Showing posts with label noodles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label noodles. Show all posts

I recently got introduced to Japanese-influenced Italian dishes, such as Tofu Mentai and Mentaiko Spaghetti, so I decided to try my own! Here's how I made my Mentaiko Spaghetti!



Here's the Mentaiko before opening the sac! I used one sac for a serving of two.



Using Chubby Hubby's recipe as a basic guide, it turned out pretty good even though I substituted butter with chicken fat and left out the wine.

XY's Mentaiko Spaghetti Recipe
Serves 2

Ingredients
1 Sac Fresh Mentaiko
3 Tbsp Chicken Fat (less sat. fat than butter)
5 Tbsp Chicken Bones Stock (according to taste for smoothness of sauce)
1/2 Medium Onion
1/2 Tbsp Light Cream
2 Tsp Japanese Mayonnaise
Roasted Nori strips (for garnish)

2 servings of Spaghetti
Cooking Oil
Pinch of Salt

Method
1. First, cook the pasta. Boil a pot of water and add a little oil and salt. When it boils vigorously, add the uncooked pasta.

2. Let the pasta cook until al-dente. You can pick up a strand to test whether it is ready. Make a note of the timing so you can refer to it again next time.

3. When the pasta is ready, simply drain the water and let it rest for a while.

For the Sauce:
1. Carefully cut open Mentaiko sac and scoop out the Mentaiko with a metal spoon into a small bowl.

2. Blend the Onion slightly to get a thick paste.

3. Heat a pot on medium fire and add Chicken Fat. When it has heated up, add a little less than all of the onion paste you made and stir fry until fragrant.

4. Raise the fire to medium-high. Now add the stock and stir a while longer until it starts to be reduced.

5. Turn heat off and add Cream, Mentaiko and Mayonnaise. Stir well so everything is mixed.

6. To serve, simply heat up a pan and add the pasta and sauce. Stir and mix well then put it on a plate. Garnish with some Roasted Nori strips and serve it while it's hot!

Enjoy! :)

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I love Crispy Hong Kong Noodle with Gravy (Sheng Mian 生面)! The crispy bits are the best, but the noodles with the gravy are tasty! The noodle is crowned with a treasure trove of goodies: Sotong, Prawns, Mushrooms, Sliced Pork and Veggies! Delicious!!



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Yet another of Mum's Experiments: Crispy Noodle Pancake! It had loads of hidden goodies inside: Mushrooms, Sliced Pork, Bean Sprouts and Wood Ear Fungus! They are smacked inside a huge cake of crispy noodles fried until brown!



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Sometimes when there's no choice but to eat a quick meal at the hawker centre near my house, I sometimes pick this Wanton Mee for lunch. It has a yummy QQ texture and springy bite to the noodles, but there is a slight hint of "boric acid taste". The other ingredients aren't that great, but I do love my noodles!

Before I put the noodles in my mouth, I tend pick the noodles up with my chopsticks and pour some soup over them to "rinse" excess soy sauce. Think it helps reduce sodium intake? :/

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The Beef House: Hakka Beef Balls
This dish is very rare in Singapore, and I've yet to come across another place selling handmade Hakka Beef Balls like this one.



This stall makes their own large ping-pong sized beef balls, and you can see the rough texture from all the "handiwork". They are very bouncy and biting these reminds you of non-wobbly konnyaku jelly. I love the yellow Hakka-style noodles (usually eaten with Yong Tau Foo) which they also serve. Unfortunately they just ran out clean, so only bee hoon is left.

I sometimes take-away their beef balls to go with noodles or soup at home. They also serve other Hakka foods like Abacus Yam and Yong Tau Foo.

217 Syed Alwi Road
Gar Lok Eating House
(9am to 6pm; Closed on Fridays)


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Sungei Road Laksa
There are a lot of stalls claiming to be the famous Sungei Road Laksa, but my Mum (who knows her stuff) says this is the very original.



There is a story behind the Sungei Road Laksa, and to this very day the owner is still using charcoal fire to warm his laksa gravy. The laksa is the "Singaporean version", unlike the Katong Laksa. You are served only a spoon like the Original Katong Spoon Laksa, so noodles are cut into small strands. At only $2 a bowl, it is really reasonable and they also serve it with cockles, fishcake and fried chilli.

Jin Shui Kopitiam
Block 27 #01-100 Jalan Berseh


P.S. Surprisingly, (or maybe not) I've never liked Laksa since young, so this is based on my Mum's account!

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