Cloudy
Its officially recognized here at Plaza Singapura. Mouth Restaurant; punny(ly) 地茂, where the older generation flock and pool to, as a cantonese dim sum fuel kiosk. The past half a year, it has shuttled from Chinatown Point to China Square Central to City Square Mall to Plaza Singapura.
Cantonese, or pure Cantonese you could say that the rice roll are 'thick toast' style. Lavished with peanut butter and ketchup sauce. Rice roll {gel} like carbohydrates toast, butchered and knived into cylindrical fingers, but is black now, like black sesame of the longing {past} Old Hong Kong Taste/Group.
Amongst the steamed siew mai with whole prawn, and infamous squid ink char siew bao, dipped a flattering warm grey. Land and the sea {ideas} aside; meat, pork, skin, squid, it is a sound, pliable "grey" elephant, just way of saying char siew bao at Mouth.
It is really silky onxy black inside, the rice roll. Rice roll rolled like this are typically the "dessert", unlike flatly undone ones the more common sight of a savoury meat-stuffed rice roll. Symbolizing its culinary wellspring(HK), the melting pot, pork floss and chopped onions are further entwined in the sticky mess with soy sauce to send the tips of your tongues little frenzied and confusion signals.
Seafood Stir Fried Ramen with Squid Ink and XO Sauce (SGD 18.00)
The meatblood of the day, squid ink is used to dress the noodles the way al nero di seppia did; not the method of dipdyeing the carbohydrates, the asian/western way of enriching the breads, like the baos and funs above. *signature of Mouth's, it was peppered with chili! Still, hearty and {ramen (la mien) [thick] | HK thin noodles} that was reminiscent of HK noodles, or more illuminatingly e-fu noodles with stock and consomme.
Steamed lotus leaf with black glutinous rice
Black and intimidating (glutinous), it was sweet.(coupled) Finely steamed breaking pockets of moisture, it held a layer of coconut shreds inside. The fragrances meted out each other and the popping knuckles kind of experience was not due to the crispy coconut pieces, but the hard royalpurple black rice grains. With lighter purple unspilt rice grains between, forming the glutinous rice paste.
P.S. The spilled bloodink of the meal, the red fronds and red sandalwood lookalikes echoed one thing- was ink from the squid strictly eastern or western style of cooking? More so, was squid (this mollusc) asian or western? Were marine creatures ever assigned, on their ethnicities? Twas al nero di seppia, not bounded by the restrictions of man, cuisine it to be used in.