monday, December 31, 2007
Some random home made hotdog
Looks and tastes much better than the hot bitches! These are pork sausages encased in butter toasted hot dog buns topped with mustard, jarred relish and yellow onions sautéed in butter. Everything can be pretty much bought off supermarkets and assembled except for the onions which have to be diced and fried.
Digested Pages :
between sliced bread,
Homer
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