To be here at CapitaSpring on an early Saturday afternoon is not something I take for granted.
Especially when you consider that weekend brunch at KAARLA X OUMI- on the 57th floor of CapitaSpring- is one dining experience that I relish, and treasure very, very much.
It doesn't matter whether I've been there before.
It doesn't matter how long it's been since the last time I've been there.
To get to dine there is a blessing, and whilst it might sound sentimental, it is true.
The first thing about this restaurant that strikes you is the view.
It's a view you get no matter where you sit.
But, of course, better it is if you do get a table by the window.
We'd reached there at a good hour this late morning, or was it early afternoon, so the staff brought us to the table, and after admiring the view a bit, began perusing the menu.
The menu here at OUMI isn't one of those long, extensive ones with lots and lots of dishes to choose from, but it is substantial, and everything is of quality, and good.
One of the dishes that I love is the Smoked Salmon Crudo.
Don't underestimate it's simplicity.
Maybe we can't see it but amidst all the slices of smoked salmon is dill cream cheese, pickled cucumbers and thyme croutons.
Then there's the hot cross bun which isn't in the menu but given complementary, as well as the Kaarla Truffle Fries and the Kajiki Tataki.
Kajiki Tataki may be a tad difficult to pronounce, but oy, don't miss out on what is a plate of lightly grilled swordfish with with tosaka seaweed, white onions and roselle leaves.
Dont' ask me how the tosaka seaweed tasted like.
All I know is that it felt like I were eating little leaves.
Small little leaves.
The Tempura Futo Roll and the Salmon Cheese Roll made for great choices almost immediately after.
If Salmon is a favorite of mine, so is Tempura, and both dishes here were fantastic.
Again, there's the simplicity of everything, with salmon and with cheese.
You could expect that they only got salmon and cheese, but no, they added a little bit of salmon skin, there was avocado and cucumber, and even the cheese was homemade with a bit of miso added to it.
Same with the Tempura Futo Roll, where instead of one big slice of tamago on top of the sushi (as my brain had previously imagined it), this one was had one little cube of tamago, one little cube of avocado, one little piece of daikon pickle, wrapped with seaweed, lightly fried with tempura batter, and a bit of fish mayo.
The heart they put in preparing this sushi was unbelievable.
There're some dishes here on the menu that look deceptively simple, really.
Like this La Latteria Burrata, and this Petite Beer Battered Fish & Chips.
But the dollop of burrata cheese wasn't small, and the salty milky flavors of the cheese dissipated the bitter bitter taste of arugula salad leaves. What's more there was almond romesco and herb oil somewhere in the mix, and altogether this made for a very interesting, all round kind of blend to what would otherwise have been (just) a salad with cheese.
The fish & chips were something I wanted to try this time.
I like the batter.
Rather, I like this kind of batter.
And even though they're (petite) like I'm eating little fish bites, the batter's well spread out and they're all evenly fried like what good fish bites will be.
We had a bowl of Misoshiru Soup each.
To be honest I don't know what this soup is- the menu says it's got hijiki, maitake and spring onions.
From the flavors alone I thought there might have been some kind of fish but then hijiki is a brown sea vegetable, maitake is a mushroom, and spring onions are, well, spring onions.
If that be the case, then let me just say that the soup was very, very good.
How they did it to make what's essentially vegetable soup to taste so rounded and rich like a clear broth takes skill.
And I love it.
We were up for two Sushi Bowls and Assorted Vegetable Tempura after this.
One of us took a Bara Chirashi.
The other took a Tuna Poke.
I think I had the Bara Chirashi.
It might look like other bowls which you'll see being offered outside, but there's all this salmon and (what I think) is swordfish cute into perfect little cubes, there's the salad- with tiny cute little leaves and then there're all these pretty edible little flowers that make this dish uniquely different from the rest.
Same too goes for the Tuna Poke.
Sure, it might be all but chunks of raw tuna dropped inside the bowl of rice, but it's got seaweed, avocado, tomatoes, aji amarillo and sesame, and that makes all the difference.
My friend dropped me the tomatoes.
You might think we'd be full after this- and we were- but the meal allocated one dish per person from the Wood Fired Grill and Hearth- and so delicious it seemed that we were not gonna forgo, so whilst I decided on a Buccatini Pasta, my friend had The Kaarla Wagyu Burger "With The Lot".
Don't laugh at my choice of the pasta.
I wanted to try charred zucchini and zucchini pesto.
I also wanted to try the texture of pasta with crunchy sourdough crumbs.
But my friend's burger really took the lot.
I mean, it's a fancy thing to have a burger of brioche bun with wagyu patty and gruyere cheese.
It's another thing altogether when the burger comes with Japanese fried egg, streaky bacon, caramelized onions and pickled beetroot with cucumber.
Let's just say this was no small burger that turned up on our table.
Let's also say that we were very, very full by the time we finished.
But one must have dessert.
So, out of their four selections, we took three.
There was a Chocolate Trifle.
There was a Matcha.
There was a Yuzu.
I can't quite say which was my favorite- I like distinctive flavors as much as I do varieties of chocolate.
So, whilst the matcha panna cotta had black sesame brittle and azuki red bean, the Yuzu was this perfectly-shaped 3D model that resembled the yuzu fruit, and which came with yuzu curd plus something called wasabi-yuzunama chocolate, I quite fancied the Chocolate Trifle too.
After all this little cup had a huge portion of vanilla chantilly, some pear sponge at the bottom, and two different kinds of chocolate- a Caraibe at 66% and a Jivara at 40% that were perfect complements to each other.