Your Hong Kong cuisine fix in Singapore

Street sign for Orchard Road in Singapore.

Image via Wikipedia

Once again, I’m out here in Singapore getting over my jet lag and preparing for adventures further afield.  Since my arrival on Tuesday, it’s been a non-stop blur of seeing friends, making new ones, numerous makan sessions and a civilized evening at a hidden Cigar Club that involved, yes, eating some home cooked Singapore food on account that it was Hari Raya Haji on Wednesday. 

Unlike my usual trips to Asia, this time I will not be stopping off in Hong Kong.  However, the craving still hits for proper Hong Kong cuisine: yum cha and won ton noodles.  Thankfully, both can be (temporarily) sated during my time here in Singapore. 

I went to Hua Ting for yum cha.  Hua Ting is inside the Orchard Hotel, just where the famous street begins.  It is, probably, the fanciest restaurant I have been to in Singapore (I usually visit hawker stands and what not).  When I was there, the restaurant was configured with large tables for the family lunches that occur on public holidays. 

They’re known for their yum cha but surprisingly, the menu had less items on it than a typical place would have.  It was a case of quality, not quanitity as the go-to standards were pretty good. 

Again, it IS a “nice” place so it’s appropriate for family meals, taking the inlaws out or a semi-serious date with someone interesting.  The best part, according to my friend who lives here, is that the total price is very reasonable.  No tacky add on charges for a napkin or tea, which makes this a rarity in Singapore indeed. 

Hua Ting Restaurant at the Orchard Hotel
442 Orchard Road,
238879

Singapore
+65 6739 6666


The other craving that hits when I’m afield is the simple bowl of won ton noodles, Hong Kong style.  That means: prawn won tons, thin house made egg noodles and the light broth made from fish. Such a simple dish that is very easy to mess up.  See what passes for “won ton noodles” in different parts of the US for example.  Most places use thicker store bought noodles that taste like a used dishwashing sponge.  The won tons usually have some kind of meat inside instead of prawns and the broth is MSG flavored instead of fish flavored.  Bleagh!

Singapore has its version of wantan mee; it’s served dry on a plate with meat won tons, generous slices of chow siu and has a dipping soup for the noodles.  It’s very good when you visit the right stall and the fact that the main dish is dry invites generous application of chilli sauce and raw chillis.  It’s hard to get the condiments right if they’re going into soup. 

So when the word hit the internet that an executive chef, formerly of Mak’s Noodle fame took over Noodle Place at Centrepoint, the mission became clear; to see if this place can satisfy the urge without having to fly three hours north and another 40 minutes on the train. 

In a word, a conditional “yes”.   The bowl was the right size and the noodles to won ton ratio was bang on.  The broth was very good, having more of the fish essence it should have.  The won tons themselves were a bit smaller than I’m used to and part of me was wondering if they used frozen prawns (they just seemed so uniformly small).  The noodles had the proper “snap” and had an alkali finish to them.  Seems house made to me!

Noodle Place is hidden in the Centrepoint mall on Orchard Road.  I say “hidden” because it’s address makes you think it’s on the main floor, but it’s actually hidden downstairs, in the very back of the mall past the Cold Storage and then up the escalator to an annex with a handful of sit down casual restaurants.  There were no maps alongside the directories and the people I asked were completely blur.  Hey Centrepoint!  How about a MAP??

Noodle Place
176 Orchard Road
01-53/56 The Centrepoint
Singapore 238843
+65 6733-3171

Enhanced by Zemanta

Continue reading “Your Hong Kong cuisine fix in Singapore”

Din Tai Fung Xintandi!

Din Tai Fung lunch by Richard Moross in Singapore

Image via Wikipedia

Din Tai Fung is a Taiwanese restaurant chain that’s known for its xiaolongbao (soup dumplings).  They’re maybe a step or two away from being perfect, depending on which location you visit. 

The great thing is that they’re all over Asia so if you’re in Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo,
Malaysia, Indonesia, mainland China, Australia or even Taiwan, you’re not far from xiaolongbao goodness.  If you live in the USA however, you’re very far from xiaolongbao goodness as there’s only one location outside of Los Angeles and that location has mixed reviews.  

Within Asia, all the locations are at an equally high standard.  Some locations are more equal than others.  For example, the Tsimshatsui location is considered one of the flagships because of its Michelin Star and its larger, more varied menu.  Because of its location and its accolades, it’s also one of the more expensive locations.  Compared to this, the Xintandi location seemed like a bargain even though it was in an expensive part of Shanghai and in spite of the inequality of the exchange rate (which will hopefully change in about a year).  

The appeal of Din Tai Fung is not necessarily the special-ness of the menu (aside from the xiaolongbao, whose equal I cannot find in my half of the world) but that the menu is prepared to the highest standard and that the service in the restaurant is also top tier.  That’s not saying much, if you were to mention the Tokyo or Singapore locations; service SHOULD be good.  But to get that caliber of service on the mainland or even in Hong Kong is a special thing.  When you visit a Din Tai Fung (in Asia), you will get xiaolongbao hand folded 23 times and it will be delivered to your table scalding hot.  Remember to scoop it out with your soup spoon and nibble the side like a beaver so that the soup pours out of the dumpling into your spoon. Sip then gulp.  Failure to follow these guidelines will probably lead to a burnt mouth.  The beef noodle soup will be, erm, beefy and satisfying.  The noodles will had that neat al dente snap.  The veggies will be locally sourced and fresh.  And although it won’t be a lomantic night out, it probably would qualify as a FUN night out.  Lomance is handled by the alleyways and bars of Xintandi…

IMG_1183

Hawker’s Noodle Soup, Taiwan style

IMG_1181

Fried Pork chop over aforementioned noodles

IMG_1177

DTF style siu mai

IMG_1175

The classic xiaolongbao with 23 folds apiece. 

We also had some soup and greens but at some point, you have to stop taking pictures and start eating because all the food is disappearing.  No more photos.  Just go there!

上海市卢湾
区兴业路123弄
2/F, South Block, Xintiandi Mall, Shanghai (metro: South Huangpi Lu)
+86 21
6385 8378
()

http://www.dintaifung.com.cn

Enhanced by Zemanta

The Giants Win the Pennant! (repeat three more times)

Brian Wilson

Image via Wikipedia

The City went nuts last night (in a good way) as the San Francisco Giants won the National League pennant.  Horns blared, lots of people yelled in joy and an M-80 went off on my block.  The World Series begins next Wednesday the 27th at PacBellPark.  It would be nice to go, but I’m not willing to donate body parts for game tickets.  Guess I’ll watch it on TV.  

Enhanced by Zemanta

The Chinese Professor

I’m Chinese (American) and I think this commercial is well done!
And no, I’m not offended.

The comparison in the video would be more appropriate to Great Britain who spent itself into irrelevancy creating its welfare state rather than the Romans and Greeks. This video has nothing to do with xenophobia and everything to do with the idiots in Washington DC.

A brief look at the Shanghai Expo

Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Ri...

 

Image via Wikipedia

On a whim (back in May), I purchased some round trip tickets from San Francisco to Hong Kong via Vancouver on Air Canada.  The all in price was US$600 which is a real bargain!

It’s one hell of a positioning flight but it put me within 2.5 hours of Shanghai and the Expo.  I cashed in miles for a Business Class roundtrip on Dragonair.  Due to a really tight schedule, I spent a total of 8 days away from my house which meant only 3 days in Shanghai, which were filled with debauchery, closing bars and getting back late late.  

But more about the nightlife later.  On the last full day in Shanghai, I visited the Expo.  If I could take one memory back from the Expo, it would be queues.  Lots and lots queues.  All of them shared one thing; that they were really looooong!

So instead of showing you boring pictures of a never-ending queue, I’ll instead show you some pix of the Expo at night. 

IMG 1255
All roads in the Expo lead to the China pavilion. 

It’s deceptively large.  That means that you can see it from everywhere and it looks kinda big.  Then when you are next to it, you realize it’s REALLY big. 

IMG 1259
This is at the perimeter fence. There’s still more walking to get to the China Pavilion.
IMG 1264
Now we are closer…
IMG 1268
Now we are too close. I like the detail on these beams.

The China pavilion will be one of the permanent structures of this Expo; it dominates the Expo and is located smack in the middle of the Expo site.

As you move away from the China pavilion, the rest of the regions of the world present themselves.  You walk through Europe then Latin America.  Here you can see the Brazil pavilion with what is supposed to be a soccer game but is actually a Windoze error message on the jumbotron.  Embarrassing! For Microsoft…

IMG 1274
Crashing…must be Windoze!

Asia Pacific was represented at the Shanghai Expo.

IMG 1253
North Korea and Iran were next door to each other (!)
IMG 1254
Besides the exhibits, such as this replica of the Juche Tower in Pyongyang, there were vendors selling currency and stamps, which are in demand by collectors.
IMG 1269
Thailand’s pavilion looked, well, Thai
IMG 1270
Australia’s looked…antiseptic and modern.
IMG 1257
India’s pavillion looked neat. Both traditional and modern culture
IMG 1261
Taiwan’s looked uber modern

Of course, if you survive the 25 minute trudge from the China pavilion, you will reach the last zone, the Americas.  The Canada pavilion actually looked the best; the US pavilion looked like a big advert.  Also, no VIP entrance for US passport holders. So no visit.

IMG 1272
Oh Jianada

Since it was late when we finally got there, we got to do a quick tour through the Expo, only stopping off in countries that didn’t have a queue. All the ones above, save North Korea’s had huge queues so we couldn’t visit. The next Expo is in 10 years. Will plan better then!

Enhanced by Zemanta

Wow, still out there!

So it’s been a while since I’ve updated.  I’ve been the great procrastinator but last night, as I was watching Sunday Night Football, I moved my blog and domain to a new, more (Movable Type) friendly webhost.  So now entries may resume…

UPDATE: Since my new webhost is MT friendly, many of the plugins that require back end support that 1&1 refused to support now work.  Picture resizing now works and most importantly, the virtual tide of comment spam that I’ve endured for the last year has ceased and updating and republishing this blog no longer involves a 500 error after 5 seconds.  Yay. 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Roaming in China? Maybe…

MTN SIM card

Image by warrenski via Flickr

Staying in touch is more important than ever in this fast fast go go world.  And for that, the luxe flashpacker uses local prepaid SIM cards.  In most countries, it’s pretty easy to purchase a local SIM.  Walk into 7-11, walk out with a new local number that’s a bargain to make calls and even more so to send SMS on.  Some of these SIM cards even allow you to roam, making and receiving calls and SMS, albeit at a really expensive rate. 

Sometimes it’s not necessarily worth the bother to purchase a local SIM for a 3 day trip; that roaming will be fine since all that will be sent is SMS.  That’s what I thought on my recent trip to Shanghai via Hong Kong.  I have maintained a New World Mobility prepaid roaming SIM for a few years now.  I can receive and make calls/SMS in the US and Singapore with it.  Considering that mainland China is 40 minutes away via KCR, it should work there too, right? 

Nope.  As soon as I landed PVG, I turned on my phone and tried to call my friend who was to meet us at the airport.  I manually selected China Unicom and CMCC (China Mobile) and registered on their networks respectively and tried to make a call.  China Unicom said my call was “Barred” and China Mobile asked me to pay my bill.  No roaming this trip.  SMS went through fine both ways.  No calls.  So what to do?  After having to make a call desperately, I fired up my AT&T Sim locked iPhone and made a 1 minute $4.00 phone call.  No more! 

When I returned to Hong Kong, I picked up a new prepaid from Peoples (AKA China Mobile HK).  They have a prepaid that has China roaming, slightly cheaper prices for aforementioned roaming and most interestingly, a Guangzhou phone number in addition to the HK number.  Since it’s part of China Mobile, it should work over there.  And we will see in December…

Enhanced by Zemanta

Experiment: Nexus One update! Does it play well with prepaid?

Update on the Nexus One experiment. Google has thrown in the towel, admitting that selling these phones on the internet, sight unseen and at full price (unlocked) was not successful. More here. I think that selling an unknown quantity such as the Nexus One was one of the reasons why it didn’t take off. This sales model could work with a known commodity (iPhone) that would justify its full price (unlocked). So if you want a Nexus One, be prepared to deal with “incentivized” sales drones…

Now, here’s my recap traveling with the Nexus One on my Asia rounds.

Singapore/StarHub Green: In Singapore, I have a prepaid SIM from StarHub that I’ve maintained (recharged to keep my number) for 7 years. Each time you recharge, your number stays active for 6 months afterwards. StarHub has a new recharge called “Happy Stars” (yes, that’s its real name) that gives you 120 minutes, free incoming calls and 30 MB of 3G data, all to be used in Singapore and lasts for 30 days. Perfect for an unlocked smartphone!  The StarHub network was adequate. Data speed was fine, averaged 800 mbs downspeed. All my apps on the N1 worked. GPS and navigation was fantastic. One minor hiccup is that Google did not program the N1 with the APN info for the Singapore carriers. Strange since the N1 has been officially released there. I found the info on the net and plugged it in. All worked fine. This becomes important later because in Hong Kong, I couldn’t get onto data. In Singapore, it’s “success”.

Hong Kong/New World Mobility (CSL) International Roaming Prepaid
: I have also maintained a prepaid line in Hong Kong for several years. AFAIK, NWM is the only carrier in Hong Kong that still that has free IDD (dial 1678) to first tier countries. On previous visits, I used an older Sony Ericsson phone, the K850 in Hong Kong. It was one of a few phones that SE made that was quad-band GSM and tri-band HSDPA which usually means it will work in the USA. I purchased that phone in Hong Kong and it may have been provisioned with NWM APN settings. When I use my SIM with that phone, I get a big “H” on the top of the screen and I can access the internet. When I put the SIM into my N1, no data. It made calls and SMS just fine. Just no data. I needed to research what the APN settings are and verify that these settings are here in the N1. So in Hong Kong, it’s “inconclusive”.
I’ll post my opinion on the Android OS compared to the iPhone OS later.