Showing posts with label crepes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crepes. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Saybons, Harry Potter

Makin bro's Beef, Mushroom, Cheese (Left) and mine Salmon/egg/cheese (Right) - that is, before adding in the salmon!
Cos of the mishap at 645am, we ended up heading to cathy all packed up nice and snug in the rain towards ps where thankfully it stopped raining, and we misst the mad car jam right into PS. Before that was chiaming, and nagged about steroids, whilst loads of ladies filtered in to get their beauty fixes. As a result of the wait was mighty late cos we still wanted to queue for Saybons (B2 Plaza Singapura) (long queue!) (sit in area!) (escargots!) - but left happy with 3 crepes, after a long wait. Sis ordered Peach Medley (which she totally regretted she's too used to her sweet crepes), Bro ordered Beef Cheese and Mushroom and I, Salmon Egg and Cheese which Bro and I LOVEEEED! We rushed over to Cathy thereafter to catch Potter. Totally dark and intense - this is prob the first Potter show I caught that I didn't sleep lol. I realised Mei has an immense dislike for salty popcorn whilst Bro and I love it!

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Good Morning Nanyang Cafe, Annie's Peanut Ice Kachang, Saybons

Everytime I meet Kelly we always have these spontaneous food trails (it never goes according to plan though we've a list of places we want to try) so this time round it was no different. And I never fail to be excited about writing about the entries, and to write it quick lest I forget the extraordinary measures we take to fill our tummies.
It was a wet gloomy day but chilling at Good Morning Nanyang Cafe (Level 2, Chinatown Point)while watching the crowd go by through those glass panels was the perfect day to spend with my best friend.
Yes, I'm not past the kaya toast phase so here we are trying another place again.... and it was tea we were having, not breakfast. Toast is such a breakfast thing, yeah? We were actually here before, but we were so stuffed from bread that day from Tong Ah Coffee Shop and eventually Barcook Bakery we bypassed this place but luckily we came back to try today cos the bread here is really GOOD!
We ordered a set (kopi, eggs, ciabatta toast) and an alacarte orange ciabatta.
I must say that the coffee here was quite good - not bitter at all, and not too sweet. Definitely freshly brewed local style coffee. Kelly had an iced tea (not part of a set).

Ciabatta Toast

The bread was really light, crispy, and crumbly...even though it looks thick its actually really light - fluffy inside yet crisp outside. One of the most perfectly toasted thick bread I've eaten.

Check out the eggy lumpy kaya! There are no slabs of butter here - the kaya and butter are mixed together. This kaya tastes similar to Tong Ah Coffeeshop's kaya - homemade and extremely fragrant. I read that here, the Coconut, Eggs, Sugar and Pandan leaves are slow cooked over a double boiler for 1 and a half hours. The flavour of the pandan is enhanced by leaving the pandan leaves in the Kaya overnight after cooking.
Don't you feel like making your own kaya now? Easier said than done man - I can imagine the temperature, timing, proportion of ingredients must be extremely precise!

Orange Ciabatta Toast $2.60
This toast is really unique. At first I thought our toast was gonna come with Orange Marmalade but no - the orange peel was actually embedded in the bread and the filling is actually the same - kaya. It has a fruity, coconuty taste - you taste it all together. You have to go try it to actually know what I mean. The bread here is slightly more sturdy than the ciabatta toast above - that was really quite crumbly.
Actually i went back to read the article on ieatishootipost and I realise you can choose the filling from a range of preserves like Orange Marmalade with Cognac, Four Fruits Marmalade and Strawberry with Champagne! Wow! Warrants another visit! And we totally forgot about the scones here... But we were so comfortable on those seats we actually sat till closing time (just before 7 pm). so we had to set off for another place after catching up.
Oh today seemed like a CG day I bumped into Jason along Holland Road just before meeting Kelly and after our tea we bumped into Kums in Chinatown MRT who was gonna try this cigar cum fine dining place which he said was amazing. Okay an aside for Kelly and my reference =)
Then for Chinese desserts we walked all the way to Smith Street cos we wanted to try the elusive 115 Tang Shui Stall (which was closed) and the Hai Sing Ah Baling (which we couldnt find) and since we were unsuccessful - our backup was actually the porridge over at Smith Street - then we decided to walk to Glace at Chinatown Plaza - (and our backup was Tong Ah Coffeeshop's toast) but it closes at 630pm so gaspp we reached Duxton Hill -which has beautiful architecture in the evening by the way, each shophouse had such interesting riot of colours and styles. I'd wanna come back and walk the rest of Duxton Hill (and try Pasta Brava at Craig Road). However, the looming HDB project at Duxton looks quite monstrous now - and even more so in the dark..Wonder how it'd look like when its all done.
Walk and walk and walk....eventually we landed up at Tanjong Pagar Food Market! My poor friend was quite exhausted esp when climbing up the stairs here! But we were eventually very =) when we saw that Annie's Peanut Ice Kachang(Level 2, Tanjong Pagar Plaza Market and Food Centre) was open! We were really quite discouraged that ALL our dessert places ditched us today so you can imagine our surprise when this place was open!! (it closes at 715pm on weekdays)
There is peanut ice Kachang, mango ice kacang, and durian ice kachang. She also has Chengtng, Chendol, bobocharbar. But everyone goes for her signature Annie's Peanut ice kachang!

It is gigornous at $1.50!

The shaved ice was really smooth! And it doesnt melt - so it doesnt leave a pool of colourful syrup at the end - according to the observant (and experienced ice kacang eater =P) Kelly. The red bean, corn and peanut went really well together, and with the evaporated milk and syrup it was phwoah! Just the thing we needed after walking the length of many train stations!

Oh but the ingredients when you get to the bottom is scant. There is no atapchee, and there is very little chendol jelly and grass jelly. It doesnt have much.....inner substance =P

We wanted to go Amoy Food Centre but it was too hot to walk any further so we decided to head to Saybons(B1 Plaza Singapura) on our way home.

This is our second time at Saybons - previously we tried the nutella crepe and seafood bisque so we decided to try something different today.

We went for the (nutritious according to an article pasted on the screen) Brocoli and Cheddar soup (and additional bread which we didnt try) and a savoury crepe.

They actually warm/fry our bread before serving...

Don't the wild mushrooms look like some virulent octupus? We were truly..enthralled.. haha, we love watching chefs at work...even watching Annie, the icekachang lady make our dessert got some oohs and ahhs...yes it doesnt take a lot to entertain us...

Brocoli and Cheddar Soup, Regular $3.20
The soup was really heavy on the cream - but surprisingly it wasnt jelak even with the cheddar. I couldnt really taste much vegetable but I thought the soup was really a good cream soup.
Sundried tomato Bread, Garlic Butter Bread Additional $2.50
You can choose a maximum of 2 spreads with your additional bread. These are the 2 more popular ones out of the 3 spreads they have (the last one is a herb butter). The bread was gently fried and really delicious - even better with the cheesy soup!
Mushroom and Cheese Crepe
I really liked the mushrooms here - and they are really generous with the mozarella cheese as well. The crepe is really light and chewy - Kelly remembers it being more crisp the previous time we had the Nutella crepe. Unfortunately here the crepe is ready made - they fry it, and add the ingredients before serving it. We thought the previous time they made the crepe from scratch but we could be wrong.
And after that we made a hilarious secretive transaction at Dorothy Perkins before heading home. Oh I cant wait for her to clear the last hurdle before planning our next trip (for Kelly its our elective trip but for me it meant a food trail =P).. All the best, babe!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Creperie Entre-nous, Out of the Pan, East Coast Park and Changi village

Today was the Chan Brothers Travel Fair and Kelly and I thought we could snag a good deal for our flights so we met and planned for a leisurely lunch at Cityhall. Parked at Shaw Leisure Gallery and cos Tom's Palette is closed on Sundays (bah!) I had to settle for the green tea ice cream from Mr Bean(Shaw Leisure Gallery) cos it was really such a hot day!!..

Green tea icecream $2.20

I felt like I was taken for a ride cos the green tea is so subtle I feel like I'm eating a green coloured original soya ice cream! Which cost 50% more! The last time I'm eating you!

And once again, like Marcus' homemade green tea icecream, the colour of this icecream blends right into my blog background...

The night before I met Michelle at 2am dessert bar and I told her I needed brunch places and she suggested Pump Room but that'd be for another Sunday when I don't have to do errands. She joined us for crepes at Creperie Entre-nous (27, Seah Street, #01-01Tel: 6333-4671) instead.

I've been wanting to try this quaint French creperie since I read about it on atetoomuch and it came out in the Cheap and Good section on Life! before but somehow I never got the chance till now. Cheap and good recommended Stephane's favourite and moines.

There are 2 set menus - $20 set menu you can choose from these savoury crepes and you get a salad and a soft drink thrown in, the $28 set menu gets you the savoury crepe, salad/soup of the day, a dessert crepe and a drink.
The savoury crepes here are called galettes, which are only cooked on one side, and are made with organic buckwheat flour. Their sweet crepes, on the other hand, are the regular wheat flour ones hence the difference in colour and texture. The galettes tend to be more crisp and the wheat flour ones are slightly more chewy.

avocado/cream/garlic/tomato $12
Michelle is quite a fan of avocado so she quite liked this. I like avocado only if its mashed up (think milkshake, icecream) so I thought the creamy avocado went very well with the crisp buckwheat crepe.
egg/emmenthel cheese $13.50
The red haired waitress(whom i think is a co-owner!) asked if we wanted the egg to be done sunnyside up (the way the French do it) or scrambled and we requested for scrambled. This was so so, the cheese was rather bland - Kelly said she had to keep adding salt and it tasted better. Well, I like anything with cheese though some meat will be great! After a while I felt like I was eating ang moh thosai.
Stephane's favourite $16.60 chicken, caramelised onions,french mustard

This was the hot favourite - the chicken was fantastic and had this smokey flavour! Reminded me of the tea-smoked chicken sandwich I had at the Moomba tuckshop. The caramelised onions were really sweet and flavourful too. At first we hesitated about this cos we thought chicken will taste weird in a crepe but luckily we went for it cos it was my favourite. This comes with a salad which has a similar french mustard. Ooh the french mustard was good - fragrant and nutty.
entre nous $7
with home made salted caramel
Oh this was a fantastic dessert crepe and Michelle said she was gonna try making her own salted caramel after this. It was plain, sweet, but very good. You can buy the home made caramel - I think it is $14 for a jar. Michelle and I were fantasising over adding the sea salt caramel icecream from Tom's Palette yums.
Mich left home (to go and sleep tsk tsk) so Kelly and I ventured onto humanjamland at the crowded Chan Brothers Travel Fair. We took a queue number and there were 120 people in front of us so of cos off we were to afternoon tea.. waffles at Out of the pan (basement, Raffles City)! Actually we wanted to go Ji De Chi but it was too far away and it was too hot so we decided to take the air con route and eat at an air con place =P
We were perched up on very high bar seats and this is really the place for being people-watched (NOT people watch we were staring at the fountain the whole time) it is inevitable that the people on the elevator will spy on you cos Krithika saw us and said hello! Not a good idea if you don't want your gluttony for all to see..
Fresh Berries $13.50
with vanilla bean icecream

This waffle is made of whole wheat and is really quite bready - with a slight crisp at the edges. It is dusted all over with sugar and we thought that there was cinammon in the batter as well. It was alright, I guess - especially with the ice cream - although we preferred the fluffier waffle at Shokudo. The strawberries were extremely fresh and sweet and crunchy!

We totally missed the point of the dessert - if you scroll up again to the previous photo you'd realise the whole time we were staring at the backside of this pretty heart shaped chocolate - well not like the waiter had any aesthetic sense either to place the dessert the right way! Seems logical being the love cynics we are, turning our backs on it.

I think the Chocolate waffles sound damn good I feel like going back to try it...the only thing that deterred me was the orange sorbet that came with it I hate anything with orange in it!
Guess what, when I went back to the travel fair after our long long leisurely dessert, there were still 20 people ahead of me! No one entertains your enquiries till you get a queue number! Of cos I gave up (and Kelly left for tuition) so I also left to meet my friends at East Coast.

Thanks to Fiona, I chalked up enough exercise credits for the year! I met Fiona, Sheryl, Kristanto, Tian, and an Egyptian exchange student at East Coast (none of them are in this photo these are some random girls) ..while the rest cycled, I was the lone soul who bladed (cos I cant stand the pain that comes with cycling for more than 45 minutes). Our starting point was Burger King (where I conveniently parked thank god for the lot =p) and end point? Changi Village. I had no idea how impossible it could be on my tiny wheels. Ignorance is indeed bliss, cos I am sure not that ambitious and I don't overestimate my stamina.

It was just about this point at the cable skiing place that the cyclists zoomed off and I was off to chase them =)

Of cos I did pass by rustling bushes which do scare me..
I like this particular turn to Changi Beach..
This stretch parallel to the runway of Changi Airport is an assault to the senses: tiring to conquer, reeks of engine oil, and loud departing and arriving planes..the road went on and on! But I must say I did enjoy the solitude and quietness of the long straight route.
Sun was setting soon, must kuai kuai go to Changi Village before it gets dark. I love the gorgeous rays and I was glad throughout the whole route, the sun was facing my back so it wasnt so glaring!
See how fast the sun is setting?? This was from Changi beach - and there are many planes descending here. Gorgeous background, I loved this place. This was my first time here - I bladed the previous long long stretch before but I didn't complete the whole stretch (so I didnt know it leads to here) as my cyclist friends decided to turn back to return the rented bicycles. But today, my brave friends decided to go all the way to Changi Village and I must perserve!
No guesses, guys, which area I zoomed by...

Super rustic and enjoying the simple pleasures in life

The planes were actually heading towards us inland to land in the air port and it was coolbeans watching the planes appear from the horizon...
After XXXX km and XXXXXXX hours I finally reached Changi Village Hawker centre, where Zhenjin, Jerry and Rou An joined us (smart to miss the cycling =P). Casualty: badly scratched phone that took the fall for me sigh Rous is right skin heals but metal doesnt!!! Thanks Rou An for ferrying my slippers when I was stranded at the Changi Village carpark despite your sprained ankle.
I desperately needed hydration and glucose I was super hypoglycemic and dehydrated. I actually drank a whole 1 litre bottle, and I wolfed down this fantastic dessert that I remembered reading about from nevertrustascrawnyfoodie..not sure if its the same stall (honestly anything sweet from anywhere will do during desperate moments) so I just tried Fu Xiang Hot&Cold drinks..well at least I tried to get the stall right I went to call Michelle (and she wasnt sleeping =P)
The longan red tea jelly with evaporated milk!
Longan red tea jelly with evaporated milk, $2
Actually I gobbled most of it down cos I was so hypoglycemic anything vaguely sweet will taste good. But it is very good, the jelly wobbly and slippery, drizzled with evaporated milk all over and the longans were very crunchy. When the ice melted towards the end the whole concoction of milk-longan juice-red tea colouring was fantastically sweet and yummy.
Funny what intensive exercise does to you...you cant stomach anything heavy or oily or meaty after that! I couldnt take the satay nor the noodles after that and Rous say that its cos all the blood has been diverted from the GIT to the other parts of my body which need the oxygen more....
Besides the Hokkien mee and charkway teow that the girls shared, Wills had meepok and the rest had nasi lemak from this International Food stall (genuine) with the insanely long queue.
I think the fried stuff are good but the rice from Selera Nasi Lemak at Adam Food Centre is still better and fluffier. Here the rice was rather dry and didn't taste of much.

Fly, Will and Rou then drove back to ECP to get Will's van to ferry ALL the bicycles back cos we finished dinner at 845pm and it was quite impossible to cycle all the way back and make it to the shop's closing time at 945pm. To get here, we started at 5.15pm and I reached at around 745pm and they prob earlier.
The worse thing was they got lost on the way to ECP so it took them more than an hour to go to ECP and come back so we were running late - AND the receipt for the bicycle had NO contact number but luckily they called us back (to remind us of the penalty friggin ex at $3 for half an hour when it was not a clause in the receipt!!!!)
After getting all the bikes in, Rous Jerry and I stayed with Sheryl to wait for her parents and Jerry fetched us all back - quite an eventful night - had to scurry back so Rous and Kristanto could exchange back their phones, and my bladder was BURSTING from that 1 litre of water (and I didnt wanna use the Changi Village hawker centre toilet) so had to hurry rush back to Burger King but the toilet was on a damn ulu second floor and it was already 1045pm I didnt wanna kena peeping tom so I had to speed to Macs to the toilet then had a second pseudo scare with the lost camera when I came home so sorry frightened Jerry and Rou an and Zhenjin with my moment of panic! All my food photos!!!!!!! I was really scared that the camera popped out of the boot cos there were many many humps along the road of East Coast Park and very dark very hard to see!
Blah the worse thing was the next day I woke up to find the $54 deal from JetstarAsia has vanished! Heck, SIA here I come! Travel fairs, never again!

Monday, December 15, 2008

LerkThai@NUS, Golden Mile-Sweet Stone Paradise+Zhao An Granny Grass Jelly+SLII Muffins,Almunch Bakery@Haji Lane,Bugis-Yella Fellas+Otac Inc+CrepeHouse

Again all in one day! Finally got down to eat our must trys of Yella Fellas and Sweet Stone Paradise. Of cos along the way there were many many gastronomic distractions we couldnt resist nor ignore and due to this our Twilight movie date is postponed till later this week =)
Green Curry Lunch Set - with Tom Yam Soup and Papaya salad $6.90

when Kelly and I were zapping stuff at Science Bookshop and eventually when I was on the way to the YIH post office, our CG mates called (i must say they were fast to take off to Arts) beckoning us to join them for lunch at Burger King and with great team spirit (esp Kelly hehe) we ditched our initial plans to screw afternoon lects and lunch out. Hence the Lerk Thai set meal at NUS Arts Canteen I had as above (and the boring CXR lecture i totally regret, sorry kels!).

this green curry is really creamy - probably alot of coconut inside. Even the tomatoes were green! The unripen tomatoes were crunchy and must be the first time I had such tomatoes cos usually they are soggy and soft and just melt away into soups. Chicken was tender but as you can see there's not that much meat. This is a shallow plate by the way, not an entire bowl.
This papaya salad was actually nice to eat on its own, minus the prawn paste sauce or any chilli added. I suppose the tanginess of the lime they added and the crunchiness of the fresh raw papaya was tasty enough.

Oh won't talk much about the Tom Yum Soup (which Im supposed to avoid cos of the seafood but of cos i forgot about my casualty) cos it was really bland.

Tom Yam Fried Rice,$4.90

Stamp of approval from Kelly the fried rice connosieur cos her mom is such an expert at fried rice. I couldnt really detect the tom yam flavour in the fried rice but the rice was really tasty and not oil logged. Wok hei also made it particularly fragrant.

Returned back for a value-un-added lecture (and a better value Mr Bean Soya ice-cream =P) before escaping to Queestown Lib and KK Library then finally arrived at Golden Mile Hawker Centre, our first stop. The rest of the CG stayed on at the amazingly boring lecture, with the guys planning to watch The day earth stood still, later on- but Kels and I wanted to catch Twilight too, at possibly the same cinema as them -which we did not have time in the end for, cos we were busy eating but it was so much more interesting that way.

Hey kels, maybe if we did lunch outside and all, we might not have done this particular route today cos it'd be too hot to hang around Haji Lane. We'd have escaped to the movie. Whatever it is, spontaenity is the rule of the game for Jules and Kels eating adventures. Things just happen according to circumstance.

Like how we couldnt find parking within Golden Mile and had to park across the road (and pay 6 over bucks for parking a few hours!!!!!) at the Golden Mile Complex where buses bound to KL leave from. We didnt even go at lunch time! It was around 3 plus already and the hawker centre was not crowded too. But anyway, if we didnt park at the opposite complex, We wouldnt have stayed so long at the hawker centre nor explore the seedy Golden Mile Complex's Thai supermarket (though we regretted not having enough stomachs to try Diandin Luk) .

This is what we came to Golden Mile for: Sweet Stone Paradise ! Actually wanted to try ROC pizza and Ice Queen as well but they were both closed, with the latter being closed for good, or so we heard.
This stall is started by an Ang Moh and another Singaporean partner and now has expanded to Old Airport Road and a cafe at Hong Lim Park. There was alot of hype about it when it first opened and it closed on me (and Matt and Chiara) once when i came too late after dinner, so i was quite excited to try it this time round cos i really like Belgian Waffles. Looks like they're banging on the 'Angmoh desserts' buck - blatantly labelling their stall's specialties in that manner!

But of cos the owners werent there and in place of them is this very very very sweet old, mild mannered and pleasant English speaking couple ran this stall. Oh its really endearing, watching how they run the stall as if its their own, and being so gentle to each other and friendly towards the customers. Its such a good concept to have grandparently figures run this place cos it appeals to the family side of people (unlike those icecream/yoghurt icecream chains hiring those young nubile innocent babes - no guesses who they appeal to).The service was so good, the uncle actually brought us to the ROC pizza stall when we were wondering where it was. Real friendly chap, unlike those dao i-am-hot-and-i-know-it icecream hawking bimbos

Set D - 2 Waffles, 1 scoop of Gelato, 1 Dip $6

With extra Single scoop $1.80

we requested for our waffles to be freshly made and they kindly obliged. Actually we were thinking of ordering the Royal Fondue set, which comes with additional fruits and marshmallows but we figured what we ordered were what we REALLY wanna try ie the waffles and fondue - so we should save stomach space for the many many other good food there - which we surveyed first as usual before deciding.

Ice cream choices included the fruity flavours of strawberry and Hawaiian sunrise (pineapple and orange), coffee, white mint, green tea and hazelnut. We chose Hawaiian sunrise (for Kelly) and hazelnut (for me)

The waffles were rather bread-like, with a crisp caramelised sugar crisp exterior. It was rather chunky and perfect for dunking into the chocolate dip (which we wished they gave more - it was under half filled!).

The ice cream came in a whole scoop, making it hard to eat fondue style - we needed a metal stick and small mini scoops of ice cream a la Haagan Daz style. The ice cream was slightly icy and not dense, rather watery actually. Mixing the dark chocolate sauce and hazelnut icecream should be nutella heaven but it didnt taste much like nutella, possibly because the chocolate was really really dark. If you leave the chocolate on the ice cream for a while, it'd solidify to form a rather fragile hard shell. Good warm dark chocolate though, we devoured the entire bowl.

Kelly really enjoyed her Hawaiian Sunrise cos she really likes sour sweet bright coloured fruits and she said it was tangy and sweet enough.

Of cos with that rich thick chocolate fondue, we had to follow up with something icy. And the next was what I found on ieatishootipost...really smooth grass jelly and it sure didnt disappoint..its called Zhao An Granny Grass Jelly. Makansutra endorsement of Die Die Must try.

The auntie was rather dao haha though she obliged our extra sugar syrup and extra ice request.

I don't really eat Cold grass jelly ($1.20) much cos I had allergic reactions to it now but i had to try this. The chin chow was really smooth - it just glides down your throat. But the strange thing is that it is so smooth it is difficult to break cos it just slips away when you try to cut it. Thats how smooth it was. Its unlike the smoothness of tau huay where you can destroy it by mushing it all up.

Can you imagine how smooth it is? Fantastic for cooling down on a hot day. Needs more sugar syrup though, with the extra ice on top. Kels who grew up on this said this was one of the smoothest she has had.

Then of cos, we couldnt ignore this SL II muffin stall as recommended by Michelle. I was eyeing the durian muffin when we first explored the place. Do you know there was also a Japanese review on the stall?! It was displayed on the counter..cant help but think about the namesake of a skin product also from Japan ..

They have many many flavours - apple, coffee nut, chocolate chip - with the most popular being Banana Walnut.

Its buy 5 get 1 free.

These tarts look like those that are sold in the neighbourhood bakeries. Not the coconut tart though, havent seen the likes of them around. Didnt try these this time around - cos we had 4 muffins! - so maybe the next time round.

The muffin mix before they get baked in the oven. The left is the orange cranberry and the right is the oatmeal. Looks like its alot of oatmeal right? But when we eventually ordered the oatmeal one from this particular batch - we couldnt find the oatmeal!! Did they all dissolve into the batter?

The auntie was super friendly, even posing by the oven with her muffins. She called all her customers dear, and even took out the containers to show us the fresh durian paste when we went back a second time to buy more and commented that the durian muffin was good, asking whether they use real durians.

We bought 2 muffins first - Durian and Cream cheese, and we went back fo9r seconds cos we couldnt resist the newly freshly out of the oven muffins so we got warm and hot Banana Walnut and Oatmeal muffins.
It is better that you be patient and wait for a new batch to pop out of the oven. The difference in freshness and crisp is worth waiting for! Not to mention the lovely aroma as well.
Durian Muffin $1.50

All their muffins have this crisp outer crust on the top, even the ones that are sitting on display. The inside is really moist, but not too dense or cake like. Its really light, possible to eat many at one go.
This durian one has a prominent aroma the moment you eat it, and check out the real durian paste in the middle.

Cream Cheese Muffin, $1.50
On the other hand, we couldnt really taste any cheese anywhere. When we went back to ask the auntie, she say she uses chopped up bits of cheese in the middle - which probably dissolved during the baking? Kels is too used to her Mr Bean cheese pancake with that thick chunk of central cheese core! Amusing thing was, the drinks stall auntie next door is a fan of this cream cheese muffin, she thinks its the best amongst all the muffins.

Banana Walnut Muffin, $1.50

This was fresh off the oven. Fantastic!! Especially with the many slices of caramelised bananas inside the muffin. Bananas were nicely melted from the heat and its like a banana crumble, with the crispy top layer (made even more crunchy from the walnuts). Wished Ice Queen was open so we could have ice cream with our many many muffins.
Oatmeal muffin $1.50

On the other hand, the oatmeal muffin turned out to be a ordinary (but still good) plain muffin cos we couldnt search for any trace of oatmeal besides the slight sprinkle right on top. But we did see the auntie put more than a table spoon of oatmeal onto the batter before chucking it into the oven. We thought that the oatmeal will be like a cornflake adding much crunch to the muffin but oh no it didnt happen that way.
On our way back to Golden Mile Complex, to the car park, we passed by this traditional cake shop which has been around for 50 over years, called Sze Thye Cake Shop. What a matronly establishment, and Kelly heard about this place from the press before, and she thinks her relatives did order those traditional Chinese pastries from this shop before.
Really traditional - Check out those Chinese New year decorations. Many old school pastries like lao por bing, tau sar piah, and those goodies that the Chinese give during weddings, month old birthday celebrations. Will you give these traditional goodies or those Western dainty chocolates and cakes? the former just seems so traditional its coolbeans lar, unlike the cliche western ones

sweet and salty tau sar piahs join the league of other flavours such as the lotus paste, yam paste, almond paste, durian. I bought 2 sweet, durian and a lotus paste one.

my loot. its 80 cents per piece - no free give away!

They actually tell the flavours apart by the red stamp on top of the pastry. the durian one (below) has a flower stamp to mimic its thorns.

Durian Tau Sar Piah
When i reached home i tried the durian one, and the flavour doesnt hit you until you reach the central core. Its not the fresh soft kind you eat in the durian puffs and rolls and ice desserts - but more of the dense consistency of the paste you find in mooncakes. The pastry was very good though, not too flaky nor too buttery. It was actually faultless. My grandma liked it too, and considering she only likes traditional flavours, it must really be quite good.

Then we decided to walk around the Thai supermarket on the second floor of Golden Mile Complex before going down to the carpark
Many many snacks from Thailand and Vietnam, and of cos their produce and food products. There were fresh fruits and prepacked Thai salads even.

many savoury snacks - jackfruit and durian chips, taro root chips, potato stick snacks.

the cup noodle containers were in such an odd shape they looked like urinals.

these japanese snacks were everywhere in the chocolate section - this chocolate biscuit burger is really cute.

I havent seen these glico chocolates elsewhere either. I bought the middle one.

and I also bought the strawberry Caplico sticks. Looks really old school.
then we drove to Arab Street and with MUCH difficulty in parallel parking (and a whole lot of cars waiting for me cos its a one way street =P) we happily strolled around the Haji Lane shops. Plenty of Middle eastern food - Allaturka Restaurant, Sanmar - but for another day to try cos we were planning something else at Shaw towers and Bugis (read on)

The crowd here is truly different - the ages vary and so do their sense of fashion. They look and dress differently - albeit with more individuality. Poeple watching area man.

interesting christmas tree we spotted in a clothes shop, Salad. If you remove all the christmas accessories you actually get a really gigantic accessory rack to hang your ear-rings and dingdangs.

This bag is coolbeans. Newspaper in a bag. Idea for kels..8 days page in a bag to satisfy her Monday craving haha=P

really whacky phones. Check out the Donald duck one behind. and the plastic one next to the paino reminds me of epic pinball. If i had that on my cord phone the land line will forever be engaged. It was here where we found the Harry potter black roundish specs and kelly made me pose with it cos of my pseudo lightning feature so it was all really apt. haha.

the nissin character is insanely cute. i feel like a chu qian yi ding noodles now, the noodles are really Q! Shane introduced this instant noodles to me in RJ and i still like it till now.

I actually wanted to try the Kaya Sundae at Pluck as recommended by Michelle but unfortunately it was closed. Another shop with a similar clothes+ coffeeshop concept was this place called MONO+ (66-64 Haji lane), with concoctions of icecreams and toppings to go. But we didnt try cos we had Mr Bean ice cream at NUH, then the 2 ice creams at Sweet Stone Paradise, and we were intending to try Tom's Palette. Another hang out place to consider, the owner was really friendly. She says she'd be introducing more food in time to come cos she just moved here from another unit.

its a small and cosy place. Looks like many shops in this area are going into the clothes-F&B concept like Project shop Blood bros and their highly successful PS Cafe.

Next, we decided to walk to Bugis instead of driving there through town madness and ERP and parking horror. It was just a street away, passing by Raffles Hotel. However we got distracted by this bakery along the same stretch as Coffee Nations and Blujazz Cafe.

This bakery, Al Munch Bakery (28 Bali Lane) is into its fifth week now and I havent heard about them yet so i was half suspicious yet half being adventurous but I couldnt resist some good brownies and cookies so I tried some samples of each - and with the enthusiastic owner baker treating us to complimentary macarons cos we looked truly interested in food ie GREEDY faced haha.

okay im the kind who likes chocolate loaded cookies so their samples were a little to dry for me. its the crisp cookie type.

their brownies werent sufficiently chewy and fudgy for me as well. I guess i cant really appreciate brownies without dark warm chocolate sauce and good old vanilla ice cream no?

Raspberry Macaroon with Chocolate Ganache (Complimentary)

But what blew us away were the macarons. This is actually the first time we were eating macarons. Somehow eating crisp sweet mini sandwiches dont appeal much to me (unless its free, of cos, like in this case =P) and i think a large part of this is because of its petit size. I love large cakes and pastries so I cant bring myself to pay for mini stuff when I can be eating huge slices of cakes.

Biting into the outermost crisp layer and into the dense sugary raspberry interior of the macaron, the slightly frozen layer of dense dark chocolate made it really perfect. The baker recommended that the macaron be thawed slightly so the chocolate would melt slightly.

If you look carefully, the true hallmark of a macaroon is that the macaron shell must have a flat smooth top with an associated ‘foot’ (a risen outer edge of the macaron). A macaron is essentially a delicate baked biscuit comprised of whipped egg whites mixed with sugar, almond powder, and some form of flavoring, coloring, or stabilising agent. That’s it. The list of components is simple but the execution of making macarons is where the confusion starts cos there are countless interpretations to making this unique pastry. Im so not into baking, but I realise making a perfect macaron is not simple because there're many layers of textures and density to achieve in that macaron shell - not forgetting complementing the flavours of the filling and the shell. Im so glad im not an OCD baker ( a la the baker wannabes we eavesdropped upon at Jones the Grocer). Im sure I wont have much of a life if I were to obsess over achieving that level of sweetness, that intensity of chocolate, a particular crispiness. As it is already, I am busy enough obsessing over all the food that I wanna try.

Anyway, Im so gonna try the macarons at Gobi, Canale, and Amande once I start developing a taste for macarons (and their cakes don't distract me) so I can discern between the good ones and their opposites.

the other green one was the chocolate mint. They ran out of the passionfruit flavoured ones. They're having a promotion now and its 4 pieces for 5 bucks.

Christmas logcakes! I bought a slice of the Belgian chocolate Chiffon Roll logcake ($1.25 per slice, $15 for 375 g whole cake) cos they had the same chocolate ganache layer like in the macaron. But I found the cake too spongy for me - i need more of the dense fudgy ganache layer!

ok can finally finally move onto Bugis. After trying Yella Fellas we planned to go to Shaw Towers for Tom's Palette but that was not meant to be because Tom's closes early and there were too many things to try at the Bugis Basement.. the opening of the new extension does make it feel like the basement of Plaza Singapura cos it has a similar concept of many takeaway stalls.
We've been wanting to try Yella Fellas (Bugis Junction) since it first started more than a year back , but never got down to trying cos it was too far away and it was a takeout stall, no space to sit. We had to find our own corner near the water fountain near macs where many many other people were eating takeaways too. We read about Poutine - fries in cheese and beef gravy in our favourite section of Urban - Posh Nosh lady is so cool lar - and we really wanted to try that.

But guess what we tried in the end?
Preparing our fries...they're only fried upon order so its super fresh. they actually weigh the potatoes for each serving.

yup we didnt try THE poutine but the spicy chilli crab one because we thought it'd be more unique. (and this lady in front of us who confirmed that it was good)

And we were rewarded for being adventurous.

The many other sauces you can add to your normal fries or twister fries - garlic yoghurt, herb mayo, malt vinegar (i think this you add to fish and chips which they have) , salsa sauce and the more off-the-beaten-track kind of sauces. Right down my alley.

Spicy Chilli Crab $4.90

Yella Fellas with real crab in every bite!

This was AWESOME. Got to be the best fries I've had in my life. The fries were thick and made of real potatoes - do you see the potato skins on some of them? And they were right off the deep fryer. And there were generous crab meat in the sauce as well, and it was really thick and flavourful. A genius combination, up one level from fried mantou and chilli crab sauce.

I guess fries wont taste the same again. We will be back to try the Poutine.

Then we drifted to Otah Inc.(Bugis Junction) It is back to back with Yella Fellas, I realise with this photo. The Otah Taquito - which is essentially Tortilla Roll with different otah flavours - looked really good!
They serve the taquito, nonya otah toast, and crispy thin crust - a otah wrap in short.

Taquitos come in the flavours of crab otah, chicken otah, and mushroom cheese otah. The latter was calling out to Kelly so we tried that, especially since a fresh batch just came out freshly baked from the oven! They also make to order, and I am sure fresh ones will always taste better. It does make a difference we realise, whether is it waffles or muffins. or fries. Very important lesson of the day haha

the fresh mushroom cheese otah taquitos..

packaged in a cute long plastic bag

Mushroom Cheese Otah Taquito, $2

the innards..the otah is not the meaty kind but i think it is an otah paste, with mushroom slices inside. I couldnt detect the taste of cheese but i could see the stringy connections of the cheese in the paste. Tasty nonetheless, the crispy tortilla layer was perfect with the savoury warm mushy curry interior.

Of cos to round off the evening, we needed something sweet again so we were off to try crepes. I believe Crepes House(Bugis Junction) is a franchise from Japan, cos i saw this programme before where this place is hugely popular in Japan, with an insane list of flavours in the fake glass display outside the shop (like the ones below displayed on the counter)

the top 3 flavours.. it seems that strawbrerry flavoured crepes are really popular, even offered at Saybons too.

there seems to be alot of whipped cream for each crepe

i always look forward to a good show of the food preparation before i eat..its so interesting to realise what goes into making your food - when all the tastes of the different ingredients come together sometimes it can get quite confusing which is THE flavour that stands out the most or which gives that dish the X factor.

maybe thats why place with open kitchen concepts like Tatsuya and Iggy's really appeal to me cos food is an experience for me, and i think a gastronomic experience should move more senses than one. Watching how the chefs work their magic makes me appreciate my food even more. It adds character to the food.

Even watching a hawker whip up his routine plate of noodles - or one half of the very sweet old couple making our Belgian waffle can be such a heartwarming experience. I mean, some of these hawkers who have been around and been passing down the trade for generations - they do the same thing day in and out everyday, but they are content in doing so and they do it with much passion. They work their time for long hours everyday but we see them only one meal that day - yet it could potentially be a memorable tasty meal that warrants a repeat visit and truly passionate hawkers strive for this positive feedback...just like how the plastics see plenty of gashes and injuries and sew up plenty- but a particular laceration for a particular patient - the permanent scar stays for the patient for the rest of their life - whether they stitch up a good job or not, they really make a difference, if they realise.

okay i don't know why i was so longwinded with that very long train of thought but this crepe making was really fast! after she poured the fluid batter onto the pan and spreaded it around with a flattener it was only minutes before she checked the beneath for brown-ness before she whipped up the entire crepe to the board to add in the rest of the ingredients.

red bean at the bottom most

followed by red bean, a sprinkle of finely crushed peanut, fresh cream and a scoop of green tea icecream.

Managed to catch the action just before she wraps up and closes. Real swift!

Crepe with green tea icecream, fresh cream, red bean $5.50
oh this crepe was really soft and collapsible...without the support of the paper it'd so totally sag with the heaviness of the icecream and the other toppings of red beans and whipped cream. The green tea icecream was really creamy and milky, it was good on its own too! This crepe is really soft. For this crepe, there's no layer of crisp at all, unlike the more crispy and chewy crepe from Saybons which also has more structure as well - didnt threaten to crumble at all, being upright all the way =P this crepe you can pull apart the crepe quite easily.
There was plenty of whipped cream and real red beans as well in its own paste. If you like soft, melt in your mouth kind of crepes, then you will like this japanese crepe. However, for people like kels and i who like crispy, chewy crepes - then go for Saybons. We chose a japanese icecream- red bean combination because it'd probably more unique and we wont be able to try this anywhere else. And by the way, for ONE japanese dessert crepe here you can get almost TWO of Saybons. So try Saybons first before here!
And of cos we couldnt miss JCO Donuts (Bugis) on our way home so i da-paoed a dozen home..i must say the colours are really pretty!
Strawberry, Tiramisu and Alcapone.
No plastic bag this time round cos there's a special holder for Christmas. Thumbs up for being more environmentally friendly..
We'll be back to the basement again for more FRIES! and also to try out Pink Yoghurt, which I believe is the popular yoghurt ice cream chain from US.. and there's a Korean takeaway stall too which sells our favourite Korean rice cakes...we couldnt take any more carbo after todays overdose. Finally a date where we don't have to stress over work. Well, at least for a while! Thanks again for being great company, kels...till our next makan madness!