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Oribe Sushi, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

26 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by denisegan in Japanese, Restaurant review

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Tags

abalone, aburi, aji, anago, authentic japanese cuisine, authentic japanese cuisine in kuala lumpur, barracuda, blow-torched, botan ebi, cod sperm, engawa, flounder, flounder's fin, hinata, hirame, horse mackerel, hotate, ikura, japanese restaurant kuala lumpur, japanese restaurant malaysia, japanese restaurant review, kamazu, mackerel, nodoguro, omakase, oribe, otoro, prawn, restaurant review, rockfish, scallop, sea urchin, seiki aji, shirako, sushi, sushi oribe, top japanese restaurants in kuala lumpur, tuna belly, uni

2015/01/img_5426.jpgI was treated to Oribe Sushi about a week ago, and a treat it was! Chef Hideaki Oritsuki was previously head chef at Sushi Hinata. I gave Sushi Hinata a 6.5 back then… while they do have fresh raw ingredients, the quality of the rice as well as a couple of other factors dragged the score down. I was slightly perturbed that the fish was pre-sliced and placed in a box for convenience and quick service. That’s not how it’s done in Japan!

I digress, so I gave Sushi Hinata a 6.5 then. Oribe Sushi would be a 7.5. Chef Ori has addressed the rice issue and uses Japanese rice in his sushi. It makes a world of difference! His ingredients are fresh and flown in from Japan as well and it helps that he was more than happy to talk about Japan and where he sources his ingredients from. Very friendly chap he is! Ambience I excluded from the score, so I must add that while the sushi counter is sufficiently pleasing, the rest of the restaurant didn’t look like that of a high end restaurant.

We both had the omakase, which is priced at RM450 for dinner. So here goes!2015/01/img_5435.jpgSashimi platter as a first course; Otoro (Fatty tuna belly), Clams (Tsubugai), Flounder (Hirame), Botan ebi (Prawns) and Bafun Uni (Sea Urchin).2015/01/img_5434.jpgIt was delicious, and as fresh as you’d expect sashimi to be. We ended up sucking at the prawn head to get all the lovely,cholesterol-rich prawn brains out! Not a look you’d want to go for on a date but it’s worth it I think! The only thing that was slightly disappointing on this plate is the Hirame, which could have been better and “livelier” so to speak.2015/01/img_5437.jpgShirako (Cod Sperm) served with ponzu and ginger. My first encounter with the infamous Shirako wasn’t very pleasant so I half dreaded this dish when it came. I’m quite happy to say that it was absolutely delicious! Creamy in texture and fresh, well complemented by the tang of the ponzu sauce, it made for a perfectly well balanced palate and leaves no lingering unpleasant aftertaste. Lovely!2015/01/img_5444.jpgHerring roe marinated with dashi, pressed and then topped with bonito flakes. It’s a fun dish, I could very clearly hear whenever my partner bit into it! Let’s just say it’s pretty crunchy 😉2015/01/img_5448.jpg

2015/01/img_5451.jpgAbalone that has been steamed for 7-8 hours. Tender to the bite and loses none of its natural flavour. A dish well done.2015/01/img_5453.jpgCawanmushi – standard as far as steamed egg custards go unfortunately. Nothing special here.2015/01/img_5458.jpgGrilled Nodoguro (rockfish) was well cooked, had the perfect amount of sear to it and meltingly soft flesh. Would have been stellar if the skin had been a little more crisp!2015/01/img_5462.jpgSeiki Aji (Horse Mackerel). The chef emphasized that this is one of the best kinds of horse mackerel in Japan as it was caught in Kyushu where the currents are strong. It is always served with ginger and spring onion. Now this was outstanding! I usually don’t pay the horse mackerel much attention but this had beautifully fatty and rounded flavours. Usually this fish tends to taste and smell a little strong but there was none of that here and I think this would be a prime example of how it should taste like! Full marks here.2015/01/img_5465.jpgEngawa (Flounder’s Fin) – I always give brownie points whenever I get Engawa in any respectable sushi joint. It’s uncommon, or at least in Malaysia and Singapore it is. It’s got a chewy texture and is mild and sweet in taste. I wish I could have had more! There’s a “BUT” in here though… it was better in Japan ;(2015/01/img_5467.jpgThis I very blithely requested XD. Aburi Otoro! (Blow-torched tuna belly). OH SO GOOD!!!! With a couple of drops of sudachi juice and salt. Melts in the mouth with the fatty bits all softened to gorgeous tenderness and fabulous with that slight char. Wish it were a thicker slice though >.< 2015/01/img_5474.jpgAburi Hotate (Blow-torched scallop) with yuzu zest. I asked very nicely for it to be topped with uni 😀 After all, that’s what all the food blogs out there are for right? To advise you to exercise some control over the chef’s discretion. He was really sweet and acquiesced to the request though. Another delicious morsel is thus born! Hotate is creamy by itself already, so topped with the uni it makes for gold!2015/01/img_5470.jpgKamazu (Baby baraccuda); some fish requires a little charring to break down the fat and toughness before its full potential comes out. This one had its skin on. Raw skin never tastes good, so blow-torching it is a nice way to render the skin delicious and yet be able to enjoy the flesh without it being cooked to death. 2015/01/img_5486.jpgOh this… stuff that dreams are made of! It’s a little different in that he added some shiro ebi (white prawns) into the mix. Usually it’s just Uni, Ikura and Negitoro (Tuna belly and scallions). Nevertheless! Always a perfect combination. Can never go wrong with this if you’ve got the fresh ingredients!

I forgot to take pictures of two of the sushi that we had… the Saba (Mackerel) with seaweed and the Anago (Eel) that was had yuzu zest and half of it basted in a sweet sauce and the other half served with a touch of salt. 2015/01/img_5488.jpgSatisfying end to the meal. Green tea ice cream 🙂2015/01/img_5478.jpgCouldn’t resist another picture of the cholesterol bomb!

So overall, a 7.5 out of 10. Fresh ingredients and affable chef were plus points, as well as the availability of Engawa and Shirako. Minus points would be that it’s always better in Japan, and they would be more generous with the portions and number of servings in Japan. Also, no surprises with the menu, perhaps there could have been a little more in that area. Ambience would have been a real killer if we weren’t seated at the counter!

Sushi Oribe

Ground Floor. Block C-1, Vipod Residences, No6, Jalan Kia Peng, 50450 Kuala Lumpur., 43000

+60-3-2181-4099

Lunch 12:00-15:00(Last Order: 14:30)    Dinner 18:00-23:00(Last Order: 22:00)

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Kinki, Singapore

07 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by denisegan in Japanese, Restaurant review

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Tags

aburi otoro, ambience, collyer quay, engawa, foie gras, fusion, hotate, japanese, japanese restaurant, kinki, Kinki sushi, Marina Bay Sands view, mbs view, otoro, restaurant review, scallops, sea urchin, singapore, sushi, tai, truffle, uni

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Kinki Sushi remains one of my top favourite Japanese restaurants in Singapore. The setting is pretty casual and relaxed. Perfect to kick back after a day at work or if you just want something special for dinner.DSC00024

The best part of this restaurant is that it overlooks this breathtaking view:DSC00020

Its amazing isn’t it? There’s also a rooftop bar where you can have snacks and drinks but I haven’t checked it out. Was just there for the food 😉

They serve the usual very fresh sushi and the custom Kinki dishes which are amazing. I must warn you that the bill can get pretty steep depending on what you order. Check out the menu and the prices:-

http://www.kinki.com.sg/wp-content/uploads/Web-Kinki-Dinner+Lunch-Menu0211013.pdf

So I just had to try the Tai Carpaccio, something similar to what I had in Aoki. The taste is almost identical except that at Aoki they served the fish with shaved fresh truffles on top. At Kinki they just make this with truffle oil. Still delicious nevertheless and I love the way they presented this dish. The dish and the dark table gives a stark contrast in coloring. The fish is rendered translucent and looks like a work of art.DSC00036 DSC00041

Not my best shot. I don’t know where my other pics went to. These pictures could have been better had I done something about the white balance but I was hoping to capture some sort of that dinner at dusk kind of look ;pDSC00059

A bowl of expensive but divine sea urchin. It is indeed my ideal type of sea urchin: fresh, plump, not too firm, beautifully creamy and yet has some form to it (I hate sea urchins that come in pure mush form but then again I don’t like it when its too firm, there isn’t much flavour in those). A little soy sauce on the uni sashimi, place it onto some crisp seaweed and you’re all set to go!DSC00051

The view… I just can’t get over it.DSC00073  On top is the Engawa with sudachi zest. Very good balance of texture, firm and chewy yet it seems to have some fat in it to round the flavours all up. The slight torch and zest gives it a nice twist and a fresh tang to the very enjoyable bite of sushi.

Below the Engawa is the Otoro Aburi, seared fatty tuna. This was really good as well, the fat just melts away in your mouth while the seared top and, what I suspect is yuzu or some citrus, all helped to cut through all that buttery fatty piece of fish. It can get pretty cloying if you have too many pieces of fresh otoro, but the seared otoro is a whole different ball game.

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And here is the first bomb (by bomb I mean it is the THE BEST) of the night: The pan-seared foie gras and Hokkaido scallop sushiDSC00079

The seared foie gras and fresh scallop tastes so amazingly divine served like this! I suppose its because both ingredients are on the creamy tasting side, with the foie gras imparting a rich gamey depth to the sushi while the scallop lends it a light and briny ocean flavor. And then there’s that sauce, it just… ties everything up together in one delightful little parcel. Game Over.DSC00082

Cholesterol for the night.DSC00085

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The Kinki Okonomiyaki was a surprise. To be honest I wasn’t expecting much from it but it was delicious as well. It’s got Hokkaido scallops, prawns, streaky bacon,sweet onions and buffalo mozzarella. Normally okonomiyaki is made up of batter, lots of cabbage, and other toppings topped with mayonnaise and bonito flakes. THIS okonomiyaki has a pastry base, the flaky pastry base that everybody loves and it remained crispy for a long time even with all the delicious toppings all laden on top. And the portion is generous, so if you’re not a fan of sushi, or are on a budget but would like to try out this place then this is the dish for you.

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Lastly, my baked scallop in butter topped with sea urchin. This was the second bomb of the night. While my cousin thought this was a tad overcooked, I though it was cooked perfectly. It is definitely not rubbery and didn’t have much resistance when I cut through it. It remained succulent and retained all the flavors of a fresh scallop, soaked in a luscious butter and chive gravy. As if that weren’t enough they had to top it all off with a dollop of that beautiful sea urchin. I can’t even imagine how to describe it further. Heaven in a bite. This dish and the foie gras with scallop dish are my top faves of the night.DSC00104

Pure bliss.DSC00116

Finish off your evening with some goma ice cream and work off all that food with a walk with the MBS in full view. ❤

Aoki restaurant – Singapore

29 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by denisegan in Japanese, Restaurant review

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

aburi, anago, aoki, ara, chutoro, engawa, hotate, japanese, maguro, otoro, restaurant review, sashimi, sayori, scallop, singapore, sushi, truffle, truffle cawanmushi

Aoki Restaurant at Shaw Centre is a restaurant by the Les Amis group. You can hardly find it as the entrance is very obscure and the name of the restaurant is written in Japanese. It seems to be the trend for sushi gems to be hidden away in hard-to-find hideouts, especially in Japan but I didn’t expect it to be like this in Singapore as well. I like it though, the hunt and then the rewards you reap once you find these temples of food.

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Set lunches are affordable ($35-50) as it serves top quality Japanese food in a traditional Japanese ambience. Dinner sets are available from $40-80. Should you feel like splurging, there is the omakase set during ($100), while dinner sets are priced at $165, $300, $400 and $500.

The bar counter seats 15 guests, however we chose the table seats as those are more conducive for a girly meal. There are only three tables. All in all a very cosy and intimate restaurant. Would love to try the bar counter next time as I like to watch the chefs prepare the food. Makes it taste better 🙂

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So this is the table/room. Very very enclosed if you decide to shut the sliding door all the way. Not for the claustrophobic.

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On a random note, the menus they handed us seemed a little beat up.

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We both decided to go for the $300 omakase dinner sets. Pricey but we’ve planned to make room for a monthly treat like this whenever we can plus we both really really needed the uni!

So to start, raw shrimp mixed with some uni and topped with a dollop of caviar and a sprinkle of edible flowers. The flowers tasted sharp, not unlike shiso leaves and complemented the creamy flesh of the shrimp, uni and the delicately briny caviar. I wished there were more of it 😦

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The next dish came as a surprise. A carpaccio of Tai sashimi in what tasted like truffle oil, chopped black truffles and a generous shaving of white truffle on top. I’m not a crazy big fan of truffles but this dish made me open up and embrace the heady world of truffles. The firm chewy fish in the aromatic oil and truffle slices were absolutely delicious, and to me, very creative.

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Just look at it! Gorgeous!

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Next course: Sashimi

Top left we have an ark shell sashimi and scallop, and going clockwise we have otooro, something that looks like sashimi from a great trevally judging by its creamy pink flesh but I could be wrong, ebi and chutoro.

All very fresh and delicious. Generous thick cuts too. The scallops were creamy, shell was crunchy, otoro and chutoro tasted like butter in my mouth and in fact so did the great trevally sashimi.

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After all that indulgence came a Japanese tomato, which is unlike any other tomato that you’d normally find in the grocery stores in Singapore. The locally grown tomatoes in South East Asia are hard and sour most of the time. This tomato, with its bright red color, firm yet supple flesh, tasted savory when dipped into the salt. Its like a red tomato sauce party in your mouth and is just so so rich in flavor. IMG_8387

Truffle cawanmushi. The cawanmushi is slightly thicker in texture than your normal Sushi Tei restaurant, but still delicious. Again topped with chopped truffles, probably a dash of truffle oil and shavings of white truffle. Egg custard perfumed with truffles made for a pretty heady experience. I would love to try making foie gras cawanmushi one of these days. Bet that would be amazing!

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Now this was when I got slightly annoyed. More of the waitress’s fault rather than the chef/restaurant. I know that we were at the tables and not the counter, but I do think we still deserved to know what type of fish we were being served. The waitress served me sushi and just said “white fish”. I KNOW it is white fish, I can totally see it from the color, but it tells me nothing else. I asked every time she served sushi about the type of fish that was being served. They always had to go and check with the chefs, which I thought was pretty bad. Shouldn’t you know what fish you are serving especially since you’re working in a pricey sashimi/sushi restaurant? Ok I’m digressing from the main topic.

On the left is Ara sushi, and on the right is Engawa sushi. See, I would never have known the names if I didn’t ask. And it was a good thing I did! They were absolutely delicious! Both of them had a chewy/crunchy texture to it and a light, subtle ocean taste to it. I would have preferred it if the chef had seasoned it rather than leave us to our devices (ie our soy sauce saucers) as I always find it difficult to dip the sushi into the soy sauce without making a mess. Shinji was better in this sense, they seasoned all the food unless they made special sauces for you to sample with the food. Shinji’s gari (pickled ginger) is also way better than Aoki’s, much crunchier and it seemed fresher too.

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Next plate of sushi, the toro and an aburi toro. The fish was good, toro again was buttery while the aburi had a nice scorch to the fatty meat. But it bothered me a little that the shape of the sushi was so long and can’t be popped into the mouth whole. The bite wasn’t to my liking either.IMG_8395

So I flipped the sushi over and finally noticed what was bothering me. The rice is long grained and a bit too tightly packed. I prefer short grained rice in sushi and they must be packed just right such that it doesn’t fall part in your hands but not too tight so that it can still fall apart in your mouth. This needed a little bit more chewing. So a little disappointed on the rice.

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Next, some scallop sushi and sayori sushi. The scallop hardly needs introducing, but the sayori, I’ve never had it before. It is Japanese halfbeak or needlefish. As you can see, the flesh is white with shiny skin and the fish is fresh, the taste itself is very delicate bordering on light.IMG_8399

Uni! My favorite! This uni sushi by itself costs like SGD 28. Yikes. I could get a tray of uni for SGD 45. But of course it wouldn’t be as tasty.IMG_8400

My friend requested for the steak tataki (I think that’s what its called) as her sister highly recommended this dish to her. She was a little disappointed as the beef was cold. She liked the egg though, which, being fresh and well done, had none of the slight but noticeably foul smell that raw eggs tend to have.IMG_8402

Braised anago sushi. I wish it had a little more char on it, but it was good otherwise.IMG_8403

Dessert was not included in the set so we were asked if we wanted to order a dessert. We declined and continued to drink tea and chat for quite a while. Then the chef sent over some fruits on the house (I’m not sure if this was because we were so thick skinned and sitting so long with just tea and not leaving, or if it was because the chefs were being nice, but we appreciated it very much!). IMG_8404

 

All in all a pleasant dining experience, not the best but still pretty good.

Aoki Restaurant

Aoki Restaurant
1 Scotts Road
Shaw Centre #02-17
Singapore 228208
Tel: +65 6333 8015
Mon to Sat: 12noon – 3pm, 6.30pm – 11pm
Sun: 6.30pm – 11pm

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