Spice Central at St Michael's Bus Interchange Coffeeshop can be considered one hidden gem in Balestier. Yummy South Indian delights can be found here and it has been nominated for several foodie awards, including being nominated as a favourite haunt for taxi drivers.
It may be an unassuming place, but things can get hot at this Indian food stall, thanks to its spicy fare.
My favourite dish at Spice Central has gotta be its fried lady's fingers and achar. I just love the aroma of their ladyfingers ! Sometimes when they get sold out (and yes quite often), I will go for their bittergourd instead - fried and cooked in the same way. And of course, as palatable as their lady cousin. See above picture of the ladyfingers.
As for their achar, it's always very appetizing with its colourful pineapple cubes and onion shreds (btw I'm a big fan of onions).
What is achar: An East Indian word referring to pickled and salted relishes. They can be made sweet or hot, depending on the seasoning added.
Get your South Indian food with some bryani rice or steamed white rice, both go well together with the spice :) Other recommendations are: Fish Curry, Mutton Curry, Chicken Curry, Chicken Masala and thosai.
Seghar (the young chap owner of Spice Central) and his mum will serve you the best Indian food in Balestier. He's very friendly and makes an effort to remember the likes and dislikes of every customer - that's very good service! When he goes back to India for a short while or he closes his stall for a public holiday long weekend, that makes our craving even stronger!
For Bahagia Residents, here's a quick tip for you: Make friends with Seghar , introduce some friends to his stall. You guarantee your meals will always come in bigger portions than expected.
How to get There
Spice Central @ St Michael's Interchange
Posted by
Gigi
on Sunday, August 23, 2009
Tags:
We Eat Balestier,
Whampoa
/
Comments:
Spice Central @ St Michael's Interchange
2009-08-23T01:41:00-07:00
Gigi
We Eat Balestier|Whampoa|
Comments
)
Lerk Thai @ Novena Square 2
Posted by
Gigi
Tags:
Novena,
We Eat Balestier
/
Comments:
Lerk Thai @ Novena Square 2
2009-08-23T00:18:00-07:00
Gigi
Novena|We Eat Balestier|
Comments
)
I had a craving for my avocado milkshake from Thai Express and I always thought there is a branch in Square 2. But no, I ended up in Lerk Thai and settled for a mediocre thai dinner.
There was a value-for-money promotion going on where the set dinner of about 6 dishes (including dessert) cost $19.80++ and it looked like the Tom Yum soup could well make up for the lack of Avocado milkshake in this meal. Hence we decided to give it a try.
The Tom Yum soup itself was fine. We topped it up with seafood which cost an extra $2.00 and it looked nothing like it was filled with seafood. Obviously, it was completely different from the dish they featured on their website and in their promotion images. See the above image (2nd picture from the left) and compare it to the below. What a world of difference!
Ah well, I should have known and I wasn't surprised at all.
The rest of the dishes tasted like coffeeshop zi char, especially for the fried kang kong and omelette. Not too bad for us and people who are easily satisfied when it comes to food.
Anyway, Lerk Thai is located on the 2nd level of Square 2. Good thing about this thai restaurant is that it is strategically located beside the glass railing and you can have a bird's eye view of the mall on the first level. Dining chairs were also comfortable - they are those fabric ones with full arm rest!
Bird's eye view of Level 1. Recommended for those who like to people-watch.
Eventually the meal came up to about $35 for 2 pax - it was inclusive of 2 lemongrass drinks which inflated the price from $20+ (of the set dinner) to $30+. Conclusion is - I will not come here again.
How to get There
There was a value-for-money promotion going on where the set dinner of about 6 dishes (including dessert) cost $19.80++ and it looked like the Tom Yum soup could well make up for the lack of Avocado milkshake in this meal. Hence we decided to give it a try.
The Tom Yum soup itself was fine. We topped it up with seafood which cost an extra $2.00 and it looked nothing like it was filled with seafood. Obviously, it was completely different from the dish they featured on their website and in their promotion images. See the above image (2nd picture from the left) and compare it to the below. What a world of difference!
Ah well, I should have known and I wasn't surprised at all.
The rest of the dishes tasted like coffeeshop zi char, especially for the fried kang kong and omelette. Not too bad for us and people who are easily satisfied when it comes to food.
Anyway, Lerk Thai is located on the 2nd level of Square 2. Good thing about this thai restaurant is that it is strategically located beside the glass railing and you can have a bird's eye view of the mall on the first level. Dining chairs were also comfortable - they are those fabric ones with full arm rest!
Bird's eye view of Level 1. Recommended for those who like to people-watch.
Eventually the meal came up to about $35 for 2 pax - it was inclusive of 2 lemongrass drinks which inflated the price from $20+ (of the set dinner) to $30+. Conclusion is - I will not come here again.
How to get There
Fayidha - The Eating Place for your Supper Fix
Posted by
Gigi
on Sunday, August 16, 2009
Tags:
We Eat Balestier,
Whampoa
/
Comments:
Fayidha - The Eating Place for your Supper Fix
2009-08-16T07:15:00-07:00
Gigi
We Eat Balestier|Whampoa|
Comments
)
Fayidha is the nearest 24 hour Muslim eating place for your midnight supper fix. They serve your Indian and Indian-Muslim food - martabak, prata, mee goreng, nasi goreng. Pretty tasty!
My muslim neighbours were lamenting about how difficult it is to find muslim food in Whampoa hawker centre and most of the time they come here! Some readers were also asking me where they can find supper places to hang out (for timings like 2am to 3am) with their friends and this is probably good supper / breakfast after a late night mahjong session!
Fayidha at 7pm on a Sunday.
How to get There
My muslim neighbours were lamenting about how difficult it is to find muslim food in Whampoa hawker centre and most of the time they come here! Some readers were also asking me where they can find supper places to hang out (for timings like 2am to 3am) with their friends and this is probably good supper / breakfast after a late night mahjong session!
Fayidha at 7pm on a Sunday.
How to get There
小青岛饭店 Qingdao Chinese Food
Posted by
Gigi
on Monday, July 20, 2009
Tags:
We Eat Balestier,
Whampoa
/
Comments:
小青岛饭店 Qingdao Chinese Food
2009-07-20T16:38:00-07:00
Gigi
We Eat Balestier|Whampoa|
Comments
)
What a great start to a brand new week! Please accept my apologies for lack of updates as I've been really busy (with preparations for the photoshoot and lots of shopping). Shall start from where I left off - more foodie places in Whampoa! We have been indulging ourselves with good food, still, around Balestier, tons of pictures stacked up (digitally of course) of which some may never see light.
We had a fast dinner at 小青岛饭店, 87 Whampoa Drive. This eatery will probably be better off introduced as the place to get rather nice "fried mee sua" at $3.00 nett, rather than "Cheap Zi Char Restaurant with Air Con"
We were the only diners there on a Monday night at 7pm, probably because people see it as an air-conditioned place and think it's expensive.
Its fried Mee Sua is quite uniquely fried with dried chilli and you can seldom find this dish in a coffeeshop. We also had a very small bowl of soup (老王瓜干贝汤)- Tonight's Special at $2.00. Altogether, a simple dinner for $15. Highly recommended.
How to Get There
We had a fast dinner at 小青岛饭店, 87 Whampoa Drive. This eatery will probably be better off introduced as the place to get rather nice "fried mee sua" at $3.00 nett, rather than "Cheap Zi Char Restaurant with Air Con"
We were the only diners there on a Monday night at 7pm, probably because people see it as an air-conditioned place and think it's expensive.
Its fried Mee Sua is quite uniquely fried with dried chilli and you can seldom find this dish in a coffeeshop. We also had a very small bowl of soup (老王瓜干贝汤)- Tonight's Special at $2.00. Altogether, a simple dinner for $15. Highly recommended.
How to Get There
Whampoa Hawker Centre Breakfast Trail Part 1
There's a real bustle in the mornings at Whampoa Hawker Centre, especially on weekends. Which you wouldn't get unless you wake up in time to join these queues by 10am! After which, what you do get are the left overs :)
There is a queue for the vegetarian food.
There is a queue for the char kway teow.
There is also a queue for the curry rice!
Queues everywhere, at almost every economical cooked food stall.
Being our first time there (yeah we made great efforts to wake up very early!), Chuck and I chose 545 Prawn Noodles stall as it is one of the stalls without a queue, but alas we were so wrong.
The stall has stacks and stacks of bowls, with raw noodles waiting to be cooked - this is the 'queue' of existing orders. They literally stack up the orders from customers and deliver when it is ready - like 40 minutes later. What's more, this prawn noodle stall has 5 people tending to the stall at one time (count from the picture above)!
My savoury Prawn Bee Hoon. Plate of carrot cake during the long wait for the prawn noodles. And a freshly made you tiao . to feed Chuck's craving. Will be back soon for the handmade ban mian, heard it's very nice!
How to get here
There is a queue for the vegetarian food.
There is a queue for the char kway teow.
There is also a queue for the curry rice!
Queues everywhere, at almost every economical cooked food stall.
Being our first time there (yeah we made great efforts to wake up very early!), Chuck and I chose 545 Prawn Noodles stall as it is one of the stalls without a queue, but alas we were so wrong.
The stall has stacks and stacks of bowls, with raw noodles waiting to be cooked - this is the 'queue' of existing orders. They literally stack up the orders from customers and deliver when it is ready - like 40 minutes later. What's more, this prawn noodle stall has 5 people tending to the stall at one time (count from the picture above)!
My savoury Prawn Bee Hoon. Plate of carrot cake during the long wait for the prawn noodles. And a freshly made you tiao . to feed Chuck's craving. Will be back soon for the handmade ban mian, heard it's very nice!
How to get here
All about Balestier Tau Sar Piah
Balestier is locally famous for three things when it comes to food: the flaky bean jam pastry tau sar piah, fish head steamboat and the pork rib soup bak kut teh.
As for myself, I never had a thing for tau sar piah until I tasted Loong Fatt Eating House & Confectionary's, arguably the original tau sar piah shop along Balestier Road. The crust has a crispy buttery taste and I bought 4 fresh out of the oven!
Photo Credit: Hyacinthus @ MyHomeTown.sg
If you are in for some sweet or salty tau sar piah, head down to this old shop, tucked at the corner of the street of shops. You can find workers hand-making each of this tau sar piah non-stop at the back of the shop, where the oven will churn out trays of hot piping piahs. Whenever I have a chance to peep through the shopfront in the day time, the probability of seeing a queue is high.
Photo Credit: atetoomuch.blogspot.com
The auntie promptly serving tau sar piahs to a snake of queue.
Sweet or salty tau sar piah at $0.60 each.
I prefer the salty ones (I am not a big fan of sweet pastries). The shop itself is also a 'coffeeshop', you can sit down and have tea with your tau sar piah. So nostalgic!
My 2nd favourite Tau Sar Piah shop goes to 631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah Deli!
631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah Deli is a few steps down from Loong Fatt. A plain-looking shop front with a simple partition to fence off the baking area and minimal range of tar sar piahs on display, expect only the freshest from its oven!
631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah - Sweet and salty ones.
Lovely warm and crusty - I couldn't stop savouring it.
Next up, head over to 603 Tau Sar Piah. Another few steps down.
A bit more shelving space for all its display. I've counted, they have about 11 flavours of tau sar piahs here - like Durian, Peanut, Sesame, Pineapple etc. Oh gosh, the variety of tau sar piahs available here reminds me of mooncakes!
The sweet and salty of 603. The pastries are more "hollow" than the first 2 tau sar piah shops mentioned above and this is also less flaky - aka less crusty. See the big lobang in the above picture. Didn't make it to my 5-star list.
The last tau sar piah shop in this stretch - House of Tau Sar Piah 529.
From the outside, this tau sar piah shop looks attractive with big colourful posters and a detailed explanation of its tau sar piahs on an A4 note, "It specializes in tau sar piah, a flakey biscuits filled traditionally with lotus paste or mashed beans. But here, you find a lot more variety of fillings, all enveloped in a thin, delicate crust which is very cripsy. Fillings include yam, durian lotus, and green tea-flavoured lotus paste. My favourite is the salty tau sar piah, which is cheapest at 50 cents each. The rest range from 60 to 70 cents. The shop opens from 8am to 6pm daily."
Inside, it looks most traditional with its retro glass casing. Has the largest range of tau sar piahs here.
There is probably another unknown confectionery on the opposite side of this stretch all the way at Quality Hotel's end. Its building has a fin-like signboard that shouts 永蕐豆沙饼。 However, the tau sar piahs here are pre-packed from somewhere else and of course, can't beat the shiok feeling of tasting it fresh!
Good luck for your Balestier tau sar piah snack trail!
As for myself, I never had a thing for tau sar piah until I tasted Loong Fatt Eating House & Confectionary's, arguably the original tau sar piah shop along Balestier Road. The crust has a crispy buttery taste and I bought 4 fresh out of the oven!
Photo Credit: Hyacinthus @ MyHomeTown.sg
If you are in for some sweet or salty tau sar piah, head down to this old shop, tucked at the corner of the street of shops. You can find workers hand-making each of this tau sar piah non-stop at the back of the shop, where the oven will churn out trays of hot piping piahs. Whenever I have a chance to peep through the shopfront in the day time, the probability of seeing a queue is high.
Photo Credit: atetoomuch.blogspot.com
The auntie promptly serving tau sar piahs to a snake of queue.
Sweet or salty tau sar piah at $0.60 each.
I prefer the salty ones (I am not a big fan of sweet pastries). The shop itself is also a 'coffeeshop', you can sit down and have tea with your tau sar piah. So nostalgic!
My 2nd favourite Tau Sar Piah shop goes to 631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah Deli!
631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah Deli is a few steps down from Loong Fatt. A plain-looking shop front with a simple partition to fence off the baking area and minimal range of tar sar piahs on display, expect only the freshest from its oven!
631 Balestier Tau Sar Piah - Sweet and salty ones.
Lovely warm and crusty - I couldn't stop savouring it.
Next up, head over to 603 Tau Sar Piah. Another few steps down.
A bit more shelving space for all its display. I've counted, they have about 11 flavours of tau sar piahs here - like Durian, Peanut, Sesame, Pineapple etc. Oh gosh, the variety of tau sar piahs available here reminds me of mooncakes!
The sweet and salty of 603. The pastries are more "hollow" than the first 2 tau sar piah shops mentioned above and this is also less flaky - aka less crusty. See the big lobang in the above picture. Didn't make it to my 5-star list.
The last tau sar piah shop in this stretch - House of Tau Sar Piah 529.
From the outside, this tau sar piah shop looks attractive with big colourful posters and a detailed explanation of its tau sar piahs on an A4 note, "It specializes in tau sar piah, a flakey biscuits filled traditionally with lotus paste or mashed beans. But here, you find a lot more variety of fillings, all enveloped in a thin, delicate crust which is very cripsy. Fillings include yam, durian lotus, and green tea-flavoured lotus paste. My favourite is the salty tau sar piah, which is cheapest at 50 cents each. The rest range from 60 to 70 cents. The shop opens from 8am to 6pm daily."
Inside, it looks most traditional with its retro glass casing. Has the largest range of tau sar piahs here.
There is probably another unknown confectionery on the opposite side of this stretch all the way at Quality Hotel's end. Its building has a fin-like signboard that shouts 永蕐豆沙饼。 However, the tau sar piahs here are pre-packed from somewhere else and of course, can't beat the shiok feeling of tasting it fresh!
In case you have heard of this missing tau sar piah shop (611 - Tau Sar Piah Cake Shop), they have already left Balestier after 14 years of operations and have moved upmarket to Vivocity and Sembawang Shopping Centre in 2007. Rebranded as Little Red Shop.
What are your Tau Sar Piah options in Balestier?
If you want to be acquainted (and eventually be in love) with Tau Sar Piah in Balestier, you need to remember these few numbers: 639, 631, 611, 603, 529.639 - Loong Fatt 龙发餐室西果店 the original one at the junction of Thomson and Balestier Road (More insights here - http://ishootieatipost.com/loong-fatt-tau-sar-piah) My favourite. 631 - Balestier Tau Sar Piah Deli. My 2nd - only because its atmosphere can't match Loong Fatt. 603 Tau Sar Piah. Hollow tau sar piah, nothing to shout about. 529 - House of Tau Sar Piah. Widest selection. Yong Hua Dou Sha Bing 永蕐豆沙饼. Not bad tasting but pre-packed.
Good luck for your Balestier tau sar piah snack trail!
The Nearest Amenities - What every Resident should know Part 1/2
Posted by
Gigi
on Sunday, June 21, 2009
Tags:
Bahagia Bulletin,
Balestier,
Convenience Store,
Featured,
Hawker Food,
Jalan Bahagia,
Jalan Mamor,
Whampoa
/
Comments:
1
)
Here's a little directory for those who want to get around in the estate.
3 nearest Coffeeshops - Don't just depend on the Hawker Centre, these are the nearest 3 sussed out.
(1) Wong Poh Coffeeshop at St Michael's Interchange - 200 m walk (Zi char / Fish Head Steamboat, Indian Food Spice Central, Mix Vegetables Rice, Malay food - nasi lemak, mee reebus etc). If you take a bus back, go all the way to the Bus Terminal and tabao some food back.
(2) 74 Whampoa Dr - 350 m walk (Zi char / Mix Vegetables Rice, wanton noodles morning/day, indian rojak) I think this place is popular with the elderly in the mornings - there's a bird 'display' area next to it.
3 nearest Coffeeshops - Don't just depend on the Hawker Centre, these are the nearest 3 sussed out.
(1) Wong Poh Coffeeshop at St Michael's Interchange - 200 m walk (Zi char / Fish Head Steamboat, Indian Food Spice Central, Mix Vegetables Rice, Malay food - nasi lemak, mee reebus etc). If you take a bus back, go all the way to the Bus Terminal and tabao some food back.
(2) 74 Whampoa Dr - 350 m walk (Zi char / Mix Vegetables Rice, wanton noodles morning/day, indian rojak) I think this place is popular with the elderly in the mornings - there's a bird 'display' area next to it.