[Review 1049] Iberian pork leg hoof fetish @ Estudio

06/04/2011

Estudio
金鐘金鐘道88號太古廣場二期LG1樓Great Food Hall 9號舖
Shop 9, Great Food Hall, LG1/F, Two Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Admiralty












UnoMas was the first place that I tried Spanish food, ever since then I have liked Spanish food.
When I saw the squid ink being served, I knew I had to give it a try someday.
I finally went on a day when there were less people.

Estudio is like an open kitchen located in a chic international supermarket with high swivel stools.

The seats are level with the chefs, waitresses and the kitchen, everything can be seen right in front of your eyes such as cutting of the ham and the chefs cooking.
The joint can seat about 12 people.

It was fun sitting in the hustle and bustle of lunch hour, watching people in a rush, queuing to pay at the supermarket tills, eating at Triple Os.

Anyway, I ordered the SQUID COOKED WITH SQUID INK and EGGS COOKED WITH BLACK MORCILLA FROM BURGOS & PIQUILLO.
I wanted to try the Bravas Patatas but I already tried that at UnoMas.

scrambled egg n blackpudding
EGGS COOKED WITH BLACK MORCILLA FROM BURGOS & PIQUILLO
The eggs cooked with black morcilla was the first to arrive. It was basically scrambled eggs with black pudding sausage and skinned peppers.
There was a metal holder put on the plate before serving, the scrambled egg took form of a cake shape when served.
I thought that was quite good, because scrambled eggs usually look like a pile when served.
The taste and texture of the scrambled egg was delicious, money well spent, it tasted even better than the ones at ADC and Star Cafe because it wasn’t buttery or greasy.
Although the taste of the black pudding was faint, the whole dish was yummy, the texture of the egg was so light and the scrambled egg was like droplets of cooked eggs forming in one mass.

squid in ink sauce
SQUID COOKED WITH SQUID INK
I was amazed how tender and soft the squid was. Inside the squid, it was stuffed with its own tentacles. I wish I had taken a picture, but anyway there were lots of tentacles stuffed inside.
The sauce was slightly too sweet for my liking, but was nice for dipping the bread.

It just so happens that where I was sitting, the 5J Iberian ham was sliced right in front of me, the chef kindly gave me a piece to try, and said that it was the most expensive item they served. The leg of ham hung in the cupboard was worth HKD$19000.
The piece of ham I tried was nice and tender, slightly waxy and oily, however I didn’t eat the fat.

Anyway, I wasn’t that full, so ordered the 5J JAMON AND BECHAMEL CROQUETTES

5J JAMON AND BECHAMEL CROQUETTES
The coating of the croquette was nice and crispy, and not too oily. Inside the croquette, the béchamel cheese was liquid. There was lots of ham inside.

More about Jamón ibérico:
Jamón ibérico is ham from black Iberian pigs, that thrive, snuffling on the dusty ground for sweet acorns (bellota) fallen from the trees.
These fat pigs with slender legs are known simply as "pata negra" because of their trademark black hooves.
There are four grades of jamón ibérico, categorised primarily by the diet of the pigs. The curing process remains the same, but the length for which they are aged will differ with the lower grade hams receiving little more than a year of hanging and the very best up to four years.

The age difference can be seen in the finished result with the flesh of the younger hams having a lighter pink colour and those of older hams being a deep, ruby red. The taste too is very different with the acorn richness of the jamón ibérico de bellota lingering on the palate like a fine wine.

The ham served at Estudio was bellota grade, there was a label attached to the ham showing its grade.

black hoof

info tag
GRADING STATUS:

[I]Jamón ibérico de bellota[/I]
From pure Iberico pigs fed on a diet of acorns during the Montanera and granted DO status. These hams are aged for at least three years before being released and often labelled 'reserva' and 'gran reserva' to denote their age.

[I]Jamón ibérico de recebo[/I]
Fed on a diet of cereals and acorns and aged for at least three years.

[I]Jamón ibérico cebo de campo[/I]
Free range, but fed only on a diet of cereals.

[I]Jamón ibérico de cebo[/I]
Commercially reared pigs fed on a diet of cereals.

5J is also known as cinjo jotas. There is a website for 5J products at http://www.cincojotas.com/index-english.htm
Amusingly the website has chinese, so the Chinese are probably big customers of 5J!!

The carving of the ham was interesting, carving it into thin slices, although it is probably best carved by hand, it reminded me of Microtomy and cryosectioning because of the waxy texture of the ham 

When I got the bill, I felt I was in Europe, the typical European handwriting, especially how they write their "1"s, "4"s and "7"sand being addressed senorita (Miss)


[Review 1048] Chocolate Swiss roll @ 美心西餅 Maxim's Cake Shop

05/04/2011

美心西餅 Maxim's Cake Shop
灣仔軒尼詩道27-29號東亞大樓地下
G/F, 27-29 Hennessy Road, Wan Chai
https://www.openrice.com/zh/hongkong/review/chocolate-swiss-roll-e2159697

The chocolate swiss roll at Maxim's has been jazzed up.
They never used to have icing sugar drizzled on top.
Anyway, it still tastes the same as the swiss rolls years ago, the roll is ok, but the cream inside is the nasty chinese salted buttercream.

[Review 1047] Foamy hot chocolate @ MOS Burger

04/04/2011

MOS Burger
樂富聯合道198號樂富廣場2樓2102舖LF09號舖
Unit LF09, Shop 2101, 2/F, Lok Fu Shopping Centre, 198 Junction Road, Lok Fu

This was the sort of drink I was expecting at Kami Teapresso, tea with fancy foam on top.

This was my first hot chocolate in HK from a fast food chain. It is commonly served in KFC and McDs in UK, but not served in HK.

Anyway the Foamy hot chocolate at MOS costs $15. There was lots of lovely foam on top, foamy fun alternative for people who do not drink coffee.

Sugar was provided too which was not pre-mixed, you can adjust the sweetness level to your liking.

The foam at the top was made from milk, and the hot chocolate had a strong taste of cocoa and slightly bitter, which was compensated by adding the required amount of sugar.

Overall, the hot chocolate was fun to drink and didn’t leave a sour aftertaste like other milk products.

[Review 1046] Pistachio Baklava @ 伊斯坦堡特快 Istanbul Express Turkish Restaurant

04/04/2011
伊斯坦堡特快  Istanbul Express Turkish Restaurant
灣仔駱克道66號地下舖
G/F, 66 Lockhard Road, Wan Chai
https://www.openrice.com/zh/hongkong/review/pistachio-baklava-istanbul-e2159428



On my last visit, I had their Turkish ice-cream, since then have added another sweet item to their menu.

They have added the Baklava to the menu, it costs $42 for three.

Baklava (Greek:μπακλαβάς) is a rich, sweet pastry made of layers of filo pastry filled with chopped nuts and sweetened with syrup or honey.
The size of the Baklava's were about 4cm x 4cm, the appearance looked like ordinary pastries with green pistachio filling in the middle.
The top of it was flaky, while the bottom layer was chewy, sticky and oozed with syrup.
In the middle there was moist grounded pistachios that was not sweet.
But overall, it was very sweet from the syrup soaked bottom layer.
If it were less sweet I would have liked it more or if there was cream to go with it.
For $42 it was slightly expensive considering it was just puff pastry, pistachio and syrup.

[Review 1045] Tai O's yummy chinese crepes n da BEST CHIPS in HK @ 大澳小食

04/04/2011
大澳小食
大澳吉慶街70號
70 Kat Hing Street, Tai O
https://www.openrice.com/zh/hongkong/review/tai-os-yummy-chinese-crepes-n-da-best-chips-in-hk-e2159427

At Tai O village there are two popular snacks that were a “must try” for me, the Chinese pizza and Husband roti.

The Chinese pizza was a savoury crepe, a bit like the spring onion pancakes founds in Chinese restaurants.

Apart from Chinese crepes, they also had fried snacks such as fried golden prawns and chips.
The Chinese crepe was made with a few basic ingredients: crepe mixture, egg, spring onions, coriander, sesame and coconut, pickled vegetables (choy po), savoury biscuit cracker and seasoning.

The Chinese crepe was made in a few simple steps:
1) The pancake mixture was spread on the pan and heated till the pancake was formed.
2) An egg was cracked on top of the crepe and spread all over the pancake.
3) When the egg was half cooked the spring onions, coriander, pickled vegetables, sesame and coconut were sprinkled on so that they adhered to the half cooked egg while being heated.
4) A thin piece of savoury cracker was broken into smaller pieces and placed on top, special sauce was then added to the crepe.
5) The pancake was rolled into a roll shape and cut into desired portions and served.








Whilst I was waiting for the crepe, the owner kindly fried a prawn for me to try.
The golden prawns were fried with their heads, tails and shells and the whole thing was edible.
The golden prawns cost $30 per skewer and there were about 15 prawns per skewer; on the menu, the price varies according to different seasons.

Golden Prawns:
These prawns were already deep fried, but re-fried again.
The shells were crispy, yet the prawn was will juicy. The shells were coated with some flour hence the uniform golden coating.

Chinese Crepe:
This was a nice savoury Chinese pancake which was full of flavour emerging from the spring onions and coriander, and interestingly I could taste and smell cumin too which was probably mixed with the coriander.

Begonia fimbristipula drink:
To finish off, got this drink which looked like berry tea, it contained Begonia fimbristipula.
Begonia fimbristipula is meant to be a flower, in chinese 紫背天葵.
I was expecting it to taste like Rose but it tasted like Ribena, the sweetness was just right and the Begonia taste wasnt that strong.
Not sure if the Begonia fimbristipula is a local product from Tai O, but the dried version was sold nearly everywhere in Tai O.

Wild herb tea:
Not sure what herb this was, but there was a gingery spicy aftertaste with sweetness.

Chips:
Before ordering, I just knew they were going to taste good, and they were brilliant.
They looked like thick cut chips but they were not uniform, and the edges were not smooth which indicated they were hand cut by themselves.
The chip was super crunchy on the outside and like liquid in the centre.
The best thing was, they tasted good, WITH/WITHOUT sauce!
It would have been great if there was malt vinegar too!
These chips are as good as the ones at New York Fries, but thicker cut, and the outside is crispy.

[Review 1044] Back for the other stars @ 奇趣餅家 Kee Tsui Cake Shop

04/11/2011
奇趣餅家  Kee Tsui Cake Shop
旺角花園街135號地下
G/F, 135 Fa Yuen Street, Mong Kok
https://www.openrice.com/zh/hongkong/review/back-for-the-other-stars-at-kee-tsui-e2159426


After trying the egg tarts on my previous visit and reading comments on the “gai jai beng – baby chicken cakes”, I decided to come back for them.

As well as baby chicken cakes, I also got red beancurd crunchies – nam yu darn saan.

The red beancurd crunchies were strips of red beancurd flavoured dough twisted, fried until it had a crunchy texture.
They reminded me of nachos and thin crackers and I would have dipped them in cream cheese or hummous if I had it.

Beancurd crunchies:
These had a really strong smell of beancurd, the smell was very prolonging, but the taste of beancurd wasn’t that strong. The crunchies were slightly too salty.

Baby chicken cakes:
These are mini cakes filled with gelatinous filling also containing red beancurd, it was chewy and the inside is similar to the “wife cake”.
I was slightly disappointed because it was not as irresistible as it described by others.
On my first try, I found it too sweet, but after getting accustomed to it, it was irresistible.
The chewy filling seemed to contain sesame, which acts like some friction when you chew.
Overall if they could be less sweet, it would taste better and healthier.

As well Kee Tsui, Yuen Long Hop Hing does really good Baby chicken cakes: too, they are not as sweet and much chewier.
Baby chicken cakes@Yuen Long Hop Hing review:
http://www.openrice.com/restaurant/commentdetail.htm?commentid=2159425

[Review 1043] Yuen Long Hop Hing VS Kee Tsui baby chicken cakes @ 元朗合興餅家 Yuen Long Hop Hing

04/11/2011

元朗合興餅家 Yuen Long Hop Hing

荃灣青山公路荃灣段264-298號南豐中心1樓A134號舖
Shop A134, 1/F, Nan Fung Centre, 264 Castle Peak Road (Tsuen Wan), Tsuen Wan
https://www.openrice.com/zh/hongkong/review/yuen-long-hop-hing-vs-kee-tsui-baby-chicken-cakes-e2159425

I have never heard of this bakery until they rented a stall in Kowloon recently.
I saw the “gai jai beng – baby chicken cakes”, they looked fresh, the shape of them were flatter and slightly bigger than the ones at Kee Tsui.
I think the ones at Kee Tsui are meant to be baby chicken cake bites.

Anyway got a bag to try, the taste and smell was much better than Kee Tsui, although it was sweet, it was not as cloyingly sweet as the ones at Kee Tsui.
I could'nt stop eating them, and they were lovely and chewy!

On the bag, there was a website printed on it (http://yuenlonghophing.com), the website was very good, it had product shots of all the products they do.
It also gives information on where the current stalls are, and there is a $5 coupon for people to print out, but you need to spend $50 to get $5 off.

Baby chicken cakes @ Kee Tsui
http://www.openrice.com/restaurant/commentdetail.htm?commentid=2159426

[Review 7821] Kaya toast @ 一粥麵 Super Super Congee & Noodle

19/12/2020 一粥麵  Super Super Congee & Noodle 樂富聯合道198號樂富廣場1樓1113-1114號舖 Shop 1113-1114, 1/F, Lok Fu Shopping Centre, 198 Junction Road, L...