Showing posts with label resteraunt review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resteraunt review. Show all posts

Friday, 10 October 2014

Interesting Food

Here's some of the interesting snacks I've been consuming lately

Chia seed pudding:

I put about 5 teaspoons of white chia seeds with one 160mL can of the TLC light coconut milk (which is the brand I usually go for) and leave it overnight. The chia seeds absorb the liquid and it coagulates and forms a gel-like consistency. It's a really easy and delicious snack! 5 teaspoons makes it relatively thick but if you like it thinner, just put less chia seeds and you'll still get some liquid remaining.

I've been putting in blueberries too and I'm sure it would be great with other toppings like chopped nuts, desiccated coconut, obviously mango (pureed), maybe some kind of sweetener too. 




True to my blog name, I've been consuming a lot of coconut related things lately. I saw a carton coconut milk the other day at Coles, I think it was the So Good brand but it had way too many additives so looked online and saw Vitasoy had released one too. They've got a bunch of new alternative milks, like coconut and almond/soy etc. and it's only at Woolies at the moment. It's really expensive though, $4 for one. Like all alternative milks, it's got some thickeners and only a mild coconut after taste flavour. It tastes quite artificial, like coconut essence in some thickened water. Not bad but not worth it and would be disappointing if you're after a genuine, strong coconut flavour.



This on the other hand was surprisingly really good. It's got a really strong roasted almond flavour, which I think the coconut must have something to do with it because the regular so good almond milk also has 2.5% almonds but is nowhere near as intense an almond flavour. Again, it has some body to it from the thickener. Smells great too, when I use it in my porridge. I've repurchased this when it was on special at woolies for $3 (usually $3.80 I think). Coconut flavour is very, very subtle. 



Went to the Asian groceries and found some of my favourite childhood drinks, which I was quite excited by.

The black coconut drink is quite popular, in fact many of my co-workers who don't frequent asian groceries have even tried this. It's very sweet though, even though it only has around 3g of sugar, I believe. Quite a genuine coconut flavour and minimal ingredients. It like to have it chilled with cubes of grass jelly (I'll save that for another post). One thing I noticed is these are sold in cartons of 6 for $5 but some had one or two missing. I believe you just need to take one out from the plastic that contains all 6 and you can purchase them individually that way. I'd probably ask the sales assistant first though.

The blue can is called lulu almond drink. It has a very strong and delicious almond flavour, nothing at all like the long life almond milk here. Much stronger almond flavour, again minimal ingredients with  most of being almond I believe. It's not as sweet as the black can and tastes pretty good heated up. It's very popular in China and it's served in their restaurants too.



I'd also mentioned I'd never fried jackfruit to a friend before and she got me this can. I believe it was around $2.50 from the asian grocery. Jackfruit is delicious. It has a very nice tropical smell when you open the can, tastes very tropical and sweet too. It tastes similar to lychee and has a very similar texture. It's quite sweet, even after draining the sugary syrup and washing it but not overly so. It's thicker than lychee and has some substance to it. It's actually stringy too, you can peel it straight down (like the beta stringer cheese). 



I went to Naruone the other day with some friends. I know they're known for their fried chicken but we opted for other dishes. Sorry about the pictures below, I know they're a little hard to make out. They have quite a lot of soup dishes here! It wasn't the best korean I've had though. Quite a few korean customers given the time we went (2pm on a Wednesday), service was decent too. When I entered, I'd noticed they sold some kimchi in the fridge as well. Very reasonable prices.





One of my friends got the bibimbap, it looks a little disappointing but from what I could see, there looked to be a decent rice to vegetable ratio. She got a little pot of chill sauce too.


2 of my friends got the spicy pork rib hangover stew. 


One friend got the grilled eel with rice, she said it was quite good and didn't have that frozen texture some do.


I got the soybean paste soup with seafood. It wasn't bad but it wasn't great, Seoul Ria does a better version of this. It had very small (frozen) prawns, one of two oysters and one of two calamari rings. It was probably from a marinara mix. The soup wasn't too salty though, which I appreciated and had a miso-like tasting broth. Large blocks of tofu though. 




The banchan (side dishes) were very different though compared to the other Korean places I've been to. The tofu skin didn't have the same oiliness, it just seemed to have been marinated in some clear liquid. It still had that great texture and sweetness, but none of the other flavours to it and not oily at all. The bean sprouts were exactly that, no additional flavours. The kimchi was very tame, tasting mainly like cabbage. Quite disappointing in fact and not as many side dishes as you might normally get.

My favourite Korean place would probably be Bibim to mix in darlinghurst. Really friendly service, great food at excellent prices and it was the first Korean place I went to that started my slight obsession with Sundubu jjigae (tofu, egg and seafood stew).


NaruOne Korean Restaurant on Urbanspoon

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Eats Of The Week #5

Here's some of my latest yummy eats:

I'm still loving the Carman's fruit and seed porridge for breakfast. 

As a snack, I've been loving the new chobani coconut yogurt. It's the same as their old ones in that the top is just their plain 2% yogurt and the bottom has the coconut flavouring. It's essentially coconut flavour with desiccated coconut. The coconut doesn't taste too artificial and it's not too sweet as well, love!


I've been to a few food/drink places this week:

Went to Uncle Ming's on York St and luckily I was with people who knew where it was because it would've been pretty hard to find. There was a small sign outside but you have to go down some stairs to get there. The interior was beautiful, there was a wall of asian posters, lanterns and smelled pretty strongly of incense (which I didn't mind at all!). The lighting was extremely dim though and we all had to get our phones out to see the menu. The service was very friendly. They also made my friend a delicious mocktail, even though it's not on their menu.

Very cool place, cocktails were yum and all around the $18-20 mark. 



This was the Jackie Chan, it was really nice and the flavours masked the vodka.

 I got the Mao Tai, very strong but delicious and quite tropical. Tasted like there was almond essence or something in there. Love me a marischino cherry. This is our waitress's favourite as well.

Another friend got the Cookie Kwan but I didn't try it. 

Uncle Ming's on Urbanspoon

Also went to the Malaya at 39 Lime St. Sorry about the bad pictures though! It was pretty dimly lit. We also got the Barbequed fish fillet with chili sambal but didn't take a picture. I chose it but it wasn't that great especially for sharing. It was a very small piece of fish that cost $35 and it tasted a little dry to me. I thought most of the dishes were quite expensive for what you get but the view was nice, it was right by the harbour and service was great.

Salt and pepper prawns. Everyone LOVED these, gone in minutes. Very light batter, delicious seasoning and not too oily. YUM


Sayor Masak Lemak, vegetarian curry. Really liked this, had some decent sized well cooked pieces of vegetable that still had some crunch to them. 


Sorry, I'm not too sure which dish this was but it was a chicken one

Kwai Du, flat skir fried noodles with chicken, prawns, bean sprout and egg. It tasted like Char Kway Teow.

This was another meat dish, maybe beef rendang?

Malaya on Urbanspoon

We had an intern from Ohio finishing her last week with us so we took her to one of my favourite places, Menya Mappen.

If you haven't been here before, you basically line up and say your order (what you want, if you want it hot/cold, regular/large and if you want soba/udon noodles). Then you get a tray and wait until they've finished and they put your dish on the tray. You move along the line and get any of the tempura you want and put it on your tray. They have a little chilled cabinet as well of some side dishes (seaweed salad, potato salad etc.).  They you can add tempura flakes and green onion and pay. That's it!

She loved it and found the ordering experience a little stressful but exciting. The manager was so nice, as it's extremely busy there (communal seating as well) he helped us clear 3 seats so we could sit next to each other and gave us the name of the chili powder they use. He said they get theirs from Japan but you can get it from any asian/japanese food store. It's called Schichimi and it's a 7 spice powder. They put it on the tables and I go nuts with it.

I got the Ontama Bukkake Soba:


I recommended the Ontama Bukkake Mentaiko Soba to her, the only difference is the mentaiko which is a cod roe butter. Adds a richness to the dish. 


My friend went to Menya Oiden, which is next door and got the vegetarian one, which she always gets when it's her vegetarian day. Really nicely flavoured. I think this is their take on a korean bibimbap.


Menya Mappen on Urbanspoon