Yet another breakfast from the bagel shop that definitely has more than two men. That's the one with brisket, sauerkraut, mustard and pickles. Lots of tang to cut through whatever it was there to cut through. I added runny eggs because it was breakfast and I thought it was nice to have eggs for breakfast. Brisket was very tender - thought I tasted cinnamon in it.
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Monday, March 09, 2020
Salt Shoreditch with runny egg in cheddar bagel from Two Men Bagel House
Digested Pages :
between sliced bread,
burgers/sandwiches
Sunday, March 08, 2020
Revisiting Wicked Garlic and maybe this is it
Here's a second go at The Wicked Garlic. The aglio olio has very little garlic flavour. The bacon they used didn't taste so much like bacon as it did crumpled strips of pork belly. Where's all the salt and smoke? I recall (albeit from a long while ago) that even Pasta Mania made much better aglio olio. At this price point, pasta from Saizeriya blows this out of the water.
Their penne al granchio tasted better than it looked. The tomato cream sauce isn't Valentino's or Da Paolo and neither are the portions of crab but I suppose there's a good reason why this place costs less.
That's a quattro formaggi and it would be understandable if no one recognized it for what it was. It looked uniform. Taleggio the menu said. Gorgonzola the menu said. Mozzarella the menu said. Goat cheese the menu said. I tasted none of those. The flavour was just generic cheese and I couldn't tell what type it was from taste. For a four cheese, this was just sad.
Digested Pages :
local western,
pasta,
pizza
Saturday, March 07, 2020
Slow roasted ribeye from Marché
A roast by any other name would taste......the picture in front of the grill station at Marché showed the regular ribeye which they've always been doing and that kept me wondering what was the difference between that and their regular steak. We eventually figured it's the prime rib that they had on their board. For $19.90, I couldn't complain. Reasonably tender and well seasoned. I know it's not fair to compare so I won't. Heh!
Digested Pages :
prime rib
Thursday, March 05, 2020
The green goddess beneath Parma
No need for me to advertise where this came from.
It's the green goddess inside.
Packaging is obvious.
Used half the packet on the pizza.
In retrospect, I should have used the entire pack of 150g for more flavour from the prosciutto. Now I know.
Wednesday, March 04, 2020
Revisiting the Red Sparrow
We enjoyed the food from Red Sparrow from the last visit. So we came back.
The restaurant whips up a deliciously flavourful seafood fried rice. The portions aren't big for what they charged but there's scallops, some crab meat and shrimps in it. A little greasy but big on flavour. Would eat it again.
Their bún chả featured pretty impressive grilled and charred meatballs and pork belly from Berkshire pig. Not something traditionally found in the streets of Vietnam I'm sure but the pig they used isn't the talking point here. The sweet glaze the used was kickass. It even made the broth taste like spicy bak kwa. Would have loved for this to have more vegetables and rice noodles though.
Xào bông kim châm - stir fried daylily flower. Tasted leek-y with a hint of bitterness along with a deliciously savouriness from the sauce they concocted for the stir fry. One of those things to be had with steamed white rice.
Guess what they have on tap here?
Digested Pages :
vietnamese
Tuesday, March 03, 2020
Chico Loco, Amoy Street
Chico Loco's (102 Amoy Street, tel : +65 9738 7828) a Mexican styled rotisserie run by The Loco Group - the amigos who gave us Lucha Loco and Super Loco. From what I've read, one gets hormone-, antibiotic-, cage-free 42 day old chickens sourced from our neighbour Johor Bahru.
I just realized that we had been ordering elote every visit to the Loco restaurants. To their credit, they were nicely done. Corn was sweet and juicy pairing with saltiness from the cotija cheese. On top of that, a bit of heat from the spices along with citrus from the squeeze of lime. Very likeable combinations.
Chicken's not bad. The bird's been marinated and it showed in the meat. Spice rub/crust was not bad. All in all, it was good enough that the dips that they were selling was almost (I'll explain why it's almost) unnecessary. But we still enjoyed their chimichurri yoghurt (say raita-ish!) and the habenero mango.
Nicely done leg of lamb as well. Couldn't tell what was the gravy they used but it worked. Like the chicken, it did well enough on its own without any of the dips.
Got their Chico slaw because we needed some vegetables in our diet. Texturally loaded with different types of crunches from both the nuts, fruits and vegetables. Something in it oddly reminded me of chicken rice. Now was that sesame or chicken oil? The menu mentioned spiced macadamia granola - I detected what might have been candied macadamia and walnuts. Loved those nuts in the slaw. And the mint too.
This was where the dip came in handy. The rotisserie fat rice which possibly had the drippings from the roasts but were lacking in salt. Not so nice to eat until I doused some of the habanero mango dip into them. Speaking of which I liked that habanero mango sauce.
Digested Pages :
mexican or mexican't
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