Showing posts with label Egg Tarts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egg Tarts. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Dim Sum at Bing Sheng

I went with my parents to visit my Grandma's place a while ago and from her place, we walked to Bing Sheng.  We've been here before and I'm usually pretty hungry when I go, and pretty full and happy when I leave. 


Chicken knees, haha!  I've got a couple of friends that get creeped out by this sort of thing, but I love the stuff.  Would be better on a hot summer night accompanied by an ice-cold beer or some sake, but it's nice for breakfast as well, haha!
The congee was piping hot, and stayed hot for along time, probably because of the stone pot.  It also didn't seperate and get all watery half-way through your meal like some places I know. 
The hagow are crammed with shrimp and the skin is thin enough that if you're not careful, the whole thing will grenade on you.

Steamed pork ribs were built up with butternut squash filler, which isn't that bad.  I was tempted to order a bowl of rice and just dump the leftover drippings into it, but I refrained.
The siumai were also on the large side, and packed pork and shrimp.

Have I mentioned I love egg tarts?

Friday, August 5, 2011

Do You Enjoy Eating Egg Tarts?

Do you enjoy eating egg tarts? I hope you won't be put off by my frankness when I tell you that I absolutely love them. In fact, I enjoy no food item more than a freshly-baked egg tart.



Now, I've met a lot of people in my life, and it's true that quite a few people do not share this opinion. I'm sorry to say that these people have always angered me. There are two types of people in this world: those who eat egg tarts whenever it is possible to do so, and those who opt to do other things with their free time.



Who do the latter think they are kidding? What pastime could be more rewarding than the consumption of egg tarts? I haven't yet found one, and I don't expect to in my lifetime.



Unlike other foods, egg tarts can be eaten at any time, in any place, and it is not necessary to cook them. Now, I ask you: Why not eat egg tarts? They are delicious. I carry a box of egg tarts with me wherever I go. I eat them from the box whenever I get the urge, regardless of the circumstances. When I‘m at work, my egg tarts are my colleagues, my co-workers, my friends. If, in the middle of helping a client, I decide I want to consume an egg tart, I do so. I waste the client’s time and company time, but in the end, it is all worth it, because I enjoy egg tarts more than I enjoy working.



This bothers some people. I had the chance to work for a really good company, but when the boss learned of my egg tart cravings, he hired someone else. To this day, I am peeved about this.



When I worked at a call centre a long time ago, I ate over 800 egg tarts a day. It was necessary. My job was extremely intense, and I found the inspiration to work hard through my intense love for egg tarts. One of my co-workers said that he never wanted to work with me again. I kept eating egg tarts when I spoke to clients, and that seemed to bother him. I say f*ck him. He doesn't even like egg tarts.



I would like to end by emphasizing once again that I really like to eat egg tarts. If any of you people disagree, I loathe you. I despise you. Not only that, but I also despise all your loved ones. I want to see them torn to pieces by wild dogs. If I ever meet you in person, I'll smash your brains in with a f*cking bat. Then we'll see who doesn't like egg tarts. **



** blatantly plagarized from Christopher Walken's essay on hot dogs...=)

New Town Bakery - Chinatown

The next stop on the China Town tour was New Town Bakery.  Actually, I wanted to go to Kent's Kitchen, but we were so full from dim sum, Kent's will have to wait for another visit.  I remember New Town Baker as one of my early childhood Chinatown memories.  We'd either go there for Chinese pastries/deserts or even a sit down meal.  My dad would point out a lot of old residents of Chinatown (2nd and 3rd and maybe even 4th gen Chinese would come here to eat.  I'd see Chinese seniors that spoke in English without a hint of a Chinese accent, and to me, that was strange because the only elder Chinese people I knew in my life at the time were from overseas.  I guess that's what someone will probably say about me when I'm that age =)




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The place is old, as old, as some of the customers that frequent the place, and has not changed at all in my lifetime and who knows, may not ever change.  It's a bit of a grease spoon, and not exactly the cleanest place in town, but that's not saying much considering it's in Chinatown, haha! 


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Seems like this place might be popular with the local Philipino community as well because they supply alot of Philipino delecacies, and some of the deserts are labelled with their equivalent names in Tagalog.


These coconut tarts are one of my favourites.  Sweeter than hell, but oh so tasty.

My mom's favourite  -sesame balls.  I think I've had one to many so I didn't get any.
The butterfly crisps here are pretty good, nice and flaky and very buttery. 
I love almond cookies, but didn't get any this time.  I was still full from dim sum and had to limit myself to the 6 pc special, haha!
I got the sweet egg crispy....I thought they were Chinese rice crispy squares for the longest time, haha!  Anyway, sachima is one of my favourites as well (aw hell, they're all my favourites, lol!) but I wasn't happy with the ones from New Town.  These were a little on the dry side and I was gagging for some tea after eating mine.
The walnut cupcakes were also a little on the dry side.
Egg Tarts, who doesn't like egg tarts?  I love egg tarts. 
Vince has actually tried this - Egg Pie, one-upping the standard issue egg tart.  As much as I love egg tarts, I was too full to try this, but I swear, I will return to get one and do a review.

Ah, egg tarts, is there any greater wonder in the world?  I seriously doubt that.  I wrote a post a long time ago, just about egg tarts.  Maybe it's time to post it, haha!

Anyway, New Town's not perfect, but I think it's worth the visit and return visits.  I have fond memories of the place from when I was a child, so it works out for me, and the food here is cheap and tasty (haha, for the most part).


New Town Bakery & Restaurant 新城餅家餐室 (Chinatown) on Urbanspoon

Floata Seafood Restaurant - Chinatown

Ah, Chinatown.  I used to go here all the time with my parents because when I was little, there was only one Chinese grocery store in Richmond, and only a few scattered restaurants.  Talk about dating myself!  For me, Chinatown can be summed up with dim sum, smelly meat and fish shops, cheap hair cuts and kung fu shoes.  I went to Chinatown last week and had a stroll down memory lane.  I couldn't believe how some of it was exactly as I remember (filthy, minging and chock-full of junkies) and other parts were modern, clean and completely unrecognizable as the same place.   

The first stop on the Chinatown tour was Floata Seafood Restaurant.  Holy cow, talk about a bad rating and some really nasty reviews of this place on Urban Spoon, haha!  I've been to Floata before - a few times in the old Richmond location and once or twice before at the Chinatown location, but all those times, I never had a camera with me....strange.  Anyway, I've only been to Floata for dim sum, and never had any problems, but after reading some of the other reviews of this place, I better get some shots before my next visit:

http://www.followmefoodie.com/2010/10/floata-seafood-restaurant/

First, a couple of interesting facts.  The restaurant can trace it's roots back to HK (that could explain the clientele's habit of "cleansing" their utensils with hot tea, haha!), and it's Canada's largest Chinese restaurant boasting a seating capacity of 1000 people = mass production Chinese food.

My buddy Vince got there first and started ordering food.  They've got this early bird special for dimsum and it's a bit cheaper if you eat there before 11am.  The place was filled with seniors sipping their morning tea, with one or two items on their table, reading their Chinese newspapers after their morning tai chi.  Most folks were there just to hang out, and there wasn't a whole lot of eating going on there, except for me and Vince who were there to pig out on the cheap dim sum.



I'm starting to think that there must be a massive siu mai factory somewhere that all the restaurants get their supplies from.  I swear this tasted like a lot of other places I've been.....or maybe it's such a simple dish, it's hard to get a variety that's done totally different.

I don't know what this was called, but it was basically a deep fried dumpling (possibly a wonton) with some veg and prawns (sea bugs as my friend Jeremy calls them, haha!) so yes, we had some bugs in our food during this visit.
Guts!  As Vince says, it's all in the sauce.  And the sauce here was basically sha cha jiang.  The dish itself was pretty good overall, nice and tender, not chewy at all, and didn't have the strong aroma of stomach liner.  Overall, not too bad, and not a catepillar to be seen.

The lo mai gai here was bigger than other places.  I learned something about this particular item and apparently there's a difference when it comes in this size versus the steamers that come with two or three smaller ones.....but I forgot what Vnice told me.  Haha, anyway, this one came with loads of ground pork and other bits of filling and no, there were no catepillars or plastic zip ties in it. 
The steamed rice noodle with beef tasted as good as could be.  The meat filling tasted like the typical beef meatballs (which is mostly fish paste, haha!). 

The nai wang bao was really tasty here.  Some places make it so the filling is either runny or way too dried out.  The filler her was nice and moist, and so was the bun....no catepillars.
The Chinese sponge cake tasted good too.  It was nice and fluffy and didn't have any catepillars in it. 
The sesame balls were fresh and slightly crispy on the outside, nice and gooey on the inside and lotus-paste filling tasted pretty good. 
The spare ribs were of okay quality. The taste was good, but the bone/cartilidge/fat/lean ratio could have been better. When I was done, I had a mountain of bones and cartilidge, and I usually eat the cartilidge!
Be built a tower of steamers and wanted to see how high we could stack it before someone took notice and came a long to clear them......

.......we got pretty high before it was taken.



If you're expecting fine dining here, don't, especially during dim sum.  I wouldn't say it's bad service, but rather lack of service.  It's not like I could single out any particular server to be described as rude because when they did manage to get around to serving us, most were friendly.  But I don't think the staff shoud be blamed for the ratings of this place.  If they weren't so understaffed, they would be able to address the health and safety concerns, they would have enough people to clean the washrooms, and customers would not bne neglected, or made to fetch their own tea or hot water from the back end.  Yes, on more than one occassion, we went to the back with our teapot to get our own hot water, sauces, etc.  The staff didn't even bat an eye, as if it was completely normal.  We started doing this because we saw many seniors (who were probably regulars) do the same thing. 

As far as bugs in the food, well, I didn't read about that until after my most recent visit.  I find that pretty gross, and it really makes me hesitate to go back because the restaurant wasn't particularly sanitary.  The washrooms were filthy the last time I went, and customers are allowed to walk in and out of the prep/kitchen area, bringing in who knows what kind of filth.  The shame and blame should be paced on management though, for keeping the place so understaffed and underpaid.  If you overwork your staff and pay them bare-bones, they are not going to care if there are catepillars in the food.  Floata could have been a grand restaurant, but the owners and management are running it into the ground.  It will take a lot of effort to turn the place around.  Well, on the bright side, at least the catepillar was cooked, haha!


Floata Seafood Restaurant 富大海鮮酒家 on Urbanspoon

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