I might have gone a little overboard with the peanuts there but the stall was closing up soon for the long weekend so why waste them right? Anyways, I liked this dry kuey teow from Gubak Kia. Wished they were a bit more generous with the mixed beef parts though. If I had to pick what I thought to be the better bowl, I'm pretty sure I enjoyed the Empress Place bowl a bit more. What ultimately made a difference between this guys versus Empress Place and MooTeow were the peanuts.
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Sunday, January 26, 2020
Mixed beef kuey teow from Gubak Kia
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
Saturday, January 25, 2020
Getting grilled cheese and hotdog from Five Guys
So we're back at Five Guys. This time with a cheese dog and a grilled cheese sandwich where we've added a beef patty. Hotdog's pretty salty and not particularly memorable. But that nicely browned and appropriately greasy grilled cheese....I'm coming back for.
Today's strawberry and vanilla shake. Another day another flavour.
Digested Pages :
american,
between sliced bread,
burgers/sandwiches
Friday, January 24, 2020
River Valley Nasi Lemak, Lucky Plaza
Came across this stall (#B1-99/101 Lucky Plaza, 304 Orchard Road) that is opened in the morning early enough for breakfast in one of those uncommon times we were in Lucky Plaza early enough for breakfast. I'm guessing by their name that they used to operate somewhere off River Valley in the past.
The nasi lemak was okay. I felt that the standards of their rice aren't great just like everyone else's. Drumstick was dry and sinewy. Otah's actually not bad. Ditto for the dry-ish potato patty thingy (begedil?). Egg's very thin, sambal's sweet and the fish was more crisp than meat. It's not bad that I wouldn't mind eating again if I'm here but I'm not coming back specially for this.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
Thursday, January 23, 2020
Alijiang (阿里疆) Silk Road Cuisine, VivoCity
These guys (#03-11B VivoCity, 1 Harbour Front Walk, tel : +65 6252 4979) are relatively new and the menu from appearances is focused on Silk Road Cuisine. If I had to summarize into laymen's terms, north western China/Muslim/Middle Eastern would be pretty accurate no matter how one looked at it. I'm pretty sure that there are influences from other parts of Asia that they didn't bother to mention as part of their marketing as well.
I was interested because this meant that the food from the regions of Chinese Muslim regions like Xinjiang would be represented.
Li Guang apricot tea was kinda nice. Tasted very much like regular apricots if anyone was wondering.
We started off with some of their lamb skewers (羊肉串). Flavour was pretty good. While the quality wasn't questionable, they were also more expensive than what I'm used to seeing them go for.
There was a mushroom dish which the English translation called tricholoma matsutake. They looked like regular brown/button mushrooms but were very flavourful. An umami heavyweight that was perfumed by dill. Very delicious.
Followed by a chilled lychee and cherry tomato salad which was refreshing in its own citrus-y manner. Very nice too.
Their 'lamb in a cage' looked like it was meat from the rib. They were served in a contraption with hooks.
Then removed from the contraption and sliced into bite size pieces. Very nice lamb-y flavour with bits of fat.
We ordered some grilled pineapple to go with it and it was sweet and delicious as well from the grilling.
We tried a dish called Xinjiang specialty rice. It was rice cooked in a pot on order after some yellow peppers, carrots, onions and bits of lamb were sizzled in oil. Not much else went into it.
There was a sweetness from the vegetables that was infused into the rice along with the fat from the lamb. I liked this.
Tried a bunch of their desserts. This rice cake was translated as 'fragrant concubine pastry'. It's not so much pastry than it was layers of sticky rice. In between the rice were cranberries and raisins. The yellow stuff on the top might have been millet. There was osmanthus honey drizzled over it. Not bad.
We also tried something called Turkish milk rice. Rice that was cooked with sweetened milk and flavoured with vanilla. Tasted like how it sounded. This stuff is good when it's hot.
Some fruity yoghurt that has a caramelized sugar top like crème brûlée. The other brown stuff tasted like Coke flavoured pop rocks. Cool. But this was not the end to the yoghurt.
The new flavour to me was what they called 'Imperial pea pastry'. Again, it wasn't a pastry but a gelatinous pudding of sorts that was made from beans. Tasted like mung bean or chick pea but lightly sweetened. Intriguing which kinda latched onto me.
When we got the bill, we were given more yoghurt. With honey. Nice.
Wednesday, January 22, 2020
Strawberry dango from Isetan
Got these from the dango stand at Isetan. I had the idea that it was some strawberry sauce lathered on top of those dango but it was actually strawberry flavoured bean paste.
Digested Pages :
japanese
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Another go at Lau Phua Chay
I happened to be in the vicinity getting lunch and saw that there wasn't any queue at Lau Phua Chay so I decided to give them another try. I don't think my opinion of them has changed. Unless one is enamoured with that sauce, I don't get the appeal.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
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