Friday, December 13, 2019

Bare Snacks

Bare snacks is a snack food maker of the rather healthy variety, focusing on fruits and veggies, in a pretty pure form.
"We slice real fruit and veggies and bake them up slowly for a one-of-a-kind crunch."
While they do make "chips", these are certainly among the healthiest I've ever had.  They mostly didn't excite me, but they remain my favorite manufacturer for coconut chips.

Veggie Chips

For veggie chips, Care makes carrot, beet, and sweet potato chips, all available in a basic sea salt variety, and then each is also available in a fun custom flavor - ranch for the carrot chips (my favorite match!), salt & vinegar for the beets, and barbecue for the sweet potato.
Sea Salt Carrot Chips.
"Simply made with carrots and sea salt."

I started with the simple carrot chips.

They looked different from most other veggie chips I've had in the past, slices of carrot, as expected, crispy, as expected, but, bubbly?  Interesting, since they are simply baked.

Anyway, they were .. fine.  A bit thinner than the style I prefer, and, well, not oily or greasy or fried, so kinda lacking in oomph.  Fine, but boring.  I prefer the less healthy version of veggie chips it seems.
Sea salt beet chips.
"Simply made with beets and sea salt."

Next I went for the vibrant purple beet chips, also the simple sea salt version.  I ... didn't like them.  The sweetness was too much in a chip, and they weren't nearly as crunchy as I was hoping.

Beet chips are also available in a salt & vinegar variety, but I'm not sure how I feel about the idea of salt and vinegar against the sweet beets.
Sweet Potato Chips.
"Simply made with sweet potatoes, sea salt, and black pepper."

Sweet potato chips I do often love.  But ... yeah, another one that feel solidly in the "eh" category.

They weren't bad, the sweet potato flavor was strong, but ... they just weren't interesting.

Fruit Chips

Fruit chips were the first Bare product I tried, years ago.  I remember trying some kind of apple chips, and not really finding them interesting.  Bare makes a few kinds of apple chips - you can get a specific variety (granny smith, fuji, etc), or you can get cinnamon flavored, or go all organic if you wish.

They also make banana chips in a few flavors, cinnamon or organic too, plus a strawberry banana flavor I remember trying, and I think liking?  I'm not sure why I never reviewed them properly though.

The final offering in the fruit line up is one I am extremely excited for though: coconut chips.  I adore *some* coconut chips, and have long time loved Dang coconut chips, particularly when frozen.  And Bare makes a very large assortment of flavors, some sweet, some spicy, some ... caffeinated.
Toasted Coconut Chips.
"Coconuts, simply baked and crunchy."

Well, Dang has been unseated as my favorite coconut chips.  No question.  The Bare chips I just simply like better.

They are more crispy.  The form factor is about the same, large shreds, although Bare has more that are bent over onto themselves, which I like - even crispier!  I tried the first few bites, expecting to move them to the freezer (how I prefer them!), but the first bag I had never lasted that long.  I finished them in seconds.
Chia + Vanilla Chia Coconut Bites.
"Simply made with coconuts, chia seeds, vanilla extract, cane sugar, and sea salt."

I approached these with caution, as I don't tend to like chia, but I loved the regular toasted coconut chips so much I was willing to give them a try.

The form factor, "Coconut Bites", was great, it basically meant clumps of coconut chips, sorta like how granola gets clumps.  Great crunch, great texture, no freezing necessary.  I loved the form.

The vanilla flavor, and extra hit of sugar, were also nice.  But the chia?  NO!  They gave a nice crunch actually, but, the bitter crunch I did not like.
Read More...

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Ume Burger and Bar Ume, Sydney

Update Review, October 2019 Visit

I've been to Ume Burger before, and enjoyed it.  It is an easy, casual option.  I like the harbor front location.  I like the flavors and Japanese inspiration of the menu.

But ... this update review comes with a pretty big caveat.  We didn't exactly have a good experience there.  At all.

I booked for a large group, 20 people.  Our table was reserved for us, waiting with a sign on it.  That part worked well.

But everything else?  Well, a bit of a disaster.

Where to begin, besides ... total disorganization?  The drink order was particularly amusing, as we had 20 different drinks, and they all came basically at once, and the person delivering drinks to the table had no idea which drinks went to each person.  Previously the staff provided cutlery to us, and cups ... this time it was definitely just fending for ourselves, which meant we emptied out the entire communal cutlery bin for the entire restaurant.  No share plates were available for the sides, so, when they arrived, before the burgers, no one had anywhere to put fries, sauces, salads, pickles ...

The ordering process was excruciating too.  Previously, when I visited with a large group, we were able to start a tab (given a credit card), and add to it as as pleased.  This time they kept aggressively asking for our credit card for each order, saying we had to pay separately over and over any time someone got another drink or side.  One person's burger was entirely missing from the order, and after everyone else had their burgers, and it was pointed out, the staff went back and looked, didn't see it in our order, and again, asked for another credit card payment to add it on.

We were not rude, drunk, rowdy ... or anything, yet felt like they were giving us dirty looks and wanted us to leave, nearly immediately.  It just was not welcoming, nor pleasant, in any way.

On the plus side, they did do an impressive job of delivering all 20 (er, 19), burgers all basically at once.  But ... yeah, I cannot recommend this as a group venture again, although I did still find the food enjoyable.

I didn't get photos, but we ordered fries and rings, Japanese pickles, and all the sauces again for the table.  I liked the onion rings, they were crispy and fresh, but not particularly remarkable.  I still find it annoying that you cannot order just a side of onion rings, and must get the fries and rings combo.   The fries (er, chips) were fine, lightly seasoned with the "umami seasoning", and for me, really just a conduit for the sauces.

As for the sauces, they were again the stars of the meal.  The curry mayo I just adored, mostly with the chips, and, uh, in my salad.  Great flavor, creamy, and I think it would go great with many things.  The nori mayo and spicy cod roe mayo I liked, but neither had as strong of a flavor as I wished for.  The tonkatsu I actually thought was fun with the onion rings.   Yay, sauces.

And finally, the Japanese pickles.  Tart, acidic, crispy, tasty.  I added them on my salad and I really liked the texture and acid level they brought to it.
Seaweed Salad / Sesame Dressing. $7.
For my main dish, I didn't actually want a burger in a bun. I wanted a salad topped with a patty, an idea I had last time I was there, after trying, and really liking, the salad.

You can get any patty "naked", but I really wanted to make a salad bowl.  When I tried to ask to have a patty added to the salad, I was met with utter confusion, so I gave up, and ordered separate.

I again found the salad shockingly satisfying.  It looks so simple, but the base of mixed greens was really fresh and crisp, I liked the mix of seaweeds - two kinds, the standard seaweed salad you can see on top here is the brighter, thinner, covered in sesame and (likely) sugar sauce, and darker, larger chunks right below.  I added an entire side of Japanese pickles for more crunch and texture and flavor, and threw a few lotus chips on top for more crunch.

The sesame dressing really is quite flavorful.  I added spicy cod roe mayo and nori mayo in as well, for more creamy dressing and a touch more flavor, and really kinda loved it.

So, my final dish?  Seaweed salad (e.g. mixed greens and seaweed bases), topped with Japanese pickles and lotus chips for crunch (I bet wasabi peas and the like would be great too, but Ume doesn't carry those), plus the sesame dressing intended for the salad, plus nori and spicy cod roe mayos mixed in.  Throw on the patty of your choice, and, really, quite delicious.

I'd definitely do this again.
Kakiage Burger (Naked). $14.20.
"Vegetable Fritter, Nori Mayo, Shredded Cabbage & Tonkatsu Sauce."

While I enjoyed my fish burger last time, I really wasn't in the mood for it again.  And they even had the ebi burger this time, but I also wasn't really feeling that for some reason.  So I decided to go totally rogue, and get the veggie burger.  I was really curious what it would be like.

I got it "naked", e.g. wrapped in lettuce, since I was trying to just chop it up and throw on salad.

It was interesting.  Basically shredded fried veggies, very crispy.  Good textures.  It didn't taste like much in particular though.

The nori mayo was fabulous of course, and there was a very, very generous amount all over it.  I really liked the shredded cabbage too, and wished I could have that added to the salad normally.  The lettuce wrap was really crisp and tasty too.

So, it worked.  I added this lettuce and cabbage, and all the flavorful mayo, into my salad bowl, and chopped the patty up into chunks for bits of texture.  I would not get the kakiage patty again, but, the salad bowl idea I think is still solid.  Just, next time, maybe I do the ebi burger?

Original Review, February 2019 Visit

Japanese burgers.  Yup, fusion.  No, not burgers with ramen "buns", so not that trendy, but, certainly a fusion concept, incorporating Japanese flavors and styles into a causal burger restaurant.  That, is Bar Ume and Ume Burger. 

Bar Ume and Ume Burger were started by a well regarded, hatted chef, who branched out from his fine dining past at Koi and UME, to follow his passion for street culture of Tokyo.  The result is a sit down casual restaurant in Surry Hills, Bar Ume, and a fast casual concept in Barangaroo.
Tasty Eats.
I dined with a group, so I was able to try nearly all the sides.  Everything was good, not necessarily destination worthy, but certainly good, and far above average for the style of food.

Setting - Ume Burger, Barangaroo

Ume Burger is the casual establishment located along the harborside in Barangaroo, open daily for lunch and dinner.  Dine-in, takeout, or delivery.
Ordering Counter
The service style is to order at a register, pay, help yourself to cutlery and tap water, and place a number on your table.  Food is delivered to your table when ready.  If you want something more, another drink, etc, you need to go order and pay again, unless you are with a group and are able to start a tab.
Seating.
Seating is entirely outside along the sidewalk, mostly small tables with little stools that can technically fit 4 people, but look more designed for groups of two.  Most were occupied by just pairs.

Our group had an advance reservation, so we were able to have one of the two larger tables.

All tables are under a covered area in the case of rain, which, was necessary as it was raining on our visit.

Food & Drink - Ume Burger, Barangaroo

Ume Burger has a seemingly simple menu, that turns out to be more extensive and interesting as you read further.  Yes, it is burgers and sides, but there is much more to the menu than just a basic burger and fries.

Drinks

On the drink front, there is beer, wine (including orange and pink wines), cider, and housemade sodas, but also a decent assortment of sake, shochu, and Japanese whiskey.

We opted for a bottle of sake for the table.
Sake.
Not exactly being a connoisseur, I don't feel like I have much to say here except ... it was fine?  Smooth?  The itty bitty sake bowls were slightly annoying to drink from though.

Sides

Sides range from small little bites (pickles, kimchi), to fried things (chips, onion rings, renkon chips, koji fried chicken), to a single salad.  Basically, what'd you'd expect from a burger joint, but, with Japanese flair.

We ordered all but the fried chicken, since everyone was ordering a burger.
"Delicious Kim chi made in-house from scratch."

I don't actually care for kimchi, but one of my co-workers loves it, so this was his pick.  I didn't try it, but he seemed to enjoy.
Japanese Pickles. $4.
I do love pickles though, so gladly opted for the Japanese pickles.

They were fine, a fairly standard Japanese style sour pickle of items that I wasn't entirely sure what they all were.  No one else in the group even wanted to try them!
Renkon Chips. (Large). $5.
"Lotus root crisps, cooked in-house and seasoned with seaweed salt."

I'll admit that the renkon chips are what originally drew me in to Ume Burger.  One day, months ago as I was wandering through, I saw, and tried, the samples of them at the register.

I love chips, and snacks of all sorts, and particularly interesting root veggies, so these are very much something I should like, and, Ume does them well.  Crispy, nicely fried (not oily, but fried tasting in a good way), and well seasoned with the seaweed salt for a great salt level and a bit of extra appeal.

I enjoy munching on these quite a bit, with or without dips.  Available in two sizes, pre-bagged, which is nice because you can easily take extras home.
Seaweed Salad (sesame dressing). $6.
The single salad on the menu is not a just a token mixed green salad.  No, it is Japanese inspired, a seaweed salad ... of sorts.  But, not just a standard seaweed salad like you can get at any sushi restaurant, or grocery store even, not the mass produced seaweed mix with way too much preservative, oil, and sesame seeds, but rather, a salad ... with some classic seaweed salad on top.

The base salad was a mix of assorted lettuces and baby greens, a large variety of just about everything.  All fresh, crisp, good enough.  And on top, a fairly standard seaweed salad, although I was glad to see that it wasn't the kind that easily gets stuck in my teeth.  Plenty of flavor in it already from the sesame based dressing on the seaweed salad as is traditional, but a separate sesame dressing was served on the side.

This sounds pretty boring, I know, but it works.  The seaweed on top of the fresh greens really is a nice combination.

I enjoyed this, I'd get it again, and I think it actually would be fairly tasty to get with a fish patty on top as a lighter non-burger option.  Ume does do lettuce wraps, but, I wonder if they'd let you just add on a patty (any kind) on the salad?
Chips & Onion Rings Combo. $6.
"With umami seasoning."

The side I was most excited for was the onion rings.  I ... have a thing for onion rings.  However, you can't just buy a side of onion rings.  Onion rings are available only as part of a combo with the fries.  We got several large bowls for the table, each of which came with only 5 onion rings.  Yes, we had to share.

The onion rings were good.  Crispy, well formed, the batter didn't fall off.  They did seem slightly over cooked though, just, um, very crunchy and a touch more golden than I'd prefer.  I also didn't actually get that much onion flavor, and prefer a larger ring, but, I'm just being picky, these were fine onion rings, and considerably better than any others I've had in Sydney (not that the truly awful ones from Lord of the Fries {LINK}, or the oily mess from Fish Butchery {LINK} are really any competition ...).

The chips too were decent.  Hot, fresh, crisp, but ... just fries, not really something I get very excited for.  I did appreciate the different sizes, particularly the little extra crispy nibs that fell to the bottom of the bowl, along with all the "umami seasoning", which I did really love, a salty savory mix.

So overall, good onion rings, fine fries, and I'd have the rings again, and maybe a fry or two, but the renkon chips and seaweed salad were my preferences on sides.

Again though, I'll lodge one complaint that I couldn't just get the rings ... I'm so curious why they have this restriction.  Can the fryer not handle it? Are they trying to encourage healthier eating?
(Clockwise, from top left) Japanese Mayo / Curry Mayo / Nori Mayo / Tonkatsu Sauce / Spicy Cod Roe Mayo. $1.50 - $3 each.
If you read my blog much, you know that I'm all about the sauces.  Creamy mayo sauces in particular, I just love.

So of course I ordered one of every sauce to go with our chips (and, to slather on the burgers if we needed, although they all came with sauces anyway).

The Japanese mayo was just simple creamy mayo, likely Kewpie mayo, and I liked it, but it was the least interesting.

The nori mayo didn't have nearly as much flavor as I was hoping for, really just bland mayo with some visible green bits, although our one diner who does not like seafood or seaweed clearly tasted it, and was not pleased.  My third favorite.

The spicy cod roe mayo wasn't really spicy as advertised, but it was certainly my favorite, quite flavorful, and I loved the little pops from the roe in it.  Great texture.  My second favorite, although this one didn't hold up even a few days, quickly getting an odd taste too it.

The curry mayo I wouldn't have ordered if alone or with a smaller group, since I don't tend to like "curry" flavor, but I got it just for completeness, and I'm glad I did.  It was my favorite, really quite flavorful and complex.  It went great with fries and rings, and as I discovered layer using it all, with fried tortillas, and, surprisingly, really good with lettuce, like a thick salad dressing.  I was shocked by how much I loved it in all applications.

And finally, tonkatsu, which didn't seem to be a very good fit for our fries or rings, but was nice to add to my fish katsu burger.

Interestingly, you cannot order some of the other sauces I know they have, such as the Japanese tartar sauce or the special sauce, as sides.  Or maybe you could ask for them even if not on the menu?

The sauces ranged in price from $1.50 for the simple mayo to $3 for cod roe.  I'd get the curry and cod roe mayos again.

Burgers

Ok, finally, the burgers.  We were at Ume *Burger* after all.

Ume Burger has a burger for ... nearly everyone.  Burgers range from classic beef, to pork or fish katsu, to fried veggie or chicken kakiage, with specials appearing regularly too.  All come designed with a specific sauce and toppings, none of which are just simple lettuce and tomato (ok, unless you go for the classic cheeseburger, which does have lettuce, tomato, onion, cheese ... but also a special sauce and Japanese pickles on it).

Our group of 7 managed to order a nice assortment, all but the pork.  Everyone seemed quite pleased, one beef eater almost seemed ready to go order another, and the vegetarians also were fairly thrilled.  I call this success.

I'll admit that I was personally very sad though, because I went intending to get the much lauded juicy ebi burger, and ... it had sold out.  I was told it usually sells out at lunchtime, which I didn't know in advance.  I would have planned a lunch visit!  That said, the fish katsu wasn't a bad option.
Fish Katsu Burger. $15.
"Hand Crumbed Fish Fillet, Japanese Tartare Sauce, Iceberg Lettuce & Cheese."

At first glance, um, this is a really simple burger.  Just a slightly nicer quality Filet o' Fish right?  A sesame bun, crumbed fish, basic cheese and lettuce, and tartar sauce?  Really?

Yes, it was a simple fish burger.  It lacked any of the more interesting elements of the other burgers (my neighbor eating the veggie kakiage had shredded cabbage and a duo of sauces on his, and of course those with the signature Ume Burgers had wagyu mince on theirs), but, everything that was there was done well.

The bun was large, fluffy, slightly glazed on top, and nicely toasted on the bottom, and clearly buttered up.  Richer than I'd prefer, but a good bun.  I think next time though I'd go for a lettuce wrap (or, my aforementioned creation with the seaweed salad), so I could enjoy more of the other flavors, and not have them dominated by the bun.  Still though, this was a good bun, far above average.
Fish Katsu Burger: Inside.
Inside, the top was spread with the Japanese tartar sauce, somewhat unevenly.  The tartar sauce was good though, creamy, full of little chunks of pickle.  It went great with the fish and cheese.  In the end, I also did appreciate that the entire patty wasn't covered, as it meant I could experiment with the other sauces, such as just dunking it in tonkatsu.

Under the patty was a slice of simple yellow cheese, only partially melted (seemingly only melted from contact with the hot patty, not melted on the patty, so the edges were not melted).  But ... it was good, and the melty bits, with fish, and sauce, were quite enjoyable.  It wasn't trying to be anything more than a simple slice of cheese.  Same with the large slices of iceberg.  They were just iceberg, no fancy baby greens, but the juicy, fresh, simple lettuce worked great.

The bottom bun had mustard spread on it as well, which surprised me, as it wasn't listed on the menu, even though it is listed with the pork katsu.  I'm curious if this was a mistake?  It was fine though, very mild mustard, so it just added more flavor.

And finally, that fish patty itself.  Now, I really had wanted the ebi burger, so I had to reset my mind that I was getting crumbed fish instead, but, once ready for it, I did like it.  It really was perfectly crumbed, super crispy and well coated.  The fish was mild, moist, and flaked easily.  Clearly nice quality fish, definitely not Filet O' Fish here.

Overall, this was a very good simple fried fish burger.  It wasn't trying to be fancy, and for what it was, everything was executed nicely.  I'd rather have the ebi burger, but if I went back and it wasn't available, I'd get this again as a lettuce wrap, or perhaps just as the kid's fish fingers, or even try my luck at the salad topping option.

Food & Drink - Bar Ume, Surry Hills

The concept at Bar Ume is a bit more formal, with table service and a bar area, and entirely inside seating.  The menu is also more extensive, although it includes all the burgers and sides that Bar Ume offers, it also has specials like salmon and lamb shoulder, more sides, and, actual desserts.

It is the desserts that I sought out, and in particular, the ice cream.

Note: The soft serve machine used to be located at the Barangaroo location, but they *just* moved it to Surry Hills.  I find this unfortunate, as I'm really one for eating my ice cream outside in the sun, and the Surry Hills location is entirely indoor seating.  It also just seems like an odd move, but I guess folks strolling along in Barangaroo just weren't opting for soft serve?
Rose White Chocolate Soft Serve (Sample).
So, there is a story here.

I was nearby Bar Ume, before lunch, and wanted to see what flavor of soft serve they had, as I was meeting up with a friend, and we were trying to figure out where to get our final precious Sydney soft serve.  Aqua S and Devon Cafe were both high contenders, but I had been really impressed with the consistency of the soft serve at Ume Burger when I had it once before (a pumpkin flavor I wasn't into, but the consistency was spot on!), so I wanted to know the flavor on offer that day, so we could make an optimal decision.

So I stopped in, right when they opened, at 12, to find out.  The answer? Rose white chocolate.  Not rose or white chocolate, nor a swirl, but a single flavor, rose white chocolate.  It didn't necessarily sound like a winner to me, as I'm not one for floral flavors, and I worried that with the white chocolate it would just be very, very sweet.

The bartender, clearly amused that I came in literally the moment they opened just to ask about the soft serve, and clearly excited that they had the machine now (I think it was their second or third day with it), offered to make me a sample.  Or so I thought.  I said sure, expecting a thimble-full of soft serve.  Then I saw her get a cone, and start filling it.  My eyes went a bit wide, as I was headed to lunch, but also because I thought I misunderstood, and now I was getting a full ice cream.  And out came the toppings.  I interrupted saying, "Oh, I thought you meant just a sample", and she laughed, confirming this was a sample, but she wanted me to try the whole thing.  I wasn't going to say no ...

So over she handed the creation, a regular size cone, filled with the soft serve, and topped with white chocolate and crushed rose petals.  This ... was my "sample".  My very, very tasty sample.

The texture and consistency was exactly what I remembered, creamy, really quite perfect.  Wonderful soft serve.  And the flavor?  I didn't need to be worried.  The rose was subtle, the white chocolate was just a pleasant sweetness.  The toppings were beautiful and accented it nicely, although, um, I'm still not really into eating flower petals.

Overall, this was fantastic, and I'd gladly get a full size cone sometime.

Ume Burger Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato
Read More...

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Singapore Airlines, SQ34, SIN-SFO

Flight Info

Flight: SQ 34
Departure: Singapore Changi
Departure local time: 3:50pm
Arrival: San Francisco International
Arrival local time: 1:50pm (same day)
Duration: 14h 33m (non-stop)

Equipment & Amenities

My aircraft was the Airbus A350-900, the exact same aircraft I flew on to Singapore the previous week, which I reviewed then.  Only change this time is I was in seat 15K instead of 12K, and had kids surrounding me.  Sigh.

Still, I was glad to have a seat in the forward cabin.  I still HATED the angled seat, and somewhat wished I had chosen the middle seat bulkhead row 11 that was available ... it is a middle, with a neighbor, but ... zomg the seat is so uncomfortable.  I did manage to find a way to prop myself up on the side of the seat with a pillow wedged in the other side, but ugh, that seat.

I did still love the other features of the seat, particularly all the well designed storage, and the nice bedding.

Dining

In 14.5 hours, yes, there was ample food to be had: dinner (way too early for dinner time, particularly given lounge hopping!), refreshment (anytime you want, great lineup), and then ... lunch.  No breakfast service, given the timing of the flight, which I was worried would be awkward, but I made work well.

I ... ate a lot on this flight. And it was good.  Very, very, very good.
Dining Experience Outline.
As before, I appreciated that they outline what to expect from the "dining experience", highlighting what meals will be served when, although my flight crew didn't really follow them, serving the first meal faster than I've ever seen on a long international flight (way to early for me!), and the second full meal way too early (5 hours before landing?!).  The Refreshment menu was available after the first meal and up until about an hour before landing.

Drinks & Starters

Our first drink orders were taken before takeoff, and served fairly soon once underway.  The canape came soon after.
Bordeaux / Perrier.
For my first drink once underway, I asked what red wine was available.  I was given an answer of ... "a bordeaux", with no other details.  Well, ok.  On both flights, it was clear the staff didn't care about the wines at all, very different from Air New Zealand or Japan Airlines, where they want to educate you about the wines.

I really didn't care for the red wines on the previous flight, but this was better.  Not amazing, but not harshness, not too tanic.
 Canape: Singapore Chicken & Lamb Satay.
"With Onion, Cucumber and Spicy Peanut Sauce."

Singapore Airlines is known for the satay, I believe served on most flights out of Singapore.  It was served soon after takeoff, long before I was hungry, but the aroma was incredible, and even though I dislike chicken and lamb, I do love peanut sauce ...

So I accepted my "canape", which, to be clear, is *before* the appetizers.  The flight to Singapore just had nuts, this was significantly more substantial, a portion of 2 chicken skewers, 1 lamb skewer, and tiny skewer each of cucumber and onion, all drenched in the peanut sauce.

Now, again, I don't like chicken or lamb, but that peanut sauce!!!  Wow, so good.  Slightly spicy, chunky, served warm.  I loved it.

The cucumber was very refreshing, the onion harsh and crisp, and I just couldn't get over how good that sauce was.  I even tried the chicken, and was impressed ... it seemed ... actually grilled, and quite flavorful (slightly smokey and sweet!), although fairly dry.

I see why people rave about this dish.  It almost made me wish I actually got satay while in Singapore, if the airline version was this good ...

You could also opt for what I imagine is a larger portion of this as the main course, via Book the Cook, that also comes with ketupat rice cakes, but otherwise sounds the same.
"The Australian One."
Later on, once the appetizer cart rolled through, I was asked if I wanted to try any other wines.  I asked what else there was, slightly confused because I thought they only had the one red wine, and I was offered "the Australian one".

It too was actually fine, not something I'd go out of my way for, but again, considerably better then the selections on my previous flight.

Dinner

Spoiler: I really enjoyed my dinner, even though it was served way too early for me to really be hungry (the FAs were too on top of things!  It was only about 4:45pm when dinner was served).  
Incredible Dinner.
This was one of the best airline meals I have had in a long time.  Really shockingly fresh and seemingly high quality ingredients.

I had a very full, but not heavy meal, full of fresh vegetables, flavorful sauces, and quality proteins.  And decent enough wine.  And ice cream.  Oh yes.

Certainly one of the best non-First class meals I've had, although my brunch meal might have been even better ...
Carlo Cracco's Selection.
The simple, I don't want to make a decision option was created by two Michelin star chef Carlo Cracco, featuring a halibut filet.  Many people seemed to get this, and I do like halibut, but, I as more interested in the Book the Cook options.
Canyon Ranch Selection.
The other single decision option is the healthy Canyon Ranch menu, featuring a different appetizer (which I *really* wanted - it had burrata, endive, watercress ... but alas, no mix-in-match allowed!), beef short ribs, and lavender flan (which, again, I wanted ...).
On board Dinner Menu.
The regular onboard dinner menu had a choice of the aforementioned seared halibut or beef short ribs, or Oriental roast duck, or vegetarian Indian main dish, in addition to an appetizer and dessert available to everyone using Book the Cook.

Selecting a dish on Book the Cook was *really* hard, primarily given the vast selection .... nearly 65 choices, ranging from every cuisine.

I really was tempted by the laksa (my newfound love!), or the Lobster Thermidor (because, um, that is just crazy), or several of the excellent sounding seafood dishes, but I made a strategic, simple choice.  More on that soon.
Appetizer: Marinated Prawns.
"With Jerusalem artichocke, bell peppers, and anchovy cream."

The appetizer course was served from the cart once our tables were set.  It was dressed with the anchovy cream as it was served, so I asked for the cream on the side, rather than on top, in case I didn't care for it.  I had backup sauces with me.

I did not need the backup sauces.  The anchovy cream was EXCELLENT.  Serious anchovy flavor, and I loved it.  I immediately asked for more, and was given a HUGE scoop.  I devoured every last bite.

Overall dish was quite good, although I'm not sure about the "marinated" part of the prawns.  I didn't detect anything particularly interesting about the flavor in the prawns themselves, although I was quite impressed that they were not fishy at all, were well cleaned, and weren't rubbery.  They seemed quite fresh.  Very nice, actually.

I was also quite happy with the sunchokes, not something you ever seen on flights.  The portion was four chunks, mostly not visible here, but they were decently well cooked (a bit mushy), and just kinda a fun thing to have on a flight.  The bell peppers did seem marinated, and were grilled or cooked in some way, and I didn't like them, but they were easily pushed aside.

The final component was a few greens, not enough to make it a salad, but that was fine, as I actually had a salad coming for my main course, and I just used most of this dish on top of my salad main dish, to create a lovely entree.
From the Basket: Cracker-Thing.
Bread service came from a passed basket, and I was surprised to see so many tasty looking options, including a cheesy filled bread I almost selected.  But I went for the cracker thing, a huge crispy flatbread, that was actually quite delicious.  Nicely seasoned, a bit cheesy, crunchy ... and I honestly could have eaten a stack of them.  So very munchable.

Best "bread basket" item I've ever had, and I was happy to see it offered again during lunch service.
Main: Book the Cook: Spring Salad Bouquet of Haricot Verte Beans, Artichokes, Asparagus and Tomatoes with Hard Boiled Eggs and Roasted Walnuts.
"Haricot beans are high in protein and folic acid, artichokes are high in fibre and stabilize the metabolism. The alluring colours and flavours of this meal are a delight to the palate. Inspired by International Culinary Panel Chef Georges Blanc."

For my main dish, I used Book the Cook to pre-select my dish, yes, just a salad, but this was a very strategic decision, given that I knew that I would go lounge hopping in advance, and that the canape and starter were both decently sized, AND I wanted several of the Refreshment options too.

When it arrived, I was a bit let down just from inspecting it.  It without the haricot verte beans.  Without the asparagus.  And without the walnuts!  It was literally missing half the toppings, and came with just artichokes, tomatoes, and hard boiled eggs on top.   I was looking forward to the asparagus and green beans, since Singapore Airlines impressed me with veggies before, and I was looking forward to the roasted walnuts for a crunch factor.  And ... I planned to eat around the artichokes and hard boiled egg anyway, just not really my thing.

That all said ... the salad base was *really* impressive.  An incredible mix of greens, bib lettuce, raddichio, endive, spring mix, and more.  All were shockingly crisp.  Honestly, like picked that day crisp.  I don't understand, I haven't had such a good salad base even at most *restaurants*, let alone flights.  Seriously quality greens, and I was also quite pleased with the interesting selection of greens.

I didn't care for the artichoke or hard boiled egg, as expected (although I admit the hard boiled egg was pretty perfect, no graying yolks or anything).  The little tomatoes were good too, somehow perfectly ripe, and not mealy (as usually happens with refrigerated tomatoes).  Seriously Singapore Airlines, kudos.  I don't know how they pulled this off.

I asked for the dressing on the side, but, it wasn't brought at all, which was fine, as I just asked for more of the insanely delicious anchovy sauce from the appetizer, which was gladly provided.

I added the sunchokes and shrimp from the appetizer dish, crumbled a bunch of the cracker thing on top for crunch, slathered it in the anchovy cream, and was very, very pleased.  Fresh greens, interesting veggies, quality protein, crunch, and dressing I loved?

Awesome.  It also felt nice to not eat a super heavy meal.  Who knew, healthy-ish could feel good?  Best in-flight salad I've ever had.
Dessert: Sicilian Cannoli with Ricotta Cheese Chocolate.
"And morello cherry."

The dessert options weren't great: cannoli or "petite patisserie", a trio of very salad look buffet quality items.  I went for the cannoli.

It was very lackluster.  Soggy cannoli shell, really not crispy at all.  They get points for having pistachios on the ends though.

The filling was ok, pretty standard ricotta based filling, slight orange accents, and little chocolate chips.  Not sure where the morello cherry was supposed to be, it certainly didn't seem to be found in here.

I immediately asked for ice cream.
Fruit: Grapes.
After the main desserts, a cart rolled through with cheese, crackers, and fruit.  Given how good the fruit was last time, I was looking forward to this, particularly as I wanted to use fruit on my ice cream sundae, but alas, the lineup was not very appealing, mostly whole fruit (bananas, pears, apples), melon, or grapes.  No berries.  The grapes at least were an interesting darker color and large size, so I tried them, but the skins were bitter, and I wasn't really into them at all.

Refreshments

As always, after the dinner service, you can order on demand from a huge lineup of dishes, many of which sounded great.  I almost wished we had even more time on board to sample them all, but kudos to Singapore Airlines for offering so many different choices.
Refreshments Page One.
The refreshment lineup features a number of actual small meals, including several noodle dishes (bee hoon, egg noodles, or bak chor mee, the later of which is also a Book the Cook option that I had almost selected), the very well reviewed Singapore Fried Carrot Cake, an Indian dish with many components, an omelette if you are feeling like breakfast, two different soups, and a smoked salmon croissant.

So. Many. Choices.

I was able to strategically order my Book the Cook options to compliment this menu, since I had seen it in advance, and was able to enjoy one main dish as my brunch main, and another as a pre-arrival meal.

I was quite pleased.
Singapore Fried Carrot Cake.
"A hearty traditional dish of fried savoury radish-rice flour cake with prawns and pickled turnip."

Um, wow.  Serious wow.

I ordered this for my "brunch" main dish, and asked to reserve one early in the flight just in case it ran out.  I learned about Singapore style fried carrot cake (Chai tow kway) while in Singapore, and found myself totally fascinated by it.  No, it is *nothing* like Western carrot cake, as, uh, it is not cake, and it does not contain carrots.  Heh.  Look it up.  This was the white style, without the sweet dark sauce, but it wasn't particularly eggy.

My hotel had a pretty good version I enjoyed regularly at breakfast, so I knew it would fit in well to my brunch lineup as a savory option.  I also knew people tend to praise Singapore Airlines for dish, and it turns out, for very good reason.   Another very very well done dish by Singapore Airlines catering.

So, uh, they managed to serve this crispy.  Actual crispy.  As if it had just been pan-fried to order.  I don't know how, really.  But, they did it.  The texture was just spot-on, and the chunks of radish were juicy and soft.  It was a delight.

The prawns were a smaller style than the dinner appetizer, and weren't actually a highlight - they weren't fishy or anything but were a bit rubbery.  Fine, but not great.  Garnished also with spring onion.

On the side was a good enough sambal, but there was so much flavor in the base itself with the fermented turnip that it didn't really even need it.

My tied-for-second place favorite dish of the flight full of hits, and I'd gladly get it again.  It was perfect for a mid-morning savory option.  It made me *really* wish I had managed to make it to a real hawker stall for an even better version, but I adored this.
Bak Chor Mee Soup.
"Egg noodles in pork broth, garnished with sliced and minced pork, pork ball, braised mushroom, lettuce, fried pork lard and dried sole. Served with sliced red chilli."

Another fairly signature dish from Singapore Airlines, available via Book the Cook on all flights out of Singapore is the Bak Chor Mee (done in both this wet version, and a dry version).  The soup version was available on our Refreshment menu.  I was eyeing both versions for my Book the Cook pre-selection, but decided on other dishes instead, so I was happy to see it available still when we were about 2 hours away from San Francisco, and I kinda wanted something more, particularly after I saw others eating it.  The toppings looked legit!

It was yet another fairly good dish.  The noodles were the part that surprised me the most - not mushy, not firm, just ... right.  Great texture, and nice egg flavor.

The elaborate toppings line up was a mixed bag: the pork balls were kinda dried out and looked a bit scary (odd color), and the sliced pork was fairly chewy, but the minced pork and braised mushrooms were fine.  I loved the super crispy fried pork lard chunks and strips and bits ... sooo much texture, and kudos to serving so quickly they didn't get soggy.  I didn't really find any of the dried sole.

On the side was sliced red chilli to add as I pleased, really quite spicy.  It needed it though, as the broth was mild and quite bland, although not a bad thing for early morning.

I wouldn't get this again, and certainly didn't like it nearly as much as anything else I consumed, easily my least favorite dish, but, I was glad to try it, and really did appreciate all the extra touches and garnishes.
Refreshments: Page Two.
The next page is mostly lighter options, a vegetarian panini, chia seed pudding, and a slew of snacks: fresh fruit, cheese, nuts, chips, flavored popcorn (!), trail mix, biscuits, and ... Ben & Jerry's ice cream.

I eagerly asked for the honey mustard popcorn, given my total love of flavored popcorns, but alas ... I was told they didn't have it on this flight.  Grumpcat.

And then they found them.  And ... literally about every hour, a FA showed up with another bag for me.  I was not asking for more, but they just kept bringing them, apologizing that they couldn't find them earlier.  Heh.  Score.

And of course I ordered ice cream.  Multiple times.
Ben & Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough.
After the lackluster cannoli, I needed more dessert, stat.  So I asked for the ice cream, which is amusingly Ben & Jerry's for flights out of Singapore (it was Häagen-Dazs out of San Francisco).  

Chocolate chip cookie dough isn't really my first pick, but at least it wasn't vanilla (as it was on the previous flight).  It was hard as a rock, but time fixed that.

Yes I added my own toppings, and was glad to have this backup option.
Ben & Jerry's #2: Melty Soup!
Later on in the flight, alongside my brunch waffles, I asked for another ice cream.

The flight attendant told me it was really melty, but asked if I still wanted it.   I'll admit I wasn't expecting it to be *entirely* liquid, but I just asked for a little bowl, and got to work making my perfect dish from it.

But, yes, it was not frozen in any way, a bit surprising, as we had 5 hours left in the flight, and I thought usually airlines kept the ice cream on dry ice?
Ben & Jerry's Cookie Dough Soup + Strawberry Coulis + Berries.
I added berry coulis and fresh berries from my waffle course, and used it as a dip with my waffles, and then just a sweet delicious rich soup, and loved it probably even more than if it was frozen ice cream.  It somehow felt more breakfast-brunch appropriate this way.

Lunch

Since the flight lands at 1:50pm, the next meal is ... lunch, with a full three course service.  Yes, this is jarring after the very short night.  I was NOT pleased to be woken with 5 hours remaining in the flight (!), being told "we are doing the meal service now", as it was only 9:30am at our destination and something like 3:30am in Singapore.  I was even more NOT pleased when others were able to get the full meal service only 2-3 hours out.  I'd certainly do this differently in the future, and I'm still confused why I was kinda forced into it (I was literally still in bed and they quite aggressively wanted to set my table, stat, even though my seat was in bed mode still).

Anyway.  I turned it into brunch, and it was amazing.  And likely better for me to get up and try to get on SF time ...
Lunch Menu.
Book the Cook is available for the main dish, so I again utilized that, rather than selecting an on-board choice of grilled salmon, bak chor mee (also from refreshment menu), or Indian veggie briyani.

All options come with an appetizer (salad) and dessert (cake).
Incredible Brunch.
It shouldn't surprise you that I designed an elaborate, and truly fabulous, brunch, utilizing the standard on board Refreshment option for my savory main course, Book the Cook for a fabulous sweet main course, and another Refreshment as the side sweet.  The regular meal service appetizer salad and dessert rounded it out to a *fabulous* 5 course brunch.  Because ... what else did I have to do but eat?  Ooops.

But seriously.  Amazing meal.  I think the best non-First class meal I've had on a flight?
Illy Gourmet Coffee.
In the "morning", I was again pleased by the brewed to order extensive lineup of Illy roasts.

Arabica Selection: Brasile.
"With an equilibrium of acidity and bitterness, the taste is characterized by the unmistakable notes of caramel and dried fruit."

I started with a regular, caffeinated option, opting for a more intense roast than my previous flight (although I liked that lighter ethiopian too).

It was definitely bolder, bigger, and slightly too strong for me, but I asked for a little extra water, and I was quite pleased.  So nice to have great coffee on board in the morning! 

Espresso Decaf. 
"Decafinated espresso with delicate notes of caramel, toasted bread and chocolate with a sweet aftertaste."

I moved on to the decaf, and had several, and they were all decent as well.  So much better than standard instant decaf on flights.

Thank you Singapore Airlines for caring about coffee quality!
Appetizer: Smoked Duck Breast.
 "With cabbage, rock melon, dried cranberry salad, yuzu pepper vinaigrette."

Since the meal is considered lunch, it comes with an appropriate appetizer, a salad featuring smoked duck.  I never really want the fruit, yogurt, or cereal "appetizer" round on a breakfast flight, so I didn't miss that exactly, but, I wasn't exactly craving salad or lunch food at this point.  I also never thought I liked smoked duck until I had a great version on an Air New Zealand flight, so I was still kinda excited for this.

It was served over a base of a few mixed greens (slightly wilty, not as impressive as the dinner service ones), some slaw (nice, crisp), tart dried cranberries (not too hard, actually quite complimentary), and dressed with a tangy yuzu pepper vinaigrette.  I'll admit I was pretty pleased with the little side salad thing.

I had to push aside the rock melon due to my allergy.

The duck was very nice, tender, lovely smoke to it, almost ... almost reminding me of bacon, but that was clearly my body wanting breakfast, not lunch!

Overall, a good dish, but not really what I wanted at 3am.

I moved on to a more appropriate breakfast-savory dish, the Singaporean Fried Carrot Cake, and the timing of that was just right.
Book the Cook Main Course: Warm Waffle with Strawberry Coulis.
"Warm waffle with strawberry coulis, fresh berries and mascarpone cheese."

The dine-on-board menu had traditional lunch entrees, but this meal service is also available for Book the Cook, with all 65 or so options again.  I knew that I'd be interested in something more breakfast-like at this point, and saw they had waffles (one of my favorite things!), so it was a no-brainer that I wanted this, particularly after I saw photos of it.

I asked for the toppings on the side, as it normally comes topped and I was worried that I might not like the coulis, or that the cream would melt, and I was really pleased with just how cute they plated it!  That tiny little cup of cream and the shooter of coulis were awesome.

Also awesome?  Um, the dish!  I've had such mixed success with waffles on flights before (usually quite poor, like the Air New Zealand ones that always disappoint ... over and over), but I had hope for this just given the positive reviews I had seen).

It might have been my favorite in-flight waffle experience so far, finally surpassing the excellent British Airways First Class pecan waffles with sautéed bananas and cinnamon honey, which have long held that title, and the more recent runner up from Japan Airlines.

The waffles were fairly tiny, but with all the other food I was ordering (as I also had the carrot cake main course from the Refreshment menu at this time), it was more than plenty.  They weren't quite the crispy liege-style quite they looked, but they were soft and fluffy in a good way, not mushy, certainly not soggy, not dried out, not stale.  Fairly impressive re-heating job, honestly not sure how they managed to do this without the edges getting hard or the waffles getting strangely moist.  The base flavor was good.  

The mascarpone topping was excellent - rich, thick, sweetened.  Seriously, so good, and turned this into an epic dessert course.  I didn't mind.

The berry coulis was also very good - fairly thick, bursting with berry flavor, some slight texture.  Sweet but not cloying, no strange spicing, just, very berry forward, very good.

And lastly, the fruit, berries.  All were fresh, ripe, and tasty.  I was again impressed with the freshness and quality.

I may or may not have also ordered another Ben & Jerry's ice cream to go with it.  It was crazy melty at that point, but great to dip the waffle into.  A+.

Overall, this was just absolutely wonderful - good waffles, excellent toppings, and exactly what I wanted at that time.  My favorite dish of the flight full of hits, and I'd gladly get it again.
Dessert: Ondeh Ondeh Cake.
"Pandan sponge cake with gula melaka cream and dessicated coconut."

But the meal just kept on giving!

Since this was a lunch meal, it came with dessert, as those opting for the regular menu had a standard savory entree.  I certainly did *NOT* need more dessert at this point, nor do I like sponge cake, but the server really encouraged me, saying it was so good.  And I do love pandan ...

I think actually, it was good.  The cake was moist, it wasn't dry, slight pandan essence.  The cream layer in the middle was not very think, but the yula melaka came through, and I loved that.  On top was a cream layer (coconut?) and lots of dessicated coconut.  I didn't really care for that part, sometimes too much coconut is off-putting to me, particularly if not toasted, and this fell in that category.

Still, a decent little dessert, if you possibly wanted dessert at that point.
Read More...