Nan Heng Hainanese Chicken Rice: Mom and Pop Chicken Rice

 


Unlike Char Kway Teow, Chicken Rice is one dish that will continue to prosper.  There is by far many more good Chicken Rice stalls in Singapore than any other hawker dish.  This is probably because the dish appeals to people from all ages, from kids to senior folk and because of its ability to be cooked in a central kitchen and transported to food courts to be sold, even the generic food court chicken rice is pretty palatable.  At least when compared to food court Char Kway Teow.

So, now that I have covered most of the famous chicken rice places, I want to focus more on the traditional Hainanese Chicken Rice stalls.  You know. the mom and pop shops where there each chicken is still lovingly dunked into chickenstock and every skin blemished is still lamented over.

Day Night Fried Kway Teow: The Search for the last Char Kway Teow Men!



With the publication of my book, "The End of Char Kway Teow", this particular hawker dish has suddenly become an icon for endangered hawker dishes.  So I am on a mission to find the last of the Char Kway Teow men and in particular, I am hoping to find some Gen Y Char Kway Teow men, if they are any out there.

This particular stall was recommended to me by Soundman who has been eating here since he was only a tweeter.  (Now he is a subwoofer). The first thing that I noticed about the Char Kway Teow is that instead of using the usual Kway Teow, they have a thinner version that looks very much like the Penang kway teow.  But make not mistake, the taste of the Char Kway Teow is distinctly Singaporean as it has the cockles and the sweet black sauce.

The End of Char Kway Teow: First Book Reading Event


Photos by Cactuskit


Many thanks to our sponsors, Timeout Magazine, Littered with Books, Kim Joo Guan Bak Kwa and VCTAsia for helping to make the event such a success!

I would specially like to thank Celine from Timeout who organized the event!  You are a real gem Celine!  Thanks also to Cactuskit for shooting the photos!

For those who wish to order Bak Kwa for Chinese New Year, Kim Joo Guan is offering a fast pass service where you can simply place your orders and collect the Bak Kwa without having to queue.  Collection before 24 Jan is $45, and after is $48.  You can place you orders by calling 62255257.

I was particularly taken by Littered with Books.  This little bookstore at Duxton Road just opposite that big carpark reminds me of the bookstore in the film Notting Hill.  It's located in a quaint Peranakan house and offers many interesting books.  It is a cosy little place where you can get excellent personalized service. (Don't say I say but they have a little coffee machine that you can also help yourself to a cuppa) Just beware because I can guarantee that you will out with a few books in hand!  For those wanting to get your hands on The End of Char Kway Teow, they still have a few autographed copies left.  Do give them a call if you want to reserve your copy.  Tel:  62206824

For those who missed out on our first Book Reading, fret not, we will be organizing some more sessions in January.  So I look forward to personally meeting with you and autographing your book!

Littered with Books
20 Duxton Hill

The ieat Book Lauch at Paradise Pavilion featuring Bejing Roast Duck and California Mexico Abalone!



We celebrated the launch of "The End of Char Kway Teow" last Saturday with a feast of  Beijing Roast Duck and a four course Abalone lunch.

The big surprise of the day was when my 8 year old daughter, Megan came up to deliver the first speech and gave me a copy of the book! I think everyone was quite amazed that she managed to pull off the speech in front of such a large crowd without having to read any notes! I then spoke a little about trials and tribulation of writing a book before inviting Edmund, my publisher to present the first book to Peter Knipp who wrote the foreward to the book.

We then all settled down for a wonderful meal of Beijing Roast Duck followed by a lavish four course Abalone menu. At the same time, Abalone expert, Urs Heggily was on hand to tell us about how Abalone is harvested and processed. I think the thing that most people remember that day about Abalone was that the sexual organ of the male abalone was blue (boy) in colour while the female was green (girl).

I have so many people to thank for making the whole book launch event possible.

First of all, I would like to thank Wayne from Goh Joo Hin, the distributor of California Mexico brand Abalone and his team, as well as Edlan from Paradise Pavilion for so generously hosting the event and donating all the proceeds to help build schools for the kids in Sandakan.

I also have to thank Soundman for helping to cooridinate things on our end plus providing the sound system for the day. Thanks also to Greg for being our MC, Cactuskit and ijeff for taking photos and Champagne and her team for looking after the registration table. I really praise God for providing so many friends who have come alongside me to make the book launch such a big success! 

The books will be delivered to bookshops across the island on Monday and you should see it on the shelves by the end of the week!  I hope you will enjoy the book! 


To read my post on the authentic wood fired Beijing Roast Duck at Paradise Pavilion, please click here.

Paradise Pavilion
Marina Bay Link Mall, #02-01/02
Singapore 018984
65099308

Ariston OpenSpace Oven: Ieat's Chiffon Tin Crispy Roast Chicken Recipe

This Recipe was brought to you by Mayer, the Kitchen Speclialist
Exclusive offer for ieatishootipost readers at the end of the post


ieat's Chiffon Tin Crispy Roast Chicken

There are many recipes for Roast Chicken on the internet, but I haven't come across one which deals with the Chinese Style Crispy Roast Chicken which I love to eat at Cantonese restaurants.  So I hope this recipe will be useful for anyone who wants to make this yummy dish at home.  Typically, the roast chicken that you buy outside is not really roasted.  The whole chicken is actually deep fried in oil.  Doing this at home is not practical as there is a lot of wastage.  With this recipe, the chicken is first roasted at a low temperature to ensure that the meat does not lose its juices and then the skin is browned to give it that crispy bronzed skin.

First Copies of The End of Char Kway Teow available this Saturday!

Thanks so much for all your support for my upcoming book!

The book will be officially launched this Saturday, 18 Dec and I will be at Littered with Books at 20 Duxton Road to talk about the book. Even if you can't attend the talk, you can still drop in between 7pm and 9pm to pick up autographed copies of the book. But better still if you can get the tickets to join us for wine and Bak Kwa!

Tong Chiang Claypot Restaurant: The Claypot Rice Is Just Bait

Review by Joao, Photos by ieat

Sausage, Salted Fish and Chicken Claypot Rice ($6/$11/$16.50/$22)

Before we begin, I want to caveat that I do not harbor some clandestine Hakka cuisine revival agenda.  Hot on the heels of my last post on Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies comes yet another post about Hakka food. Completely coincidental, as you will soon see.

Some time ago we had an interesting and educational lunch at this shop on the corner of Lavender Street and Serangoon Road.  Tong Chiang Claypot Restaurant's main draw is their titular claypot rice.  I had tried the Claypot rice at Tong Chiang before on the recommendation of some friends, but I wanted to see how it compared to Le Chasseur's brilliant Claypot Rice, so I rallied some of the kakis and we paid Tong Chiang a visit while the memory of Le Chasseur's version was still fresh on everyone's minds.

Shui Kway: Why is Chye Poh soooooo addictive?



You like chye poh (preserved radish)? I absolutely love it.  It is one of the most addictive of foods!  Give me an omelette topped with chye poh and a bowl of hot steaming porridge and you got yourself a very happy Teochew Ah Hia.

Ever wonder why chye poh is so addictive?  Well, as with most addictive foods like potato chips, parmesan cheese and salted eggs, radish is one of the richest source of natural occurring glutamates alongside fruits such as tomatoes and gherkins.  Glutamates excite the umami receptors on your tongue to give you that savoury sensation, which is why MSG (Monosodium Glutamate) makes everything taste so good.

But you can't just eat preserved radishes to satisfy your hunger, so the Teochews created the Chwee Kueh as an excuse to eat chye poh.  Oh yes, as I think about it, the chye poh is the star of the dish whilest the chwee kueh itself is just the excuse for eating chye poh.  I can eat chye poh on eggs, chye poh on kueh, chye poh in carrot cake, heck even chye poh on rice.  Chye poh might be cheap, but good chye poh can give you as much umami rush as an aged Parmigiano Regianno.



Aunty demonstrating how the kueh are steamed in a modern steamer

Now Chwee Kueh is possibly the most simple of Hawker foods at least from the point of view of the number of ingredients involved.  It is also the kind of hawker dish that is easy to commercialize since both the rice cakes and the chye poh can be made in the factory so that the hawker only needs to reheat it and serve it. So I am always willing to check out any hawker who still bothers to make their own rice cakes, like this Aunty at Sembawang Hills Food Centre.

She tells me that she finds that the chwee kuehs outside used too much water which made the kuehs translucent and too soft.  She makes hers so that there is much more bite and substance to the cakes. I still can't decide if I actually like texture of the cakes as I found them a bit more pastey than the ones I am used to.  But her Chye Poh is really good!  Its not too salty, not too sweet and she augments the savoury flavour with dried shrimps.  Best of all she drains them well so there is hardly any oil, so you can afford to indulge a bit.  4.25/5

Conclusion

Man I am salivating thinking of the Aunty's chye poh now!  Still can't decide if I like the texture of the cake, so maybe you all can let me know how you feel about it?  This is not the first time I have come across the homemade ones with similar texture.  Perhaps I am just too used to eating the watered down ones?



Shui Kway
Sembawang Hills Food Centre
#01-16
Weekdays7am to 1.30pm, 3pm to 5pm
Weekends 7am to 5pm

The End of Char Kway Teow: The ieatishootipost book will be officially launched on 18 December!



I am glad to announce that the ieatishootipost book will be officially launched on 18 December 2010 and you are invited to attend our very first book reading event!

The book is essentially a celebration of our Singaporean Hawker Heritage and will contain the stories that I have collected from talking to the hawkers over the last five years.  In it you will read about where President Nathan buys his Teh Tarik, the story of the origins of Bak Kut Teh, why Poh Piah should be eaten uncut and of course, as the title suggests, why I say that it is curtains for Char Kway Teow.  The book will contain full page and centrespread photos of the food that I took at the stalls. I hope they will do our Singaporean hawkers proud!

Sole Pomodoro Pizzeria: Now this is what I call Pizza!


Buffalo Margharita Pizza $24

You might not know it, but aside from hawker food, I am particularly obsessed with pizzas.  The obsession all started when I read about the Vera Pizza Napoletana which is an association set up to preserve the original pizza created in Naples.  There are of course many styles of Pizzas even in Italy, but most pizza experts I know, people like Jeffrey Steingarten and Peter Reinhard, regard the Neapolitan or Neo-Neopolitan pizza to be the benchmark for all pizzas. 

My obsession with the Neopolitan pizza led me to Jeffery Varasano's excellent website on how he perfected his pizza recipe.   This guy is so obsessed about Pizza that I am sure the psychiatrists would coin a special syndrome just for his condition! (I am probably just a mild case) Inspired by what he did, I started by own quest for the perfect pizza.  Over the last year, I have accumulated two pizza peels, two pizza stones, a few pizza books, various thermometers and even a Ferrari..... pizza oven.  I have sourced flours from Italy, Canada the US and found places which I could buy fresh yeast.  In fact, I even grew my own colony of wild Singapore yeast on top of my fridge.  Don't get me started on the different brands of mozarella cheeses I have gone through to find the perfect one. Then there are the tomatoes.  Yes, you need Italian tomatoes, San Marzano and certified DOC if possible.  But fortunately, I wasn't the only one crazy about the perfect pizza.  My kaki Damien, whom you all are familiar with as one of the walking directories on Singapore food was my accomplice.  He even went to the extent of working for a Pizza Master in Naples for 3 months to learn how to make the perfect Neapolitan pizza!  (Naples was previously known as Neapolis - hence the name Neapolitan)

Song Kee Fishball Noodle: Fantastic Fishballs!



Making fishballs isn't easy.  "Yeah right, tell me something I don't know" I hear you say.  But I am actually telling you from personal experience.  Yes, I have tried to come up with a recipe for fishballs and so far, I haven't been very successful.  When I speak with fishball sellers, they all tell me that fishball is essentially, fishmeat (in Singapore Yellowtail fish is the most commonly used) that has been minced, mixed with a bit of salt and beaten.  You won't be able to produce that bouncy texture by just mincing it in a food processor.  In order to get the protein strands to unravel and align to produce that bounce, the paste has to be beaten. In the past, the hawkers used to use their hands to beat the fish paste until it gets to the right consistency.  So I thought I could easily beat fishballs at home.




Well, I tried beating the fishpaste extensively but my fishball eventually came out rather toothy rather than having that lively bounce that we all enjoy. To be sure, when I threw it onto the flour, it did bounce, so I was rather pleased until I bit into it and realize why they tell me it is not easy to make fishballs. Back to the drawing board!

Anyway, the reason I am trying to make fishball is just purely for experimentation purpose only.   The money I spent on the fish plus the time spent can hardly be justified.  It's better just buying good fishballs from hawkers who still bother to make them by hand.

One of the stalls you might find this is right here in Toa Payoh Lor 5.  This 2nd generation hawker still insists on beating their own fishballs from pure yellowtail fish meat.  It's amazing that they managed to cramp so many machines and troughs of fishballs into such a small space.  In order to get the fishballs ready for the next morning, they start making the fishballs at 3 am in the morning.  I was invited to come see how it is all done, so one day I hope to shoot a video of the whole process!




Needless to say the fishballs here are very very good.  It has got the right balance of bounce and taste that you don't get with commercially produced fishballs.  The additives and fillers they use in the commercial ones often means sacrificing taste for a more bouncy texture. 4.5/5

Aside from the fishball, they have a limited stash of Her Giao (Fish dumplings) which they also make themselves.  The difference between commercially made Her Giao and handmade ones is even more stark.  The Her Giao here is excellent.  The skin has that slimy mouth feel and the meat filling is soupy and savoury.  4.75/5.  I am not sure if they serve Her Giao to only those who ask for it.  They have buckets of fishballs, but only a small bowl of Her Giao, so I suspect they only give it if you specially ask for it!



The noodles here are not for those who are eating fishball noodles because it is a healthier alternative.  They are very generous with the lard and fried shallots here so the noodles can hardly be considered a light meal.  I like the chilli here as it is wonderfully shiok as they add Buah Keluak to it.  It might not be for those who crave for the pain and subsequent release of endorphins that is produced by really hot chilli paste, but for me it was excellent, although it does get a bit jialak (too oily) at the end. 

Conclusion

I realized that I have not been blogging as much about fishball noodles as I have about bak chor mee, so I aim to correct the imbalance.  This is one of the best stalls for fishball noodles that I have had so far, where else would you all recommend?

Song Kee Fishball Noodles
Toa Payoh Lor 5
Blk 75 Food Centre
#01-354
10.30am to 12midnight
Closed Alt Wed
96776979

My First Cover Photo on PhotoYou magazine!



For those of you who are interested in Food Photography, you might like to pick up the current issue of PhotoYou magazine.  I have written an article about food photography for beginners and you can pick up some useful tips there.  The magazine is available at all good magazine stands and costs $9.90.

We are planning our next food photography workshop on 15 Jan 2011.  I will be announcing the details later, so keep a look out for it if you are interested to attend!

Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies: Texture Like No Other

Review and photos by Joao
Suan Pan Zi (Abacus Beads)
Remember that channel 8 drama from 1997, The Guest People (客家之歌)?  The story revolved around four childhood friends of Hakka descent and their struggles as they moved from Fujian to Nanyang, but a large part of the show focused on Hakka culture.  The earlier part of the series was set in China, and featured these large impressive mushroom-like communal-housing structures known as tulou (土楼).   As a young boy, that was my first introduction to the Hakka people, and that image of tulou buildings has always popped into my head whenever the subject of the Hakka people was discussed.  That is, until recently when I discovered the joys of Suan Pan Zi (算盘子 lit. Abacus Beads).

Suan pan zi, a dish that's usually associated with Chinese New Year, is so named because of its individual dumplings' resemblance to the beads on counting frames. (Abacus)  It  is one of the few hawker foods that is, without a doubt, of Hakka origin.  For some reason, it just hasn't received the mainstream acceptance of other starchy hawker foods like ubiquitous carrot cake or heavily-franchised chwee kueh.  This is a dish that's quite difficult to find outside of home kitchens — offhand I can name you four or five stalls that sell this, and some of them aren't even located in hawker centres.

A raw "Abacus Bead" dumpling
























One good example of this dish can be found at the Food Opera foodcourt in Orchard Ion.  The round yam "gnocchi" that the dish is named for are just resilient enough that they yield to your teeth without sticking and give you the satisfaction of the chew.  Crunchy black fungus strips provide texture contrast and dried mushroom slices and hei bi supply an umami flavour kick to complete the experience.  The only problem with the Food Opera version is that, like every other food item sold there, it is ridiculously overpriced for what is essentially glorified hawker fare.  The good news is that the Food Opera stall is an offshoot of the Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies stall in Shunfu Road Hawker Centre, where the prices are a lot more sane ($3.50/$5/$6) and the suan pan zi is just as delicious.  4/5

So what makes a good plate of suan pan zi?  Apparently it's the texture of the abacus beads that separates then wheat from the chaff.  The individual dumplings need to be slightly bouncy, but not sticky and definitely not overly chewy.  I once tried some pretty nasty frozen supermarket suan pan zi that had the texture of dried craft glue when cooked — one of the worst things I've ever eaten in my life.  Good suan pan zi requires a special handmade dough made of steamed yam, rice flour, and water, the precise portions of which are integral to attaining that pleasing texture.  The yam has to be mashed and steamed, and the resulting mess needs to be kneaded with rice flour (a painstaking procedure) to form just enough gluten to give the dough its trademark bite.  If that sounds like a lot of work just for one dish, it's because it is.

Hakka Soon Kueh
Fortunately, as I found out, the resulting dough has other uses, which makes the arduous kneading process a bit more worthwhile.  Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies also serves a mean Soon Kueh that utilises this dough.  Now I know soon kueh isn't Hakka in origin, but Mei Zhen's is a bit different.  You still get the same clean-tasting savory turnip and black fungus filling that you'd find in other good soon kuehs but what distinguishes Mei Zhen's soon kueh is the excellent skin — it's so chewy!  Yes, the skin is made from the same yam dough, now rolled thin.  The end product is a soon kueh quite unlike any other I've ever eaten.  You'd be remiss in not trying it at least once.  4.5/5

Conclusion

The suan pan zi and soon kueh at Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies represent an oft-ignored portion of our Singaporean culinary heritage, and it's hard to fathom why.  These dishes can more than hold their own against other starchy breakfast favorites with their clean simple flavours that hearken back to cleaner simpler times.  If you're in the Lakeview area one morning and you're keen to try something different I recommend checking out this stall.


Mei Zhen Hakka Delicacies
Blk 320 Shunfu Road Hawker Centre
#02-26
Open 7.30am - 2.00pm
Closed Mon - Tues
97932189

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