Sunday, February 24, 2008

Herbs & Spices the Euradian Restaurant, Upper Thomson Road


This was interesting. Herbs & Spices (207 Upper Thomson Road, Yew Lian Park, tel: 6252 9038), which was just a unit down from Miss Clarity at Upper Thomson was the first Euradian restaurant I've come across. Euradian as one of the owners explained, referred to the blend of European and Indian. One of the chefs they had apparently has experience in doing Italian food. So the result was a pretty good selection of Indian and Italian food. The options for both cuisines put together was in fact, overwhelming. They had for Italian food alone more options than some other Italian restaurants which I've been to. I went for some safe bets which I liked from the Indian section, cliche it may be. It's the usual palek paneer, butter chicken, butter and kashmiri naan, lassi, buttermilk (ice blended??) and along the way, tried the deep fried fish roe, chicken pakora (I hope I got this right), gobi manchurian and *drumroll* mushroom risotto with goat cheese.

palek paneer

The palek paneer here was quite enjoyable. The spinach puree wasn't flat tasting as I thought it might have been. Which was a good thing. My only gripe here was that the cottage cheese portions were puny.

butter chicken

The butter chicken here tasted like the one down at Jaggi's - meaning that it was rich and creamy while lacking the edges of spiciness. I liked this. Especially with the naan or rice.

fried fish roe

Fried fish eggs. Who doesn't like these? Freshly fried and still had a bit of the juices. Enough said I suppose.

chicken pakora

These fried pieces of chicken with herb and batter were quite tasty. Would make good beer snacks. The first time I've had these here, they were in much smaller minced portions. This time round, they were larger chunks and much more tender.

gobi manchurian

The gobi manchurian appeared different from what I thought it might have looked like while recalling the ones at Spice Junction. The rendition here looked like a sweet and sour cauliflower dish. Tasted spicy but I thought wasn't as tasty as the ones at Spice Junction.

mushroom risotto with goat cheese

I had expected more out of the risotto. The flavour wasn't as fragrant as I had hoped. I've had much better risotto and the goat cheese barely registered. The restaurant had mentioned that it had been adjusted to a mild level since not everyone liked the pungent taste. There's definitely room for improvement.

As a whole, I quite liked this place. The location is a bonus and now I know that I know that there is an alternative to Race Course Road for me.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Pho24, Upper Thomson Road


I haven't much experience with pho bo beside a store that used to be at Novena and Va Va Vroom down at Seah Street which served a bowl filled with herbs that killed beef flavour in the soup. I was told by someone who's had pho in Vietnam that the broth was more oily and served very hot so as to help blanch the vegetables/herbs that accompany them. Pho24 (215M Upper Thomson Road, tel:6451-6811) was a fairly new establishment. They did a pretty tasty broth for their rice noodles. Was not able to comment on the authenticity of the cooking but it tasted pretty good to me because the broth was pretty beefy. That was from a bowl I tried with meat and offal. Adding sliced chilli and onions kinda enhanced it. For $12.90, it wasn't cheap but it was enjoyable.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

6" in the Subway


I've always wondered at the slogan of 'Eat Fresh' at Subway. What do those two words really mean and what are the layers of meaning behind the the thoughts of the people who came out with that tagline and the ones who approved it for the marketing. Does it just mean that it's just freshly made? If so, many fast food places could "Eat Fresh" themselves too. A number of the ingredients are anything but fresh.

This 6 inch, double meat-ed cold cut trio was just basically ham which is essentially salted and preserved meat. What's so fresh about ham? The roast beef on the counter would probably appear fresh to a blind man. Cheese options are plasticky and cheap for even sandwiches. The vegetables aren't too bad, but I really don't know about having label them as fresh. Sure their sandwiches are probably healthier than the whole slew of other fast food joints, but a double meat-ed sandwich would cost at least around the region of $7, which isn't exactly cheap for food like this. Anything without double meat is simply sandwich fillings travesty because the default fillings are just pathetic. With the cookies and chips and sugar laden drinks, I suppose "Eat Healthy" isn't such an appropriate option for advertisement. That being said, I wouldn't mind eating them once in a while.

Eat fresh everyone!

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

More from Muthu's Curry

Muthu's Curry, lassiI've had cravings for Indian food these couple of weeks. After the recent trips to Race Course Road, the options at Muthu's Curry (#B1-056, Suntec City Mall, 3 Temasek Boulevard, tel: 68357707) didn't look as attractive as before. In spite of comments I've heard about them being commercialized, I still thought that the food wasn't too far off from what's cooking in Little India. Was I mistaken about that? I found myself enjoying both the spicier butter chicken here and the subdued and creamier version down at Jaggi's. The masala prawns slathered in the spicy and nutty gravy were still crunchy though they appear to be a little smaller than I remember them. I had the navratan korma for the first time. That was a mixed vegetable dish in a cashew and cream gravy. The gravy was pretty good though I couldn't taste any flavour of cashew or even any nuttiness. Flavour from the cloves was rather strong. And now, I too recognize that the lassi over at Delhi Restaurant and Spice Junction were way better than the ones served here.

Considering how much it cost to eat here, the restaurants down at Race Course Road or anywhere else in Little India looked a lot more appealing.

Muthu's Curry, chennai cabbagechennai cabbage

Muthu's Curry, butter chickenbutter chicken

Muthu's Curry, navratan hormanavratan korma

Muthu's Curry, masala prawnsmarsala prawns

More fruity Kit Kats from Hokkaido


Both these Kyoho grape and the apple flavors in the chocolate wafers were very superficial and definitely pales in fruity flavored comparison with the rock melon rendition. I was thinking that since these are Japanese, they might actually be good. Apparently, not everything Japanese tastes fabulous. Ahem!

Monday, February 18, 2008

Seafood platter from Fish & Co @ Paragon

Fish & Co, seafood platter
I've noticed that the prawns in the Fish & Co here (290 Orchard Rd, #B1-35/36 Paragon, S238859, tel: 6733 0938) are meatier and the seafood platter for two came with scallops instead of mussels. The portions have fortunately remained as large as I remember them and most of the time, I find it quite difficult to want to order anything else than this. The wok was laden with the usual suspects of the grilled prawns, very generous portions of salty peppered grilled squid, four scallops, a forgettable fish fillet, the delicious orange raisin rice and fries. All good to go into the gut with the tangy spicy chilli and dragon breath inducing chopped garlic. Prices seem to have gone up from what I recall last by about $7 or so. I'm not sure if it's just this particular outlet or has it gone up across the board for all the other outlets as well.

Fish & Co, garlic butter mussels
Another regular item on their menu which I've only started ordering recently are the mussels in garlic butter. More than a half dozen mussels swimming in a garlicky butter broth which makes good a dip for bread. Yep, even the uninteresting focaccia at this place become tasty after a couple of dunks in that creamy and heart clogging broth which happens to be also pretty awesome when slathered over the rice in the seafood platter too. It's been around for ages and I've only started noticing them last year.