It has been just over a month, nearing two, that I came to this place at Chijmes.
But I haven't forgotten the food.
Neither have I forgotten the route I had to take to get there.
It is not difficult to get to Chijmes- the place is indeed one of the most iconic landmarks in Singapore's Downtown where the nearest MRT stations include Bencoolen, Bugis and City Hall, and where there're plenty of buses to drop you off in a five-minute walking radius.
It is, however, a different story, once you get into the grounds of this place that once served as a convent, as well as a school for girls, once upon a time.
Perhaps the alma mater ladies might have no challenge finding their way around the beautifully restored place.
But visitor that I am had a whirlwind of a time trying to find hotpot place Broth & Beyond that Google Maps said was at the basement of the grounds at Unit #01-02.
Trust me when I say that the basement was like a maze.
Then again maybe it wasn't as complicated as I make it out to be, but I was hungry, I was wondering just what sort of a hotpot place this was to plonk themselves at what is generally perceived as a pub, izakaya, Michelin-star restaurant kind of place, and would the meal be expensive.
I have come out of the experience not knowing how much the meal costs- it was a birthday meal and the only thing Hedgehog would tell me was that 'it's not expensive'.
But I have also come out of the experience having a new perspective of what hotpot is, and what it can be.
Broth & Beyond grants you one of the most refined, elegant experiences there are when it comes to hotpot. Location, ambience, decor, everything, it is the kind of place where you can have a quiet date, a casual business chat, a long-hour catch-up with a friend, a corporate lunch, a marketing lunch, or even a ladies' brunch, which, from what I saw that afternoon, seems to be very popular.
No more are hotpot places heavy on the fabrics and grandeur. Where once hotpot places used to swing on the extremes between the royal and the workman, now the decor has reached middle ground where the furnishings are contemporary, the light is gentle, and there is a general sunniness about the place that brightens your spirit, whets your appetite, and keeps you there.
The website tells me that their hotpot is Yunnan-inspired.
To be honest, whilst I have heard of Yunnan and have heard a fair bit about it, I should like to know what a Yunnan-inspired hotpot means.
Perhaps it means that the ingredients and flavors are very close to nature.
Perhaps it also means that there're interesting broths and foods to be had along the way.
Their broth is, I have to say, wonderful.
Seldom is it that I get to taste unusual soups like this one, which, although has the color of a bright orange pumpkin, is really a signature broth of Golden Fungus Chicken.
There were other soups- three others, I think- where there was probably one with mala, and one with mushroom that they call the Black Truffle & Eight Mushroom. The truffle and mushroom broth actually sounded interesting- I mean, eight different types of mushrooms- and I had thought I might have that, but then in the end the collagen broth won.
I mean, it's got Yunnan golden fungus and even dried scallops at the bottom of the soup for that wee bit of seafood sweet.
This afternoon we chose the Wagyu Beef Set for the hotpot.
Now, how much this set costs, I don't know, but included in the price were the aesthetics, where the set arrived at the table on two wooden trays placed in a sort of a two-storey cage where the top floor held the vegetables and the lower, the wagyu beef.
What this meant is that you were greeted by a bright, refreshing array of colors where nicely laid out on the wooden tray were the sliced tomatoes, the sliced chilled bean curd tofu, pieces of black fungus, lettuce, and cabbage. There might have been some other vegetables hidden beneath the bean curd, but I don't quite remember.
Perhaps I was already taken in by the bright green lettuces all so prettily placed on the wooden tray.
Or the cabbage, which, although I don't always have, I don't hesitate when I get them.
Of course there was the bright vibrant red of the meat too.
It is amazing how they managed to slice the meat up in such a way that each piece was neither too thin nor too thick. Not just that, the meat was shaped in such a way that each piece looked as if it were a beef tongue of sorts.
Maybe it was meant to help the diner cook better.
Hotpot, after all, can be quite a science when it comes to cooking your food. Very often we think all we need to do is to just chuck it inside the pot, but there's actually more than that.
Beef cooks really fast, for instance, and so absorbs less of the soup.
Chicken, on the other hand, can take a fair bit of time to cook, so the soup's all inside the meat by the time the piece is cooked and ready.
Same goes for the vegetables.
Fungus takes a bit of a time to soften. Cabbage also takes a bit of a time to soften. Lettuce, however, cooks faster, and tomatoes, well, they get cooked almost instantly.
I can't remember whether I threw the tomato into the soup.
I might have.
Or I might have eaten it fresh with the cooked beef, either or.
One thing about this hotpot is that all the ingredients, be it meat or vegetables, they all cooked fast.
Whether it were the wagyu beef, which my friend and I were very careful to cook it shabu shabu style- swirling the slice inside the soup instead of dropping it inside and letting it cook by itself- or whether it were the bean curd, the fungus, or the vegetables.
There'll be friends who cook their vegetables the same way they cook their meat, swishing the leaves inside the soup until they soften.
Not so me.
I chuck them all inside the soup and let them simmer.
Doesn't matter to me whether the vegetables become smushed or, as some may say, discolored.
I like them that way.
In fact the more smushed and limpy they become, the better.
Because that's when I know they've absorbed as much broth of the hotpot as they can have, and in one vegetable leaf alone, I can have a bit of crunch, a bit of soup, and the vitamins of greens all at once all at the same time.
I guess it is the burst of soup out from the leaves that I especially love.
It was a very lovely, pleasant celebratory meal that I had here at Broth & Beyond.
What made the experience even lovelier was the Market Table, which, I later found out, you didn't actually need to order hotpot to have. You just needed to order a main- any main- top up bit of an extra- and you got access to a charming array of appetizers, condiments, and desserts.
Mine this afternoon, if I'm not wrong, came automatically with the hotpot.
So, besides a little bowl of condiments that for me was sesame paste, sesame oil, and a huge heap of parsley, I helped myself to a dish that included kimchi, and cherry tomatoes. There were a few other appetizers to be had from the counter, mostly spicy ones, I think, that featured foods from different provinces around China.
Perhaps next time I'll try those, but this afternoon the (very red) kimchi, the (very red and fresh) cherry tomatoes, and some Yunnan bean curd jelly that I thought looked interesting was good enough for me.
I've started planning my next visit, by the way.
It might not be one where I'll take the hotpot, but it will definitely be one where I'll have a main- whatever it might be- and the Market Table.
For the main, if it isn't this dish they call the Yunnan Spice Wagyu Jerky, then it will be the claypot rice that this afternoon I had, and liked.
Don't underestimate this dish despite its appearance of simplicity.
It was full of flavor and texture.
How it was done, I don't know, maybe it is the way they controlled the flame, maybe it is the way they had estimated the cooking time. Whatever method it was, it certainly called for some skill.
The rice not only had the faint hint of smokiness as if it had been left to gently cook in the pot over the stove, the texture of the rice was light and crisp and mixed so well with the other ingredients that every mouthful made me feel like I were eating fried rice- without the oil- and claypot rice- without the burnt.
Trust me to say it was one of the best claypot rice dishes I have ever had.
Not just the mains, I've too planned out how my dessert next time will be.
First I'm going to go back for more of these jellies.
This time I had taken an entire bowl full, added a few ladles of evaporated milk, plus a drizzle of condensed milk, but there were other desserts that I still wanted to try.
At the counter there had been a few kinds of jellies, including strawberry, osmanthus, and almond (if I remember right) and there had been plenty of toppings that diners could have.
For some reason this afternoon I didn't take the taro balls. the little cubes of fruit- all of which looked like the fruits from the fruit cocktail- and the clear balls that I now realize were actually water chestnut balls.
But I'm going to go for those next time.
I'm also not going to leave out the ice cream.
Never mind that I had already had a single serving of vanilla, which, when the gentleman server brought to me (the machine had been out when I tried to do it myself), came with a cute little bear biscuit and a few small jellies around the ice cream.
But I want to try the ice cream with the taro balls, more of the little cocktail fruit, some M&Ms, maybe a slight drizzle of the condensed milk, and maybe even some of the freshly cut fruit.
Fruit and ice cream might go together good.
























