Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), Jurong East

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), Jurong East

Zai Shun (#01-205, 253 Jurong East Street 24, tel : +65 6560 8594) has been on the radar for a while now but I've never really figured out exactly where it was located until very recently. We came by for a brunch.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), 毛瓜 hairy gourd

Which include side orders like stewed hairy gourd.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), leeks chives tau kwa

Some sweet leeks stir fried with tau kwa.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), hae bi hiam

And some pretty delicious hae bi hiam that you could enhance with a squeeze of lime. This stuff kicked ass with rice.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), hae bi hiam rice

You can trust me on that.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), golden pomfret

Their steamed golden pomfret was delicious. We had thought that the fish might have been cold and mushy but instead was served slightly warm and had the firm yet tender texture of a fish that was fresh. Paired with some savoury kiam chye.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), sliced giant garoupa

We were recommended some thick sliced giant grouper steamed Hong Kong styled.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), shovel nose ray

Along with steamed shovel nose ray cartilage with tau cheo - or also known as spicy fermented bean paste. Those gelatinous bits on the cartilage were nice and slurpy.

Zai Shun Curry Fish Head (載順咖喱魚頭), Jurong East

The food wasn't cheap but the quality of the fishes were superb. I could understand why the stall was so well liked. Would definitely come back again.

Monday, June 11, 2018

Circa 1912, Shaw Centre

Circa 1912, Shaw Centre

....and with what seemed to be little fanfare, Circa 1912 (#03-07/11 Shaw Centre, 1 Scotts Rd, tel : +65 6836 3070) arose capturing the fickle and transient attention of several online food media platforms. A restaurant that has been described to take cooking back to the cultural influence from its namesake era where flavour is king and bold and dishes aren't dandied for Instagram.

That and some of the dishes we've seen online were pretty much what piqued our interest.

Circa 1912, golden coin chicken

I've read about the "golden coin chicken" (金钱鸡) from the food obsessed lamenting the scarcity of the dish due to the laborious preparation to more traditional online media waxing it's place as a culinary curiosity of bygone years. I've never tried it but have been curious largely because I suspect I would like the flavours. I've always had the idea that I might have it in Hong Kong but I guess I was wrong about that last part.

I did like the flavours, or at least of the ones done here. That layer of candied lard with barbequed liver and sweet jerkied pork. How could anyone say no to that treat? 

Circa 1912, deep fried superior stock pig's brains

The dishes we picked were pretty much what the restaurant itself would have tried selling to us. A collection of what would appear to be their signatures and rightfully so since little to no one else cooks them here anymore. Like this diamond shaped fritters which are deep fried superior stock and pig's brains. The latter ingredient nothing more than a thin fog of flavour in the creamy innards. I wouldn't have known these had pig's brains if it hadn't been mentioned.

Circa 1912, wok fried goats milk chicken seafood

Treading further down the trail or stuff that no one else makes are their wok fried goat's milk with bits of chicken and seafood. This tasted like an egg white dish and not so much of what I had expected from goat's milk. Interesting but not outstanding just like the previous dish. 

Circa 1912, braised mustard greens crab meat

We had to get some vegetables for the obligatory fibre so we ended up with some braised mustard greens with crab meat. Tasted like how it looked - nothing more or less than its visual sum.

Circa 1912, steamed rice duck fat crab meat

It got a little more interesting when their steamed rice with duck fat and crab meat arrived. I liked the aroma from this lightly flavoured rice and thought it would benefit from a bit more salt. In fact, I could attest that it benefitted from some sliced chilli padi and soy sauce. The duck fat was lost to us.

Circa 1912, sweet and sour iberico pork

Couldn't pass on their sweet and sour Iberico pork where the sauce was made with the traditional ingredient of hawthorn fruit. The chunks of fried pork tasted tasted fatty - like it was all fat with a light yet defined crisp that shattered and melted once you started chewing them. I'm not sure I could enjoy more than a few pieces of these. I prefer the contemporary renditions which have meat in them. Liked those strawberries though.

Circa 1912, red bean paste aged tangerine peel

Dessert wasn't impressive. The red bean paste was lacking in flavour/fragrance from the beans and the supposed aged tangerine peel in it didn't do very much enhancing those flavours. This was a little disappointing and inexcusable. Even the red bean soup from Tanglin Halt's fried bee hoon stall had better flavours.

Circa 1912, tangerine bean curd orange broth

The curiosity was the tangerine bean curd in an orange broth. That's a real tangerine skin - so nothing like what Heston's meat fruit pretends to be. The interior is filled with almond tofu (I think, I'm a little confused at this point) that's flavoured with tangerine. Said tofu had a texture that was akin to a dense custard.

The chances of me returning are slim to nil. The people that I ate with didn't think much of the food and for what the restaurant charged, I could definitely understand that sentiment. So if my folks aren't coming back, could I alone?

Sunday, June 10, 2018

Satay chicken nasi lemak from Crave

Crave, satay chicken nasi lemak

I've had my apprehension about these guys since anyone who expects the real McCoy is either foolishly optimistic or delusional. Or both. But I decided to drop by to try their nasi lemak anyway.

In retrospect, there're mixed feelings. It was not a bad plate of nasi lemak. Not bad meaning I'll be reluctant to give it thumbs up but it's also not something I'll be steering clear of. There's definitely some coconut flavour in the rice. The sambal was a pretty enjoyable sweet and spicy while the satay sauce probably needed more crushed peanuts to be pretty decent.

One the other hand I found the entire plate oily. Having that sambal (which they charge if you ask for extras) ironically also meant that I'm not going to be tasting much or any of that coconut fragrance in that rice. The portions were a little small if you asked me for something that's $4 more than their regular plates. What's more, this didn't even come with begedil

So I guess this was just another chain outlet just like any other. One can certainly see that "passion for great food" is not a priority. The food was cooked and assembled by a bunch of hired hands so there's that. They certainly didn't care if anyone was satisfied by those portions for what they were charging because I certainly wasn't. Jia liao buay simi song. #notshiok

There - I've let it out. #不够爽 

Saturday, June 09, 2018

R.I.P. Anthony Bourdain

We interrupt the scheduled post of this solar cycle for a day of silence in memory of Anthony Bourdain whom had departed this world. I've just learnt about it a few hours back. I don't pretend to understand what he's been through but I can't say that he hasn't been points of inspiration for this blog. A vanguard of this era's food and travel television. He will be remembered.

Friday, June 08, 2018

Lin Da Qiang Steamed Fish Head (林大强酱蒸鱼头頭), Chinatown Food Centre

Lin Da Qiang Steamed Fish Head (林大强酱蒸鱼头頭), hor fun

This (#02-072 Chinatown Food Centre, 335 Smith Street) was the neighbour to Mr Fish doing pretty much the same type of local Cantonese stir fry so I guess they're competitors. They either don't do or ran out of yu gai (鱼鸡) so it's the sliced fish bee hoon and hor fun. You know what? I enjoyed this as much as I did Mr Fish. There's a slight variation to how both do their black bean sauce but I guess both worked for me.

I'm definitely coming back another time to try more of their dishes. 

Lin Da Qiang Steamed Fish Head (林大强酱蒸鱼头頭), bee hoon

Thursday, June 07, 2018

An apple pie from Marché

Marché, apple pie

We haven't been here at Marché for quite a long time. Prices have gone up but they've managed to maintain the quality of the food through the years. This might have been the first time we've tried their apple pie which was loaded with sliced apples and raisins with an almond crust. The serving came with some vanilla sauce which I had initially thought was unnecessary but turned out that it helped sweeten and mellow some of the tartness from the fruit in the pie.

Marché, 313 Somerset