EVERYTHINGYOU CAN IMAGINE

and always trust your heart.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Hong Kong : Temple street claypot rice | Go to post

 

Four Seasons VS Hing Kee 


Oyster Omelette


 
 
Four Seasons: It was so crispy to the point where the person siting beside you can hear you crunch this baby up in the noisy eatery.   
                
Hing Kee: Oily. Oily. Oily. One bite and I can feel the oil all over my mouth and lips. It was a little crispy at the sides but unfortunately a little soggy in the middle.                                  


Vegetable 

Basic blanch in hot water with oil method.

 
Four Seasons: Tung Choi (Kang Kong) accompanied with fermented bean paste. Eating veg with fermented  bean paste is something new for me. Make sure to stir the bean paste thoroughly and evenly otherwise it is going to be very salty.  

Hing Kee: Kai Lan with garlic. I like my kai  lan to be crunchy so this suits me just fine.


Claypot Rice


Pork ribs with Chinese sausage
 
Four Seasons: Can you see the colour of the rice under the sausage? This is the first sign that you know it is going to be good because the sausage imparts the favour to the rice. Pork ribs were seasoned perfectly.          

Hing Kee: The rice came out cleanly from  the bottom. Pork ribs here have more meat and were well seasoned. Chinese sausage given here was half the portion of Four Seasons.
       

Chicken

 
Four Seasons: Chicken with salted fish. The chicken was well seasoned and juicy. However the salted fish was not fragrant, it does not give the "I-can-eat-another-bowl-of-rice" taste. So far, the best salted fish I have eaten was from Malaysia.        

Hing Kee: Chicken with Chinese sausage. The chicken was a little on the blend side even after adding the dark soya sauce.



Modem Style

 
Four Seasons: Eel with pork ribs. Yummy. Something different for me since eel is not the kind of food I get to eat everyday.                     

Hing Kee: Frog leg. Has a light favour but nonetheless it was good.
         

Other Variants








Hing Kee has an extensive menu. Seafood was not on my list to order at a claypot rice eatery. But my travel companion was having metallic taste, so we ordered a plate of clams with black bean sauce. Taste wise was average but on a salty side.
                                                                                 

Overall, I prefer Four Seasons over Hing Kee. Order a bottle of beer and a large plate of oyster omelette for a late night snack.
Tip: 15-20 HKD (ie. +/- 3SGD) for a plate of vegetable. Therefore order more ! Load up on fibres.
Order 2 types of claypot rice for a group of 4 small eaters is sufficient (unless you love to eat a lot of rice).  

10:41:00 AM

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Bangkok....... | Go to post

Day 8

I was in bed the entire day! 

Had real bad stomach flu (ie diarrhea, vomiting and fever)

~ Holy moly ~

holiday + overseas + being sick = no joke 

 

Day 9 

 

Felt better and hungry in the morning because I puked my dinner 3 hours after I consumed it.

   So my mum and I walked down the next few streets and bought breakfast. 

 

 

 

A woman used a pail as her marketing trolley.

 

 

Street side market 

 



 

Don't really like the way this stall vendor handle raw meat, vegetables, fruits and money. 

 

  

Coconut pudding was absolutely yummy.  

 

 

Soya bean curd and small crunchy dough fritters. 

 

 

Normal, short, soft and twisted dough fritters. 

 

 

These are the accompaniments to the soya bean curd. 

 

 

  

 Ta-da! Breakfast!  

 

 

 One last meal at terminal 21 before heading to the airport.  

 

 


Of course I had to order double scoop rum and raisin!

3:04:00 PM

Monday, August 19, 2013

Bangkok...... | Go to post

Day 7

 

 

China Town  

 

 

Old oil tins 

 

 

 


 

Vintage scooter 

 

 

  Small alley

 

 

Dried shark fins and jaw

 

 



Crowded gold jewellery  shop 

 

 

Bird nest shop 

 

 

Soft boiled eggs, gingko nuts and honey eaten together with the bird nest soup.  

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Dislike to hear the splashes the fishes made when someone throw a piece of bread into the water.  Yuck! 

 

 

 

old Chinese design coffin shop 

 

 

Dinner was at sukhumvit soi 38

 

 

 

 

 

 

 






 

 



9:58:00 PM

I don't think you've heard ★

My name is

Alicia Wan.

I love to watch dramas, movies, read books and cook if I have the time.

I listen ♪ to English, Chinese, Cantonese, French, Korean, Japanese, Italian & Instrumental songs. After all, music is universal regardless of its language (>.-)

I love travelling . *grins* :) Been to Australia, Brussels, China, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Italy, Malaysia, Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, South Africa, South Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, United States, Vietnam.

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