This piping hot teriyaki glazed eel freshly off the grill was not bad at all. The meat was tender and well, the picture speaks for itself. My fondness for this place grows. By the way, those yellow shreds scattered on the plate are eggs.
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
The unadon from Nakajima Suisan
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Monday, June 15, 2015
Some sushi from Oceans of Seafood
Here's some nigiri sushi from Oceans of Seafood (200 Turf Club Road, #02-06 PasarBella @ The Grandstand) down at PasarBella. The cooked food area seems to have revamped a little with some of the older stalls disappearing and some new ones taking over the previously empty spaces. This order of sushi was actually not bad if I might say. It was very affordable for one (that chutoro was merely $3 because of their ongoing bluefin tuna promotion) and it tasted very decent. I'm aware that the tuna was barely not-akami. And there was an interesting kurogoma tamago that had a nice sesame aroma in the grey-ish sweet egg.
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Yoyogi, The Grandstand
An old friend had told me about Yoyogi (200 Turf Club Road, #01-12 The Grandstand, tel : +65 6468 8826) a long time back when they were still at Mohammad Sultan. I agreed to check out the place and subsequently only managed that visit a few years later today. This was a lunch of their truffle set.
Which started off with dainty slices of kanpachi with shoyu and truffle. The truffle looked to be of the jarred variety, it's not expensive stuff and was definitely not aromatic like what one would generally expect. The fungus was mostly just a little nutty. Not sure what to make out of this starter. The fish was so thinly sliced that most of the texture was indiscernible and the flavours consisted mainly of just the ponzu. With a little truffle.
The next item that came with the set was chilled truffle capellini with ebiko and crispy sakura ebi. The portion was literally just a few mouthfuls, but this was delicious. The serving plate and fork were also chilled for the serious chilled noodle experience. I sure hope the a la carte portions are much bigger because I can see us coming back for it.
The soup was simply described as a black truffle dobinmushi.
There was some seafood in it. The truffle flavour was much too little to even warrant mention but the soup was quite nice.
The highlight of the truffle set was their ohmi gyu donburi; with the same black truffle that they had used for the rest of the set. We were taught to plunge our spoons into the middle of the egg to scoop out the liquid yolk which would then be drizzled over the bowl of thinly sliced beef and rice.
It was then that we realised that the preparation of the rice was done with a rather heavy hand with the vinegar. In spite of the fact that ohmi gyu had a high ratio of fat to meat and the bowl was doused with the egg yolk, none of the rice bowl came across as rich. There was enough vinegar to have somehow "balanced" flavours and I'm not sure if that was such a good thing. But then, I'm not complaining. We were just not so impressed.
This black truffle set should have ended with a dessert of yuzu sorbet.
But because we were sitting at the counter where certain prized cuts of tuna were chilled, we gave in to a post dessert dessert.
Note to self : The portions here were lightweight. Needed to get more food afterward.
Digested Pages :
from Davey Jones' locker,
japanese
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Les Bouchons Rive Gauche, Robertson Quay
We hadn't gone back to Les Bouchons for quite a long while and couldn't get seats on short notice, so we ended up at the outlet on the left bank (41 Robertson Quay, tel : +65 6733 4414). The menu is pretty much the same as the one at Ann Siang and little has changed throughout the years. This would be the cosy French steak frites place you go to when you seek something that's not fancy and dependable. But then again, it also really depends on how you define those two words. Since I'm not the qualified person to be providing lessons in vocabulary, to the food....
The meat quality is not fancy but very serviceable. The cooking has been pretty much the same standards throughout the past years; up to the point where their medium rare (I call it the French medium rare) is still a little more rare than most other people's medium rare. Consistently so, so to speak. Like I mentioned earlier, dependable. Barring accidents. Fries seem to be nicer than I remember it. Despite the large portions, I finished them. There's actually little need to exercise the botttomless option since the primary potions are already pretty generous.
What I didn't recall them ever having previously was creamed spinach. And blue cheese sauce which is chargeable. That sauce if you are wondering works for the sirloin, their bread and their fries. Both items taste to be from the same recipe from their sister L'angelus. The spinach was the same tasty nutmeg scented and wilted in cream rendition which I rather liked.
Thursday, June 11, 2015
Soup Stock Tokyo, 313 Somerset
This was our first visit to Soup Stock Tokyo (313 Orchard Road, #B-14 & B2-53/53A, 313@Somerset). Have been seeing them around for some time but haven't actually been interested in trying until now. For the most of the part, it's just various soup options with bread or a few selection of rice types, not much beyond that. One of the non-soup item on the menu was their butter chicken curry which I had naively been hoping would taste like a kickass local Indian rendition. Guess not. This was a lot thinner without the creaminess.
Digested Pages :
japanese
Tuesday, June 09, 2015
Tomato broth tsukemen from Menya Musashi
This sure was disappointing and things seemed to have gone further downhill since the last time. I'm talking room temperature noodles with a barely lukewarm tomato broth that was a lot less tomato-y than I had been expecting. The consistency of that broth was so thin that barely anything clung onto the noodles and I've always had the impression that the broth, for tsukemen, ought to be a lot richer and saltier since it was for dipping. Even the just passable grilled pork neck was cold and their charshu was still stiff and dry.
What with all the competition around, I'm getting the impression that these guys trying hard to wind down the business.
Digested Pages :
japanese,
ramenation
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