Here're a bunch of stuff I picked up from the Hokkaido & Mochinoku fair. Expectedly like the norm of such events, the crowd thickens from the early afternoon and doesn't really subside till the end of the day. This time round there was also a counter that was vending camembert cheese which I did not notice before in the previous fairs. I hear that there is more to come later in the week.
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Monday, January 21, 2008
From the Hokkaido & Michinoku Fair
A huge sushi roll...
This was not a perspective shot. That roll was as big as you think it is. I was watching the chef at the fair make rolls of them when the stacked sushis were rolled into that one huge roll that you see. I took out the camera to take a shot, the chef took the huge roll out from behind his glass enclosure to pose for this. If I did not remember wrongly, there's uni, shake, tamago, ikura, hotate, those slim Japanese cucumbers, more unidentified bars of fish roe in there. Certainly made me wonder how much it cost and how is one suppose to eat them.
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Pit stop at the Hokkaido & Michinoku Fair
Stay tuned for my loots from the fair.
Digested Pages :
between sliced bread,
burgers/sandwiches,
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Hey la, hey la.....Hokkaido Fair's back!
Here's one of the bento box which I picked up from the fair at Isetan Scotts in the afternoon. It comes accompanied with a kawaii chick in singlet and short pink skirt that feeds you with attentive care. Nah...just kidding about the part on the kawaii chick. So it's back and the fair started on Staturday 19/1/08. I was told it ends at the end of the month, so go go go!! Stay tuned for the picturesque tales of my loot after I jostle the endless tides of insane aunties. Lol!
Digested Pages :
japanese
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Brown Sugar, Stardus Clubhouse
The food could probably be described as European. What I found agreeable were the layered salad of deconstructed apple, walnuts, brie cheese drizzled with an apple balsamic dressing which had very clean and refreshing taste. I had the impression that these "deconstructed" dishes tend to be gimmick-y but this one was delicious gimmicky. The choice of ingredients here struck a good balance.
The foie gras was not bad. Liver was done with a nice char. Also came in more generous portions than something else that I had recently which was rather expensive and what I felt to be a waste of money. The oils that settled at the bottom of the plate, I mopped up with bread.
Desserts weren't bad. The ubiquitous chocolate fondant cake was rich while the butter bread pudding in butterscotch was pretty good with a nice crispy top. If only it were served hot rather than lukewarm.
I wouldn't mind returning given the opportunity.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Modesto's, another take
I've had this thought in my head for a while now regarding gnocchi. I've heard people on some basis to use the overly whored "melt in your mouth" expression to describe it. I've had ones that I thought were good and ones that were pretty bad. None of them actually qualified as something that actually come close to melting in the mouth. Am I missing something here? By the way, I thoroughly detest that phrase simply because of the countless times been abused by those that don't know any better or are trying in some odd sense to show off that they're actually eating something that really good.
Speaking of which, Modesto's actually has pretty decent gnocchi in Gorgonzola sauce. They're served hot, soft and slightly chewy which is the way I think they ought to taste in terms of texture for these dumplings. The portions are also rather generous. These definitely do not melt in your mouth.
The squid ink tagliatelle wasn't really anything impressive. The taste struck me as pretty flat and ordinary in spite of a "shrimp bisque" sauce. Like the gnocchi which just tasted mostly of the light creamy Gorgonzola zauce (at least they were satisfying to some extent), the tagliatelle tasted mostly of the bisque, came with very unremarkable shrimps and pan fried scallops that doesn't look nor taste pan fried to me. I had imagined this to be much better.
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