Friday, December 24, 2010

size does matter

9 - 12 december 2010



the finals of the 2010 figure skating grand prix was held in beijing at the capitol stadium. all the biggest stars of figure skating were here (except kim yu na). had a great time. most of the skating costumes were the usual suspects, except my favorite Ashley Cain from USA. hope she sets a new trend...  :)



I had my GF1 with 200mm zoom with me, but next to these guys and their equipment, man did I feel inadequate







welcome to beijing!

thursday, 9 december 2010


arrived in beijing to a familiar sight - gridlocked traffic, and the sun hidden behind the smog


some days we get surprised by clear skies and a nicer smelling air 


smog again on the day I left on 21 dec. beijing as i remember it

Monday, November 22, 2010

a 10 year old's holiday packing list


yes. nail polish and earrings too

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

recommended eating places by erc & vbabe

Expensive (over US$200/person)
- Mizutani 鮨 水谷
Ginza Seiwa Silver Bldg.,B1F, 8-2-10 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo (Station: Shimbashi 新橋)
東京都中央区銀座8-2-10 銀座誠和シルバービル B1F
(Michelin 3 star, very small place, seats about 8, very hard to book. If you don't speak Japanese might be bit difficult... but then again, you just need to know one word: omakase)

- Sushi Kozasa 小笹寿し
Dai Go Shyuwa Building, 1/F, 8-6-18 Ginza Chuo-Ku (JR Line: Shinbashi 新橋)
東京都中央区銀座8-6-18 第5秀和ビル 1F
(Eric's favourite place, also quite small, but usually can get reservations on the day of, they are also open for lunch)

Great sushi and amazing bargains (under US$50/person)
- Daiwa 大和寿司 in Tsukiji or Sushi Dai 寿司大 next door
東京都中央区築地5-2-1 築地卸売市場6号館
(go early in the morning, and you can't miss the place cos of the crazy long line. Expect to wait at least an hour or more, but at 3500 yen, it's the best omakase deal in town and the food is amazingly fresh. Only thing is that, due to the popularity, it's a bit of a production line, so don't expect any zen experience.)

- Midori sushi 梅丘寿司の美登利総本店 渋谷店
in Shibuya Mark City above the Shibuya train station
(Be prepared to go early or wait for at least 90 mins or more for a table. Evidence: the long long line of locals waiting for a table every single day. About US$40/person)

YAKINIKU (Grilled meat)
- Yakiniku Jumbo Shirokane 焼肉ジャンボ 白金店
東京都港区白金3-1-1 第一麻布ビル1F
(Our new favourite place. Hands down the best beef I've ever had...ever!! Ask for omakase beef, and they will bring you all the special cuts not on the menu. Oh, and must order the Hokkaido soft cream there for dessert! About US$80/person)

UNAGI (eel)
Hitsumabushi nagoya Bincho ひつまぶし名古屋備長 in Ginza
東京都中央区銀座2丁目2番地14号 マロニエゲート12階
(Located inside the Marionette department complex above a huge Tokyu Hands store, this place serves eel grilled on charcoal to order. Must try the house special (the "hitsumabushi"), eel on rice served with extra broth to mix in, ask the restaurant for the picture guide on how to eat. on our last trip in Nov 2008, we went there 3 times!?)


TONKATSU (pork cutlets)
- Maisen Honten まい泉 青山本店
東京都渋谷区神宮前4-8-5 off of Omotesando in Harajuku
(The restaurant is in an old converted bathhouse. Great place for lunch) "Roast" is the fattier cut, more like pork chop, and "hire" is the leaner fillet. The fried ebi (prawns) are yummy too. place is a short walk from the main street. I'd asked the policeman in the police post, and they had the place marked out on a local map - shows how many requests they must be getting for directions!)

GYOZA
- Harajuku Gyoza Lou 原宿餃子楼
東京都渋谷区神宮前6-2-4
(As soon as you spot Kiddy Land on Omotesando in Harajuku, find your way to the road that is directly behind the shop and you'll find it. Make room for it as lunch or a mid-day snack, you can ask them for the English menu - they only serve gyozas, rice and three small side dishes, so don't expect ramen. It was so crowded the same time we tried eating at the place we moved on to somewhere else instead. will definitely try the next trip!)

SUKIYAKI / SHABU SHABU
- Shabuzen しゃぶ禅 六本木店
東京都港区六本木3-16-33 青葉六本木ビル B1F
(Very good quality all-you-can-eat japanese beef, English menu available)


KUSHIYAKI 
(grilled skewers of meat, like yakitori but with more variety)
- Kushisuke 串助 宇田川店 in Shibuya
東京都渋谷区宇田川町12-5
(I've always liked this place, great skewers and variety at reasonable prices)

- Kushiya Shimomura 串屋 しもむら in Roppongi (behind Hard Rock Cafe)
東京都港区六本木5-3-4 第一レーヌビル 1F
(also very good, the set menu is a bargain, but make sure you order the additional beef with wasabi, english menu is available)


TEMPURA
- Tsunahachi 新宿つな八 総本店
Tempura Hayashi はやし in (Tiny family run business, counter sits about 7-8 ppl. Freshly peeled and cut seafood, lightly battered and deep fried in front of you, as you eat. Expensive though, about 15,000-20,000 yen pp). did not try last trip, but if this is the shop in shinjuku, we've been there on previous trips. great food, pity about the (poor) ventilation though. will. come. out. smelly.

Sushi in Tokyo

Thanks Mike for this. You know how much I love Japanese food, especially great sushi! This is reproduced from an article posted by Jaime Ee "after a marathon session of sushi dining". No intentions to plagiarize - just want to have an easy reference for my next trip to Tokyo! Please read his original article here.

Stop 1: Tokyu Supermarket
(Shibuya Station)

While the likes of Tokyo's Isetan and Takashimaya boast takeaway sushi in their newly refurbished food halls, Tokyu supermarket retains its original frenetic self complete with fish vendors trying to out-shout each other to attract customers to their displays of gleaming red slabs of tuna and other freshly cut seafood. Enticing displays of sushi in various permutations call out to shoppers who fill their baskets with dinner for the day. The prices are amazing - fat slices of fish on rice can be had for around 980 yen (about S$13), while roughly cut tuna sashimi went for about 900 yen.

Stop 2: Sushi Daiwa, Tsukiji Fish Market
(getting to sushi daiwa)

YOU may have long given up on the idea of ever getting into this tiny little restaurant that is as famous as the fish market itself. There isn't a single foodie website that doesn't recommend it, which means long lines for sushi breakfasts as early as 5 am. If you're not able to wake up in time with the rest of Japan's tuna, take a chance and go there at around 1 in the afternoon. The market itself would have closed by then but if you're lucky, it will be almost closing time at Daiwa and hardly anyone will be lining up to get in.

That means you might be able to squeeze in with the last diners of the day, at a counter where you sit shoulder-to-shoulder with both locals and non-Japanese in a claustrophobic ambience. But you hunker down and ignore your discomfort as you mutter 'setto' (set) to the amiable chef who immediately starts plonking down fat hunks of toro (tuna belly) on your plate.

Refined elegance is hardly what you get in Daiwa. It's just chop shop service with roughly cut chunks of fish slapped down on rice with no finesse whatsoever. But yes, the fish is fresh and in generous portions - the toro was more of a slab than a slice, albeit so icy that its clean and milky texture was dulled in the mouth. They pay no attention to temperature or presentation, but compared to the other sushi joints in the area, you can't beat Daiwa in terms of value-for-money. A couple of notches above Tokyu, Daiwa is tops in its category. But is it the best sushi you'll find in Tokyo? Not by a long shot.

Stop 3: Midori Sushi, Ginza
7-108, Ginza Korida-dori 1F.
Tel: 5568-1212

LISTED in the Luxe travel guide, Midori is located in the trendy Ginza Corridor, joining a long row of restaurants just below the train tracks. Long queues can be expected, but they thin out closer to the end of lunch time (one thing you notice about the Japanese is that they eat lunch and dinner pretty early) and boasts some of the largest slices of fish or eel on smallish balls of rice one has ever seen. It's probably Ginza's equivalent of Daiwa - where quantity dominates quality but the sheer size of its set meals is enough to make you forget about the cheap quality (albeit fresh) of the fish.

Set meals can be had for as low as 2,190 yen - a large platter of mixed sushi which includes tuna, sea eel (anago), sea urchin (uni), yellowtail (hamachi), salmon roe, shrimp and omelette (tamago), and a small chawanmushi and crab liver salad. If you're hungry, you can really fuel up on one of these sets. Have one of these and you could probably set off on foot from Ginza to Roppongi Hills without the need to refuel. But if you want to expound on the finer qualities of uni sushi, this place would fail. Sure, it's value for money but not value for your palate. But where mass market dining is concerned, this is definitely one of the better places.

Stop 4: Seamon Sushi Restaurant, Sakaguchi Bldg.
6F, 5-5-13, Ginza, Chuo-ku.
Tel: 03-5537-0010. www.seamon.jp.

NOW that you know what 'cheap and good' sushi tastes like, it's time to raise the stakes a little at this very appealing sushi joint that marries modern design aesthetics with Edo-mae (pre-Edo)style sashimi and sushi. Step into a tiny lift which brings you to an equally tiny restaurant that looks more like a really cool bar where patrons sit either at a long sushi counter or mould themselves to fit into the tiny tables that seem to have been scooped out of the adjacent wall.

Lunch sets are affordably priced from 2,940 yen to 6,825 yen. Try the 4,725 yen Seamon set lunch for a delicate and delicious peek into what the restaurant offers. Quality-wise it is several notches above the likes of Daiwa and Midori - and you're eating in stylish surroundings where as much emphasis is placed on the crockery used as the ingredients themselves.

The set starts off with a seaweed and vegetable salad and a homemade sesame tofu square topped with a tiny wafer of dried fish and wasabi. A super fresh oyster is served in its shell with a well-tempered soy vinaigrette, followed by the prettiest shrimp sashimi - sliced thin and fanned out on a rock slab, served with julienned slices of kelp which you roll with the shrimp and squeeze a drop of yuzu juice on. The head of the shrimp is deep fried to a crunchy crisp that you eat whole.

A good selection of sushi is artfully presented one after another - sea bream, tuna, squid, toro, horse mackerel, crunchy baby scallops, and a comforting bowl of salmon roe on top of warm seasoned rice that was exquisite. Sure, it's more expensive than Daiwa or Midori, but affordably so, and you enjoy a better ambience, presentation and yes, higher quality fish.

Stop 5: Sushi Nakata, Mikuni Ginza Building.
5F, 6-7-19 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo.
Tel: 03.3571.0063.
Branch: Imperial Hotel

IF Kyubei is said to be among the top sushi restaurants in Tokyo, Nakata is said to be just one level below. While there is a more convenient outlet at the Imperial Hotel, the original outlet at the Mikuni building offers better quality in a more authentic setting. Mind you, the prices here are not cheap - it's pretty much Kyubei pricing although the standard is definitely a notch lower, which makes one conclude that it is rather overpriced. But if you want to explore the various levels in sushi quality at the top price level in Tokyo, Nakata is a good example.

Authenticity is its selling factor - that's assuming you're open to the idea that nobody here speaks a word of English, and it's patronised completely by locals. It must be, given the looks of surprise that you get when you open your mouth and no Japanese comes out. That doesn't stop the sushi chef from rattling off at you in Japanese earnestly, perhaps in the hope that if he speaks long enough, you'll understand something. He was so earnest that you feel bad about not understanding, so it was a stroke of luck that the waitress turned out to be from China, so some mangled Mandarin later and all was well.

The sushi here is large, so large that the chef kindly cuts each piece into two for easier eating. There was blood red maguro, squid, clam, sardine, grilled anago, and some lovely broiled toro sushi. It wasn't a lot of sushi, and a bill of S$300 for two left a lump in our throats. But the quality was definitely top notch, which you can tell from the sweetness and odour-free uni, which you only get at restaurants of this level. Lunch here was a far sight better than the average quality sushi at the Imperial Hotel branch, which serves to show that so long as one restaurant has branches, it's always best to go to the original.

Stop 6: Sushi Kyubei,
8-7-6 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo.
Tel: 03.3571.6523

SUSHI nirvana is close at hand at the original location of this 71-year-old restaurant run by owner Yosuke Imada for the past 30 years since he took over the reins from his father. Kyubei is known for inventing gunkan-maki - the style of sushi where seaweed is wrapped around sushi rice and topped with roe or uni.

With several branches across the city - and one just across the road from the original - Kyubei has been expanding at an amazing rate, while enjoying enormous press coverage and an A-list clientele from around the world. All this threatens to take away the charm of the restaurant, especially at lunch, when the well-priced sets (about 4,000 yen upwards) are served assembly line style by a chef who slices his fish in advance before fashioning them into sushi and distributes among the six people or so he is attending to. The quality meets standards but is hardly memorable. But go for dinner and it's a different story altogether.

Super milky chutoro sashimi, a beautifully bouncy/crunchy slice of hirame, silky shiroko (whale sperm) so fresh it just needed a light dressing, crunchy deep-fried sea eel bone and mind-blowingly tender steamed abalone - it all sent memories of Daiwa and Midori disappearing into oblivion. It's here that you will truly understand the concept of fine sushi and why it is impossible to get good and cheap sushi that is of this quality and of such high cooking standards. It's the quality of the rice, the temperature of the fish, the way they parboil shrimp to perfection and the expertise of the chefs that make it such a fine dining experience that's well worth the $300 price tag.

Not to mention that owner Mr Imada personally shows up towards the end of the meal to greet and chit chat with customers, passing out copies of an interview he did with the Wall Street Journal. There's no denying that his PR machine is in overdrive as he builds what the WSJ calls a sushi empire, but with sushi this good, he can be forgiven.

Stop 7: Sushiko,
6-3-8 Ginza, Tokyo.
Tel: 03/3571-1968

IF the hype around Kyubei isn't quite your cup of tea, you are guaranteed of an equally good, if not better, sushi meal at the less-publicised but equally venerable Sushiko, also in Ginza. This personal favourite has been around for about a century and is run by a fourth-generation owner, with a quieter, cosier ambience where the focus is more on the food than the hype.

There are two floors of counter seating which fit 11 people each. Fortuitously, we ended up in the coveted second floor, where chef Hirata and his more than adequate English and sommelier skills ensured that we had a memorable meal.

Like most restaurants of this ilk, there is no menu to speak of, and they literally feed you until you tell them to stop, probably at the $350 level. An interesting range of starters included a clean-tasting fresh crab salad, exquisite clam in sake, and an amazing melt in the mouth tuna sushi with absolutely no sign of veins or stringiness. This is achieved by a chef who painstakingly cleaves layer after layer from a slab of tuna, removing all the sinews until he is left with pure, fatty ambrosia that he slices and mounds over perfectly cooked rice. You just can't get enough of this silky smooth mouth feel, and with superb uni, broiled tuna and more, you truly feel that you have achieved the ultimate in sushi dining - if you have to scrimp on other meals, do so, because a meal like this you just cannot miss.

Friday, September 3, 2010

streets of Bangalore


traffic jams in Bangkok, I realised, are nothing compared to Bangalore. After 10 minutes in the rickety bus (which cost an arm and leg to hire by the way), we finally made a u-turn to end up opposite the hotel!


ignore the finger (ya ya I know) and check out the moo-ving traffic on the street




perhaps an indication of how things are in India - plenty of fans in the hotel coach despite the air conditioning and (sealed) windows (lessons from IT Redundancy?), and a first aid box secured by a padlock (perfect for emergencies??) 

despite all the grandeur of Leela, these did not work when I checked into my room - toilet cannot flush, sink was choked, and the shower was leaking and spraying from the hose... sigh

And despite informing the hotel twice that we are postponing the coach departure time by an hour, it was nonetheless waiting for us at the original departure time!

and Indian news would cover the rush to complete the preparation (and the current mess) for the Commonwealth Games in a month's time, and all the potholes on the roads. The following is a good indication of the local sentiments:



Wednesday, 2 Sep 2010

spent the day in the hotel working (no one wanted to leave the hotel to explore the city) and experiencing a traditional Ayurvedic therapy called Shirodhara 'administered' by an Indian man. Ahh, once is enough... enough said


no this is NOT me

we left Bangalore on the 11.05pm SQ flight to Singapore. In anticipation of the evening peak hour traffic jam, we actually left the hotel at 7.30pm and arrived at the airport just after 9pm. Next was a long wait in the sparse airport drinking overpriced lattes

flight departed on time while we tried to cram in sleep for the 4 and a half flight before arriving in SG at 6am, or 3.30am Bangalore time. Easier said than done when it is only 11pm with the excitement of heading home...

Happy to make it home on time (6.30am) to send the kids to school :)

But felt like a zombie with a massive headache for the rest of the day. Hang on, zombies are dead. do they get headaches?

room 268


it takes about 5 minutes to walk to my room, pass 3 loooong corridors. you can't even see the end of the corridor


Bangalore

Tuesday, 31 August 2010


similar to HK, Bangalore is a contrast between real life within and outside the hotel compound. We stayed at the super grand Leela Palace Kempinski Bangalore. Built for a Maharaja!

After flying 5 and a half hours from HK and arriving in Bangalore at 1.40am, it was a nice welcome at 3.30am when we checked in at Leela (after an hour for airport to hotel transfer without any traffic jam). Finally went to bed at 4.30am (7am SG time after settling the logistics etc for next day's itinerary). 


love the columns!





reality is armed hotel guards (with shotguns? for tigers perhaps? seriously doubt their effectiveness against terrorists or other security threats), and scanners before you enter the hotel

Hong Kong

Sunday, 29 August 2010

9 days on the road from Singapore to Tokyo to Hong Kong to Shenzhen to Hong Kong to Bangalore to Singapore with 2 nights spent in an economy class 'bed'. Tiring business trip.

We stayed at the Langham Place Hotel in Mongkok. Pretty impressive hotel and an interesting contrast to the real Hong Kong - grimy buildings and an assault of signs


















Saturday, August 28, 2010

小青蛙!

used to watch this as a kid like, 35 years ago? 小青蛙 in Japanese! Talk about limited programs on TV

Posted by Picasa

Getting to Sushi Daiwa part 2

Turn right when you see the Shrine for the fish riverbed god (literal translation)


Continue walking and turn right into the lane after the red Post Box


Sushi Daiwa!
Posted by Picasa

Getting to Sushi Daiwa!

Thanks to a diner at Sushizamai, I finally discovered the way to Sushi Daiwa, THE sushi place in Tsukiji (unfortunately it is only open in the morning, Sundays excluded)

Get out from Exit 1 of the Tsukiji Station on the Hibiya Line

Turn left at the exit and walk pass the temple towards the Lawson store (across the road). Walk pass all the small shops along the pathway

Turn left when you see the Shell gas station and walk towards the Tsukiji Fish Market



Posted by Picasa

Sushi!

Had lunch at Hitsumabushi today, and to satisfy my craving, it was an early sushi dinner in Tsukiji (at Sushizanmai which incidentally, is open for 24 hours)


Otoro, abalone, snow crab, uni and ikura sushi
x 2
yes I had 2 orders
they were 980JPY per order. It must be a mistake



my favorite Anago sushi. 400 JPY



and the finale - Aburi Otoro sushi x 2. It was heavenly with the baby chives, burnt salt...
398 JPY per piece of heaven
Posted by Picasa

girls day out


Geishas in Ginza. But of course
Posted by Picasa

"No darling we can't bring him home"

Saturday, 28 August 2010


Long queue of visitors to A&F. It's kind of odd seeing the mainland Chinese thronging the place checking out the clothes, or rather the eye candy inside. The Chinese are everywhere


there was no queue (surprisingly) so I took a picture with the topless hunk of the day (I told him it's for my wife)
Posted by Picasa

walking through Ginza

Saturday, 28 August 2010



The main thoroughfare of Ginza was closed to traffic today and picnic tables and chairs were set up right in the middle of the street, in 40C sun. They were not very popular :)



however, most of the locals are still staying off the road and sticking to the pavements. Old habits die hard I guess

Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

豊寿庵 大福


left Tokyo via Narita Airport from Gate 44 on this trip and chanced upon this being sold at one of the food counters located at 3F Narita Airport Terminal 1, Satellite 4 (near Gate 38 - 47). Shio Daifuku (http://www.hojuan.jp/) is utterly delicious and we had some at their store located in Kyoto Shinkansen station end of last year.



Completely frozen straight from factory, it thaws in 3 hours and is just perfect for consumption upon arrival in Singapore. Last for 3 days after thawing.



6 pcs in a box for 1200 JPY. worth every yen.
Posted by Picasa