Friday, September 06, 2013

The Diamond Jim Brady

Lawry's, diamond jim brady creamed spinach

Still one of the better prime rib in town.

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

A chicken rice & laksa dinner at Food Opera

Food Opera, sergeant hainanese chicken rice

That would the medium sized serving from Sergeant Hainanese Chicken Rice (#B4-03, Stall 20, ION Orchard, 2 Orchard Turn) above. The only difference with the regular serving as I was informed by the stall was that it comes with more meat. For a whopping $7.50, it was easily twice (maybe more, depending on where you eat chicken rice) what most places charged. Have to admit that it was pretty good as a whole. The rice was flavoured sufficiently without being overly greasy and the chicken was smooth and tender. Still, it's not cheap for a quick fix or guilty pleasure in town. If I had been famished, the portions would have been inadequate.

Below is a bowl of medium sized laksa from 3rd Generation Laksa & Prawn Noodle also from Food Opera. The broth was quite creamy and it came with usual suspect ingredients of rice noodle, hard boiled egg, shrimp, tau kwa, some fish cake and cockles. Even as it might be not an apple to apple comparison, this looked better, tasted more satisfying and had better quality ingredients than what I had at Laksania. For just 30 cents more. Which also incidentally implied that Laksania was pretty expensive too.

Food Opera, 3rd Generation Laksa & Prawn Noodle

Saturday, August 31, 2013

The Mini Miyazaki Buffet at Triple Three


Here's some looks from the Mini Miyazaki Buffet held at Triple Three (Level 5, Mandarin Orchard Singapore, 333 Orchard Road, tel : +65 6831 6271). The highlight of the buffet was the availability of A4 graded wagyu from the Miyazaki prefecture. Yes, good quality wagyu on buffet that is prepared slow roasted, aburi-ed a la minute on sushi, shabu-ed or teppanyaki. The teppanyaki station which generally had the longest queue was our favourite. My guess is that most of the people must have found it to be the best treatment of all the options that they had for the meat.

Personally, I felt that there was definitely room for improvement in the skill and care that was required to deal with such a delicate premium cut of meat. But I'm not complaining. What they're charging for the buffet was a steal.


Those aburi wagyu sushi could have benefited with a bit more char and certainly some salt. 


That's a new platter of that thinly sliced wagyu for the shabu station. Each portion of the meat is painstakingly prepared with accompanying vegetables by the attending station chef that portions each handout to the queue. 


As a result, one doesn't actually get it hot from the pot to the mouth or at a specific doneness as preferred. This was the lightest tasting option for the wagyu that literally dissolved in the mouth. And it was lighter than the tofu.


The honey baked ham station looked forlorn, so we gave it a little love. The ham was awesome. It's been a rather long while since I've had such good ham. The meat was warm and tender, fats were soft with the smoky saltiness in tandem with the sweet from the permeated honey. Very good stuff which looked to be under appreciated by the throngs of diners at the wagyu station.


The cuts of wagyu at the teppanyaki station were so well marbled with fats that it stopped hearts simply by being present.


This chef along with the one manning the shabu station had the heaviest work cut out for them since the queues never subsided unless the beef ran out.


This we agreed was the best treatment for the wagyu here. There was nothing but pepper and salt to flavor and aromatized the caramelized meat.


The slow roast wagyu on the other hand, lacked identity in the department of flavors. It was crowded at the station at the start. And only then. 


While we could taste that it was a good beef, that slow roast seemed to have robbed the meat of the distinctive flavor that most of us recognized of the wagyu.


Somehow, people forgot that there was a pasta station that did pasta with shaven black truffle. I didn't.


Miso cod was competently done. The fish was oily and rich, paired off with the char and sweet miso.


This foie gras chawanmushi didn't quite turn out the way I imagined. While it was a deliciously savory  chawanmushi, there was no flavor of foie gras at all.


Oyster station saw that the shellfish were shucked on request. These oysters were impressively fresh tasting, briny but lacked the usual pull on the buffet crowd due to the wagyu stations. 


At this point, I needed some fruit to cut the richness. Cherry tomatoes did the trick.


The Indian food also received little attention. So it was just unfortunate for the people that repeatedly queued for the wagyu that they didn't realise that there was a rather awesome and smoky butter chicken to be had along with some nicely done paneer mutter masala. The nondescript looking prata was surprising light and delicious at the same time.


And then some fruit, cheese and bread. There was a cheese crusted bread filled with seeds that was actually pretty good. Good to the point that even when we were rather stuffed, I was still popping piece after piece into my mouth. It's another one of those items along with numerous others which were a good showcase of the quality of food at Triple Three.


Most of the desserts were unexciting for me unfortunately. The only items that were good enough that I got past a sample licking were their yuzu cheese cake, yuzu sorbet and sliced nectarines from the fruit station.

Small Potatoes Make The Steak Look Bigger : Year Seven


Seven years of talking about what I eat. And the adventures go on!

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Laksania, JEM

Laksania, dry laksa

Laksania (#03-09 JEM, 50 Jurong Gateway Road, tel : +65 6734 8908) is apparently the business part of a social venture that engages marginalized people and helps get them into the workforce. The theme of the food is obviously centralized on laksa along with various renditions of the dish that are either regionally based or simply a fusion of their own.

This was a laksa goreng I got at lunch. It didn't quite look like what was featured on pictures in the menu/media. The flavors were admittedly pretty decent but I gripe over how little ingredients they had added for how much they were charging for a plate of this. The tau pok was minimal and one could certainly also count on one hand the measly strips of fishcake which were present. The prawns were also not de-veined and didn't taste fresh.

As noble the idea behind this venture is, I certainly felt that they could do better with the food. Rental aside, their margins must be really fat.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Ma Maison, Bugis +

Ma Maison, gyu katsu

We stumbled upon this branch of Ma Maison (#01-12, Bugis+, 201 Victoria Street, tel : +65 6884 4471) not realising that there was one here. Later it dawned upon me that this was the Aloha Ma Maison that I heard about some months back that came with a Hawaiian theme. How did I figure that out? The decor couldn't have been more obvious with those surfboards and tiki carvings. I'm not sure if the Hawaiian food options have been removed, but this turned out to be serving the same stuff apart from the acai berry pancakes. But there was a seasonal menu card that drew us in.

Ma Maison, cuttlefish ink curry katsu rice

Firstly the gyu katsu which is the second of sorts that's been around here as I know it. This one by Ma Maison did better by the virtue of having a thicker cut compared to the one at Tampopo. So you could actually taste that it was beef even though they hadn't been using wagyu. The other thing was cuttlefish ink curry with a regular but respectable rosu katsu which to their credit, managed a Japanese curry that did taste of the ink. Their grape tart was pretty good. Those grapes don't taste processed. I wonder how they perform those surgical precision slices.

Ma Maison, grape tart