Tuesday, October 07, 2014

Beef & Liberty, Wing Fung Street, Wan Chai

Beef & Liberty, Wing Fung Street, Wan Chai

Beef & Liberty (2/F, 23 Wing Fung St., Wan Chai, Hong Kong, tel : +852 2811 3009) which started off in Shanghai is part of Hong Kong's forward moment towards better burgers. Their claims to their burgers are the use of hormone-free grass fed Hereford and Angus cattle from Cape Grim in Tasmania. Ground in house. Personally, I preferred the patties that they're doing down in Butchers Club Burgers which featured aged beef which were also little more charred with flavours that struck more of my chords, but this place isn't too bad.

Beef & Liberty, ginger vanilla milkshake

Ginger and vanilla milkshake. I was hoping (against hope) that they'll be doing this with old ginger, but it wasn't the case. I guess it was okay and that the tall glass of it went down much lighter than it had appeared.

Beef & Liberty, scotch quail eggs

Scotch quail eggs weren't much to talk about. Actually, I recommend skipping this.

Beef & Liberty, bacon burger

Their bacon and cheeseburger was pretty decent. Frills free and quite nicely done. The whole burger was constructed to be eaten properly with hands. I could always lament about how it would have been nicer for the bacon to have a little more char for flavour, but honestly, it's a decent burger with a grill toasted sourdough bun.

Beef & Liberty, burger

The regular burger tasted like how it looked. What was nice about here, was the choice of sides. Fries aren't forced into you here as a default if you don't feel like it. In this case, we picked a mandarin orange salad with sun dried tomatoes and candied walnuts which was refreshingly tasty.

Beef & Liberty, burger

The meat's done pink and the grind isn't too fine. Which is one of the attributes that I liked of the patty.

Beef & Liberty, Wan Chai

While I may not have sounded very enthusiastic about this place, I'm pretty glad it exists. It's better value in terms of cost to product ratio than most if not all for the same price point back home. Why is that I wonder.

Beef & Liberty, Wing Fung Street, Wan Chai

Monday, October 06, 2014

Yue Hing (裕興), Stanley Street, Central

Yue Hing, milk tea

Ahh... an actual sit down breakfast. It is a luxury of time for the majority in this part of the world where one sits and enjoys the first meal (oftenly mentioned as the most important as well!) of the day in leisure. Something that usually does not happen on company time during the working week. Much too often, it is often reserved as privilege for the majority during the weekends, holidays or during vacation. And even so, that's assuming that one has slept in often enough to want to give up the precious morning shut-eye to get up early.

Yue Hing (裕興), ham peanut butter sandwich

This is Yue Hing (82 Stanley Street), just a few short paces from Wai Kee Congee Shop. And this is breakfast. Of hot milk tea and sandwiches uncommon; down in the bustle of Hong Kong Central.

Yue Hing (裕興), corned beef peanut butter sandwich

The thing to order at Yue Hing in the morning, are their sandwiches. The choices that you get for those sandwiches are really just the option of the meats that you want. Luncheon meat (or spam), ham or corned beef. It's all pan fried with eggs and cabbage, slathered with some peanut butter and then placed between wholemeal bread. No fuss, no frills and no pretensions. Each order of those sandwiches comes with a choice of beverage which is usually, tea.

Yue Hing (裕興), Stanley Street, Central

Sunday, October 05, 2014

Dumpling Yuan (餃子園), Wellington Street, Central

Dumpling Yuan (餃子園), mutton dumplings

This slightly dodgy looking shop, which I noticed some years ago along Wellington Street does Chinese styled (Beijing?) dumplings. It also strangely seemed to share the same address as Tsim Chai Kee (98 Wellington Street, Central), but it's actually located just next door to the wanton noodle shop. We dropped by for something light and things turned out to be rather promising in this no frills joint.

Dumpling Yuan (餃子園), tofu century eggs

This chilled diced tofu and century eggs were as it appeared. Topped with bits of chopped scallions and garlic in a soy based sauce. This stuff is pretty good nibbles for the warm summer evenings while waiting for the rest of the food to arrive.

Dumpling Yuan (餃子園), mutton dumpling

We had only managed to try their mutton dumplings which were honestly, pretty tasty. The marinated stuffings paired up nicely with the natural flavours of the mutton. The skins of the dumplings were not as thick as had feared, so I guess how they do the wrappers here works for me. The dumplings were served piping hot and juicy.

Dumpling Yuan (餃子園), hawthorn tea

An innocuous looking plastic cup of hawthorn tea? Or so I had thought. I was almost dismissive of it until I took my first sip. It turned out to be the most powerful hawthorn tea (read thick, read delicious) I've ever had. The flavours were rich and punchy and certainly did more than its part as a palate cleanser for the grease in the food here. A whole load of herbal-ish sour and enough sweet to balance the taste. Note to self, come back again and order chilled hawthorn tea. There's also donkey meat on the menu.

Saturday, October 04, 2014

Chocolate steamed milk from Yee Shun Milk Company and...

Yee Shun Milk Company, chocolate steamed milk

Oooo...chocolate flavoured steamed milk, never seen this before. It tastes like it's made with Milo. Not a bad thing indeed.

Yee Shun Milk Company, ginger steamed milk

And because we were here anyway, hot ginger steamed milk.

Yee Shun Milk Company, luncheon meat egg sandwich

And also because we were already here, a savoury comfort snack was also in order. Nom nom nom......

Friday, October 03, 2014

Butchers Club Burgers, Landale Street, Wan Chai

Butchers Club Burgers, Landale Street, Wan Chai

Dry aged Black Angus beef burgers? Yes please. That was basically the bait to me for Butchers Club Burgers (G/F, Rialto Building, 2 Landale Street, Wan Chai, tel : +852 2528 2083) which I bit. Pun intended. This place seem to be part of a trending better burgers phenomenon in Hong Kong. Their meat is minced in house and there is only one burger to order (really? nawww...it ain't so). Open 7 days a week. Butchers Club does a few things apparently. A New York styled deli at Aberdeen, a steak frites joint at the same location and even an online store selling meat.

Butchers Club Burgers, Wan Chai

The ordering is fairly straightforward here. The shop is pretty small. One queues to make the order, pays and gets a chit. You can get a seat if you're part of the early bird queue, or you can stand/squeeze in any corner, even on the outside for your food. The ready order is called out and you simply acknowledge and someone will deliver the order to where you are. That's all to it.

Butchers Club Burgers, burgers

On the left, the burger with a spicy mayo, pickles, tomato, cheese and bacon. Eastside stands Return of the Mac which can be gotten off their "secret" menu. Two all beef special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions in a sesame seed bun their style. That secret menu can be found on their website or extracted from a QR scan at the shop. These were pretty good burgers there. Salty, greasy with sufficient beefy juicy goodness and for the latter, slightly hefty. The texture of the grind was good in my opinion as it was course and that creates texture. Duck fat fries were pretty decent too, but I do generally like my fries a little soft.

Thursday, October 02, 2014

Meanwhile, somewhere along Portland Street...

364A Portland Street

It's not going to take Sherlock Holmes to figure out the location of this shop.

364A Portland Street, wanton mee

We've had wanton noodles a number of times at this shop. Twice in this trip alone. Their bowls were fuss free and quick. As usual, the noodles were characteristically wiry. 

364A Portland Street, wanton mee

Their wantons were no slouch as well.

364A Portland Street, wanton mee

Shrimp, minced pork and a light hit of sesame oil. Skin was light and the stuffings tasted fresh.

364A Portland Street, fei ngau mee

In a revisit, we tried their noodles with add on of fei ngau (thin sliced fatty beef). This was good stuff too.

364A Portland Street, wanton soup