Mission

Mission: To respond thoughtfully and responsibly to my experiences of drinking and dining at restaurants with regard to the quality, service, preparation, presentation and overall experience received thereat. The standpoint is one who respects the crafts of the chef and sommelier and who seeks to understand their choices in the kitchen and cellar and grow in knowledge. In this, I will seek to be fair, reasoned, direct and constructive and aim to keep my ego in check on our mutual journeys through the worlds of food and wine.

Sunday, February 21, 2016

French Haute Cuisine Pop Up at Stoked - stunner!

Mrs and Mrs May and Ria
February 15th 2016

Seems like I am becoming a broadcaster for Stoked at the moment. A lot of the posts are about wine dinners we have had there. But truth to tell they have been well worth writing about. And this was another absolutely cracking dinner. Not a bad dish anywhere and some delightfully delicious and well paired wines. Got to give props where they are due and 

Stoked are happily pushing the food envelope with the pop-ups they are bringing to Malaysian shores. 

Got an email from Yin-How saying that Stoked would be having a single evening French Haute Cuisine pop up at the Stoked with guest Chef Addision Liew taking the helm and getting to grips with his Bertha.

We didn't have a clue who Chef was, but the menu and wines sounded excellent. We ummed and ahhed a bit but when we saw Sweeper Moss confirming quickly we figured we had better do so too. These things can sell quickly.

Which proved to be the case. An attempt one day later to add Texas to the gang proved not possible as the night had been booked out.  


Brittany Muirgen Oyster
Truffle emulsion, Charcoal-Smoked
Yin-How had advised that friends May and Ria were attending and opted to seat us all together. Which ended up most pleasant as it turned out to be May's birthday which necessitated a bottle of Champagne to get the evening underway. Which ended up as quite necessary when we got informed by a member of Stoked staff that there would be no wine until the food came. Which ends up as a lesson to check for aperitifs for future beanos. Yes.

We had been parked away from the main dining area so we had some distance from the other diners which gave a pleasant sense of exclusivity. There was one other foodie sat on a separate table who seemed to be enjoying his own company. Didn't get a chance to do the rounds and see who had shown up, but appeared very few from the IWFS. Perhaps Chinese New Year was getting in the way of scheduling. It happens.

 
The champagne survived until the amuse bouche Brittany Muirgen Oyster came. These 
were absolutely brilliant and would unanimpously get declared by the table as the dish of the night. Yin How shared that they were probably the most expensive oysters he had ever had to purchase, but O they were gorgeous. Lightly grilled over the charcol in the Bertha with some truffle foam and a hit of would would prove Chef's signature finely chopped celeriac - went down in two dream creamy bites and chews and the freshness and taste were way off any taste map we could think of. Superlative after superlative flowed from the lips of the assembled till all we could do was gape in awe at the magnificence of this little French silt sucker.

Research shows that Muirgen apparently translates from the Gaelic into “Born from the sea”. These shallow oysters start life in Ireland in ecosystems unique to the locale and then travel to Cancale for gently refining in the waters of the Mont Saint Michel bay. This oyster is said to appeal to oyster gourmets because of its sweetness and its beige-coloured flesh which, nestling in a meaty jewel, provides a rare delicacy to the palette.

Additionally, the Oysters getting accidentally paired with the bubbles was perfect, as eating it on its own would have proven a bit less spectacular. I now understand why oysters and champagne are considered to be a perfect match. Total treat where seawater tang hits biscuit bubbles and fruit. There is no other taste quite like it.

Cured Tasmanian Petuna Ocean Trout
Slow-Cooked Kampung Egg

Second up was the Trout. Allegedly. Most complained there did not seem to be much of it on the plate, though we figured the carroty looking thing we consumed was probably it. I did come across a mussel, though. There was also an oyster leaf parked on top - a leaf that really did smell and taste like an oyster! Apparently available in Malaysia, it was a wonderful add and lent a charming nose to the dish.

Seems that The Petuna Ocean Trout lives in a remote South-west coast of Tasmania, where the Franklin-Gordon Rivers meet the Great Southern Ocean.  Petuna comes from the combination of Peter and Una Rockliff, the originators of a fishing company specialising in trout and salmon fishing and aquaculture. In 2010 they sold 50% of the business to the Sealord Group and went way more global.

Trademark labelled by the company as "the Wagyu of the Sea", the Trout is said to possess a "vibrant intense colour, purity of flavour, and luscious marbling (and) a creamy succulent texture which is velvety." The website proudly proclaims its Petuna Ocean Trout to be "the key ingredient in Tetsuya's signature dish for over 20 years."

Well and maybe, but as said this one slipped through the nets like a golf ball at the driving range. The problem was that the slow cooked egg pretty much consumed everything as a result of the apparent escape of the trout from the kitchen. Tasty enough, but it ended up like eggy vegetables. with foam. And finely chopped celeriac. Though it was belter with the bread and truffle butter. Sopped it all up a treat and sucked it down with total delight.

The Chablis was one of those which seemed to have little in the way of "oomph" but was a delight to sip and chug. Very light on the nose, little hint of greenish airy meadow breeze, lovely balance though light on the fruit but a clean firm finish. Good choice to pair with the trout. Well, it would have been had enough of the fish been caught in the first place.  

French Artichoke Veloute, Chilled Rougie Fois Gras
Next up was the French Artichoke Veloute. Velouté in French means, “velvet” and this effect is apparently created by puréeing everything in a blender and then pressing the result through a sieve. Seems this is standard technique in Thomas Keller's French Laundry where ‘nothing moves from one pot to another in the French Laundry kitchen without first passing through a sieve.’ Research says that the other method for creating velvet soup is to create a butter and flour roux. Whatever that means.

Whatever technique was used, it was magnificent. Perfectly fresh and seared Foie Gras drowned in a gunky goo of, er, velvety Artichoke Soup and sprinkled with (yep) fried celeriac chips. The combo was stellar - the liverish smoke of the FG getting soused by the soup to create a slurpy zip and oily smooth mouthful of wonder and light chew. Absolutely sublime. And pairing with the medium body Pinot Gris gave that sweetish Sauteurnes-ey feel without the unctuous sugar that goes with it. Lovely, lovely, lovely - almost as good as the amazing oyster.


Live Normandy Saint-Jacques Scallops and Razor Clam
Sevruga Caviar, Champagne Sauce
The Live Normandy St Jacques scallops were wonderfully fresh and again seared perfectly, having that little textured "give" in the bite to send the table into more expressions of delight and praise. I tried to find out more but all the Wikipedia information was in French with no apparent translation available. Presume the "Live Normandy St Jacques" moniker gives them a bit of kudos. Well, French names tend to do that, don't they? But they were darling little coquilles.

The Razor clam was quite inventive, and getting a hit of grapefruit was a cute acidic startle that nicely contrasted with the somewhat lean razorclam and the delightful caviar. Seems the Sevruga caviar that came with the dish is harvested from the Stellate sturgeon that has its natural home in the Black, Azov, Caspian and Aegean Sea basins. It is one of the highest priced varieties of caviar, though somewhat behind the top end Beluga and Ossetra brands. Perhaps this is because the 150lb and 7ft long fish is the smallest of the caviar producing sturgeons and its pearlescent grey and somewhat saltier eggs tend to be smaller. They did give a pronounced salty sea bite to the dish.

The Morey St Denis Burgundy was totally delightful - light medium texture, lovely firm tannins on the finish, excellent clean smoked cherries with great hints of forest and in wonderful balance. The wine discovery of the night - would happily buy this and leave for a year or two, though it probably would last that long in our household…

French Duck breast, Celeriac Risotto, Natural Jus
The French Duck breast was excellently seared and seasoned and beautifully tender, whilst the veg and celeriac risotto added useful fibre and carb. The broccolini was excellent - firm and crunchy, great bite on these.

The Bordeaux was a fair choice to try and match the duck, though naturally the Morey St Denis would have been brilliant and my preferred choice to match. But then it would not have followed the flow of the other dishes and wines, so some slack for compromise clearly was necesssary. It worked - the Mallet was light and lean in texture and in excellent balance, and the somewhat lean fruit let the even tannins do their work on the duck. Another good pairing.

Some of the reds proved a shade too much for the ladies, so Sweeper was having a rare old time of things polishing off the remains of the glasses that got passed to our end of the table. I managed to save one from his clutches for reference purposes. Well, someone has to act as a pacemaker, non?
 

Sarawak Pineapple Canneloni
Dessert was tasty - nice contrast between amazingly fresh and brilliantly tasty strawberries aided by some strawberry syrup and the yogurt sorbet proved the perfect creamy foil to all this zippy sharp sweetness.

A good coffee with a darkly rich petit four proved the perfect cap to a perfect evening. And a mini chocolate lava Birthday cake from the Stoked kitchen with a candle for May to make a wish was nicely thoughtful.

What a total brahma of an evening. These are the ones you wait for - amazingly fresh food wonderfully prepared, great wines to pair with it all and a table of entertaining and engaging friends. Doesn't get better than this. All the dishes looked fantastic on the plates with some very nice artistry in their presentations. Though Sweeper occasionally felt that some of the plates seemed a shade large for the amount of food therein. But they do lend a grandness and sense of occasion to the whole.
 

Chef Addison and the Fan Club
Chef Addison came out to say hello. Young looking lengjai, though apparently already 33 years old - would easily pass for mid twenties. Total heartbreaker - the ladies loved him on sight. Born in Ipoh, Chef honed his skills in fine French Haute cuisine at various Michelin starred restaurants around the world, including the 1 starred Auberge de la Charme in Dijon, 2 starred Les Jardin de Sens France in Montpellier as well as the highly regarded 3 starred L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon in Hong Kong. He is currently the Senior Sous Chef overseeing the daily operations at The Tasting Room, a 2 star Michelin restaurant at The Crown Hotel in Macau.

My Singapore foodie friend Julian (http://julianteoh.blogspot.sg
suspected Chef was partly on a mission to look for future sponsors to set up an enterprise. Chef did indicate that he would be open to this but in fairness felt the need for some further time in charge of his Macao Hotel kitchen to add some more kudos to his CV. On this showing, he has skills. Insisting on absolutely fresh and particular ingredients to create his delights seemed to be critical here - they set the tone for the evening and all the dishes were hugely memorable as a result. Same with the wines - great matches and well tasty. One for the ages. Damn shame Blogger wouldn't seem to let me upload and layout all the photos. Usually is fine but today it did not like them. Only difference is that they were taken on the iPhone. Maybe time to change to Wordpress...

A Night of French Haute Cuisine by Chef Addison Liew

Brittany Muirgen Oyster
Truffle emulsion, Charcoal-Smoked

Cured Tasmanian Petuna Ocean Trout
Slow-Cooked Kampung Egg
Domaine Faively Chablis 2014

French Artichoke Veloute
Chilled Rougie Fois Gras
Trimbach Pinot Gris Personelle 2010

Live Normandy Saint-Jacques Scallops and Razor Clam
Sevruga Caviar, Champagne Sauce
Domaine Taupenot Merme Morey St Denis 2012

French Duck breast
Celeriac Risotto, Natural Jus
Chateau Sociando Mallet 2004

Sarawak Pineapple Canneloni
Fukuoka Strawberries, Yogurt Sorbet

Coffee/Tea
Petit Fours

RM298 nett or RM430 with the wine.


Thursday, February 18, 2016

Memphis Bistro - fantastic!

Memphis Bistro
February 6th 2016

This was recommended by a new friend at a recent Amante CNY feast somewhere in Taman Desa. We had expressed a liking for good steak and he started raving about this place called Memphis. So enthusiastic, he even whatsapped the contact details. We immediately decided it was a must try. And it would indeed prove to be a fantastic find.

Though trying to get there on the Friday evening directly before the Chinese New Year holiday was in hindsight hugely stupid. Initially looking good, the Federal Highway traffic ground to a, er, grinding halt in the drizzling rain just before the PJ Hilton. Waze started screeching for us to turn off on Jalan 222 which we figured would be better than the nerve frazzling crawl and took us through the back roads of Petaling Jaya to the LDP. Here, a quick U turn got us into the backwaters of Kelana Jaya and then surprisingly quickly to the restaurant. Took about forty minutes from the Jalan 222 turn off. 

Interior - kitchen and Chef and Lenglui and me reaching for a glass - as usual...
In fairness, without the Waze we would never have found the place. It was in a back corner of what looked like a recently constructed and even more recently abandoned shoplot village going by the name of Dana 1 Commercial Centre (or Pusat Perdagangan Dana 1 as the maps will name it). Seemingly very few tenants with lots of "To Let" signs. But the Waze was brilliant, taking us right to the front door of the place (though not initially so good getting back - it couldn't find the road out). There were many admonitions en route to the restaurant to park in the downstairs parking or risk a clamping but there was so much space everywhere in front of closed and vacant shoplots I decided to take a risk and park directly outside the place. I figured I could keep an eye on Willy through the large windows and move it if any of the Complex goons started hovering around (Willy is our nickname for the grey Honda Accord - when we first got it, it felt huge and like driving a grey whale, hence the name).

Specials of the House
The interior was warm and welcoming, with a long bar on one side and tables arranged in four and eight seaters. Figured a maximum of fifty could be catered to. Lots of wood and as said large windows facing on to the street. Very homely. At the far end of the room was a perspex board on which were written all the specials of the house. Wow. Lots of fresh seafood and steak. There was also an a la carte menu on which everything also looked excellent. Also had a Christmas Tree festooned with the usual baubles to which some Ang Pow packets had been added to give a Chinese New Year feel. Quite cute, yes? There was a large window through which we could see the kitchen and a homage poster of Elvis on the side. The King. Of course. Also a poster of the code of the Native North American peoples gave a sense of soul and spirit to the place. A reminder that we are all temporal beings connected to the Great Spirit. Who hunt and eat the buffalo. Om.

Squid Nuggets
We were about thirty minutes ahead of time so we sat down and got an ice bucket for the Oyster Bay SB. It needed about ten minutes to chill so I took a quick walk around outside to get a sense of the place whilst Lenglui sat whatsapping the incoming Texas (who would be joining us with his squeeze the FBQ). It did feel like a ghost town, though there were a few restaurants and outlets looking to try and make it. I couldn't see what would attract people to come here. The light drizzle just added to a sense of desolation about the place. Location wise, on a good day it would be easy to get to - U turn back on the Subang airport road, past the Citta Mall, hang a left and you are here. My guess is that Citta Mall takes much of the traffic. It also has lots of named food outlets which is always a good draw in Malaysia. Ten minutes wandering in the darkling rainy gloom of this concrete maze was enough so it was back into the warm glow of the Memphis.

Escargots
The wine was nicely chilled and the thirst worked up by the stroll was excellently slaked (slaken? slakened?) by the lean acidic crunch and throat tickling crispy fruit of this lovely wine. For some reason the 2014 had crashed in price and we had been picking it up for RM80 (normally RM130 in the supermarkets). Drinking nicely and better than some younger NZ offerings, it has maintained its lean firmness and was delightful both on its own and brilliant with the Squid Nugget starters we had ordered. Salty peppery crunchy bites that accentuated the crisp zip of the wine. Darn tasty, and a great start to the evening.

Mr and Mrs Texas arrived (they had done the Uber which whacked them for premium rate due to the time of day) and we got down to the serious business of ordering. With FBQ, is quite simple - order everything so we all can taste everything. We usually reign in such enthusiasm with the logic that we can't finish so much food (which surprisingly worked tonight) so we settled on four starters and two mains with a side salad. 

Wagyu M5 - double yum!
It would prove enough. We had another plate of the delightful Squid Nuggets and went with the Portobello Mushroom, the Crab Cake and the Escargots. It was all very good, though the Crab Cake felt a bit mushy for my taste. I like it a shade drier and crisper in the potato stakes. Big sizes, good tastes and fair prices - could not argue with anything here. The Escargots were done nicely in garlic butter (with a possible hit of truffle?). Perhaps lacking refinement in delicate textures but hey, we're in a Bistro here. You come for Soul Food not deconstruction or reconstruction or abstraction distraction nonsense. Yes.

And we had indeed come for the steak and they were darling pieces of meat done perfectly.We had ordered one piece of (presumably Australian) Wagyu M5 and one Sirloin with Goose Liver Butter just to compare. I carved them up and everyone got a chunk of each. The Wagyu was the clear winner, but not by much. Both were excellent. The Wagyu took it on texture and mouthfeel but in taste and quality terms both pieces were darn good. The Goose Liver butter was a cute surprise and soaked the sirloin with a cream fatty softness that helped it slip across the cheeks so sweetly. And it all came with a plate of roast potatoes, carrots, cauliflower, and (gasp!) Brussels Sprouts which were done perfectly. I have a total weakness for these softly bitter green little chaps. Everyone else vehemently asserted that they hated them so I was able to drizzle them with the gravy and totally glutton out. Happy as a dog in the mud. We had also ordered a salad which went pretty much untouched - there was more than enough food for four without it. 

Sirloin with Foie Gras Butter - yum
We had the meat with a magnificent Australian Shiraz that Texas had brought whose name escapes me - might have been an Executioner or Judge or one of these Wine Poetry jobboes. Whatever, it was an excellent match - light pepper silk with a velvet caress on the meat. Top, top end. (note - Texas read this and texted the name - Two Hands Gnarly Dudes)

We finished off with a delightful chocolate souffle kind of lavabomb with a dollop of ice cream on the side that erupted with cocoa goo and milky cold in the mouth and made for a well pleasant sweetener. 

Corkage at RM20 a bottle for ice buckets and decent glassware felt extremely reasonable compared to what one gets elsewhere for far more outlay (eg Osteria Realblue). Food was pretty fast out of the kitchen. Solid service, no real complaints. Definitely one to go back to, and quite often if time permits. One of those default places you feel can confidently go and get great food at fair price. Foodie friends said they had been going there for quite some time. Easy to see why. Total bill of RM400 inclusive of three bottles corkage for four people felt most friendly. 

Chef KJ Tan
The affable Chef KJ Tan came over to say hello and we shared a glass of wine with him. Clearly he has a passion for the kitchen and the meat and wine, and is one of those old rock and roll souls given his selection of decorative album covers adorning the walls of Memphis. Not sure what is the story behind Memphis and the web is remarkably silent on the point. Have to sit down with Chef next time and split a bottle to find out. And eat more of his wonderful wagyu. Come and join us! But make a reservation - it might be full. Cheers!


Memphis Bistro
D6-70G, BLK 7,
Pusat Perdagangan Dana 1
Jalan PJU 1A/46,
PJU 1A,
47301 Petaling Jaya
Selangor DE

Tel +603 7843 6818
HP +6012 3068717

Photos by kind permission of FBQ Jan Shaw


Code of the Native Americans