Rewriting this again because I have only just realized- after writing almost the entire post, mind- that the visit I had been writing of (and posting pictures about) was not the most recent one, but the one that I had made a couple of months ago.
How is it that I could have written the entire post, and posted a whole bunch of pictures without realizing it wasn't the one I wanted to write about?
Perhaps then that is something to be thankful about.
Because it means that memories are still fresh, it means that I have had a deep impression of the first time I was there, and that I have had experiences so pleasant they got meshed up together.
I forgot to bring Chonkycam this time.
So Samsung came to the rescue.
And in case I blur myself and get everything all mixed up, I'll just plonk them pictures all here and then go along.
One thing I can say though.
I wasn't very impressed with the pictures that I took the previous time, so this round I was determined to do better.
I wanted my plate to have more color.
I wanted my pot to look more full.
So early on in the buffet I went to the counter and filled up my plate with what I wanted.
Just like how I usually am at hotpots these days, one of the things I will go for is the lettuce, or cabbage, or green leafy vegetables. There wasn't any lettuce here at the counter, and this evening, for some reason, I didn't feel like cabbage, so bai cai it was for me instead.
I tend to not take these vegetables because of the stems, but today I needed the color, I wanted to have a bit of chew, and so decided I'd go for them vegetables which I normally would not have.
I had worried the stems would be hard, but to my surprise, no, they weren't. They turned out softer than I thought they would be.
What's more, the leaves absorbed plenty of the soup too.
I filled up my plates with more of these vegetables after that.
Although, really, I had to cut back on the lobster balls and the squid balls and the cheese tofu, because, as nice as they are, they fill you up really, really easily and I didn't want to occupy stomach space on too many cheese tofus.
I did go for more prawns, more quail eggs and more bean curd skin though.
I like my quail eggs- especially when I can have as many as I want- and for some reason the bean curd skin adds further oomph and texture that I didn't know before but do now.
What's cool is that the bean of the bean curd actually goes so well with this particular soup that it becomes almost like a different dish altogether.
My hotpot- in the end- looked like this.
Which, let me tell you, I absolutely absolutely loved.
It wasn't just the bright, fresh, cheerful colors.
It was the warmth.
The kind of warmth that can only come with a hotpot meal.
I was determined to not miss out on the cooked food section this evening.
Now, I generally don't- I will not miss out on what I have paid for- but I don't always pay attention to the cooked food, too distracted I am with whatever it is I am here for and what I am interested to have.
But today I made my calculations and my calibrations.
At the buffet counter there were servings of pasta (those ribbon ribbon type), there was butterfly pea rice, there was also spaghetti. I saw a couple of braised meat dishes, or maybe they were vegetable- I now can't remember- and there were some little bites at the end of the counter that I know I wanted to have.
For some reason though my eye was drawn to the spaghetti.
What precisely it was about this pasta this evening that attracted me, I don't know. It wasn't the ingredients- I didn't take any- so it might have been the sauce. My memory is a little blurred now but I think it had salted egg, or something. I just know that it was lighter than I thought it would be. The sauce didn't overwhelm, didn't make one feel jialat, nor did it drown the spaghetti.
The taste was just right.
The texture of the noodles also caught my fancy.
I had thought the noodles might be all soggied up in the sauce but no, it was as dry as it could be, and one might be mistaken for thinking there was no sauce or taste at all.
Is this what they call al dente, by the way?
I've never been able to figure out what the significance of this cooking method means. I just know it means quality.
Along with the spaghetti I had three pieces of aburi salmon sushi.
These three had been deliberately chosen.
If I already had a liking for salmon sushi and salmon sashimi- which, by the way, this evening I did have, although I don't have a picture- salmon sushi done aburi style is my next favorite.
I like how the taste is lightly burnt, how the texture of the sushi is firm, yet soft at the same time, and how you get to have the balance of both cooked and uncooked at the same time. It's not uncomfortable, by the way. On the contrary, one gets to relish in the flavors of the in-between where you get to embrace both textures, and tastes, at the same time.
I wish I knew how to describe it.
But how does one describe the taste of salmon?
How does one describe the taste of salmon that has been lightly seared such that the top is booked, the middle is medium-rare soft, and the bottom is soft?
So this aburi salmon sushi might be a little hard- not as soft as some that I've eaten elsewhere- but the hint of these textures were there, and so good were they I wish I could have had more.
One must not fill up on rice at a buffet, however.
Especially when there is a single serving of crayfish served with roe and a huge slather of Mentaiko.
What's funny is that I didn't even know about it until my friend got it for me.
The meat was fresh, tender but firm, and the chew was absolutely delightful.
The rest of the meal was all about the hotpot after.
More vegetables, yes, more bean curd skin, yes, more quail eggs, yes.
Then it was time for dessert.
Again I was very careful this evening.
I didn't want to fill up only on ice cream.
Not when there were cakes and fruit and jellies at the dessert counter to be had as well.
I got myself two different kinds of cakes.
Tonight felt like a night for red velvet- I had been thinking about it since a conversation with a friend not too long ago- and since there were them little slices for the taking, I took two. It were the cheese on top that I wanted more than anything, actually, so carefully I cut the slices into quarters, and ate them slowly.
I can't remember what the other cake was.
It might well have been carrot cake or maybe even gula melaka cake.
No surprise if it were, honestly. The color seems to be so.
Hopefully this cake will be on the dessert counter if there be another time I get to eat here.
I'll make sure to remember it better at that time.






