Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Hot mentai cream soba from Nadai Fujisoba Ni-Hachi

Nadai Fujisoba Ni-Hachi, hot mentai cream soba

This was the “soup” version of the mentai soba from Nadai Fujisoba Ni-Hachi. Previously we had the mazesoba which was the “dry” bowl. This broth was initially slightly viscous and I’m venturing a guess that it’s actually mentaiko cream mixed in their regular soba broth rather than just mentaiko cream alone. Not like what I had imagined. Halfway through the bowl, that little viscosity was gone.

I’m liking how they did the mentai broth for this because it wasn’t overly rich and at the same time, it was sufficiently flavourful of the roe. I liked it enough to slurp up till almost the last drop. The only comparison I would make of this to the mazesoba bowl was that this broth wouldn’t really bring much flavour to the soba because of the mentioned lack of viscosity (hence no hold onto noodles) as opposed to the latter where the noodles were full of mentaiko flavour.

I can see that both were meant to be approached differently and I couldn’t say which one I preferred more. Perhaps the one with broth for those cold days and the mazesoba for regular ones.

Monday, January 09, 2017

BBQ Station has become BBQ Box

BBQ Box

Wow, these fellas have certainly upgraded since the last time we were here. The furnishing and decor have gotten an overhaul from a relatively frills free looking Chinese skewer joint to something that was slightly steampunk-ish. Yeah, you did read steampunk.

These days each table is provided a wooden bbq box, albeit heated by just tea lights under aluminium foil to keep your skewers warm.

BBQ Box, skewers

Here’s a look at some of those skewers. Obviously we had ordered much more but it was a pain in the ass trying to get a picture for each small batch that arrived. The pig intestines and pig skin were delicious. So was the shishamo even though it hadn’t as much eggs as we were hoping for. That cumin certainly transformed things. Interestingly, there were also squid beaks!

BBQ Box, lamb ribs

These were their lamb ribs. Pretty decent and nicely dry rubbed with the spices but obviously not the same standards as those from Restaurant Manchurian

BBQ Box, scallops

We had scallops too. While it looked a little sad, they actually tasted pretty good. The shellfish was not overcooked at all and certainly didn’t taste stale while the spicy sauce on the shell was kickass spicy. That kind of kickass spicy that was also savoury, flavourful and would be excellent accompaniment to steamed white rice.

Sunday, January 08, 2017

The Prosperity Burger is back at McD


McD has been doing these prosperity burger for annual Chinese New Year season for some time now. It's the only time of the year where one can get the gloopy, messy, sweet and peppery sauced sandwich which comes with the sidekick of curly fries. Does anyone still remember that it all began with the humble $2 McPepper? I'm not sure if I'm imagining things but the one this year seemed a little sweeter than before and some of the edge from that black paper sauce seems to have been whittled away. 

Saturday, January 07, 2017

CiBO Italiano, River Valley Road

CiBO (#01-01 Loft @ Nathan, 428 River Valley Road, tel : +65 6385 1310) I have gathered is run by the folks from Donna Carmela. An Italian deli/bistro incidentally similar to what the defunct Riciotti used to do years ago.

CiBO Italiano, antipasti

The menu has antipasti plates that one can choose from what they're selling at the counter. I hope to see some rotation there. Those mini peppers stuffed with goat's cheese were quite good. A nice catch hovering between the aroma of the peppers, pungence from the cheese and some sweetness. The baby octopuses were oddly kinda stiff.

CiBO Italiano, puccia

There's a sandwich on the menu called puccia - apparently a savoury flatbread indigenous to the region of Puglia in Italy. This felt/looked/tasted like foccacia; stuffed with rocket, mortadella and some pickled peppers. The menu doesn't quite specify what goes into them so I'm guessing it's what they feel like for the day.

CiBO Italiano, vongole

One of the uncommon occasions that vongole is featured in this blog. I love clams, I just never thought very well of vongole that's done locally from past experiences and that has perhaps rubbed off onto me for a very long time. This one was quite good even though the there was quite a bit of the residual tang from the perhaps, generous use of wine. Clams were plump and tasty. Wouldn't mind eating again.

CiBO Italiano, carciofi fritti

When we ordered the carciofi fritti, we didn't expect the portions to be so big. While I'm no expert, this item felt Roman - something that's not such a common sight around these parts. And it was a lot easier to eat than they looked. The fried batter was thin and we don't get fresh artichokes so quite often around here.

CiBO Italiano, tiramisu

Tiramisu here is ok. Not a bad one, but not particularly memorable neither.

Friday, January 06, 2017

Ju Hao, Tiong Bahru Plaza

I first noticed Ju Hao (#02-112 Tiong Bahru Plaza, 302 Tiong Bahru Road) when I saw them at Square 2 at Novena some time ago. From what I read, they were previously operating in the food court at Lavender and had worked with MOF to reinvent their business. 

The first thing that struck me while looking at the menu was the reminder of Din Tai Fung. There were enough similarities that one could be forgiven if they were to think them a clone of DTF. With the number of parallels that could have been drawn, I wouldn't be surprised if some of the kitchen people actually came from DTF. 

They are even priced quite similarly.


Here's some garlic spicy pork with cucumber thing. These aren't bad, but it's not exactly very mention worthy either. It's a lot less spicy than it looked.


Behold that pork chop fried rice. Doesn't it just look DTF? Well actually, there was a difference. Ju Hao is less heavy handed on the five spice marinade on their pork chops. I'm considering this a serious alternative though.


Even the xiao long bao looks similar, but one can tell that the DTF ones are made with more delicate skin and greater finesse with the folds. These above are actually salted yolk xiao long bao and they're pretty good. Blows the salted yolk sauce shit that's been going around out of the water.


That's some three treasure signature noodle. Not very tasty at all and their beef briskets were kinda tough. That "special" sauce with the noodles didn't taste so special. I wonder if restaurants these days even understand what the word 'signature' means. Note to self, never order this again.

Thursday, January 05, 2017

Uncle Chicken, Havelock Road

Uncle Chicken, chicken rice

If you recall the Uncle Chicken that I've written about previously, yes, this would be that same Uncle Chicken which has moved to the current premise (729 Havelock Road, tel : 1800 244 2536). The shop had shifted from Alexandra to Bedok and now an air conditioned place in Havelock. And wow, they even have a toll free line these days.

Uncle Chicken, chicken

Inevitable comparison mode on, this pretty respectable but definitely not the same standards of boiled chicken that Sin Kee does. The bird was tender, but it's not the same degree of slurp off the bone tender. It seems that there's even soya sauce chicken to be had. This must be a first for the family linked chicken rice business.

Uncle Chicken, chilli

To address the other two parts of the chicken rice trinity, Uncle Chicken's chilli packed some heat and lime just like how they did previously. But their rice seemed different. I recall that rice being quite similar to how Sin Kee does theirs but today, what we had was dry and the taste was quite bland lightweight. Which I guess might be a good thing since the chilli gets put to good use.

Prices sure have gone up though.

Uncle Chicken