Monday, December 31, 2018

Meatsmith Western BBQ, Makansutra Glutton Bay

Meatsmith Western BBQ, Makansutra Glutton Bay

I was intrigued by this stall (#01-15G Makansutra Gluttons Bay, 8 Raffles Avenue) after reading about them because it was a venture by Dave Pynt of Burnt Ends and the name of the stall was a also reference to his other joint Meat Smith - both of which are from Loh Lik Peng's Unlisted Collections.

I hadn't been to Glutton Bay for years. I didn't think much of them the last time I was here. It looked a little better these days. Prices have gone up and it still felt like it's meant for tourists.

Before I digress further - this stall was neither Meat Smith nor Burnt Ends. While those represented higher end barbeque somewhat and the obligatory name dropping had already been done, one shouldn't expect a similar standard. It's a hawker stall in a expensive touristy spot trying to do better than the regular western food stall.

Meatsmith Western BBQ, salted egg chicken chop

The salted egg chicken chop was pretty good though. Not going to comment on the quality of the salted egg sauce beyond saying that it's not bad. The chicken was properly grilled with the prerequisite char aroma and some juiciness. Garlic rice was okay. Those sour that seeped from the pickled cucumbers actually elevated the rice. Too bad about the coriander. No idea why they had even thought that coriander would have made this any better.

Meatsmith Western BBQ, suckling pig

Didn't think much of their suckling pig. I wouldn't eat this again. Meat was a stiff, dry and tasted like it was prepared hours ago to be reheated on serving. The texture of the skin was more hard than crisp. Nothing like the properly done Spanish or Chinese versions. Glutinous rice was okay. I found myself missing the ones from Ikea while eating this though. My thoughts speak hidden volumes. *gasp*

Since Makansutra's review was pretty positive, I will only attribute this experience of the food as either inconsistency or incompetency.

Meatsmith Western BBQ, Makansutra Glutton Bay

Sunday, December 30, 2018

PS. Cafe, Raffles City

PS. Cafe, szechuan chilli pepper chicken fried rice.

PS Cafe has a spiffy location at Raffles City (#03-37, 252 North Bridge Road, tel : +65 6708 9288). We were here for a quick dinner. That dish on top was their Szechuan chilli pepper chicken fried rice. Didn't taste like fried rice to me. The gong bao sauce didn't pack much heat. While I don't know much about cooking, I'm pretty qualified to comment that those chicken that they used would have turned out much better if they had been stir fried rather than boiled. Nothing was caramelized and the cashews weren't toasted; the result was that much of flavour that made gong bao chicken simply didn't exist. While it didn't taste bad, it did feel like an imitation of a Chinese dish that felt stereotypically American Chinese.

But maybe that was their point.

PS. Cafe, prawn noodle

Their hae mee was still outstanding like we remembered it. Probably the only food from this region that they did right by.

PS. Cafe, Raffles City

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Aburi-EN, Guoco Tower

The group En Holdings which runs Aburi-EN (#B2-09 Guoco Tower, 1 Wallich Street, tel : +65 6214 3570) are probably disorganized or are hiding something rather than not being proud of themselves. They run a slew of restaurants like En Dining Bar, Z'enMonster Curry and En Sakabar to name a few so they've got to be doing something right. How all these restaurants were even related was information that took a little sniffing online.


But enough of that. Aburi-EN mostly does grilled kurobuta and Miyazaki wagyu donburi. That above was their premium yukke jyu which the menu described with lightly torched marinated wagyu strips. Gimmicky and we fell for it. Could taste the wagyu if the meat was eaten by itself. With the rice and anything else, it somehow magically crosses the too-much-flavour line where none of the wagyu-ism mattered because it couldn't be discerned. For what they charged, the yukke portion felt stingy. 


But their kurobuta hoho don was delicious. Most of it because of those nicely grilled fatty and tender slices of pork jowl. The kind that unimaginative people all over like to call "melt in your mouth" because they still think that they can appear marginally more knowledgeable that way. Of course it doesn't really melt in the mouth. It's meat. The fat to meat ratio isn't quite unbalance to that point. But one could feel that parts of it were dissolving away.


That's the sumibi tori yaki. The picture on the menu looked golden brown with nice looking burnt ends. This one looked carcinogenic. It even tasted carcinogenic. In a strangely addictive manner from that grilled infused aroma. I'd order this again.

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Hotate yaki and unagi hitsumabushi from Man Man Unagi at Duo Galleria

Man Man Japanese Unagi Restaurant, hitsumabushi scallop

The theme for the menu at the Man Man branch at Duo Galleria seems to be combo pairings with unagi for their hitsumabushi and teishoku. There's option for roast beef, salmon belly and even crab. Here's a grilled scallop and unagi hitsumabushi. The scallops were from Hokkaido and were grilled with just salt and pepper.

Man Man Japanese Unagi Restaurant, hitsumabushi scallop menu

What I've basically confirmed for myself was that the grilled eels are of a different standard over here at Duo Galleria compared with the original shop at Keong Saik. The end product from this shop just didn't have that light-flaky-meat-under-well-caramelized-surface texture that made them outstanding in the first place. Today's unagi didn't even have those scorch marks like what I've always expected from them. Did they remove the wasabi root for the hitsumabushi as well? 

Man Man Japanese Unagi Restaurant, Duo Galleria

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

A year end dinner at Keria Japanese Restaurant

Keria Japanese Restaurant, Cuppage Plaza

It's feeling like Christmas at Keria.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, otoshi

Today's otoshi was simmered eggs and mushrooms.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, sashimi

Their sashimi moriawase for today was hotate, kanpachi and shima aji. The hotate was sweet and the shima aji tasted fatty.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, shirako tempura

Shirako is on the menu. We had them in tempura.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, shirako yaki

We had them grilled too. On hindsight, the grilled ones were much tastier. These came with ponzu on the side which was appetizing too.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, mentaiko cabbage

I don't remember the last time we didn't order their mentaiko cabbage when we were here. Sweet, crunchy and mentaiko-y,

Keria Japanese Restaurant, beef cubes

I had ordered the beef cubes thinking that they'd be pan fried with just pepper and salt and maybe a bit of shoyu. I'm not sure what's that sauce.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, nama tamago gohan

That's the raw egg with rice set.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, nama tamago gohan

Pour egg into rice.

Keria Japanese Restaurant, nama tamago gohan

Add a splash of shoyu to taste, give it a good stir and...

Keria Japanese Restaurant, nama tamago gohan

.....itadakimasu!

Keria Japanese Restaurant, nama tamago gohan

*burp!*

Keria Japanese Restaurant, Cuppage Plaza

Monday, December 24, 2018

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, Golden Mile Complex

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, Golden Mile Complex

I've only heard about De Tongue Thai (#02-33 Golden Mile Complex, 5001 Beach Road, tel : +65 9626 1913) recently but according to their website, they've been operating since the 80s. The shop's location is at the corner of the second floor so I guess for the most of us who aren't regulars at Golden Mile Complex, they wouldn't have as much visibility as say Diandin Leluk.

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, prawn porridge

We ordered their prawn porridge because it looked good on the menu. It didn't look much like that picture on their menu though. Those prawns were much smaller looking and this was akin to Teochew styled porridge which was basically rice in a broth rather than the congee style which I was thinking of. The broth had a sweetness and was deliciously garlicky.

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, yum mama talay

Their yum mama talay was warm, tangy and appetising. With a bit of heat. If the picture wasn't apparent, it's a noodle salad with seafood. Pretty tasty with the crushed peanuts that were available in their condiment cups on every table.

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, mango salad

I liked their spicy mango salad too which was delicious with a spoonful of sugar and lots of crushed peanuts. Those helped with the acidity that's often found in such salads.

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, fried pig intestines

We had some fried pig intestines that came with very fragrant bits of fried garlic which were really good. These intestines were chewy, not in a bad way, and salted very lightly compared to the Chinese variety that can be found in porridge stalls.

Dee Tongue Thai by Rung Mama, isaan sausages

Wanted to try their grilled pig's tongue but they were sold out. So we swapped that order for some snappy Isaan styled sausages which were stuffed with pork and rice and also garlicky. Don't mind coming back again.