I Love Dumplings, Melbourne 07-2016 & 09-2016

It's been a long while since I've wandered along Racecourse Road in search of lunch. I've driven a few times and thought I Love Dumplings had closed down this branch (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/i-love-dumplings-melbourne-01-2014). In fact I was correct - that branch did close down and a new one sprung up bigger than before such that I didn't realise. The big writing in red should've redirected me but I suppose I wasn't looking in the same place.

Using my last entry as a guide, I didn't have a lot of difficulty in choosing dishes. Fried meat dumplings, lamb ribs and whatever else.

- Wonton noodle soup $9.8 - a typical mild flavoured clear broth with thin egg noodles and soft wontons;
- Pan fried lamb & beef dumplings $9.8 + Sichuan chilli sauce $1 - an excellent dumpling with chewy skin (base could have been that bit more fried and crisp), a deep soft mince meaty core and an outstanding savoury sauce with a bit of tang (black vinegar?) and not enough chilli. I wonder if the sauce has chicken/pork broth added to it?;
- Deepfried lamb ribs with homemade chilli sauce & cumin $24 - the serves seem to be smaller than they used to (my previous picture has at least 2-3 more ribs) and they now serve the cumin salt and cold tangy chilli sauce separately. Still delicious with delectable meat and crisp skin.

On the lunch menu they also offer a quickie of rice & lamb ribs for $10. I wonder how many ribs you'd get for that price and if it is better value for money?

Next time I would order the lamb ribs and more pan fried dumplings to eat with the Sichuan chilli sauce. I suppose for variety the mapo tofu and other Sichuan things may be worth a try.

09-2016

I went back shortly after for dinner. After a short 10min wait (on a Friday night), a table was free tucked in the back corner minimally separated from another dining pair. Their calamari smells were alluring.

- Salt & pepper calamari (small) $9.8 - very heavily salted and flavoursome calamari that begged to be eaten with rice. One of the most flavoured without being overwhelming. A large size would be in order next time;
- Chilli green beans with pork mince $16.8 - another heavily flavoured dish with some bites of chilli coming through. The beans make it healthy, the pork makes it more filling;
- Fried tofu in Sichuan spicy hotpot $15.8 - it was served in a wok sitting on top of a flame. For some reason I expected the hotpot to be have more broth. It was fine but nothing special and wouldn't order it again.

I also got the lamb and beef dumplings but they didn't give me the Sichuan chilli sauce I ordered. I'll have to be more vocal about receiving it next time considering how good it is.

I Love Dumplings Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Longrain, Melbourne 06-2016

It's been a long time since I was united with Longrain. There's nothing quite like the special birthday reminder to give me any excuse to revisit the beautiful drinks, the atmosphere and the pork hock. There are some visits where I feel the shared tables are too wide to comfortably have a conversation across it, but on this weekday late night, private tables were available.

Since my last Longrain post (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/longrain-melbourne-10-2012), I have been once for the pork hock but have also tried many modern Thai contenders, of which the most recent have been in Canberra (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/morks-restaurant-canberra-12-2015) and Melbourne (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/chin-chin-melbourne-05-2016).

- Caramelised pork hock with five spice & chilli vinegar $23.5 (entree) - as good as I remember. Outstanding mixed textures of meat, sweet thick coating and a little sprinkle of vinegar for contrast and added chilli hit;
- Jaew curry of snapper fillet with baby corn & betel leaf $36 - a much more thin liquid soup base than what I expected as a thicker curry. Nice fish, ingredients and a lighter flavour;
- Braised beef cheek, black vinegar, ginger, Chinese celery (special) - tender beef cheeks in a tangy black vinegar sauce.

The pork hock was still the best dish and flavour. I think partially as my cooking skills have improved, I realise I could possibly make the other two dishes with less difficulty (not to detract anything from the outstanding kitchen). I'd prefer the thicker curries and heavier flavours, as that has always been my association and affinity to Longrain.

Next time I would order the Pork Hock again (perhaps the large size and take the leftovers home). Of the current menu I'd add the Coconut-poached Chicken and Mussaman lamb curry or Red Curry Scotch Fillet (not that interested in scotch but I am in red curry), although I agree it's a heavy meat selection (albeit 4 different meats).

Longrain Melbourne Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Frying Colours, Melbourne 07-2016

It's been a while since my last fried chicken craving. In actual fact I was craving Belle's Hot Chicken but didn't want to travel so far to wait in line. A satisfactory alternative was KFC - the Korean one, not the Kentucky one. It's been a little while for that too, the last being Arisoo in Melbourne http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/arisoo-melbourne-12-2015) or B-One in Canberra (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/b-one-korean-restaurant-canberra-07-2015).

They serve original, sweet soy and spicy. Other KFC places tend to have a chilli and a particular spicy sauce also. It would be interesting to see if their spicy was a nice heat that I like or more fiery and too hot for me to handle (like Gami). The price is a good 15% more than the other places so hopefully that reflected quality rather than the reputation (Broadsheet's favourite is mentioned outside) or the neighbourhood.

- Bibimbap Beef $19 - a nice bowl with good ingredients and an excellent gochujang (had to ask for a second container to make it as wet and spicy as I like). I'd prefer there to be more of the crisp crunchy base and I did ensure not to disturb the bottom until toward the end;
- Spicy Fried Chicken $39 (whole) - a nice bird with quite tender meat and a thick coating of crisp hot batter. The chilli was just enough and definitely not too hot for me although left a little burn;
- Wasabislaw $6 - coleslaw with a bit of wasabi tang in the mayo (as an aside I wonder if they make it themselves or use the Kewpie?).

The food is good. The flavours are nice. Most of all it's close to me and more convenient than Chimac or Gami or whatever else is around. The price is a bit higher so I'll suppose I'll just have to wear it.

Other than the bibimbap and fried chicken (which I'd order again, but less likely the slaw), the mandoo dumplings, tteokbokki, seafood stews and lamb ribs all also appeal to me.

Frying Colours Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Roti Road, Melbourne 06-2016 & 07-2016

It's not often I frequent a Malaysian place, although each time I seem to remind myself why some of the flavours put me at ease. The most recent places have been C&R in London (before the months long renovations) and Roti House in Canberra, with a special mention to Chef Lagenda closeby. I do have a place in my stomach for PappaRich but that's mainly to do with the Entertainment Book and their sweet drinks (most of their product is premade and even precooked... apparently).

Nonetheless as close as Lagenda is, Roti Road is even closer and walkable. I've heard some mixed reviews but on the whole informed their laksa is a decent rendition in town.

- Deepfried Squid Tentacles $7.8 - not too bad, a bit chewy, quite heavily salty, could have used more chilli;
- Curry Laksa Seafood $13.5 - a real Malaysian curry mee with strong flavour and only a hint of coconut. Not the Singapore or Thai laksa style that most people might be used to with the salty/sweet/sour combination, but a good straight forward Malaysian type. A small amount of seafood (squid, prawns) and some eggplant rounded out the ingredients;
- Roti Chanai with Ayam Masak Merah $10.8 - a nice wispy roti with a bit of chew to it. The chicken reminded me of tandoori and I'd opt for the rendang beef next time (as I feel that should be the roti default, but not my choice this time...).

07-2016

I came back again a few weeks later to try a few other things (no photos):

- Roti Telur & Bawang $7.9 - a roti made thicker with egg and onion, although I felt didn't add much to it. I prefer the simple roti from the first time;
- Har Mee $12.9 - I've always had trouble choosing between this lesser eaten dish, Assam laksa (which isn't on the menu) and laksa at any Malaysian restaurant. On this occasion the har mee had a thin clear soup with mild prawn flavour. There were only a few small prawns and some chicken. I preferred the thicker laksa (maybe a reflection of my recent tastes changing);
- Ipoh Fried Noodle $12.8 - also generally known as Ipoh combination hor fun. This was a good sized serve with nice ingredients and a very strong egg sauce. Not bad at all;
- Fish Head Noodle $12.9 - I'm usually having this as a clear thin sour(ish) broth, but this was a milky consistency (not strongly coconut that I could tell) with a little bit of tang. There were a nice amount of fried fish swimming within. I was pleasantly happy with this.

Next time I would order the Curry Laksa Seafood with the backup options of Fish Head Noodle (if I'm feeling healthier) or Roti Chanai with Rendang Beef (if I want bread and curry). I still am interested in testing the standard breakfast of Nasi Lemak and some of the sweet drinks, if I get around to it.

Roti Road Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Cobb Lane, Melbourne 07-2016

One of Melbourne's great treasures is exploring the cafe culture. I don't mean that in a snobby, hipster, coffee-drinking way, but the cafe competition has risen so high that well-rated ones now have a solid standard to live up to. From my old area, the memories of Three Bags Full, Proud Mary, De Clieu and recently Archie's also extended toward Top Paddock and up further to Hammer & Tong. In this new region, I'm closer to Auction Room, Fandango and Twenty & Six which were all once a little too far to go. However I am yet to really explore that much in my immediate area - I haven't been to Milking Station (other than for a drink), Happy River Cafe or Rudimentary. I like the Seddon area a bit more (and they don't have the cheap Asian alternative of Footscray) and enjoyed Seddon Deadly Sins and Common Galaxia. It only seemed natural to move further south to what is possibly one of Melbourne's nicest suburbs to live in - Yarraville.

There's a few places in the village that I'll eventually get around to - the very busy and unexciting name of Cornershop, the smoothies and veg fare of Healthy Self Co, and even a trip to distant Yarraville to Butcher 128.

For the sake of convenient location, rating and first impressions, Cobb Lane was my first neighbourhood entry. Although the heart of winter, it was a sunny and semi-warm day (although there was a 1min spatter of rain in true Melbourne style).

The soy chai was quite nice, with a decent amount of spice and not too much sweetness or cinnamon. It was a tough call between the British Breakfast (a nod to a previous life, my lust of black pudding, the lack of it around Australian cafes) and the Pork Jowl.

- British Breakfast $19.5 - a rounded scotch egg with some nice mince, an excellent house-made black pudding that was flavoursome and very creamy in texture without too much fat cubes, thick cut bacon that was really thick sliced fried pork belly, Welsh rarebit with a strong (vintage?) cheese and some HP sauce for a bit of tangy balance. The best "British" breakfast I've had, including in the UK;
- Duck Hash (duck leg hash brown, fried duck egg, aioli & rhubarb, cress & celery salad) $20 - a nice dish on paper although I didn't enjoy the final product as much as expected. The hash brown seemed like a duck potato salad and could have used more char and seasoning I felt.

I was very impressed with the British Breakfast and the soy chai and would easily come back for those. There is a bread trolley of which I purchased an $8 seeded 100% rye loaf (vollkornbrot) with a slightly tangy dense texture for my home cooked breakfasts. There is also a nice looking selection of cakes that I'm sure will lift your spirits (and your blood sugar levels).

Cobb Lane Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Doughnut Time, Melbourne 07-2016

I didn't realise Melbourne had become so donut/doughnut obsessed. It isn't surprising since I haven't particularly kept up to date and sweets aren't so much my thing. After a nice dinner at the old haunt of Vegie Bar, our table had a direct window view to the queue outside Doughnut Time. $6 for a donut? Really?? It's a marked increase from the 80c delicious warm jam-filled cinnamon little puffs at Footscray Station.

The donuts are photo worthy. In fact they are so Instagram-focussed, they advertise it in the shop window. It's the one thing I probably have noticed with sweets - it isn't about the quality so much (eg. freakshakes) as the decadence that appears in the photo.

I tried the Stallone - a donut with Rocky Road on top. The Rocky Road bits are standard - milk chocolate with small cubes of marshmellow. It was fine but I certainly still always prefer dark chocolate. The donut itself was cold (since it isn't freshly made to order) and the texture is quite firm with a very sweet glazing, both features identical to Krispy Kreme (which I'm also not a great fan of). I'd rather a soft, chewy and fluffed piece of mild sweetness.

Overall quite disappointing for me considering I can get a better one for 13% of the price.

Doughnut Time Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Ramen Bankara, Melbourne 05-2016

Bankara seems to have a remarkably low rating. I think it is because of the high price point likely due to the central location on what I imagine is a high-rent Swanston Street. Luckily it features in the 2016/2017 Entertainment Book meaning $19.8 for two bowls of noodles (and a little extra for a second serve of noodles) makes it a bargain.

My choice of the Hakata Tonkotsu was a good one with flavoursome broth (a little thin), decent noodles, quality soft meat without too much fat to remove and nice supporting ingredients. The Pork Broth & Shoyu was a slightly more salty version I sampled, but I would always go for my own simple tonkotsu given the choice.

I'd happily eat here again, with or without the discount.

Ramen Bankara Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Common Galaxia, Melbourne 05-2016

The Melbourne freakshake is real. After copying the idea from Patissez (http://eatlikeushi.posthaven.com/patissez-canberra-07-2015), the creation of exceptionally photogenic (although I didn't do a great job) dessert creations piled high into a sugar mess has taken over the world.

Funnily enough I didn't know Common Galaxia did these and it certainly wasn't my inspiration to come here for food twice. Nonetheless after seeing it on the menu, I had to try it once. The chocolate brownie with vanilla bean ice-cream, chocolate freckle, Mork chocolate and fairy floss $12.5 is an expensive piece for the eye. Overall the base liquid is less intense and more drinkable than the plain uninspired version at Patissez, but other than the brownie, the rest of the ingredients (freckle and fairy floss) only really serve for visual appeal. Perhaps Persian floss or more dark chocolate would be to my taste, but I won't order this again. If you want sweetness, I'd suggest trying the French toast as that is likely as sweet, looked sensational and would probably be higher quality.

On the other hand, the food is better.

- Crispy skin barramundi (with buckwheat, fennel, broad bean, chilli, tomato & basil salad with olive relish) $19.5 - a nicely cooked fish, very well seasoned skin, salty relish and some colourful salad for balance;
- Portuguese baked eggs (with tomatoes, bell peppers, beans, basil, fior di latte & spiced pine nuts) $17.5 - a very tasty dish with a more rounded flavour than the Spanish versions around town and served with nice dense slices of rye.

On that day the were out of the ham hock eggs benedict with spiced hollandaise $17, so I went back two weeks later to try it. I don't know if ham hock or the fact it was unavailable made me do it, but it wasn't as good as I hoped. The bread was good, the ham was reasonably soft and quite strong, but the hollandaise isn't for me.

Next time I would order the baked eggs or pine mushrooms for breakfast and any of the cooked options for lunch.

Common Galaxia Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Thai Angels, Melbourne 05-2016

I'm slowly branching out from Footscray's Vietnamese and African places. There seem to be a good number of curry houses and Thai places especially when you include West Footscray, Seddon and Yarraville.

Thai Angels was the first to be tried simply due to an ok Zomato score (3.4) and the Entertainment Book.

- Roti Chanai (crispy and soft bread served with peanut sauce) $5 - roti was thin and quite firm and not chewy nor flaky which is my preferred texture;
- Deep fried quails (with garlic and pepper served on a bed of sautéed vegetables) $23.9 - quite expensive for 2 quails but they were ok;
- Red curry duck (traditional Thai red curry cooked in coconut milk & vegetables) $19.9 - mild curry although very little duck meat unfortunately;
- Thai omelette with prawns (filled with herbs served with dipping sauces) $19.9 - for some reason I expected an omelette similar to Korean or something bound with flour. This was an omelette in the plainest sense of the word and seemed to not have much additional flavour.

Overall I was a bit disappointed by the flavour and quality of the dishes especially as the price point was quite high. I'll probably try somewhere different next time such as the extremely nearby and well reputed Aangan (for Indian food).

Thai Angels Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato

Sapa Hills, Melbourne 05-2016

I've never really had Vietnamese dishes out in Melbourne. My experience has largely been limited to noodles and banh xeo. Until Pho Phu Quoc in Canberra, I hadn't appreciated the homestyle flavours that probably fill my Luke Nguyen and Andrea Nguyen cookbooks. Now in Footscray I was looking for a good Vietnamese restaurant for dishes. The main contenders seem to be Thien An (a classic favourite apparently) and Sapa Hills (where two independent Vietnamese people who live/work locally have nominated).

3 colour drink was nice but a little too much ice and a bit too thick with the shavings.

- Fried squid with salted duck egg $18.5 - ever since Red Chilli Sichuan's prawns fried with salted duck egg I've been looking for an equally potent alternative. Although less flavoured here, still a decent offering and different to the typical salt & pepper & chilli versions;
- Mom's green papaya slaw with beef jerky $13 - a nice goi salad with the beef jerky adding a meaty flavour and chewy textural element. The halved peanuts do the same;
- Barramundi with soy bean & pepper in claypot $35 - opted for the family size in anticipation of takeaway. Nice soft fish, tofu and a dark savoury sauce. Not as good (and more expensive than) Pho Phu Quoc but still good and fine the next day for lunch.

I also tried the Pho here once which was very good - much less intense and a cleaner beef broth, perhaps reflecting the Northern style.

It's difficult to know whether to stick to the tried and true or venture out to the less popular other competing restaurants surrounding them. Who knows but it's safe to go back here.

Sapa Hills Menu Reviews Photos Location and Info - Zomato