There are quite a few restaurants that serve Fried Chicken in Singapore, and one of Mky's favourites from young is Arnold's Fried Chicken, at City Plaza. Although the restaurant looks like a fast-food type restaurant, there is actually staff that serves you, all the way from the greeter who seats you, to you receiving your food at your table. This seems a little confusing at first, but I found out later that the fast-food counters are more for take-out orders and for the end-of-meal payment.
On to the food~! From the many reviews on HungryGoWhere, there are many who rave about Arnold's being the best Fried Chicken in Singapore. And both Mky and I quite agree! Succulent, juicy chicken with the crispy and oh-so-tasty skin as a flavoured accompaniment. (I'll leave the food description to Mky to take over).
And those fries~! Crispy fries that are thicker than your fast-food average - Mky believes that they fry the potatoes with a little of the chicken batter to give it that awesome flavour. I could eat that all day!
Arnold's Fried Chicken
810 Geylang Road
#02-99/101
Tel: +65 6746 2372
City Plaza
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Savor Rye La Mian Xiao Long Bao Restaurant
We chanced upon this noodle house, and what a surprise find it was, especially for a noodle fiend like me. It seems the cuisine here is Shanghainese and is slightly different from the normal Chinese fare we get elsewhere. The texture of the noodles is consistent and springy that gives the impression that you're getting your money's worth of carbs in every bite - just the way I love my chinese 拉面 (la mian). haha..
Unusually, Mky also likes this restaurant. She doesn't quite share the same enthusiasm that I do for noodles, but this restaurant has one particular dish that is quite unique and rare to see in the Singapore food circuit - Tomato & Egg Noodles. The sauce for this dish is heavy on tomatoes and very tasty (albeit healthy), with wisps of egg floating within the thickened soup. We've been here twice and Mky has ordered the same dish both times. She tends to do this a few times when she finds a dish she likes until the explorer in her starts getting experimental.
We tried the 小龙包 (Xiao Long Bao) which was so-so. In comparison with my favourite 小龙包 at Chinatown Food Centre, the skin was too thick dulling the enjoyment of having the warm broth burst out after a delicate bite.
Overall, for a Chinese restaurant, the food is light on MSG - I find myself not getting the post-makan MSG effect - and the dishes are quite competent. One caveat though, the small restaurant has a very limited seating capacity, and if you go at the peak hours, you might find yourself sharing a table with other patrons.
Savor Rye La Mian Xiao Long Bao Restaurant
3 Kampong Bahru Road, Singapore
Tel: +65 6223 5038
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Home-Made: Beetroot Couscous/ Quinoa Salad

Mky was inspired to make a couscous salad one weekend. However, she had to hold on to that urge for an entire week due to the lack of time. By the following week, she had so many ideas and was just bursting to get started! In this instance, she mixed in quinoa as well. Presenting, the Beetroot Couscous/Quinoa salad that Mky made!
I'll leave her to describe the process. I vaguely remember the process enough to describe it! It was a very sweet and sour dish, and a great balance of carbo, protein and greens. It can be eaten both warm or cold.
For dinner that night, Mky also grilled a few pieces of chicken with tumeric along with a grilled pineapple to supplement the dish. Fantastic!
This last pic shows Mky's own dish, having a little bit of a rabbity flourish to it. =)
Monday, July 4, 2011
Emerald Garden Thai Food
One of our fave eating/drinking places, Bar Bar Black Sheep, is host to a few very interesting food stalls. The original reason we went there was to try out the burgers from Smokin' Frogz. There's also very excellent Indian food there, which we've recently shared with our friends to rave reviews. But seeing as how Thailand has just voted in their new Prime Minister, we'll focus on the Thai outlet called Emerald Garden Thai Food.
Here we have the Papaya Salad. A fantastic dish made fabulous by the sauce used. Mky should be able to explain what it is.
Of course, what would a visit to Bar Bar's be without imbibing an exotic import? We gave the Tetley's Bitter a go, and we liked it - foamy like a Kilkeny.
Me is not a spice-lover, and so Mky will have to describe their Tom Yum soup for you. I can only say there was a lot of seafood in it!
And finally, the dish of the night - the Pork ?? This dish is listed as an appetizer on the menu... and it costs a whopping $12. But considering you're getting a whole lotta tasty meat, its not bad. Mky and I ate it as our shared main with rice. It made a nice balanced meal when eaten together with our other orders.
Emerald Garden Thai Food
@ Bar Bar Black Sheep
879 Bukit Timah Road
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Random: Juchheim Baumkuchen
Spotted this little shop at Takashimaya basement selling baumkuchen, a popular dessert in Japan that originated in Europe but has a German name. Mky is a big fan of this type of layered cakes and she just stood there watching in fascination as the lady separated the portions to be packed into boxes for customers. We didn't buy any cos Mky had just bought one from Muji. Aww..
Juchheim, Takashimaya Shopping Centre B2.
Juchheim website (Japan)
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Home-Made Savoury Pikelets with Salad + Cheesy Mini Sausages
Savoury pikelets filled with chopped cheesy sausage, shredded honey baked ham, sweetcorn, shredded snow peas and sugar snap peas, ground flax seeds and rolled oats. Packed as a bento for my workday lunch, with a side serving of shredded romaine lettuce and skewered baby tomatoes, a wedge of Japanese cucumber and a few extra mini cheese sausages on the side. All prepared with love by Mky. =9
This tasty lunch treat was a real interesting dish, inspired by Hungry Monkey by Matthew Amster-Burton, a book that Mky came across in the library about a food-loving father's quest to raise an adventurous eater.
Nutritious, fun, and as is Mky's trademark.. healthy!
(and I'm reading said book now too...)
Mky: Hungry Monkey is a fabulous book... couldn't put it down once I started! If/when we have a kid in the future, would be awesome if she loves talking about food like how Iris, the child protagonist does! For now, I'll stick to cultivating an adventurous eater in Dky first :)
Savory pikelets make good pantry-clearing, bento-lunch meals, as virtually anything that isn't too soggy or runny will turn out well when panfried in sweetish pancake batter (though some tasty bacon and/or ham will really jazz flavours up, as will serving it with some chutney or good maple syrup). I try to make them healthier by using a nonstick frypan (used just a smidgen of oil), by shredding in a ton of sugar snap and snow peas, and by adding a good amount of ground flax (which also acts as a thickener) and raw rolled oats for texture. Give it a try sometime, it's hearty, heart-warming (who doesn't love pancakes?!) and easy to go wild and creative with!
Thursday, June 16, 2011
House of Robert Timm's
Welcome to the House of Robert Timms at Wheelock Place. I'm sure the coffee drinkers out there would have come across this coffee label at your local Cold Storage. The cafe we're featuring here on the other hand, not only serves several types of their favourite coffee brews, they also do all-day breakfasts! They are located where the old Borders' Cafe used to be.
Mky told me about the time her colleagues brought her here once and since then, she's been raving about the Eggs Benedict. Look at the above shot and marvel at the gorgeousness of that runny poached egg! This dish is accompanied by smoked turkey breast, bacon, baked beans and a side of salad.
I had the 3-Way Toasts on the other hand - sauteed mixed mushrooms, bratwurst sausage and a poached egg on each slice of toast, accompanied by a portion of fresh vegetables. I really enjoyed savouring each toast slowly, mixing them up for a different sensation each time.
Whether you prefer to sit al fresco and watch the people and cars at the Paterson Road/Orchard Boulevard junction, or sit indoors in the surprisingly chilly air-conditioning, this cafe caters to whichever preference you may have.
501 Orchard Road, #01-02
Wheelock Place
Tel: +65 6735 9201
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Monday, June 6, 2011
Home-made Brown Rice Salad
Home-made Brown Rice Salad by Mky. Made for a delicious, wholesome and colourful lunch today, with sweet accents from the chopped apples being a highlight of the dish. This brown rice salad has plenty of veggies (a hallmark of Mky's usual style), wholegrains and Omega-3 oils. Mky likes to cook by colours; the more colours you have in your daily intake of food, the better for your health! This dish wins in that category hands down - purple from the brown rice, reds/yellows/oranges and green from the vegetables and white/pink from the apple and salmon.
Another point to note.. Brown rice was my least favoured carbohydrate, something I'd never choose to eat on my own. So even though we're talking abt brown rice here, this dish is so good, I'm asking for seconds! Many meals ago, I gave Mky some advice on how to make the healthy but not very tasty brown rice palatable - cook it with other things! ;) We've come a long way baby!
What's inside it: brown rice (75%), basmati rice (25%), steamed salmon fillet (flaked and deboned painstakingly by Mky), corn kernels, yellow and red bell peppers, chopped kale, chopped snow peas, apples with baby tomatoes on the side.
This dish was initially to be made with cous cous, but since we were unable to find said grain in the nearby supermarket, Mky modified it to work sensationally with brown rice instead. =)
Mky's Agarationcipe* for Brown Rice Salad
(can be enjoyed hot or cold; *to "agar-agar" or "agak-agak" means to roughly estimate in local slang vernacular)
Quantity feeds 1 Dky and 2 Mkys for lunch.
You will need:
Raw rice, washed (75% brown and 25% basmati or whichever proportion you prefer)
1 large yellow bell pepper
1 large red bell pepper
1 large fillet of raw salmon
Sweetcorn kernels
Chopped raw snow peas
Chopped kale or any other dark green leafy vegetable that is more leafy than stemmy
Chopped apple (skin on), soaked in a bit of salty or lemony water to prevent oxidation
Mky's Energy-saving Method:
-> Place washed rice into a large pot and top with sufficient water to cook the rice (or perhaps with just a teeny bit less than you will usually use). Add a few generous shakes of sweet paprika powder and a pinch of salt.
-> Top the raw rice/water with quartered chunks of yellow and red bell pepper. Top the bell pepper stack with the raw fillet of salmon.
-> Bung a lid onto the pot and allow the whole mix to steam away.
-> Once the salmon has become perfectly pink and juicy tender, carefully lift it out of the pot (be careful not to overcook it, Mky removes it from the heat once it goes opaque, the residual heat will cook it nicely). At the same time, remove the chunks of bell pepper, which will also be nicely steamed and soft.
-> What remains in the pot is the half-cooked rice, steeped in the yummy Omega-3 oils that have seeped from the salmon, and the sweet juices from the bell peppers, which will then be absorbed by the rice grains as they plump up. Nothing wasted! Give the rice grains a good stir to homogenise everything, then return the pot with lid to the heat source.
-> While the rice continues to bubble away happily, allow the bell peppers to cool before dicing them up to easy to eat pieces.
-> Break the tender salmon up into nice, toothsome chunks, deboning it as you go along. Reserve any liquid to mix back into the rice later. As for the salmon skin, either discard, or feed to any nearby fish-skin lover (Mky is one such).
-> 2-3 mins before the rice is done (when it is just slightly too damp), dump in the chopped snow peas, cooked sweetcorn kernels and chopped green leafy vegetables. Allow the vegetables to cook briefly before removing from heat.
-> Allow pot contents to rest for a few minutes before fluffing up the rice with a spatula. Mix the salmon chunks and chopped bell peppers into the pot of rice and vegetables, integrating them well but taking care to not mash the rice with too much force. Finally mix in the cubed apples.
-> Flavour to taste with a lashing of sesame oil, lemon salt, light low-sodium soy and freshly ground black pepper. Don't overdo it with the seasoning, allow the sweet, delicate flavours of the fresh ingredients shine through instead for a healthier, more satisfying meal!
-> Enjoy hot or cold, with a serving of juicy baby tomatoes on the side!
**Other possible variations: Endless! Raw nuts such as flaked almonds, crushed walnuts and cashews, vegetables such as shredded cabbage, diced carrots, kidney beans, garbanzo and cooked navy beans, sauteed onions and mushrooms, cubed feta cheese, shredded chicken breast or tuna fish... go wild! Even add some diced chili for a bit of Asian spicy kick!
Already thinking of making another evolution for next week, with skinless chicken breasts rubbed in curry spices, grilled and cubed, tossed with brown rice and diced cucumbers, tomatoes and thinly sliced celery, sauteed red onions and shredded cabbages, served with a side bowl of plain yogurt, topped with flaked almonds.
How's that sound? Thumbs up?
Home-made Tumeric Rice
Mky made rice one weekend in April. It had lots of good stuff in it - fish, chicken, many types of vegetables, prawns and one of my favourite carbs, rice! The main seasoning for this dish was tumeric and lemon slices..?? which was brought out by combining them all into a main pot. This dish shares some similarities with the Spanish Paella, but a Paella, it is not. Mky is getting real quick at preparing dishes these days, and even though cooking time was only about 30 minutes, we were able to tuck in soon after.
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