File: 49-food-re-(main)
Section: food
SubSect: review
Hed: Ah Yat Harbour View Restaurant
Subhed: Abalone king
P/Q: This is a place for dining, not just to eat.
Star: 4
Text:
Chef Ah Yat knows his abalone. So famous for his edible sea snails, Singapore Airlines carries his critically acclaimed brand of abalone delicacies on the in-flight menu.
So when Chef Ah Yat opened his newest place in iSquare, it was not going to be a small deal. Many elements goes into making a fine Chinese diner: An intimate dining space like Man Wah; the seamless service of One Harbour Road; and the proud procurement of specialty ingredients like Fook Lam Moon. With its top floor city views, cosy dining room, Hyatt-trained floor staff, and with a menu of braggable abalone from around the world, Ah Yat is surely ticking the right boxes.
The environment here is right for dining I thought as I sat down; a quiet level of conversation, mind-clearing views, undisruptive service, and calm blue and gold setting. This is a place for dining, not just to eat. Plan for a sit down. And plan to try their Yoshihama abalone set menu if you are a first timer. Five courses, a glass of wine, and dessert for $1,388.
The dried Yoshihama abalone is prized for its shape and musky taste. On another occasion we tried fresh abalone from Australia and preferred this tender meat and clean sea flavours to the Yoshihama. But this is a personal preference. Both were equally meaty, unblemished, and glossed with velour sauce made of Yunnan ham and dried mushrooms and accompanied by goose’s web.
“Have you ever refrigerated abalone sauce?” The former chef I was dining with asked. “When the sauce separates, about half of it is fat.” Maybe that’s why it is so smooth on the tongue. The supervisor overheard our conversation and broke in, “Ours is made with very little oil. You can take some home if you’d like.”
A pair of rock lobsters arrived, steamed with a mount of garlic and green onions. These petite crustaceans were beautiful objects to look at and took no more than two sweet bites to finish. Good time to note Chinese food here is eaten with fork and knives. There are chopsticks, but most of the courses require western tools.
The Ah Yat deep fried crispy chicken was simplistic and technically perfect. The skin was paper-crisp, the flesh smooth and tender though not a hint of blood was visible. The taste was heightened by a small saucer of lemon juice.
There is a saying in Chinese called wok hay (wok-heat). It refers to the blessing that transmits from the wok to the ingredients if your fire is fierce enough. When a wok breathes energy it brings the breath of a wok to whatever it touches and carries forward past ingredients that have seen this wok. In other words, there are dead woks and woks full of life. The latter is evident here with the next course: Ah Yat’s famous fried rice. First it is prepared in the kitchen in their lively woks where eggs, shrimp, dried scallops, and char sui are tossed in a wok, then brought out in a clay pot and finished to your liking. Our waiter asked us if we like our rice wet or dry then cooked the fried rice accordingly at tableside. We enjoyed the dolsat bibimbap-like crisp of the burnt rice, and the extracted flavours in the soft grains.
On fine china, course by course was laid out seamlessly and with little interruption but the views beyond us. We’ve visited twice now, and both times it has been consistent in food and service. It’s true craftsmanship, and you’ll pay the price for it. Angie Wong
29/F, iSquare , 63 Nathan Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui, 2328 0983. Daily from 11.30am-11pm.
The Bill
Yoshihama abalone set menu x2 $2,776
Service charge 10 per cent $277.60
Total $3,053.60