We were at Lorong 6, Lorong 7 Toa Payoh.
And because it was a season where we wanted to celebrate Hedgehog's birthday, decided to order several dishes instead of the rice/noodles that we tended to have.
There's something very special about having a birthday meal from a zichar stall in a coffee shop.
Maybe it's the nostalgia.
Maybe it's the sense of camaraderie we have with others who are also present at the same coffee shop enjoying their meals.
There were parties of 10 seated at large round tables alfresco having dishes of steamed fish and chili crab and what looked like big pots of soup.
There were parties of 3 and 4 at the smaller round tables having several dishes that looked just as delicious as the crabs and prawns and big steamed fish.
We got a table inside the coffee shop itself- no you don't get to choose- just be glad you even have a table quick to begin with at that peak dinner hour- and swiftly they brought us cutlery, a spare plate, and this little dish of appetizers that were so refreshing and so good.
First time I saw it I thought it were green apple (which had my overactive mind wondering how elderly consumers would eat it) but no, it wasn't apple, but guava instead.
And very soft a fruit it is too.
I don't know how it is they prepare this appetizer.
My guess is that they marinate it, because I know there's a bit of plum powder (which really enhances the taste of the guava, by the way) but there's also a bit of tart, sour flavor from the liquid that they marinate, or pickle, the fruit in.
This appetizer is one of the things I like best about this stall.
I mean, there's nothing more stimulating for the palate, even during the middle of the meal, to stick one of these nicely chopped chunks into the mouth and chew.
Not to mention there's something to keep your mouth busy whilst you wait for your food.
So refreshing are these guava pieces that you don't need a drink, even though you might want it.
I wasn't sure what dishes it were that Hedgehog ordered today- it were his birthday after all- so happy was I afterwards to see one of his favorites on the table.
It's not easy to find a good, delicious plate of Yi Mian these days.
Maybe demand is low.
Most people seem to go for either Dry Beef Hor Fun or White Bee Hoon or Hong Kong Noodles. Yi Mian doesn't seem to be on most tables as much as it used to.
So thankful was I when this lovely plate arrived at our table.
To be honest I don't know how to describe the dish.
I don't even know how to describe the noodle.
But it is an interesting texture, the noodle, which, whilst it looks firm and hard, isn't as hard as it looks, and has a slight chew to it. There's a bit of an alkaline taste (as I've been told) from the noodle itself that gives it a combination of savory and faint bitter, but it holds the gravy well and so makes it very easy to slurp up when eating the noodle.
This noodle is meant to be eaten strand by strand though.
Try eating it by the spoon and you'll find yourself with a huge mouthful to chew.
Hedgehog liked the gravy.
I, on the other hand, was more attracted by the dishes of sweet sour pork slices and fried tofu.
First off, they were huge.
Small sized they were supposed to be, but portion huge they were.
I loved the color of the sweet sour pork, which dish has always been a favorite of mine.
Except that I don't order it very much these days because usually it is just I who eats it, and I can't finish the whole plate on my own.
Tonight's order was a surprise- he told me he remembered- and what's more, they'd prepared it so well.
When the dish first came I had taken a quick peek, wondering if it came laden with the sauce like many other places tend to do, but there wasn't any. Instead every piece was so well fried, so evenly coated, so full of taste, and texture and flavor that you got the joys of sweet and sour in every bite.
It's as if each slice had been first coated, then dipped into the sauce, then placed in the wok and stir-fried till the red colored sauce penetrated each piece entirely giving them each a beautiful, gorgeous shine.
I liked the small chunks of pineapple that came along with the dish.
They were juicy, not hard, not dry.
If this dish became one of my new favorites here at this stall, the other dish that also became my new favorite was the tofu.
In general I am not a tofu person.
As in I won't go and order tofu dishes on my own if I am the only one eating. I will also be very specific about the style of tofu dish I order.
Reason?
Because tofu dishes tend to be either a hit or miss.
If you get a good place with a good chef, the tofu will turn out nice, clean-tasting and with flavor. If you don't, however, you're stuck with paying $8 or $10 for a poorly prepared version of what is relatively a very simple dish.
There are places whose tofu dishes- whilst looking good on the menu- turn out far different from what one hopes to have.
This one here was delightful.
Most memorable thing about this dish was the crisp, the crunch, the salt, and the mush.
Every cube had been so perfectly fried where the first taste you got of the tofu was the salt, after which came the crisp from the thin skin oh so gently scraping over your tongue, then, once you bit into it, the crunch and the mush coming both at the same time.
It actually made for a very good snack, great for children, if you ask me, and had I not already started on the rest of the dishes, I just might have eaten these with my hands whilst scooping up the crunchy tempura bits with my spoon.
What's funny though is that because all of our dishes came together at the same time, this dish we decided not to finish, and so packed up the tofu and brought it home.
Fried tofu is much easier to bring home than this- fried chicken with salted egg sauce- which, may I say, was also so good.
I was very comforted by this dish.
There's just something about having a piece of meat so full of flavor in your mouth that it overwhelms your tastebuds and leaves you with a combination of salty and sweet both at the same time.
Some diners will consider this a fun dish to eat, like one that they might find at fast food places.
Me, I'm not sure, but definitely I loved the perfect crisp of the breaded cutlet, I loved the tender, clean-tasting piece of meat- some pieces were breast meat- and I completely loved the rounded taste of the salted egg sauce.
Actually there wasn't any sauce.
Maybe this were the dry kind.
But same way like how the sweet sour pork had been prepared, this too felt like it had been first coated with breadcrumbs, dipped into the salted egg sauce, then thrown into the wok and skillfully wok-heied around.
I'll come back to this coffee shop for more of their dishes next time.
There're some I particularly want to order.
Like the sweet sour pork- the usual chonky kind, maybe braised egg tofu (or this fried tofu) and omelet.
I might want to do it for my birthday.
After all, I haven't forgotten the coffee shop at Lorong 7 Blk 8 anyway.