Bak Kut Teh
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Which is the best Bak Kut Teh in town?
Bak Kut Teh
Okay... let me do the honors of kicking off this category. Which is the best Bak Kut Teh in town?
My personal fav is still Eng Kee.
Do share here if you have other opinions.
My personal fav is still Eng Kee.
Do share here if you have other opinions.
auhcyelnats- Lance Corporal TKC-ian
- Posts : 151
Join date : 2012-07-24
Location : Ang Mo Kio, Singapore
Re: Bak Kut Teh
Eh.... not all i have tried before leh...
Voted the one that I have tried and find not bad one...
Voted the one that I have tried and find not bad one...
netnet- Private TKC-ian
- Posts : 52
Join date : 2012-07-20
Re: Bak Kut Teh
Missed out on Ya Hua Bak Kut Teh @ PSA Tanjong Pagar Complex
Mitlancer71- Recruit TKC-ian
- Posts : 3
Join date : 2012-07-28
Re: Bak Kut Teh
Sorry, I "Lao Hua" .... i missed it on the thread ....
Mitlancer71 wrote:Missed out on Ya Hua Bak Kut Teh @ PSA Tanjong Pagar Complex
Mitlancer71- Recruit TKC-ian
- Posts : 3
Join date : 2012-07-28
Re: Bak Kut Teh
Mitlancer71 wrote:Missed out on Ya Hua Bak Kut Teh @ PSA Tanjong Pagar Complex
Ya Hua seriously so power? Must try one of these days.
auhcyelnats- Lance Corporal TKC-ian
- Posts : 151
Join date : 2012-07-24
Location : Ang Mo Kio, Singapore
Dry But Kut Teh?
I have tried it before in Sham Alam... Niceee...
I heard those in Singapore not so good..
Singapore is a nation that loves its bak kut teh. We will have heated debates over where to find the best bowl of herbal or peppery broth, and we still talk about the proprietor who dared to turn down a visiting regional political leader who came outside opening hours years ago.
Aficionados may be divided into camps that prefer the Hokkien dark herbal style or theTeochew clear and peppery body. And then there are those who swear by the various renditions across the Causeway. But there’s one more type of preparation that is now raising a few eyebrows and tempting palates – dry bak kut teh.
It sounds at first like an oxymoron – bak kut teh is “pork rib tea” or pork rib soup. How does a soup dish get served dry? Well, truth is, it’s closer to a kung pao dish than bak kut teh. The soy-glazed pork is tossed in a claypot with dried chili, sliced lady’s fingers, and strips of dried cuttlefish. Whatever sauce in the dish is reduced by raging fire to a thick gravy.
At Old Street Bak Kut Teh at 129 Upper Paya Lebar Road, the signature dry bak kut teh (S$6.50 small, as pictured, or S$8.50 large) is seriously dry but full of “wok hei”. It may be a tad too dry and charred – you do end up wishing for more gravy, and the chopped rib pieces seem to have their moisture all wicked away. The pork belly slices in here fare a bit better. You do get served a bowl of peppery broth to go along with this though.
The soup version (S$5.50 small, pictured above, or S$7.50 large) has comfortingly meaty and tender pieces of ribs that have been boiled for a couple of hours at least (evidenced by the fact that the soft bones were easily chewable). The broth is robustly peppery, and is constantly topped up by servers who come by with kettles full of soup.
Of course, bak kut teh is best enjoyed with its supporting cast such as braised peanuts, bean curd skin (or tau kee sheets,above, S$3.50), pickled vegetables and you tiao. They also have chicken feet, pig intestines, pig kidneys, pig tail, pig stomach and tenderloin.
The braised pork trotters (S$8.50) are also worthy of mention. Again, the meat is fall-off-the-bone tender and totally infused with the thick braising sauce. You just wish the portion was bigger.
This place opens from 7am to 1am, so you can have this for almost any meal of the day. They have a self-ordering system – you tick off items on a chit, present it to the cashier, make payment and wait for your food. The shop is brightly lit, well-ventilated and reasonably clean, which makes for pleasant dining and conversation over the pork rib tea.
Old Street Bak Kut Teh 129 Upper Paya Lebar Road 7am – 1am
I heard those in Singapore not so good..
Singapore is a nation that loves its bak kut teh. We will have heated debates over where to find the best bowl of herbal or peppery broth, and we still talk about the proprietor who dared to turn down a visiting regional political leader who came outside opening hours years ago.
Aficionados may be divided into camps that prefer the Hokkien dark herbal style or theTeochew clear and peppery body. And then there are those who swear by the various renditions across the Causeway. But there’s one more type of preparation that is now raising a few eyebrows and tempting palates – dry bak kut teh.
It sounds at first like an oxymoron – bak kut teh is “pork rib tea” or pork rib soup. How does a soup dish get served dry? Well, truth is, it’s closer to a kung pao dish than bak kut teh. The soy-glazed pork is tossed in a claypot with dried chili, sliced lady’s fingers, and strips of dried cuttlefish. Whatever sauce in the dish is reduced by raging fire to a thick gravy.
At Old Street Bak Kut Teh at 129 Upper Paya Lebar Road, the signature dry bak kut teh (S$6.50 small, as pictured, or S$8.50 large) is seriously dry but full of “wok hei”. It may be a tad too dry and charred – you do end up wishing for more gravy, and the chopped rib pieces seem to have their moisture all wicked away. The pork belly slices in here fare a bit better. You do get served a bowl of peppery broth to go along with this though.
The soup version (S$5.50 small, pictured above, or S$7.50 large) has comfortingly meaty and tender pieces of ribs that have been boiled for a couple of hours at least (evidenced by the fact that the soft bones were easily chewable). The broth is robustly peppery, and is constantly topped up by servers who come by with kettles full of soup.
Of course, bak kut teh is best enjoyed with its supporting cast such as braised peanuts, bean curd skin (or tau kee sheets,above, S$3.50), pickled vegetables and you tiao. They also have chicken feet, pig intestines, pig kidneys, pig tail, pig stomach and tenderloin.
The braised pork trotters (S$8.50) are also worthy of mention. Again, the meat is fall-off-the-bone tender and totally infused with the thick braising sauce. You just wish the portion was bigger.
This place opens from 7am to 1am, so you can have this for almost any meal of the day. They have a self-ordering system – you tick off items on a chit, present it to the cashier, make payment and wait for your food. The shop is brightly lit, well-ventilated and reasonably clean, which makes for pleasant dining and conversation over the pork rib tea.
Old Street Bak Kut Teh 129 Upper Paya Lebar Road 7am – 1am
netnet- Private TKC-ian
- Posts : 52
Join date : 2012-07-20
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