Showing posts with label Food - Hawker Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food - Hawker Food. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Hong Kong - Fatty Crab 肥蟹

Malaysian inspired cuisine cooked up by a bunch of New Yorkers.  Hmm....  I had to think about that one for a bit.  I don't even eat Singapore/Malaysian food in Hong Kong since I get home quite a bit and don't get into crazy cravings.  So would I take the chance of a no-reservations place on a Friday night in Central for Malaysian food literally cooked up by New Yorkers (I didn't spot an Asian from the sliver opening of the kitchen door closest to our table).  Seriously.

No one spoke Chinese in the joint.  I don't even think they spoke English.  It was as Nu Yawk as the Statue of Liberty.  And it was Greenwich village vibe cool.  Good music and a wide array of fun cocktails.  They can do mock on request.  Definitely noisy and the acoustics amplified it.

And the food?

Like a lot of places these days which tout sharing so everyone gets a taste of everything, we were advised on picking from the different sections in the menu - raw, skinny and fatty.  They also have sides like in good ole fashioned America.  Since there were only 2 of us, we skipped to the chase and and had 3 fattys!

Watermelon Pickle and Crispy Pork
This was as good a pork as you can get anywhere, even in Hong Kong, where pork is the territory's meat of choice.  Pork is very much in our blood and we can have it in several courses of a meal.  But I digress.  This was perfectly crisp on the outside so it envelopes a melt-in-the-mouth combo of fat and flesh.  The watermelon was split into 2 categories.  The red sweet and juicy part we are all used to consuming especially in the thick of summer.  Then they pickled the pale green section between the red and the skin.  With a really really tart dressing reminiscent of the pickle dishes which many old school Chinese restaurants still serve, only much tarter.  There was also a lot of herb varieties over the top which reminded me of many-a-dish in Vietnam where herbs are the order of the day.  Nice, fresh and light for something from the Fatty section, but personally, I could do with just the out-of-the-world pork and fresh watermelon cubes.

Nasi Lemak
This was a 50/50 order since there isn't much you can do to justify badly executed nasi lemak.  But you know what?  It was good it its own right.  Not quite what you're used to on the streets of KL or even from a hawker center in Singapore, but this was nasi lemak at a finer level.  The piece de resistance was a very good piece of curry chicken leg which took center stage.  This dish could have been called curry chicken rice and still be great.  A slow poached egg when broken, added to the richness of the gravy.  Bliss.  Snags?  Sambal had too much heat and not sweet enough.  I would also have like a lot more ikan bilis but that's just me.

Chilli Crab
This scored points with me for the use of Dungeness crab, which I love.  And surprisingly, a really good Pullman toast which had chew to it.  The gravy was not the kind I'm used to although it went well with the toast.  This was not the eggy gravy with a tomato base but rather had a lot more sambal in the base and more pungent.  Wasn't bad though.

Peanut Butter kinda dessert
Perhaps the one disappointment was dessert.  We should have stuck on theme but got distracted as we would by anything with peanut butter in it.  Well, this dish probably suffered more from the choice of a jam jar as a serving platform since it was hard to get a little bit of everything making every spoonful messy and one-dimensional.  I also dislike whipped cream so it made it worse.  On a flatter dish, this would have been way more enjoyable.

Overall, lotsa fun and good quality food (just don't think of it as a Malaysian experience).  It's a theme restaurant for crying out loud.  And you do have to, to be heard over the noise, and to get past the only broken link in communication who stands out front waiting to receive guests.  Her aside, it's good service all round without the service charge.  Yes, tipping is "discretionary" (just like in America).

11-13 Old Bailey Rd.
Central District, Hong Kong
Tel: +852-25212033


Saturday, April 24, 2010

Hong Kong - Cheong Kee


Friday night...  after a wonderful dinner, my eyes are closing as I'm looking towards the weekend.  Saturday routine will begin with a late start, and of course a trip to Cheong Kee for lunch.  Try not to wrestle with me for their favourites, please.  

I never make it early enough for macaroni, stewed chicken wings and sometimes their glorious and purportedly first-to-market thick toast with spreads of your choice.  Their staples are butter and sugar crystals, a wondrous combination and guilty but good from the first bite.  The equally guilty and in my book, a better one is the peanut butter and condensed milk version.  

So I think I will stick to my usual tomorrow..  a bittergourd omelette paired with chicken chop or (battered fish fillet - see below).  



Or should I have the corned beef omelette and pan fried fish cake..  or if I feel a sore throat coming, the snow vegetable and pork slivers with vermicelli...  oh dear, decisions decisions.

But you know what?  Whatever you order, it's going to be darn tasty.  Biggest difference, their supplies are top notch and their chefs are so well trained that the foods are not greasy at all.  I mean, which cha chan tang uses imported eggs from the US, and that's just the start of it.

So don't fight with me and order something else please.  And let there be seats so I don't have to wait too long.

See you tomorrow!  Can't wait.

Shop 1 & 5, 2/F, Wong Nai Chung Complex, 
2 Yuk Sau Street, 
Happy Valley
Tel: +852-2573 5910

Friday, February 12, 2010

Singapore - Ah Kow Mushroom Minced Pork Mee

I don't crave hawker food when I am away..  but the flight to Singapore tends to set me thinking about how to make the most of my visits - gastronomically that is.  Sometimes I want to hit the new joints and see if the new kids on the block are lifting the game, and sometimes, I get nostalgic and just want to hit my old favourite hawker haunts.  Seeing that I took a morning flight this time, I stepped off the plane in time for a late lunch.  So off loaded luggage, hop into car, and off I drove to Hong Lim Centre.


This is one of the better ones around town.  Not as famous as Tai Wah but this is my choice comfort bowl of bak chor mee (minced meat noodles).  Ah Kow wasn't around so the stand-in's ratio of vinegar to oil and soy sauce wasn't as precise but it was still pretty darn satisfying.  Noodles still al dente and generous amounts of minced pork, 2 dumplings and stewed mushrooms made for a good first meal back home.

531A Upper Cross Street
#02-43 Hong Lim Food Centre

Singapore 

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Singapore - quick jaunt in the East Coast

I am not the sort to miss local food in Singapore, but I do like doing the rituals I used to enjoy when I was growing up and living in Singapore.  Jaunts around the East Coast are common since that's where the family lives.  And so, I thought I'd bring my camera along today to show my non-Singapore friends what I eat around here.


The Peranakan laksa which many come from far and wide to try.  The stall I ate from today is Marine Parade Laksa, ironically lesser known than those along the main drag of East Coast Road, although this is supposed to be the pioneer who started it all.  At least the brand is!  Who knows - there are a lot of copycats in Singapore.  This version is the original coconut milk and lots of dried shrimps recipe, and does not use evaporated milk.


The typical accompaniment to laksa is the nasi lemak (loosely translated to rich rice, and is really rice cooked in coconut milk - a Malay-origins dish) served with deep fried anchovies and a local fish (typically eaten by cats - I kid you not) and of course, the sambal chilli sauce - sweetish but with a touch of heat.  The large piece of orange "cake" resting on the rice is otak (Malay for brain - I hear they use to use fish brains - do they have any?? or was it the texture??) but in more recent history, made of minced fish and more coconut milk, and grilled in a banana leaf over a charcoal fire.


    

After all that spice, take a walk to Chin Mee Chin to savour the nation's best Kaya on a soft and chewy bun (as opposed to the wafer thin type toast which I abhor), washed down with Teh-C (tea made with evaporated as opposed to condensed milk - the former more akin to Hong Kong style milk tea).  Still set in the same premises and decor of decades ago, time stands still in this place.  


Marine Parade Laksa
50 East Coast Road
Level 1 Roxy Square One

Singapore


Chin Mee Chin Confectionary
204 East Coast Road
Singapore