Chihuly Lounge- Summer Weekend Afternoon Tea

Take a feast on all the names. Passion fruit mango éclair, casis violet écclair, mango éclair, caramel écair, mac-clair, cherry écair, cookies and cream écair, gula melaka écair, chocolate écair, green tea écair, mixed berries écair, hazelnt éclair, apple écair.

An Equador Rose

Say it with me. #iloveyouimissyousecretfriendshippleaseforgivemeremembermethankyoubemysweetheart. On a rose.

Chihuly Lounge- Summer Weekend Afternoon Tea

Take a feast on all the names. Passion fruit mango éclair, casis violet écclair, mango éclair, caramel écair, mac-clair, cherry écair, cookies and cream écair, gula melaka écair, chocolate écair, green tea écair, mixed berries écair, hazelnt éclair, apple écair.

An Equador Rose

Say it with me. #iloveyouimissyousecretfriendshippleaseforgivemeremembermethankyoubemysweetheart. On a rose.

Chihuly Lounge- Summer Weekend Afternoon Tea

Take a feast on all the names. Passion fruit mango éclair, casis violet écclair, mango éclair, caramel écair, mac-clair, cherry écair, cookies and cream écair, gula melaka écair, chocolate écair, green tea écair, mixed berries écair, hazelnt éclair, apple écair.

Showing posts with label Dim sum. Show all posts

JB kaki- Malaysia dim sum@ Restoran Kak Kak


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Once, I had been to 报纸街, coming across a shop with staff holding giant woven pans as if they were more precious than world class kaiseki ryori. It bore a memorable name too, Kak Kak (佳佳), meaning fine^2. 报纸街, have you been warned of pickpockets there?


Dim sum in strange shapes and sizes. Red, long, yellow puffs. 



There was no menu, no prices, no names. All you had to do was to gawk and point at the pink, green, or black and that will do. Dine to replace the Fullerton's Jade dim sum buffet I had given up, literally, for Johor Bahru dim sum. 


(RM 56.00)

They were meaty, as you can tell. The black was shiitake mushroom lined on top of steamed meat paste, and red crabmeat stuffed with steamed meat paste in seaweed. Like sushi, except those were filled with rice instead. What was cantonese dim sum stuffed with then, I was overwhelmed by Johor Bahru dim sum and unable to think straight. 



The green was ingeniously peas incorporated, creamy and savoury, on the dim sum of unmistakeably mixed meats. Bitter gourd was cooked till tender, set with fried nonetheless tasty meat.

P.S. So what have I gained throwing in the towel for Singapore's best, and no frills hawker dim sum? Why do I clamber out of my seat like a baby, for road side hawker? Malaysian dim sum is a cross between dim sum and yong tau foo (stuffed tofu and vegetables with meat). They are fleshy, filling, leaning on the sweet side rather than savoury. Not packed with seafood like their cantonese counterpart. 

22 dishes- per pax dim sum @ Mitzo

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Wasabi infused baked fish 




Mini black pepper pork puff




Crispy pork belly served with bun



Braised sliced abalone with bamboo pith soup



Braised truffles udon



Mitzo special barbecued pork



Poached cabbage in lobster bisque



Stir-fried scallop with egg white and fresh milk



Stir-fried lotus root, black fungus and asparagus in black pepper



Glutinous dumpling with custard filling 



Pan-fried ribeye in wasabi and Korean chilli sauce



Fruits tart and Pandan & egg tart



Steamed crystal prawn dumplings



Crispy duck roll






Steamed pork dumpling



Deep-fried tofu with spicy seaweed



Deep-fried shrimp dumpling




Autumn sonata- weekend tea buffet @Chihuly Lounge


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Baked Ham with Autumn Coleslaw in Cereal Roll



New York Pastrami with Semi Dried Tomato in Olive Focaccia 



Smoked Duck Carpaccio with Jerusalem Artichokes, Autumn Truffle Dressing 



Otar Fish Terrine with Red onion salsa 



Coriander Crab Cake with Wasabi Seaweed Mayo 





English Scone with Devonshire Cream and Fruit Preserves and Chilli Con Carne





Whiskey Coffee Dome







Shall we tea?- yummy tea purple lavender buns@Yum Cha


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Lavender Bun with coconut filling (SGD 2.80)




What flows your sand?-Contemporary@ CJade Kitchen


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{When you read one of the limbs of Crystal Jade Enterprise has new (?)flowy buns nesting in steamer baskets}. The colours of roe. Crab roe (orange), egg custard (yellow) and century yolk (purple)


Assorted Custard Steamed Bun (SGD 4.40)

Reminds me of this. The embraced and turned glamourous dim sum becoming customizable as if the colour {you have chosen} speaks forth your personality type. It has so many names and rather mind-bending. Custard bun, molten salted egg yolk bun, golden lava custard. 

P.S. The sweet corn (yellow) is like custard.The grassy fragrance of the grain tossed on the yellow skin and into a paste with custard inside. The yam (purple) is like custard bun. Deli taro on the outside and core of the purple, the meaty yam, custard(?). Only the salted egg yolk (orange) was custard bun|molten salted egg yolk bun|golden lava custard. A headier balance of sweet and savoury for the filling, the custard|egg|lava pickled nicely to be tender and not regrettably busted and run or rich. 




Me(e) time eat black @ Mouth Restaurant


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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. 



Green Dim Sum Dumplings


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Dim sum can make your meal look more interesting, with their reds and emeralds peering from the translucent white skin like porcelain pieces.


Mushroom & Seafood Dumpling (SGD 3.50)

These are not casually put on the menu, without seriousness but food! They do have a consumer group of their own and sell out within half a week. Having some meaning themselves and it is up to your luck/chance to catch them.


Brocoli Dumpling (SGD 3.50)

One of the best-sellers is this green-skinned vegetable dumpling! It is the most interesting dim sum because enoki mushrooms are used as the center of the dumpling. The proportion of mushrooms is so great that you are practically eating the mushrooms, their salty, velvety texture flowing through the dim sum. Believe it or not, the skin is coloured by broccoli(?) and there is also some susceptible asparagus/broccoli stalks for garnish, though you can't really taste them because they are also simmered in the stock till soft.


Vegetarian Dumpling (SGD 3.50)

Another lovely technique on the dumpling- the drip paint! The green slowly melting into nothingness. To add on to the decor there is the goji berry, sort of wrinkled from steaming, and carrots(well no actually there is no carrots, they are just strips of dough of the same composition snipped to bits and dyed in orange.) Just for fun, like drip paint.

P.S. No doubt about it, while most novelty foods dress themselves up in glitzy appearances, they also become unavailable on the menu. Not this dim sum. While it is often missing on the menu, it is not because of wearing demands, but because they are really sold out week after week! Even if it is for many weeks now.


Green Dim Sum Twos

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Going for dim sum, or yum cha (tea tasting), it is like a snorkeling event, where there are so many food pieces hidden deep inside the steamer baskets, you have to stretch your heads to scout every well. An example is the ever-boisterous Luk Yu stall at Ion Orchard, the whole panel built in with bamboo steamers, and occasionally, you might find an oddly coloured one inside one of the honeycomb.



Crystal Fresh Prawn Dumpling (SGD 4.00)

After a menu-drought for about a year, they finally have the tea-flavoured mushroom dumpling that is often featured in its template banner, just that now it is in the form of a prawn dumpling/har gow. In the same 'tea' skin, it is a fresh and tasty prawn within the glutinous lining, the green giving the famous dim sum an extra hype.


Sometimes, the whirl of a cantonese eating house may dizzy you, or maybe it is just exhaustion from a day's travel, you may end up spewing chinese phrases which are muddled in sequence. Like the hargowsiewmai, or
harmaisiewgow. Until you are also unsure of what you have just said.
This is perfectly ok, because hargowsiewmai or harmaisiewgow, both of them will still be green here!


Steamed Siew Mai (SGD 4.00)

The other most standard dim sum- is also green in colour! Even if it is just the paper-thin lye dough which holds it together. There is an abundant of ingredients inside the little mound, despite the small volume and ordinary appearance, making it a textural eat. Dices of prawns, distinct and crunchy, melty lumps of pork, savoury, and more commendably, the fat soft mushrooms which adds variety to the dim sum, delectable to sink in!



It is overall satisfactory in every aspect, nothing much gone wrong in the taste and texture. And probably because it is a soothing verdant green, the trepidation or aversion to the yellow lye skin is suddenly gone, seemingly very tender smooth and easy on the tongue, as if it is no longer a siew mai, or made of lye. With every dim sum partially hidden in their trays, the green seems to become illusionary with the wood, dissolving into the background like lettuce or dim sum paper, your eyes somehow cannot perceive or detect the whole of the siew mai. Like maybe it is the meatball, or a kind of adaptation.

P.S. Ripping the green skin apart, it is very drastic against the pink meat filling, making the dumpling even more odd, because it is actually so familiar inside! And on the usual white porcelain tableware, the tones shine even greater, no one would have thought these colours to be dim sum.