Thursday, January 04, 2018

Al-Naj, South Bridge Road

Al-Naj, maggi murtabak

If you had done a double take, yes - those were indeed bits of noodles inside the murtabak. Curly noodles. Maggi mee. This was a Maggi murtabak from Al-Naj (217 South Bridge Road) - a local Indian Muslim stall. And no, these guys aren't anything like Zam Zam nor were they trying to be with the egg coated exterior. The mutton that they used in the stuffing with the noodles were those from mutton masala rather than the keema variety that one usually gets in murtabak. I would have preferred the latter.

Was it good? Well, it was the carb bomb as one would surmise. What made this work was their fish curry which was pretty delicious.

Al-Naj, fish curry

Wednesday, January 03, 2018

A kinmedai set from Nakajima Suisan

Nakajima Suisan, kinmedai shioyaki teishoku

So here I was back at Nakajima Suisan and this time, with their grilled kinmedai which I gather is in season at this time. Firm, tender and oily it was with an almost prawny aroma on the charred parts of the skin. Again, another satisfying quick meal. I'm really starting to like this fish. I wished it was bigger.

Nakajima Suisan, kinmedai shioyaki

Monday, January 01, 2018

Revisiting The Market Grill and the post lunch teh halia

The Market Grill, Telok Ayer

This was the eve of New Year's Eve lunch at The Market Grill. I came here thinking burgers but clearly, we got distracted.

The Market Grill, suntory black

There's the black Suntory on tap here. It's rekindling my fondness of the place already.

The Market Grill, lobster salad

We had lobster salad. Not the mess that many people pass off as lobster salad. This one was cleaner, pronounced and didn't make any attempts to hide the fact that there's really lobster in the salad. Think some of the liquorice flavour from the fennel got onto those tails or I'm tasting lemongrass. I'm confused. But I'm liking the goat's cheese and burnt grapefruit.

The Market Grill, onion matchsticks

Their onion matchsticks was something I typically wouldn't have given a second look or thought on the menu. We actually ordered it today. This stuff had a great flavour on its crispy batter that made it addictive. 

The Market Grill, venison

Venison had me there with that spiced black current jus. Meat was tender with a nice sear on the exterior. Too bad it's only available for the Christmas period.

The Market Grill, sakura chicken

We don't typically order much chicken at places like this but Market Grill's sakura chicken deserved a mention that it was delicious to say the least. The meat was tender, moist, nicely brined and aromatized by the browning on the skin. So tender was that meat that I managed to debone the thigh with fork and knife.

teh halia

We moved next door for some teh halia after lunch. Only in this part of the world can this be possible and I give thanks for these little blessings. So now I know their ginger isn't spicy but it's good enough that I wouldn't mind it again.

Sunday, December 31, 2017

665°F, Andaz Singapore

665°F, Andaz Singapore

This space (38/F Andaz Singapore, 5 Fraser Street, tel : +65 6408 1255) was intimate, a little classy and in almost dire need of upgrade for their ventilation. We left the restaurant smelling of the smoke and sizzled fat from their grill - being seated at almost the furthest spot from the grill. 

665°F, garlic bread

They serve garlic bread. Freshly made. Which was nice. Not sure what their recipe was but a bit more butter and garlic would have made it awesome-er. But I'm not complaining here.

665°F, tuna tartare

We ordered their yellowfin tuna tartare after seeing pictures of it online. The amount of Kaluga Queen caviar from those pictures were easily 5 times or more of that tiny little mound we were given. So for $48, it was expensive and represented little value. The only way one would be able to taste those eggs was to eat them before the rest of the tartare. 

665°F, crab cakes

Crab cakes were not bad. We've had better though.

665°F, dip

It came with some pepper dip, mostly capsicum flavoured - which we thought was totally unnecessary for those crab cakes. The only thing it did was to rob the crab of any flavours left on the meat after what I thought was grain mustard already mixed into those patties.

665°F, double cut lamb chops

Double cut lamb chops were also okay. Some parts of the exterior were burnt and bitter. Medium rare was actually more medium. I'm thinking that whomever did these weren't very experienced with getting the outcome they were trying to achieve. These chops were generating an "it's alright" kind of vibe rather than a "wow, I'm coming back for this" feel on me. 

665°F, usda prime sirloin

Their grain fed USDA Prime sirloin from Omaha was pretty good though. The grill and char was respectable and the meat sufficiently beefy with what I thought was a nice shade for the doneness. Didn't need the mustards or pepper sauces they had provided.

665°F, mac and cheese

Mac & cheese was bland so we used the black pepper sauce from the steak for it. I'm not sure what these guys where thinking but something a little more sharp and aged with a little more salt was needed here.

665°F, Andaz Singapore

Saturday, December 30, 2017

A chicken sharwarma rice from Arabica Kebab


That's a shop located in the food court at Jurong East MRT (10 Jurong East Street 12). It looked a little forlorn at lunch time but I decided to give it a go anyway. Only chicken, no lamb. Got the sharwarma with spiced rice which was kinda like briyani. The salad was pretty much a token pinch of the tongs. It wasn't too shabby nor was it expensive. Their briyani-like rice dried out a little in the heater but it was still pretty edible. It's another one of those things I wouldn't mind if I'm in the vicinity.

Friday, December 29, 2017

Tendon Kohaku (天丼琥珀), Suntec City

Tendon Kohaku (天丼琥珀), ocean gems tendon

Finally down to Tendon Kohaku (#03-310/311 Suntec City, 3 Temasek Boulevard, tel : +65 6333 4386). The queue that I've been hearing about was still there but we managed to get there early so the wait was much less painful. Just 15 minutes. And another 20 or so after we got seated.

Here's their Ocean Gems tendon which featured snow/king crab, oyster, scallop, squid and shrimps in a aonori batter with a small shower of ikura. And a rather large crabstick. I'm quite sure the large chikuwa-like tempura was crabstick and not crab. 

This particular tendon is apparently on limited serving per day. It passed muster for a lack of a better description. The batter was sufficiently crisp and not too heavy with little residual grease. I liked that fried oyster in there even though I thought it was a little small. The seafood tasted pretty good except for the boring piece of squid.