Wanted all black this time round from Fu Ming Cooked Food. I liked it. A bit pricey for their portions but delicious the same with the bits of bitter sweetness from the caramelized parts and a solid mess of egg amid the tender pieces of radish cake. Did I detect fermented shrimp in their chilli?
Authenticity seems more a matter of ranges and limitations than of outright prescriptions. - Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything
Thursday, June 16, 2022
Black radish cake from Fu Ming Cooked Food (福明熟食)
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
Starshine Coke
Found this at 7-11 and got it out of curiosity. I don't know if my finger's on the right spot but this tasted like sour plum (酸梅).
Digested Pages :
miss cell
Another double SmokeShack from Shake Shack
I haven't had the SmokeShack since Hong Kong and it's the first time I'm getting one locally. I guess I tasted it better this time round and noticed that those chopped cherry peppers tasted like jalapeños. In other not so related news, I saw something call Purple Cow together with their root beer float on their menu. I'm guessing it's grape soda with ice cream.
Digested Pages :
american,
between sliced bread,
burgers/sandwiches
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
$10 at Ah Ter Teochew Fishball Noodles
Decided to try the $10 bowl from Ah Ter Teochew Fishball Noodles to see if it was impressive. It was the young chap running the stall today so the first thing I noticed was how the noodles were "bowled". It was a lot saucier than the previous times. Looking back, I realized that they ketchup-ed my noodles and I had totally forgotten about that hence overlooked asking them not to do it.
The portion of the mee pok looked similar but the ingredients were much more generous. Notice the couple of chunky prawns and seaweed which I've never gotten previously for the less expensive bowls. I'm pretty sure I would have enjoyed this more if the ketchup hadn't been mixed into the noodles. I hope I remember the next time.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
Monday, June 13, 2022
Ah Seng (Hai Nam) Coffee, Amoy Street Food Centre
I've heard of Ah Seng (#02-95 Amoy Street Food Centre, 7 Maxwell Road) for a while. It's mostly repeating gushing over their charcoal grilled toasts and pretty much nothing else because everyone doesn't know what else to write.
Tried it - no big deal. The tiny charcoal grill in the corner isn't big; the stall didn't have the space nor ventilation to accommodate anything larger so service can be slow. Nothing particularly outstanding came out of the charcoal grilled bread. Their green kaya was unexpectedly coconut-y. Coffee tasted like the ones you can get at Han's. Will probably not come back for coffee.
Further thoughts? I didn't think a commercial chain like Ya Kun or Toast Box is inferior to a "traditional" shop like Ah Seng. There's no discernible difference in the flavour of their toast. Both Ya Kun/Toast Box generally has more butter and kaya. Speaking of butter, I didn't understand why the proprietors at the stall needed to justify their cost because they used butter instead of Planta and that their charcoal was $76 a bag. They sounded defensive for some reasons. I was just there to get coffee and toast and it's not like I was complaining about the prices.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
between sliced bread,
chinese,
the coffee leaf and tea bean
Bak Kee Teochew Satay Bee Hoon (峇記潮洲沙嗲米粉), Redhill Food Centre
I haven't had much satay bee hoon for a while. Used to eat a lot more of them as a kid. In the past decade or so, Bak Kee Teochew Satay Bee Hoon (#01-40 Redhill Food Centre, 85 Redhill Lane) was the one of the few I remember being recommended to try and that has taken a while because in the times I've been to Redhill Food Centre, they're either closed or the queue looked deterring. But it's happened.
Verdict was that it was not bad. I liked this much more than Wham Poa Satay Bee Hoon. The obvious reason at first glance would be the gritty viscosity of the satay gravy which was savoury sweet, mildly spicy and nutty. Smothered in that gravy with the bee hoon were sprigs of spinach, slices of pork, pig's liver, cuttlefish and precisely two cockles and two strips of tau pok.
Digested Pages :
a local signature,
chinese
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