Thursday, 29 January 2009

Aha...Ahi! Japanese style seafood in Hawaii – Sansei

Visiting Hawaii is a great opportunity to eat great fish. Although a lot of the classic seafood about which I usually write comes from cold waters (and so lobster, crab and oysters are not very present on the menu) there is always fantastically fresh 'ahi' – Yellowfin Tuna. The flesh of the ahi is wonderfully delicious served as raw as sashimi or seared, and is a regular feature on Hawaiian menus. And it's not endangered either – rated as 'least conern' by the World Conservation Union.

Having arrived on the big island of Hawaii (also called Hawaii, confusingly – the capital Honolulu is on the small island of Oahu) for a conference, we've had a little time to explore and found a great spot for Japanese oriented seafood at reasonable prices. The Sansei Restaurant and Sushi Bar is located in the Queens Market Place at Waikoloa Beach Resort, about 45 minutes north of the town of Kona and close to many of the top resorts. The atmosphere is very nice – a combination of Japanese and American family style diner with a sushi bar at one end (lots of top-grade raw fish on display) and a very well-stocked bar to one side.

Jenny and I went for the tasting menu at $80 for two – very reasonable in Hawaii terms, where the fact that most food is imported means that prices are high at best and exorbitant at worst. Miso soup comes with the meal – and a choice of whether to have it western-style (at the start) or Japanese-style (and finish with it). We went Japanese. First up was a bowl of edamame beans (soy beans) in their shells, a tradition Japanese nibble, along with out drinks. Jenny went for their new 'sake flight' – three different cold sakes to sample, which was very interesting indeed. The Masuni 'Okuden Kantsukeri' was smooth and tasty, the Dewazakura 'Dewesansan' delicate and feminine and the Tedorigawa 'Iki na Onno' (my favourite) tasty and long. I was driving and so limited myself (tiny sips of sake aside) to one beer, a local Kona Red Ale (served very cold in a 20 oz pint as opposed to the usual US 16 oz abomination).

The main food items commenced with Sansei's Mango Crab Salad Hand Roll (best eaten with the fingers to pick up the chilli dipping sauce) and Sansei Special Roll (crab, cucumber and avocado) eaten sushi-style with ginger, wasabi and soy sauce). The best of the sushi came next – delicious panko-encrusted ahi sashimi sushi roll – basically a top-quality cylindier of ahi coated in spinach, arugula (rocket) and light Japanese breadcrumbs, served with a mild soy wasabi butter sauce – wow! The ahi just melts in the mouth. Mmmmm. In the picture we had already eaten some of it, hence the messy plate!

On with the seafood! Next up was Japanese calamari salad – fried in Kochujang vinaigrette over local greens in a won ton basket (delicious sauce, slightly tangy, pictured), and Asian shrimp cake crusted with crispy chinese noodles (very thin) with ginger-lime chilli butter and cilantro (coriander) pesto (also pictured). The crispy noodles added some very nice crunch to this dish.

We finished with two fish dishes, Matsuhisa style miso butterfish (black cod) marinated and smeared in sake and sweet miso was very rich, the fish cooked just to perfection so it was soft and melting, and (just in case you were still not quite satisfied) lobster and blue crab ravioli with truffled shiitake mushroom and maderia cream sauce (perhaps the richest thing I have eaten in the last 12 months, and that's saying something!). And then, of course, the Miso soup as a palate cleanser and digestif. Ending with the soup seemed to make good sense to me – back to reality after the exceptional and tasty dishes we had enjoyed. Service was exceptionally friendly and helpful.

Sansei, under the direction of owner and chef DK Kodama, also has restaurants at Kapalua and Kihei on Maui and Waikiki Beach on Oahu. Well worth tracking down. Maholo and Aloha! Sansei Seafood Restaurnant and Sushi Bar, Waikoloa Beach Resort, Queen's Marketplace, 201 Waikoloa Beach Drive Suite 801, Waikoloa, HI 96738, (808) 886-6286, dinner only 5.30 – 10.00pm. www.dkrestaurants.com.

Sunday, 18 January 2009

Top of the class at The Seafood Restaurant, Padstow


Rick Stein has become the face of British fish and seafood over the past ten years or so. He seems to be continuously on our TVs, seeking out producers of all kinds and showing his own compelling (to me anyway) cuisine, stressing simplicity, quality and attention to detail over elaborate and bizarre combinations. Actually, he’s been in the fish game a very long time – the building housing the restaurant was originally bought by Stein in 1972 as a nightclub (which failed) and The Seafood Restaurant opened its doors in 1975. His big break came when Keith Floyd, making his Floyd On Fish series for BBC TV, suggested to his producer that they go and see when Stein was doing. The producer agreed, and the rest is history.

As seafood geek I have obviously wanted to visit his own Seafood Restaurant for some time. The current downturn means that the Steins (Rick and his ex-wife Jill who now actually runs the restaurant) are offering some excellent bargain deals. We took advantage of a two-night break for £190 per person, including meals in the St Petrocs Bistro (more next time) and the Seafood Restaurant itself. The Almora room was very nice indeed, funky bathroom with TV, modern and light.

After a warm-up pint at the Old Customs House pub along the quay, we were shown to our table in the busy and buzzing Saturday night atmosphere. Even though this was the first weekend after New Year, the place was almost full. The menu is (of course) dominated by all manner of fish and seafood, though there is a veggie starter (pumpkin open ravioli) and a meat main (char-grilled cotes de boeuf). What a tremendously difficult choice… The starters were particularly hard to choose between – oysters from various places including native flats from Clarinbridge in Ireland, fruits-de-mer platters, proper provencal fish soup with rouille, sashimi of sea bass, scallop, brill and salmon, mussels, lobster and fennel risotto… Aaargh!

In the end I was toying with hot shellfish with parsley, chilli, olive oil, garlic and lemon juice but plumped in the end for Cornish crab with wakame salad and wasabi mayonnaise. The crab meat was delicious and delicate, the wakame (green seaweed) salad a perfect foil and the wasabi mayo had a nice spiciness about it. My companions were all well pleased with their sashimi, ragout of turbot and scallops and grilled scallops with pumpkin seeds, Serrano chilli and coriander sauce. A bottle of one of the extensive wine list’s more outlandish options, a Brazilian Ovaja Negra pinot grigio-riesling washed it all down very well – the wine was very crisp, just the job.

The main course choice was somewhat easier, even though there were many tempting options including whole dover sole (a classic), monkfish vindaloo, Singapore chilli crab and a full fruits-de-mer platter (one of which arrived at the next table looking amazing, uncompromising and fully monster-of-the-deep laden). Padstow lobster had my name on it – it’s not something one sees very often, and I had to try it here. I went for the grilled with fines herbes option as opposed to boiled with salad leaves and mayo, and it was sensational. Beautifully buttery, herby, tasty, cooked to perfection, with some work to do to get the meat from the claws and legs but totally manageable. Fantastic. A little dish of buttered and peppery neeps (swede or turnip?) was a nice accompanying touch.

Again my companions were well pleased – the troncon of turbot (does anything else over come in troncons??) with hollandaise sauce was particularly good, and the two plates of brill with pancetta and beurre noisette appeared to have been fashioned to look identical – an example of the attention to detail visible here. Bottles of Allende Blanco 2005 white rioja went very will with all this butter and richness – the wine definitely oaky and yet with a good edge, not something I would have at home but a splendid treat.

After all that the desserts might have been something of a come-down, but the Stein simplicity and attention to detail saw us through to the end. My blackberry and quince cobbler (cooked to order) with clotted cream ice cream was delicious, piping hot from the oven. Very strong coffees brought the evening to a close. The Seafood Restaurant seems to be a real beacon for British seafood well cooked and exquisitely served – a must for any serious seafood enthusiast or indeed anyone who likes their fish. The Seafood Restaurant, Riverside, Padstow, Cornwall, Reservations: 01841 532700, www.rickstein.com.

Monday, 12 January 2009

Learning about fish the Rick Stein way – Padstow Seafood School

I’m keen on eating fish and seafood – and, from time to time, cooking it. So when news came through that TV food hero and fish guru Rick Stein was offering credit-crunch beating deals at his Padstow establishments, I was on the phone like a shot. The Stein name runs through Padstow like the word Padstow through a piece of, well, Padstow rock, and the family Stein now have a multitude of eating and accommodation options. Our weekend trip took in several eateries (of which more later in the week), as well as the Padstow Seafood School.

I managed to book a place on the School’s most popular course, the one-day Original Fish and Shellfish course. And so at just before 9am on a chilly Sunday morning, still enjoying the memory of the previous evening’s grilled lobster at the Seafood Restaurant, I found myself donning a smart chef’s jacket and apron and sitting down for a coffee with fifteen other cooks-in-the-making. The school is in a relatively new building just a hundred yards or so along the front from the Seafood Restaurant itself – the building also houses Stein’s Fish & Chips (report coming), Stein’s Deli (lots of yummy things) and other seafaring outlets. The school is on the first floor, and commands a cracking view of the estuary from the long refectory table at one end.

Chief instructor Mark took us through a few words about safety and then took us to the demonstration station at the other end of the kitchen. We sat on stools and looked on while he tackled one of the day’s knottier problems – despatching a large stone crab. Ceiling-mounted video cameras helped everyone see the drama on the chopping board. That done, we went back to the cooking stations (two people to a stove), crabs and screwdrivers were produced and off we went! My partner-in-fish for the day John from Truro got us off the mark, and we put the crab on to boil – just 10 minutes is enough. Once the crab was out and cooling we were back with Mark learning about preparing a squid from scratch (including pulling out the amazingly transparent and flexible bone). Back to the kitchens to put everything into practice, this time cooking the squid in a very interesting slow way in a pan inside the oven set to a low 120C with star anise and cinnamon for about 25 minutes.

Now to disembowel the crab! Again, full guidance from Mark, then back to our places where more ingredients had appeared as if by magic (actually down to Bill and the other helpers) where we went from boiled crab to crab cakes in just a few moments. (Crushed cream crackers are the key ingredient, rather to my surprise!). Into the fridge and then back to the squid which was now cooked, so prepare a salad with vermicelli noodles, mushrooms, ginger and other things. And at last – time to eat something! We sat round the table to eat the salad and enjoy the first of what would be (if you wanted) several glasses of sauvignon.

The day was very impressive in the way it all fitted together, with alternating demonstration and practice sessions keeping the variety and allowing the various ingredients time to reach the optimum conditions. We went on to fillet fish (red mullet as a round fish, and plaice as a flat fish) and prepare the fillets en papillotte (in a bag) and grilled with various accompaniments. Now it was getting on for 2.30pm, and we all sat back around for a well-earned lunch of plaice and another glass or two. Cheers!

The final part of the day was watching Mark and Bill prepare another kind of dish – a prawn and monkfish caldine (wet curry) with flatbreads and pilao rice. The guys worked splendidly as a double act, inviting people to help with various aspects and chatting away answering whatever questions came up, as well as sharing their thoughts on many aspects of the life of the chef. For some reason we ended up talking a lot about salt (Mark says to use plenty of it – the food tastes of more!). Then finally the curry, rice and everything was served all at once, with enough for some of each all round. Certificates, handshakes, a chance to buy an apron or a knife at the school’s shop and we were done. It’s a grand day out, and you certainly don’t go home hungry. I bought a filleting knife and will definitely be starting to buy whole fish from time to time now – I have enough confidence to give it a try. Well done to Mark, Bill and the boys. Padstow Seafood School,Riverside, Padstow
PL28 8BY, Tel: 01841 532700.

Tuesday, 2 December 2008

Local seafood the home made way: The Highwayman Inn, Kirkby Lonsdale


The Highwayman Inn is a part of Nigel Haworth's Northcote Manor empire, which now features three pubs in the Ribble Valley Inns group as well as the mothership hotel. Located on the A683 between Lancaster (M6 junction 34)and Kirkby Lonsdale in the village of Burrow, the Inn was reopened in Spring 2007 following a £1m+ refit to much publicity, including a write-up in the Financial Times. Clearly this is not just any old roadside pub! Great emphasis is placed on sourcing from first-rate local suppliers, and presenting good food without too much fuss. I have visited several times in the last couple of years, and always found a warm welcome and excellent grub. This time, though, with my Seafoodshack hat on, I was setting out to give the seafood a good look.

This was an icy December evening, and although the place was not full all the fires were blazing and the staff very welcoming. I settled down with a pint of German Warsteiner lager (not easy to find here in the UK – draught Thwaites ales including Wainwright and Lancaster Bomber are also on offer) and perused the menu. The local seafood platter clearly had my name on it as a generous starter. What with the cold outside, I couldn't resist the minced rump steak burger to follow.

The seafood platter was sensational. Port of Lancaster Beech and Juniper smoked salmon (I wrote about the PoL smokehouse in an early seafood shack post) was dark and rich, yet subtly flavoured. Kipper fillet from the same source (a surprising inclusion in a platter like this) was served hot, quite robustly flavoured. Hot smoked trout, served cold (the 'hot smoked' refers to the cooking process!) was very tasty and delicate. Potted Morecambe Bay shrimps, warm in a ramekin, were absolutely delicious, the tasty spicy butter being mopped up with home-made brown bread. Pickled mussels gave a nice sharp element, along with pickled cucumber and beetroot relish. Horseradish cream (light yet rich) added a lovely savoury element. A generous cube of butter to go with the bread, more of which arrived unbidden as I finished the first lot. £8.50. Brilliant – what a starter! They also do a large version to share (or not, if you're feeling greedy).


The main course was no less superb (though inevitably less fishy). To describe it fully: minced organic Far Cappleside Farm rump steak topped with Dewley creamy Lancashire cheese, English muffin, real chips (cooked in dripping, as God intended, and dressed with sea salt), tomato relish (quite runny, good for dipping the chips), mustard mayonnaise, piccalilli, salad. This was all fantastic once again – the meat cooked medium (pink) as I requested, and easily good enough to take serving this way. £9.75. Wonderful quality and supreme value for money.

I was lucky enough to be invited into the kitchen to meet chef Michael Ward and his team. Michael was originally a sous chef with Nigel Howarth quite a few years ago. He left to continue his sous career at various Lakeland restaurants, one of which gained a Michelin star, and kept in touch with Nigel. Offered the chance of the chef position at the Highwayman, Michael says he was dubious at first - “I didn't want to be a pub chef!” - but changed his mind on seeing the scale of the kitchen and the operation planned. Everything – really everything – is home made, including the excellent potted shrimps I had enjoyed earlier. Michael described the process over a mince pie.

A butter containing mace, tarragon, parsley, paprika, lemon juice and finely diced shallots is made up (15kg at a time!). The shrimps are brought in frozen in 1kg bags from local suppliers (Morecambe Bay is only a few miles away) and allowed to warm gently next to the char grill. The dish is combined and served warm. The only other place I've eater something similar was at Heston Blumenthal's Hinds Head pub in Bray, and I fancy that Michael's are even better – the combination of herbs and spices is interesting and flavourful, yet does not overpower the delicate shrimps.

The Highwayman is a real beacon of great food and cooking, well worth a detour if you're coming up the M6 and a must if you are staying in the area. The Highwayman Inn, Burrow, Kirkby Lonsdale, LA6 2RJ, 01524 273338, http://www.highwaymaninn.co.uk/.

Thursday, 27 November 2008

Oysters and Guinness in the City: Sweetings Restaurant, London


Sweetings is a real City of London institution. Open on its current site since 1889 and apparently pretty much unchanged over time, it is also one of the very few London oyster houses to be rated by Toronto shucker supreme Patrick McMurray of the Starfish Oyster Bed and Grill (http://www.starfishoysterbed.com/) in his excellent book Consider The Oyster. I’ll be writing much more about Patrick as this series continues.

Back to Sweetings, which I visited on a chilly Wednesday in November. The place is on a street corner near Mansion House tube station, but in that part of London nowhere is very far from anywhere else, St Pauls and Bank are only a few hundred yards away. The window is filled with seafood laid out on plates to attract passers-by. Most of the clientele, however, didn’t look as if they needed attracting, being almost as much a a part of the scene as the quirky ancient décor.

The layout is rather unusual – counters along the sides of the place, facing outwards, with waiters positioned between the counters and windows or walls beyond. Presumably this allows for maximum top secret insider city gossip. There are also long tables towards the back which one is expected to share, two by two, as it fills up. Downstairs are the original 1889 loos (at least, that’s how they looked to me! But in quite a good way.)

The menu is totally given over to fish and seafood – not even a steak for the not-so-piscinally oriented. Excellent! I opted for half a dozen West Mersea oysters, described as native flats but a little smaller than one might expect. Anyway they were very tasty, nice and cold, bread and butter and lots and lots of lemon wedges on the table definitely added to my enjoyment. I do hate it when places scrimp on the lemon. A pint of Guinness – served in a pewter tankard no less – completed a great combination. I think it’s the only time I’ve ever been actually served beer in such a receptacle, rather than just seeing them hanging on the wall. Full marks. My companion’s lobster bisque looked very inviting on a cold day.

On to the main courses – scampi with bacon, and fish pie. This place is very much about good fish cooked simply and the way you want it. I asked for my scampi (8 tails) grilled, and it duly arrived such, with two thick slices of smoked bacon alongside. A side order of chips completed the picture – everything is extra. My companion’s fish pie again looked just the job for a cold day, mashed potato atop fish pieces in sauce. Lots more lemon on the scampi and an excellent and not-too-fattening lunch proceeded.

Sweetings doesn’t actually have a website (presumably as they weren’t around in 1889… I guess the adverts on the sides of sedan chairs are still running somewhere), but the various online reviews all rave about the puddings. I’m not much of a pud person, but the apple pie was really excellent, something like a pain au chocolat slightly-flaky pastry surrounding the apple. Two generous scoops of vanilla ice-cream and all was well. We didn’t have coffee – Sweetings is the only restaurant I have ever visited which doesn’t even offer it, apparently to encourage punters to move on a make room for someone else. Even though it wasn’t full when we went, the current financial crisis was not preventing a fair few besuited types gathering for a good lunch. So we wandered off to the nearer Costa coffee to continue our discussions. Not cheap at all, the bill came to £70+, but a unique London seafood experience. Why not get your financial advisor to take you?

Sweetings, 39 Queen Victoria Street, London , EC4N 4SF, 0844 5672326 but no point phoning as they don’t reserve tables, open 11-3 lunchtimes Mon-Fri only.

Sunday, 16 November 2008

Finest crab on your doorstep – SEAFOOD & EAT IT Ltd


One of the great tastes of the British seaside is surely fresh crab – in salads, in sandwiches, latterly in pasta, or even on its own with lemon and brown bread. While our seaside towns often have lots of places to get and enjoy crabmeat, it’s much harder away from the coast. Even upmarket places like Waitrose, even though they stock dressed crab with mayonnaise and egg, have not been a source of fresh crab for the discerning diner – until now!

Browing around the seafood department of our local Waitrose I noticed a new offering – fresh Cornish crab, hand picked, in white, brown or potted versions, from a company wittily calling themselves Seafood & Eat It Ltd. (The company website confirms that this is after the glorious old joke “I’m on a seafood diet. I see food and eat it!”.

Seafood & Eat It was started by two brothers – Neville, a skipper fishing for crab from Newlyn in Cornwall, and Richard a former London office worker. While many crab fishermen were giving up, Nev has persisted and when his brother decided that his future lay away from the PC and the monthly sales target they set up together with a little help from the Prince’s Trust and the Fisherman’s Mission. The aim was simple – to supply the best quality crab meat to a wider audience. To this end they cook their crab in small batches and painstakingly hand-pick it to get the very finest meat onto your plate. They have been supplying the wholesale trade in Cornwall for some time, and in August 2008 the Waitrose chain began stocking their crab meat products for public consumption.

We first tried the potted crab, deliciously rich and absolutely ready to eat on bread or even (as their website suggests) with pasta. It was so good we moved on to the white and brown meats, and I used them in my own version of a classic crab with linguini and chilli pasta dish. Simply put about 50ml olive oil, a couple of chopped garlic cloves, two or three chopped red chillis, a handful of chopped spring onion and about two strips of finely chopped lemon zest into a pan and cook until it starts to sizzle. Meanwhile cook about 200g of linguini and drain, keeping some of the pasta water. Into the now-empty but still hot pasta pan put the chilli and oil mixture, and add the pasta, 200g crab meat (we used 100g white and 100g brown), the juice of half a lemon (and optional capers) and heat through till it’s hot. Use a splash of pasta water to loosen the mixture if it gets dry. Stir in a good handful of chopped parsley and serve with lemon wedges (serves two).

Seafood & Eat It crab meat is available nationally at Waitrose stores. Now’s an excellent time to try it out in whatever form of crab dish you favour. (And do answer our poll about your crab preferences!) Seafood & Eat It Ltd, Newlyn, Cornwall TR20 8TL, http://www.seafoodandeatit.co.uk/.

Friday, 31 October 2008

Crab delights in North Norfolk - Cookie's Crab Shop

The windswept North Norfolk coast is a popular spot for bird-watchers and Islington residents in search of a weekend away. From the Victorian resort town of Hunstanton in the West to Cromer in the East, the coast is a fascinating and hard-to-find place. The sea and land seem to merge in a series of shallows, dunes, flat lands and lagoons – a haven for a vast range of seabirds including the rare bittern. The coast road is a mile or two back from the sea for most of the time, and towns with names like Wells-Next-The-Sea are very well named. The sea is indeed next…after a while. The visitor centre at Cley Marshes affords an excellent place to find out more, as well as being an impressive example of sustainable and low-impact development.

Cookie’s Crab Shop is on the coast road in the small village of Salthouse (what more seasidy name could there be?). And it’s a good half mile from the sea. It could well be called Cookies-Next-The-Sea though – this is the last bastion of civilisation before the dunes and reedbeds. Cookie’s has been in business since 1956, when Peter Cooke (father of current proprietor Suzanne and her husband Robert Mcknespiey) set up in this tiny cottage by the road and facing the North Sea. From just supplying crabs, the enterprise has spread out into the garden and now features clusters of tables in a summerhouse, a gazebo and in the open air as well as inside the shop.

This is a down-home as it can possible get – and much the better for it. Suzanne and Robert look after cooking and picking the crabs and prawns, making pates and soups and source their other supplies locally. You order at the counter and take a seat to await the arrival of the goodies. And what goodies they are! I started with a warming prawn bisque (this being a chilly October lunchtime), which featured lots of prawns as well as a hint of spice. Just the ticket. My sister’s prawn and garlic pate may have been the most garlicy thing we’ve ever tasted. In a good way.


But the real treat is the arrival of the Royal salads. This is Cookies flagship dish, and mine featured crab as the main ingredient. The delicious dressed crab even came with a smiley face (as you can see in the picture). Not only crab, but also…(deep breath) hot smoked salmon, smoked mackerel in three different guises including pepper and chilli, crayfish tails, anchovy fillets (yum), cockles, pickled herring with delicious sauce, prawns… and beetroot, potato salad, tomatoes, cucmber, bread, mayonnaise, lemon and lime wedges. What a fantastic spread, a real cornucopia of the best of what’s around in the British autumn. The cost? A ridiculous £6.30. The best value ever. No wonder Stephen Fry wrote in the Independent recently that this coast, and Cookie’s in particular, is his favourite place in the British Isles.

Cookie’s is a real king amongst seafood shacks. Get over there at once. Cookie’s Crab Shop, http://www.cookies.shopkeepers.co.uk/, 01263 740352 (and it’s worth calling to reserve a table).

Sunday, 12 October 2008

Singapore Swing II - bargain Japanese in Orchard Road

One of the great Singapore features are food courts and hawker centres. These places can easily feature 30 - 40 different outlets or stalls, each specialising in a particular cuisine, food type or even dish. There will also be a dessert stand, a fruits stand (in Singlish the plural of fruit is fruits - obvious really), a drinks place with juices, and lots more. These are sometimes found in neigbourhood settings - in Singapore everyone basically eats out all the time and why not, when you can get a great meal for $Sing 4 (about £1.60). However, they also crop up in upmarket places - including the bustling Orchard Road, mecca for shopping (the other national sport for Singaporeans apart from eating).

The Food Republic centre in the Wisma Atria, Orchard Road, is one of our favourite places to catch a bite after some exhuasting electronics shopping and book browsing in the excellent and well-stocked branch of Borders at Wheelock Place. There are dozens of places there, with a good emphasis on Malay food and lots of choice...but somehow we always end up at the Koh Grill & Sushi Bar. This is a Japanese eatery, with a counter to sit at or tables for larger parties. Behind the counter are a small army of chefs preparing sushi, rice, frying, broiling and generally preparing some excellent and bargain Japanese food.

We started with a selection of sashimi (sliced raw fish) including some unusual items - raw prawns (really raw, translucent and not at all pink), and sliced clam. Yummy, and not at all easy to find. You can of course get more regular items like salmon, squid, umagi (eel) etc. We followed up with wonderful bento box meals - mine featured grilled salmon, tempura prawns in delicate light better, tempura veggies, rice and tofu with pickles. These set meals are fanstastic value, arouen $Sing 14 - about five English pounds. There are lots of different options too, including sukiyaki, teriyaki chicken and salmon, plenty of help in working out what's what and a range of sakis and cold Japanese beers to wash it all down.

This is not, of course, a place for a relaxing and intimate dinner. It's a bustling place with people coming and going, action all the time and a great spot for food on the way home or indeed on the way out. A great way to get some fine Japanese good at bargain prices right in the heart of the shopping area - and therefore a really good example of a top Seafoodshack! Koh Grill & Sushi Bar, Wisma Atria, #4-21 (Food Republic), tel 65-6836 0609. No website, just drop in and eat.

Singapore swing I - Chilli crab at Jumbo Seafood


We were passing through Singapore last week running some workshops in team coaching and change management. I've visited the Lion City quite a number of times in recent years, and the food is always a highlight - you can get just about anything, particularly Asian food, at great prices and in surroundings anywhere from palatial to pavement. Our hosts Debbie and Dave were good enough to welcome us off the plane from London and take us straight for a great Singapore food tradition - chilli crab.


This dish has become something of a national symbol over Lee Kuan Yew era. Mr Lee, the first leader of independent Singapore from 1959 until he stepped down in 1990, is still alive and takes on the role of Minister Mentor. He took to eating chilli crab on Singapore's national day, 9 August, at one of the seafood restaurants on East Coast Road. One of the leaders amongst the many seafood places along this stretch, which links downtown to the airport, is Jumbo Seafood.


Founded in 1987, Jumbo has become the leading up-market seafood restaurant group in Singapore. They now have seven outlets, including the one on the Kallang river near the Indoor Stadium we visited. Having ordered a jug of cold cold Tiger beer (another Singapore tradition - it's more convenient to have a jug a several cold glassses!), out hosts ordered the food. We nibbled on peanuts and chilli & ginger sauce and waited for the first food to arrive. This was deep fried fresh baby squid, marinated with oyster sauce, sprinkled with sesame seeds and served over crispy noodles. These 'crunchy squidlets' as we called them were really delicious - much tastier than they sound, about the size of a thumbnail, and very tasty - an ideal starter!


More dishes arrived - sliced beef fillet with pepper, kailan (green vegetable) with garlic, prawns in cereal (lovely shell-off prawns covered in a dry flaky mixture of cereal - to go with yummy sweet sauce). The sun went down, evening fell, we sat by the river in the heat as the skyline of downtown lit up about a mile away, just the other side of the Formula 1 pits area (the Grand Prix has been in town two days earlier).


And the the piece de resistance....the chilli crab. This comprises, basically, an enormous crab! In this case a King crab from Sri Lanka. Cooked. Cracked (with still with work to do). And smothered in the most delicious sweet, hot, sticky chilli sauce with egg stirred into it. Mmmmmm. This is served, as is traditional, with steamed buns, delicious white and soft, with which to mop up the sauce. (I only wish these were more absorbent - they are delicious but hardly serve the purpose!) Crackers are provided, the crab is split into large pieces and everyone pitches in. Prizing the delicious crab meat out of the shell while getting your fingers (and possibly much else) covered in chilli sauce is really what it's all about. It's worth taking care by the way - on a previous occasion I spilt some sauce on a nice cotton shirt and the stain proved totally permanent.


Jumbo Seafood is at East Coast Road, Indoor Stadium, Riverside Point (near the excellent Brewerkz brew pub), the Riverwalk and other locations. More information at http://www.jumboseafood.com.sg/.

Thursday, 4 September 2008

Traditional British seafood - the Trawlerman, West Bay

As part of our recent Jurassic Coast outing, Jenny and I found ourselved in West Bay, just to the south of Bridport in Dorset. We were in search of a quick lunch and were wandering around wondering whether to have fish and chips from the many kiosks on the harbourside. Then Jenny noticed a sign down a small lane - 'Seafood Garden'. We wandered over and discovered The Trawlerman.

The Trawlerman is a fish shop - well, more of a seafood shop in fact - set in a quiet back street just a few yards away from the bustling harbour. It has a small patio outside, with some table featuring river/harbour views - this was the Seafood Garden we had seen. We had a look at the shop and were told by a very authentic-looking fisherman emerging that the seafood platter was the finest in West Bay. "It's pricey, mind", he added, "but you won't go away hungry." Whether around £16.50 is pricey for seafood for two could be described as a moot point, but we certainly didn't go away hungry.

What you get is absolutely traditional British seafood: dressed crab (very good), large tiger prawns, smaller tail-on prawns, even small shrimps/prawns with shell-on (very link and traditional), cockles (pickled in vinegar), mussels, large green-lipped mussels, winkles (and a cocktail stick with which to winkle them). All served on a big platter.

Everything else is extra. Bread and butter, lemons, drinks (diet Coke), whatever. You can take your own wine. It's very basic, very British and somehow just the job for a lunchtime seafood fest. Nothing to worry the hip Riverside restaurant next door, but that isn't the point. This is the kind of place I have searched for in vain in several seaside resorts (Morecambe, hang your head in shame!) - I was delighted to find it here.

The Trawlerman5 George Street, West Bay, BRIDPORT, DT6 4EY, Tel 01308 425776