Friday, August 31, 2012

Jaded


This was a second time at Jade (1 Fullerton Square, GF Fullerton Hotel, tel : +65 6877 8188) for dim sum. The first occasion was a couple of years back where it was a 2 month wait with reservations. Thinking back, it was actually kinda ridiculous considering that after these two visits spanned some short years apart, I had gotten the same impression that the food was really unexceptional for what they charged. I could easily go a la carte in many places which would fare better and cost less.

To gripe, they had a braised birds nest with truffle egg white in superior broth (a one order per guest item) which was really extra-ordinary with both the quality and quanity of the ingredents. It was pretty much a dressed up starch filler that one would normally douse with splashes of vinegar and a generous blanket of pepper. For credit that was due, the truffle flavoring did not come from truffle oil.

A lobster porridge they had with said porridge that was obviously not cooked with any lobster parts and a stiff piece of lobster flesh that was pretty much devoided of flavors from the crustacean. The other assortment of items on both visits had either been passable or ho hum with the exception of a truffle yam pastry which was largely elevated by the truffle oil.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Wagyu steak and chicken rice dinner at Serangoon Gardens

Poh Poh Chicken Rice, Serangoon Gardens

We were getting food from iSteaks (56 Serangoon Garden Way, Stalls 5 & 6) and while waiting for the steaks to arrive, spotted Poh Poh Roasted Chicken rice located at the other end of the same coffee shop which looked good. So what happened was an order of their chicken rice while the cow was making progress on the grill.

This turned out to be pretty good. In fact, I'm going to go on record and state that I wouldn't have an qualms picking this over Pow Sing nearby should I need a fix of chicken rice in the vicinity. The rice was moist, sufficiently greasy without being excessive and also grainy enough for texture. Their roasted chicken was pretty respectable. It's definitely one those where the chilli sauce (commendably decent) was an option rather than a requisite since the rice was good enough to stand on its own.

iSteaks, wagyu steak

iSteaks has a lower grade marbling Australian Wagyu on menu and hence, a 200g for $35 fix was available. This tasted much like the one at Aston's - a noticeable more buttery beefiness in comparison to a regular ribeye.  The meat that I had was a little inconsistent in doneness from a shade of medium moving towards a juicer medium rare in the middle. I'm sure this stall gives Aston's a run for their money judging from the crowd.

iSteaks, wagyu steak

Sunday, August 26, 2012

New Ubin Seafood, Sin Ming Industrial Estate

New Ubin Seafood, Sin Ming Industrial Estate

This was a bit of an unusual spot (Block 27 Sin Ming Road, #01-174 Sin Ming Industrial Estate Sector A, tel : +65 6466 9558) for a weekend lunch. For one, I hadn't known of its existence until quite recently even though I have had ba kut teh just around the corner. The location in the middle of an industrial park amidst vehicle workshops wouldn't quite advertise its presence as well.

New Ubin Seafood, erdinger

Erdinger is served here.

New Ubin Seafood, tofu golden mushroom

We ordered up a tofu with golden mushroom which tasted pretty much like how it looked except for the gravy which didn't taste as bland as what one would expect the usual renditions of this dish.

New Ubin Seafood, deep fried fish roe chinchaklok sambal petai

What was pretty impressive was their deep fried fish eggs with chinchalok and sambal petai sauce. There was a tamarind base to the flavour of the viscous sauce. Tasted just a little sweet and with a burst of a sour that was very appetizing. That sour helped cut through the richness from the fried fish eggs with a richness of its own.

New Ubin Seafood, beef

The unusual, but apparently pretty popular dish to order here was their beef, a platter of grilled and sliced USDA Choice ribeye. The preparation of the dish was rather impressive as the cooking achieved a very close medium rare with the meat suffering from little adulteration apart from salt and pepper. The wedges on the side was made in house of plain cut potatoes and there was also an excellent pile of sweet caramelised onions to go with. Not the best steak by any stretch, but a surprisingly good one coming from a seafood cze char place.

New Ubin Seafood, heart attack fried rice

The order of the beef comes with a second component of a the dish, which was dubbed by the establishment as the heart attack fried rice. Essentially stir fried with dark soy sauce and fat trimmed off from the ribeye that are fried to a crisp. This was pretty tasty, but it tasted a lot more like claypot rice rather than any fried rice that I know of.

New Ubin Seafood, deep fried oysters with salted egg yolk

The next cholesterol bomb was battered and deep fried oysters in salted egg yolk. The flavour of the salted yolk were robust and the oysters were actually pretty fresh tasting. Would make excellent pairing with white rice if I may say so.

New Ubin Seafood, claypot shovel nose ray bitter gourd

This would be the first component of their shovel nose ray which was stir fried meat from the ray with sliced bitter gourd in a sweet and garlicky dark sauce. The sauce was concentrated in flavour and would have been great with white rice. Which I'm glad we hadn't ordered any. The quality of this dish approaches the standards of claypot items we've tried at Imperial Treasure, so I guess that says something about the guy sweating in the kitchen in this establishment.

New Ubin Seafood, nai bai

We ordered a plate of nai bai to help alleviate the guilt from all the rich food that we had. The crunchy vegetables were light and clean tasting.

New Ubin Seafood, steamed shovel nose ray

The last item that was served arrived after we were done with the other dishes. We had been informed earlier at the start that it would take a while. This, was the second part to the shovel nose ray which contains collagen rich gelatinous parts surrounding a proboscis like soft bone structure. Both the outside and the interior were filled with the light gelatinous matter which tasted very much like eating hashima or bone marrow in chicken essence. The last part came from the rich broth that the ray was steamed in which could have been what is normally passed as superior sauce in Chinese restaurants.

New Ubin Seafood, Sin Ming Industrial Estate

I think this place would be for keeps.

A diamond in August

Lawry's, diamond jim brady

So here is Lawry's traditional lump crab cake which we have never had before to accompany our prime rib dinner.  It's not as expensive as the delicious ones Morton's or even Wooloomooloo's. That could be because as soon as the brought it out, the smell reminded me distinctively of Sea Shanty's. After popping one of those breaded crab cakes into my mouth, I realised that these things tasted like Sea Shanty's as well! Albeit one that has bits of crab meat in them. I couldn't say that I was surprised.

Lawry's crab cakes

Some eats from the food court at Platinum Mall

Bangkok, Platinum Mall food court, khao kha moo

Here're some pork with rice from level 6 at Platinum Mall (222 Petchaburi Road, Ratchathevee, Bangkok 10400).

The above was a khao kha moo that came with generous bits braised in collegen, fats and tender meat from pork trotters (along with bits of bone) in a light and tasty umami sauce. This was delicious and the accompanying fish sauce with small sliced green chilli couldn't have been better pairing for an additional kick of flavors, though one must be generally cautious of the heat they pack.

Below was something that was described as red pork and I guess it was just how Thailand attempts char siew. This rendition on rice wasn't so impressive and had meat that tasted nothing like those I've previously tried at Otoko market.

Bangkok, Platinum Mall food court, char siew rice
Bangkok, Platinum Mall food court, bird's nest

Bird's nest was sold as well, but it wasn't flavored with pandan so it tasted a little unusual. I'm not sure much of it is real though since it wasn't expensive. 

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Zanotti, Bangkok

Zanotti, Bangkok

This was a pretty disappointing dinner. I suppose I had been expecting more since this was suppose to be a talked about place and I had the idea that if it's so much on the wire, there has to be something about them that was great. The only thing about Zanotti that looked appealing was the ambiance.

I didn't like the way starters were pre-made. The porcini and mushroom soup along with the eggplant with anchovies along with the amuse bouche were served so quickly that I hadn't even touched the first loaf from the bread bowl before they all had arrived. Lukewarm.  There was a primi piatti described as a creamy lamb pasta that was creamy in neither taste nor texture. The lamb had also lost all it's natural flavour drowned in rosemary. Drowning food in rosemary is incidentally one of my pet peeves.

Their Castelmagno cheese risotto wasn't something I could get exited about as well. It became a little two dimensional before long. This I suppose was not their fault.

There were too much wait staff standing around and service was at best, ineffective.

Such a pity and waste of time.
 
Zanotti, Bangkok, pasta