nama yuba uni
My understanding of the word
chirashi or
chirashizushi has always been the standard definition of “scattered
sushi”; representing scattered fish over
sushi rice. Later on, I got acquainted with another similar type of
donburi known as the
kaisen don which is a literal translation of seafood rice bowl. From what I had understood, the main difference for the layman (that includes myself) was that the
chirashi - as a variant of
sushi uses vinegared rice while the
kaisen don uses regular rice. Today, I found out that there was actually a
kaisen chirashi don. Yes, this (
#05-34/35 Ngee Ann City, 391 Orchard Road) was the same place as the
one back in Far East Plaza with a waitress asking about a curry fish head order. They’ve expanded and this is the other newer outlet with a lot more seating space and staff.
ankimo tofu with uni and ikura
The menu had expanded with the same magnitude as the seating space. There was quite a lot of stuff and for a casual Japanese joint, it was kudos for effort. Their
ankimo tofu was a surprising find and so was the
nama yuba which honestly tasted quite nice. Then, their
chirashi bowl which was a coalition of the usual suspects of
sashimi/sushi -
sake, mekajiki, maguro and hamachi....with some scallops. The quality of their seafood was decent if unexceptional and portions were quite generous to boot. I didn't dislike anything in particular, but there was something about it all that didn't quite make me feel that the food was truly satisfying. In fact, as I was finishing up, I thought that I wouldn't have minded at all topping up a few dollars more and dropping myself something that would have more than just the usual suspect variety at
Kaiho Sushi over this.
aburi-ed chirashi don