Showing posts with label prawn paste chicken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prawn paste chicken. Show all posts

Thursday, November 15, 2012

rained in.



Making macarons.
Mmm. ohmyyum.


Seafood flat rice noodles.
Wok hei but made fragrant only with the help of soy sauce.


Prawn paste chicken.
Oily.
But the batter is exquisite.
Crunch worthy.
Even till the end of dinner.
Which actually wasn't all that long. :)


A large serving of fried rice.
With the prawn bits?
I expected whole prawns at least.
In an opeh leaf to seal in the fragrance.

Dinner would've been a first with you.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

hong kong street chun kee revisited


For a simple takeout, a craving to be satisfied, a weekend dinner out or even a cause for celebration.
This is where it's at for us :)


Just a personal bowl of this will suffice.
Any time. Any day.
Especially. On rainy days.


All beansprouts should be silvers like these.
Slippery smooth flat pieces of rice noodles stir fried for that infusion of wok hei.
Topped with ample fish slices and just enough seafood flavoured gravy.
And beansprouts flash fried, retaining their colour and delicious crunch.
Uh huh. Order this.
If you aren't interested in the soup version.

Pungent. But juicy and succulent.
Eat with hands for best results.
Finger lickin' good. :)


Once in a while, this makes it to our order list.
Whenever dad feels like it.
Flathead fish chopped and deep fried before drowned in black bean sauce.
Some chopped onions, green and red peppers, baby corn, mushroom and black fungus.
Appeals to the sight.
Definitely whets the appetite.
Just a lil heavy on the salt which just means you might need some plain rice with this.
Maybe a lot of it. Seeing as how the gravy just opens up the stomach's capacity.
:)

Thursday, November 17, 2011

煮炒


honeyed. perfect sheen from the glazing. meaty. fatty but only enough to ensure that the meat from the ribs are tender and moist.


simple. but oh so satisfying. fried pieces of egg tofu. drenched in a generous egg drop sauce. flavoured with seafood flavours from the fresh prawns and a smattering of belachan. appetizingly shiok.


clams. no-frills version. no tricks. just fresh flower clams. steamed.

we saw a man having a crab all to himself with some mantous and a bowl of rice. not as satisfying the rich peanut version over at Jumbo but equally generous on the egg drop sauce. and if i tell you it's not about the pincers. would you believe me? :)


veggieboost! crunchy crisp. flash fried in a hot wok. good.


Fragrant-ly oily. Deep fried prawns. Crispy crunchy butter bits. If it's all about the prawns to you, it's all about the crunchy salty-sweet bits to me. 


The acrid smell of prawn paste. Skin on fried to a crisp. Moist, juicy, tender flesh within. Finger licking good.


Address: 122 Casuarina Road, Singapore
Tel: +65 6452 2824
Daily from 5 p.m. - 1.30 a.m.

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Hong Kong Street Takeout

He's the last of us three to be sitting for his 'O' Levels.
The little brother has been out and about on study dates.
Time is of the essence.
And we won't be eating out in peace knowing that he would be hungry till we got home.
When we eat, we eat together as a family. Whenever possible :)
And good food need not be waited for personally.
So we sent our dad out for this:


Not our usual takeout order of a  虾酱鸡 Shrimp/ Prawn Paste Chicken.
Did you know that this popular 'local' dish originated a neighbouring country? 
Vietnam, in fact. This paste is a pinkish-grey coloured condiment made from fermented sea shrimps which accounts for its pungent smell and a distinctly salty seafood flavour. The chicken was crispy on the outside but remained moist on the inside. One bite releases the steam and flavoursome juices from within. Burns your tongue but you just can't stop at one :)


There must be some milk in there somewhere correct?
Wrong.
This is one of the few branches of the Hong Kong Street Franchise that does it without milk.
So pray tell where this milky white colour comes from?
I find that I've come to appreciate food more when I know more about them. 
Culinary tidbit sharing coming right up!
It seems that the authentic versions of this Cantonese-style soup dish involves some culinary science.
 The fish pieces are first deep fried. After which, the oil is drained off. Then at very high wok heat, ginger stock is slowly poured in. Only at such high temperatures can the stock form a milky emulsion with the remaining oil.
Who needs carnation milk when you have kitchen magic? :)
Just a note though, if you've been drinking soups with carnation milk, your tastebuds will need to adjust accordingly. Cantonese-style soups are particularly light in taste.
It takes more than just a spoon of soup to appreciate the subtle flavours within.
It was a delicate, almost milky aroma of sang yee Cantonese: snake fish) inside a light, cloudy stock that was fragrant with wok hei. The sang yee was thick sliced, succulent and delicious.
Judge not by first spoon.


What makes good fried rice then?

Leftover rice. That's a definite. How would you justify paying $10 for leftover rice?
Unlike freshly cooked rice, leftover rice stored in the fridge gets rid of excess moisture, giving you firm grains that instinctly separate themselves grain-wise in the wok. If you're cook with freshly cooked rice then you'll probably end up with something akin to fried porridge. Hmm.
High heat. Not just for the wok hei but the simple fact that a layer of oil on a hot surface will form a non-stick coating for you to fry rice perfectly without sticky grain business. 
What's left?
Ingredients. That are entirely up to you. But keep those ingredients 'dry', anything wet will prevent the rice grains from heating up thoroughly and you don't really want to end up with fried mush.
So $10, portions for three with 6 prawns, diced chinese sausages, charsiew, eggs and scallions.
Simple but ohsogood.
And the fact that it came in an opeh leaf just made it even more worth the price. :)

Takeout that doesn't make dinner look nor taste any less appetizing.

Hong Kong Street Chun Kee Restaurant 香港街珍記
Block 151, Ang Mo Kio Avenue 5, #01-3030
Singapore 560151