Showing posts with label haute gastronomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haute gastronomy. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

au jardin singapore


isn't it pretty in the glow of the setting sun?

a dear family friend invited me to meet some visiting US doctors whom he was entertaining and i jumped at the chance to finally visit au jardin. had heard so much about it over the years but somehow never got down to going. also, opportunities like this don't drop on my lap every so often so all the more i dropped everything to go. 

the food was superlative (augh! forgot to keep the menu) and the service impeccable. but nothing screams "evening well spent" like a date in new york come easter 2012. can't wait to re-meet the lovely guests on their side of the pond!

Monday, July 18, 2011

Saturday, June 4, 2011

organic





food and local produce as far as possible is very important to me. and i'm proud to say that we went green at the resort by sipping our drinks out of lemongrass stalks (no plastic!) and eating local and organic as much as possible. the burst of freshness and sheer dedication to preserving the natural flavour went a long way and i'm so glad the place was picked for its extensive and excellent cuisine.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

forever changed after tetsuya

had the privilege of dinner at tetsuya's - probably the single most compelling reason i went to sydney. tetsuya's is the stuff of dreams, and after waku ghin in singapore, all the more i wanted to visit the sydney restaurant for comparison. yes, i realise they're a different cuisine but it's the same man behind the magic and i like to think that the restaurants combined give one a more holistic sense of the man himself.

it also helped that just before dinner i was at a friend's and she lives literally 5minutes from the japanese house smack in the middle of the city that tetsuya's operates from. talk about prime real estate!



the private room had a even more private zen garden which did calm me down some. you should've seen the frenzy i'd worked myself into pre-dinner. aiyoh so uncool but it's true ;)



the amazing truffle butter with black truffle infused and embedded in the mix. it was so light and creamy, with a hint of cheese and after i single-handedly polished off the communal serving (mind you, i don't even eat much butter back home), the ever-attentive waiter magically produced another helping and with a wink, told me to 'knock yourself out'. now that is classy service!


the oysters weren't part of the degustation but we couldn't resist ordering plates of these babies. they came swimming in the most delectable ponzu sauce - light enough not to marinade them precious mollusks but substantial enough to perfectly complement their springy texture and tangible freshness.



the first course was similar to sashimi but because it came swimming in the perfect accompaniment, it was closer to a dressed carpaccio. looks like snapper to me, but i can't quite remember. was too busy savouring every nibble.


scampi with dollops of cream on a bed of tofu and goats cheese. call me biased but while this was objectively delicious, it was a far cry from the botan ebi served with uni and iranian caviar that is my absolute favourite dish at waku ghin. feel somewhat sorry that tetsuya's is limited by the produce that can be imported into australia. despite serving fresh local produce in sydney, almost to the point of protectivism, give me the gastronomical smorgasboard that is available in singapore any day. so this course felt like the poor cousin of what i'd eaten at waku ghin.


this confit of ocean trout is tetsuya's signature dish. there's some complicated rocket science behind its preparation and presentation. it's supposedly cooked at a low temperature for a long time with the oven door open so as to create the illusion of an uncooked fillet despite being semi-cooked. the konbu coating was a nice touch, gave it that salty kick and contrast in texture with the silky meat.


can't remember exactly what this was but it tasted good, just like everything else. that's the problem with retrospective posting. not in the habit of intellectually engaging with what i consume and the menu as it is rattled off is usually in one ear and out the other :(


this was a particularly creative use of sea cucumber, sliced finely in a cross-section and served atop some lamb ragout (i think that's what it was. again, i plead a short-term memory) the jelly-like texture of the sea cucumber was a great complement to the stringy-er lamb fibre.


slow-cooked duck breast wrapped in pancetta (pork belly) with an oriental hodge podge next to it. there was some instantly recognisable quinoa in the little mound which brought back memories of the roadside quinoa our host pilfered.* plus, at this course there was a hilarious interjection by one of the other guests hellbent on convincing us that pork belly was all nerves and no fat ;)



the sorbet intermezzo served with cappucino creme brulee


strawberries and cream, but more atas


chocolate brick with home-made vanilla-bean ice cream


an espresso to finish with


and some daifuku petit fours


now that i've been to tetsuya's, i can die happy. don't think i'm ever going to go back because no subsequent meal is going to match up to my highly anticipated and much enjoyed first. there's something special about first times, and i don't intend to detract from the mystery and overwhelming sense of awe i felt throughout the course of the evening. am eternally grateful to my immensely gracious host, who has elevated my appreciation of food from mere gasak (malay slang for indiscriminate gluttony) to gastronomy.

so this post concludes the sydney series. on hiatus till the next holiday. will be in kuching month-end for a wedding then tokyo over the deepavali long weekend, and for most of study break hehe.

*the quinoa story, as promised.

last summer (well it was peruvian winter so let's call it that), we passed through fields of quinoa en route back to el refugio from our condor-sighting at colca canyon. nathanael the guide robustly hopped out of the 4x4 and swiped some quinoa for our lunch. not like we're accustomed to helping ourselves from other people's fields but in response to our semi-horrified and quizzical looks, nathanael conveyed through sign language and some spanglish that even if the farmer caught him red (yellow?) handed, he would be more than happy to share his harvest with tourists who'd never tried quinoa before. such pride they have in their grain heritage!



and back at el refugio, nathanael arranged for the chef to whip us up some fresh quinoa soup and baby alpaca steaks.


cute as alpacas are, they taste even yummier when divvied up on a platter. i could never be vegetarian ;)

Friday, December 24, 2010

dinner at quay

lunch at lucio's was followed in quick succession by dinner at quay. our reservation was a pleasant surprise, there was some initial misinformation and i was under the impression that we'd be eating at doyle's (ground floor) so you can imagine how my mood elevated once the hostess told us that we had been mistaken. if only we made mistakes like that everydaY! so quay was a real treat - had heard many good things about the restaurant and read much about it. it's been feted as the best restaurant in australia two years running and no. 27 on the san pelligrino restaurant list. lots of anticipation there and the reservation was truly a surprise.

so let me say this at the beginning - quay was disappointingly underwhelming. did not help that the waitstaff were brusque and had the cheek to bark at me to, 'move!' (my wine glass for an incoming plate). um, okaaay... and if they were having a bad night, fine, no quibble. but friends of mine (also young and asian) who'd dined there were treated with the same scathing disregard i experienced. so not cool.

plus the menu wasn't very good value. A$155 for a piddly 4 courses, none of which were substantial so after dinner i felt like crossing circular quay to maccas for some real food. in fact, i sort of had 8 courses because one of the other guests didn't eat much (and i ate up everything) yet even after my four courses and 3/4 of his four courses, i was still hungry. plus i had a huge lunch at lucio's so you can imagine how truly miniscule the servings were.

oh well. enough complaining and here are some photos. the food was o-k, and i comforted myself with the prospect of a 13 course degustation meal at tetsuya's the next night.



the amuse bouche of tuna tartare with white eggplant puree and dashi jelly

one
Mud crab congee
Hand shelled mud crab, palm hearts, Chinese inspired split rice porridge

also had the sea pearls (sashimi tuna, sea scallop, crab, smoked eel, octopus), courtesy of my finicky neighbour but didn't get a photo of that.

two
Crisp confit of pig belly, green lipped abalone and cuttlefish, handmade silken tofu, Japanese mushrooms, chive flowers

Western Australian fresh water marron, jamon and oloroso juices, young peas and broad beans, young garlic cream, almonds, pea flowers, rose and vanilla salt

three
Berkshire pig jowl, maltose crackling, prunes, cauliflower cream, perfumed with prune kernel oil


Slow cooked partridge stuffed with pumpernickel, morels and ethical Spanish foie gras butter, faro, hazelnuts, cinnamon, cloves, rye, white asparagus cream

four
Preserved wild cherry compote, coconut cream, chuao chocolate crumble, milk meringue crystals, cherry juice and chocolate sorbet


Jackfruit snow egg


so this jackfruit snow egg is quay's claim to fame. apparently on masterchef, the contestants were asked to recreate the dessert. ho hum. i'm from singapore and personally don't find jackfruit very exotic. don't get me wrong, i'm a jackfruit fan and like the fruit but this much-acclaimed dessert, like the rest of dinner, was sadly underwhelming.

mind you, the photos above are two x A$155 dinners so whilst i'd the benefit of eight courses, most other diners had only four.

the only thing good about dinner was the 2008 pierro we had. lovely bottle of oaked white from margaret river and sublime when chilled to perfection. crisp molten goodness. mhmmm :)

and after dinner we went for a long walk from quay to the opera house, to the rocks then rinse wash repeat.

Friday, December 3, 2010

the mother of all sushi meals tokyo

to begin this blog with a bang, i decided to put all my photos from lunch at sushi-ya mao up. the post is photo heavy so please indulge me and give them .jpgs some time to load. it's worth the wait! for those in the know, sushi-ya mao at hotel seiyo ginza in tokyo is one of the most exquisite sushi restaurants on the planet, even them michelin men seem to think so. now i generally am distrusting of the michelin men who want to confer stars on japanese establishments (what would their french palates know about sushi??!) but in a similar vein, what would my peranakan palate, courtesy of many generations of sambal belachan coursing through my veins know? :)

anyhoos, this was by far the bestest ever sushi i've ever had and it was so good that it's made me sworn off sushi for awhile, at least until the memory of lunch fades some, because everything else now will be awfully inferior in comparison. that's how good it was. and that's how sore i am that i ate at sushi-ya mao on my first day in tokyo. completely robbed me of my subsequent tsukiji joy. think i might've picked at one chirashi but that was it. for the rest of my time in tokyo, it was tempura, ramen, katsu-don, yakitori and soft ice cream all the way. even now back home, i can't stomach sushi because it won't be from sushi-ya mao. how ruinous :(

allow me to introduce you to chef ichiyanagi-san who was nothing short of poetry in motion. part of the dining experience was to sit in wide-eyed wonder, amazed at his deftness and skill. it was sushi kongfu of the highest order and by the end of the meal, i was in love. it took every bit of restraint to stop myself from screaming something i'd later regret when the sushi coma wore off, something along the lines of, "LEMMEHAVEYERBABIES!!!" teehee. but my breath did catch in a certain way as i watched him prepare the sushi and i had that unfamiliar feel in the pit of my stomach, the "uh oh" moment at the start of something exciting.












dabbing the bonita briefly marinated in soy sauce dry

bonito with basil

abalone

whoops! here's the bonito again

such intense concentration as he strips the live shrimp of their shell

wriggle wriggle, or rigor mortis?





uniiiiii (marinated) for uni round 1

uni (unmarinated) for uni round 2







tuna three ways: maguro, bin-toro, otoro








 sardines with basil


magic hands

ikura

more shrimp - ohsofresh!







single-handedly ate everything plated. 
it was a steady onslaught of over twenty courses of sushi, 
artfully prepared piece by piece and served in quick succession for three hours.

in short, i died and went to sushi heaven.
nothing else compares.
(just don't look at the bill)