Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Immanuel French Kitchen, Bukit Merah Lane

Immanuel French Kitchen, chicken liver pâté with port
chicken liver pâté with port

The owner of this stall (Blk 119 Bukit Merah Lane 1, #01-40), Immanuel Tee, has a heavyweight resume. Names like Restaurant Andre, Jaan, Guy Savoy at Marina Bay Sands, Le Bistrot du Sommelier, the two-Michelin starred Pastorale in Brussels and sous to head chef at the defunct Keystone Restaurant. And he's what? 27 this year? In many industries, it could have been construed as job hopping! Lol. So modern European/French it seems then.

Immanuel French Kitchen, sous vide chicken breast
sous vide chicken breast

Food here was French bistro styled with a very curated menu. They were pretty good for their price point and there was not much to complain about except the need for a bit more salt. The liver pâté was smooth and creamy while the sous vide chicken breast was impressively tender. There was also an onglet which was spot on medium rare, had an excellent sear and the meat tender. Unfortunately, some parts were rather chewy. I'm trying not to compare with my favourite place since this was really 54% the cost of that one.

Immanuel French Kitchen, onglet
steak & fries

Sunday, August 03, 2014

A bowl of torched toro and avocado rice bowl from Kaiho Sushi

Kaiho Sushi, toro avocado don

Wow, this was pretty good. I wouldn't say that the flavours were anything new since it consisted of hand chopped tuna belly, sliced avocados, Japanese mayo, teriyaki sauce and wasabi. Nothing exotic. But it was the kind of good that we just sat and ate in silence for at least half a bowl. Melting tuna belly fat, seeping all their warmed up flavors into that mash of richness over the vinegared rice. I would have liked for this bowl to be bigger . Like maybe 50% bigger since it wasn't cheap at all.

Since we were at Kaiho Sushi at lunch their chirashi don made an appearance as well.

Kaiho Sushi, chirashi

While it did look visibly less impressive than the ones we had in the past (very visibly less, mind you), the quality of the seafood that they gave were still very decent. Special mentions to the sweet and succulent scallops.  There was fish with skin so silver and mirrored that I could have sworn that I saw myself in it. Then again, we got some salmon and it wasn't really belly. I missed the pink fish floss. I sense cost cutting at work based on the variety of toppings that was given.

Kaiho Sushi, Cuppage Plaza

Saturday, August 02, 2014

The Royal Mail, Finlayson Green

The Royal Mail, Finlayson Green

The Royal Mail (Ascott Raffles Place, 2 Finlayson Green, tel : +65 6509 3589) purports to provide a modern take on classic British cuisine. It was a really small bit of classic British judging from the menu. 

The Royal Mail, gougeres

The first impressions of the food were their gougères which were all freshly baked before service and dangerously good. The flavours were just pepper and cheese in their not so puffy choux pastry. Good that we asked for seconds.

The Royal Mail, amuse bouche

Followed by an amuse bouche of tuna with cream cheese and dill foam. From this point, we realised that the wait for food was going to be really long. We needed more amusing of the bouche and it arrived from in the form of the seconds of their delicious gougère. Which probably took a while to prepare but were inhaled in 15 seconds.

The Royal Mail, scallops

Their starters of scallops and octopus were nicely done. Scallops were really good and I was wishing that they were larger so that there would be more of the sweet seared meat to go around. The ikura which they had added were super briny. One can hence imagine the burst of flavours when it popped in the mouth. The dark sheet of shadow at the bottom of the seafood was suppose to be a squid ink crust. It didn't taste very much like squid ink, had a sandy texture and was pretty wet for a crust. Didn't taste bad, just didn't taste like how it was described.

The Royal Mail, cream of cauliflower

Soup of the day was cream of cauliflower. 

The Royal Mail, blue cheese

Cauliflower alone would have been a little too mainstream, so we asked for some blue cheese for the soup. Needless to say, it tasted a lot better than just straight old cream of cauliflower.

The Royal Mail, prime rib

Here's their 340g prime rib, which was really more of an English roast of rib rather than the prime rib that I had in mind. The meat was tender, expertly seasoned and in essence pretty good. But it just didn't give me that level of satisfaction that I get at Lawry's. Which by the way also does a much better Yorkshire pudding. 

The veal jus that they provided on the side was good stuff. It was rich, robust, salty and malty at the same time. Tasted like it has a base of Borvil.

The Royal Mail, kurobuta pork chop

This was their Kurobuta pork chop served with apples and what they describe as apple jus. These guys were so modest with their descriptions. The said apple jus was luxuriant and liquid velvet. I'm pretty sure I tasted butterscotch. It had that sweet and savoury element with a bit of tart going on.  For a thick piece of chop, it was almost inevitable that the middle of the cut will become a little dry. But that's what the apple jus was there for.


On the side, some autumn-y dish of chestnuts, grapes, almonds, apricots and blue cheese. Loved those warm grapes.

The Royal Mail, banoffee tart

Dessert was a Banoffee tart. The salted caramel had the typically agreeable notes of the smoky sweet and salty. And then cream, bananas and buttery pastry....need I embellish further?

Service was good. There were only two wait staff in the restaurant, but it was apparent that they know their work and that they were doing as best as they could. Since this was just a single visit, I think it would be a little pre-mature for me to venture an assessment of the food. But I will anyway since it's my blog. 

It's British food as they say and a little more refined than rustic. From what we had, we could appreciate what they meant by modern interpretations (not that we had that much of it). But that was probably not true of the meats nor soup which were really just what they were or have been.  I'm quite sure that it would have applied to some of the other stuff that we hadn't ordered as well. Which was just basic food without frills. There was definitely quality here. Presentation wasn't over the top. I couldn't help but to think that they're a little too pricey. Must be the damned location eh?

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, Jalan Merah Saga

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, berry salad

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, caprese salad

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, tagliatelle al granchio

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, bosco d'inverno

Da Paolo Pizza Bar, isola verde

This "pizza bar" by Da Paolo (44 Jalan Merah Saga, tel : +65 6479 6059) has been around for a number of years and I've never been here until today. I quoted them as it's not so much a dedicated pizza place than another restaurant that serves pizza, amongst other things. Like salads and pastas and even traditionally non-Italian-ish breakfast items. I couldn't even say that I felt that they specialized in pizzas and wouldn't know any better if not for what they had named themselves. But one has to cater for variety and that's the way the market demands here.

Speaking of which, my impressions of Da Paolo was different years ago. Their restaurants were more Italian-ish, so to speak. These days, they don't seem so straightforward Italian anymore. But a wise business moves with market sentiments and adjustments to accommodate survivability are sometimes a necessary evil. And that could be a thin line to thread upon when we talk about perceptions.

So, it's a family brunch so lots to eat like a less fragmented dim sum. The salads were well, just salads. The one with berries was quite nice, but the crepe bowl was stiff and tasteless and the Gorgonzola sauce meagre. No one picked at the bowl after a first bite. Caprese came with more vegetables than necessary, but I guess it makes us fill our vegetable quotas.

The pizzas were decently made, but I don't get the sense that they're very good at it. Pizza bar? I'm generally bias when it comes to blue cheese and the Isola Verde (the one with baby spinach) agreed. The other one with truffle and mascarpone lacked a little salt? The crusts were thin but not super thin and had some chew. No issues for me with that. But I was expecting to be a bit more impressed.

Which brings us to that odd pasta from the pizza bar. That tomato cream and vodka sauce really brought back memories. I'm sure those memories can be selective or fickle at times, but I'm also pretty sure that it tasted very close to what I had the first time at their defunct Il Giardino restaurant. I liked it then and I like this now. It's rich, creamy and the flavours of the crab were in there. It's my Italian butter chicken.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Xin Mei Congee (欣美粥品), Ang Mo Kio Ave. 6

Xin Mei Congee (欣美粥品), porridge

I have a little history with the chicken rice stall right next to this congee stall (#01-32, Blk 724 Ang Mo Kio Food Centre). I noticed that the chicken rice had a queue and promptly tried. I didn't think much of it. A long while later, I happened to be back here again and saw the same queue. I forgot that I didn't think much of their chicken rice and ordered it another time. The aftermath was the same. This time round, the same thing almost happened and I was fortunately reminded of the history and the déjà vu.

So it's congee today, with mixed ingredients. I took the top up option and an additional egg which ended up costing twice the price of the regular bowl. I think I like this, but it's noticeably more costly to eat nice at hawker centres these days. There was generosity with the ingredients which consisted mostly of sliced pork and some bits of fallopian tube and....I forgot what else. The dough fritters looked like they were fried upon order and that made it pretty freshly crisp. Pretty decent yu sheng to be had here as well and those chilli padi sure packed heat.

Xin Mei Congee (欣美粥品), yu sheng

Monday, July 28, 2014

Platypus Lobster Shack, Pickering Street

Platypus Lobster Shack, Pickering Street

It's probably not fair to make this particular comparison, but the lobster roll from Platypus Lobster Shack (3 Pickering Street, Nankin Row #01-31, tel : +65 6438 7961) doesn't stand up to the one Travis Masiero has done. Then again, this one costed about half of that.

For half the cost, we got chips from a packet on the side and rolls that were neither as well buttered nor crisp which really made a huge difference. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad that these guys here are doing something that's much more affordable rather than the current sweet spot in pricing that the others rolling  (hah!) with. I actually liked the lemon dressing that they squeezed over their salad on the side.

Will come back another time.