Mori

A Mouth Full of Freshness: Sushi Express

I have a habit- if I visit a restaurant once and enjoy it- I will keep on visiting the same restaurant over and over again. In Sheffield, this is true for Sushi Express and Yummy’s Noodle Bar. I place the importance on growing with a restaurant and of course, at the same time, I know that I am guaranteed the comfort and return on my food investment.

It has been around 4 years since Sushi Express open its door. I remembered the first time when I visited the restaurant- everything was so minimal, there wasn’t a clear concept and it felt as though it was a bridge in between what seemed like a really clean Japanese takeaway and an open kitchen type of restaurant, similar with Wagamama- with the exception that when both serves Japanese food, Sushi Express do serve Sushi as the name would suggest and there seems to be nothing so ‘express’ about it. Not to say that the service is slow but I do associate express with a takeaway like, low quality establishment- which Sushi Express has nothing to do with. Potentially it is a psychological trap- with the restaurant trying to attract more customers by suggesting that it is similar to a takeaway restaurant- which is a shame because it is such an elegant and exquisite place!

I had never been to Japan so I can’t comment on the authenticity of the dishes served and to be perfectly honest, when I was still living in Malaysia, I was never fond of Japanese food. My brother, on the other hand, had always been a huge fan and if it was his turn to choose the restaurant where we would dine at, I would have to just stomach it. Probably salmon, tuna and all other main Japanese food ingredients are hardly associated with tropical countries such as Malaysia- so the sense of freshness of the food served was lost.

Ironically enough, my curiosity and enthusiasm when it comes to Japanese food started with Wagamama. Wagamama is probably not the most authentic of Japanese restaurants around but when I came across the establishment, I was living in Canterbury and the selection of restaurants to dine at was limited. Even with Wagamama, I eventually got bored within a year or two and having said that I only visited the restaurant when my parents were in town- there had always been something that was not quite there. The food felt lacklustre and more often than not, there is a disconnect. Take the prawn chilli men for instance, the soba noodle often tasted under-seasoned and then when combining the sauce with the noodles, the noodles simply doesn’t absorb the sauce, leaving the dough-y noodle after taste. The yasai cha han- Japanese fried rice is an absolute waste of money- I can fry it with my eyes blindfolded- but probably won’t given how I burnt my legs before stir-frying noodles almost a month ago. I didn’t mind the raisukaree, I actually quite enjoy it- to me it felt like a lighter- fresh cousin of green curry. However, my favourite for Wagamama had always been the amai udon- it is a shame that when I checked the menu online today, it is no longer there. Instead I was presented with yaki udon which seems similar based on the description. Ever since I moved to Sheffield, I had only been to Wagamama three times and I’ve lived in Sheffield for five years now.

Although Wagamama sparked my interest on Japanese cuisine, the two years that I lived in London changed my Japanese food experience drastically. I learnt to love Ramen- which I never did before until my bestfriend introduced me to my love at first sight- Shoryu. The Ramen broth was so spectacular that it left me speechless EVERY FREAKING TIME!!! In fact, I would bug my bestfriend to have lunch with me given that the distance from her office to Shoryu on Regent Street is only 5 minutes. She always informed me so as to not get my hopes up ‘Just bear in mind that if there is a long queue, we can’t!!!’ Thankfully, for all the times that we planned on going to Shoryu, it will be packed but we never had to queue. At the moment, I am still yet to dine at Bone Daddies– which is apparently similar with the exception that at Bone Daddies- it will get messy! There are also other Japanese restaurants such as Ukai at Westbourne Grove which serves a limited menu but everything is fresh and if I remember correctly- they don’t serve hot meals; Tokyo Diner is truly forgettable, You Me Sushi is average- never quite like the Teriyaki dishes plus the sushi is a bit too ‘mushy’ for my liking, Mori is OK if you can close your eyes while paying for the meal etc. Chotto Matte which is the Japanese- Peruvian fusion restaurant was OK although it could have been amazing. When I went there, thanks to my ‘paparazzi’ behaviour, we managed to identify that they had missed out on one of the dishes as we opted for the tasting menu. It was quite disappointing in the sense that a tasting menu should work similar to a symphony- there should be a coordination- one should come after the other so when we missed out on one dish and even worst having had to clarify with the servers on their mistake instead of them realising that they have made a mistake, I would say that in the end I am 50-50 on it. There are of course a longer list of Japanese restaurants that I do wish to visit at some point.

The Irresistable Shoryu's Ramen

The Irresistable Shoryu’s Ramen

In Sheffield, I had been to Wasabi Sabi, sadly Yo Sushi and had ordered from Sakushi. It must have been quite awhile since I visited Wasabi Sabi that all I can remember was- amazing ambience, expensive and small portion of food served and to top it all- came back home still hungry. For Yo Sushi, I must have been extremely hungry to even walk to the food court at Meadowhall- since lets face it, if anyone can avoid or refrain themselves from dining at Yo Sushi- PLEASE DO SO! For Sakushi, the portion is small and it never taste fresh- the only time I will order from Sakushi is if I don’t have any cash and is craving for Japanese food otherwise I won’t bother.

The first time when I went to Sushi Express- I came with Joule. We were both on our way back home- I was still staying at Trafalgar St, behind Devonshire Chippy then. I ordered the beef with tokyo sauce bento- it was ok, nothing special. However, Joule ordered a whole bunch of food which I was able to steal. At that time, I wasn’t certain if I would visit Sushi Express again but my family came for a visit that summer and one of the day when I had just came back from the IC, I decided to stop at Sushi Express- at that time they sold assortment of ready made sushi. I grabbed a box, bought it and gave it to my brother. My mum who had never been a fan of sushi nor Japanese food- took one and couldn’t stop praising on how tasty it was. I can still remember her words- Rice was cooked perfectly, the fish/ seafood weren’t slimy and there was no fishy smell. Few days after that the three of us dined at Sushi Express- we had what would eventually became the common food that I would order up until today.

The first dish is the unadon, comes at a hefty price of £13– the sauce is amazing and so is the fish- I didn’t mind paying that much for it although it is the type of dish that is more of a luxury than a repetitive habit. In comparison to Sakushi’s Unagi Kabayaki Don, Sushi Express is better in terms of the portion, the price is £0.45 cheaper and Sakushi’s has a slight taste of earthiness to it- which could indicate that the eel has not been cleaned properly.  Four years later and nothing changed for Sushi Express- the portion size is still the same, the taste of the food is the same too and if I had to pick on something, I don’t seem to remember the price then. However, I did feel that the ratio in between rice to eel is imbalanced- there should be more eel or quite simply lesser rice. The unadon should come with a free miso soup, PLEASE ASK IF THEY FORGOT about this- the miso soup however, is a hit and miss- sometimes it can be a tad bit salty, sometimes it is enjoyable- so NEVER ORDER IT (It is £1.50 for something that is so uncertain too!)

Unadon at Sushi Express

Unadon at Sushi Express

Another one of our favourite is the 8 pieces Deluxe Dragon Maki at £12. It is an inside out sesame coated roll filled with blanched king prawn, ripe avocado and topped with tasty teritaki eel. Garnished with mayonnaise and flying fish roe. The sauce that accompanies this dish is amazing, the sushi itself is spectacular that to me, it deserves a standing ovation. I didn’t order this dish during my pre-bday dinner this year but I did so last year and last year’s summer. During both visits- they managed to maintain the quality.

Deluxe Dragon Maki at Sushi Express, October 2013

Deluxe Dragon Maki at Sushi Express, October 2013

Krish ordered the Salmon Sashimi at £5.80 when we went there recently. Personally, for a better value for money, I would opt for either the Salmon & Flying Fish Roe Don at £4 or Salmon & Salmon Roe Mini Don at £4.50. I’ve ordered the mini don but not the flying fish roe, and it is a bowl of joy! I couldn’t observe any drastic difference in between the two roe-don dishes and the salmon sashimi but only the benefit of having rice and roe at at least £1.30 cheaper.

The 2 pieces Roasted Salmon Nigiri at £2.60 is good- they have managed to cook it to perfection- some restaurants did manage to overcook the salmon thus left it dried. This is one of my brother’s favourite. However, they definitely have downsized the portion as last year, again uncertain of the price charged then but it was priced for 3 pieces instead of the 2 pieces as currently offered. My brother would also order the 2 pieces Roasted Crab Stick Nigiri which costs £2.60. I would not order this as I would avoid eating artificial food at all cost- so I am in no position to comment. However, they didn’t downsize this dish- there were 2 pieces then and there are 2 pieces now.

Roasted Salmon Nigiri and Roasted Crabstick Nigiri at Sushi Express

Roasted Salmon Nigiri and Roasted Crabstick Nigiri at Sushi Express

I had also tried the Octopus Nigiri, Squid Nigiri (2 pieces for £2.60) and Surf Clam Nigiri (2 pieces for £3). I enjoyed the octopus nigiri thoroughly, not a fan of the squid nigiri- it was just OK and first time ever that I tried surf clam and hadn’t done so since (clearly not memorable enough or simply not value for money- probably would do so for my next visit just to remind me of how I felt about it).

The Salmon Roe Gunkan is one of my favourite, there used to be an option to order just a piece (at £2.30) of it but now diners are forced to order two pieces at £4.50!!!!The price made me hesitant to order it but Krish ordered it, although now this left me feeling like a bad friend since I should have advised him to just order the Salmon & Salmon Roe Mini Don- it has everything that he wanted for a total price of £4.50, instead of the £9.80 that he paid for the sashimi and salmon roe gunkan.

Other than that, my brother had ordered the Rainbow Maki (8 pieces for £7.50), Dragon Maki (8 pieces for £8.50) and Summer Maki (6 pieces for £6) all of which are amazing but if it was up to me, I would stick with the Deluxe Dragon Maki. I did order the Spicy Salmon Maki (6 pieces for £4.50) just last week- They used shichimi togarashi to coat the sushi- Krish found it spicy, I didn’t. I found the portion rather small and at some point thought that they have downsized the size of the maki, but then I realised that was the first time I ordered it at Sushi Express. However, at my fourth piece, I was already full plus I did have my unadon before that. Taste wise- it is different than other spicy salmon maki that I have had- I was never made to taste shichimi togarashi before and quite honestly, it felt a bit alien to my tongue- but hey at least it was an authentic experience! In terms of whether or not, the spices mask the taste of the salmon- I didn’t think so, but then again I can handle my spices. Weird enough because we ordered the Kimchi (£3.20) and he was fine with that- the Kimchi was well balanced, flavour wise but if we weren’t splitting the bill, I wouldn’t have ordered it.

2014 Pre Birthday Dinner- Salmon Sashimi, Unadon, Kimchi, Spicy Salmon Maki and Salmon Roe Gunkan

2014 Pre Birthday Dinner- Salmon Sashimi, Unadon, Kimchi, Spicy Salmon Maki and Salmon Roe Gunkan

The Vegetarian Maki (6 pieces for £4.80) and the Tofu Skewer (£3) are my mums favourite. Personally, I wouldn’t order the tofu skewer as it is a tad bit greasy. I had also ordered the Octopus Skewer (£.250) once and that was a total let down- octopus was tasteless- it wasn’t marinated well or probably should have been marinated longer. The vegetarian maki on the other hand is really refreshing- not quite sure how they managed to wrap the cooked Chinese leaves around it, but it is good.

Vegetarian Maki, Miso Soup and Salmon Salad

Vegetarian Maki, Miso Soup and Salmon Salad

The absolute no-no for Sushi Express will be the Salmon Teriyaki (£7.80). The fish is a tad bit dried and I know that I can do a better job. Once in awhile, when I wanted to pamper myself, I would order the Kaisen Don (£8.20). This include a selection of raw fish sashimi slices including 2 salmon, 2 tuna, 2 scallops, 2 octopus and 2 sweet shrimp, crushed ginger, wasabi and Japanese omelette served on a bed of sushi rice. The sweet shrimp is probably a let down and probably I just can’t bear the thought of eating raw shrimp- but that is simply my personal recollection. The corn is a good touch (or I think it is corn) adds crunch to the whole dish. Oh and for my pre-bday dinner last year, a group of Japanese diners pre-ordered an octopus dish- THAT WAS AMAZING!!!! I don’t remember what it is called but apparently it is a special order. One of the waiter was really nice to allow us to taste it for free (thumbs up for that!!!)

The Mysterious Octopus Dish at Sushi Express

The Mysterious Octopus Dish at Sushi Express

Salmon Teriyaki at Sushi Express

Salmon Teriyaki at Sushi Express

Overall, after almost four years of visiting Sushi Express- although there are dishes that I would avoid and sometimes I would smirk over the bill, it is one of the best Japanese restaurant that I had been to in my life- of course I had never been to Nobu yet, so I can’t make any comparison. The seafood is fresh- didn’t need much to be done to it, they definitely showed respect to the ingredients and allowed the ingredients to shine. Sushi at Chotto Matte was fresh too but Sushi Express certainly has more flare and personality with the food that they serve- in short there is love, care and attention! Reminiscing to the first two years of their establishment- I can still remember the times when they would hold some sort of food photography session, assuming that the pictures are to be used for their menu- always thought they didn’t need a lot of

marketing because the product that they are presenting is good enough to speak for itself. I felt that way then and I continue to feel the same now. There is also a sense of consistency in terms of quality- which is always something that is difficult for restaurants to achieve- the change in management, chef, suppliers could all contribute to the lack of consistency- but they didn’t seem to suffer from that- Not at all! I am glad to have this very special experience, especially in making my London foodie friends who are often so picky about their food to leave Sushi Express utterly speechless. So, for anyone reading this post, if you would like to recreate the same experience with your friends, visit Sushi Express at:

8 Milton St, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S1 4JU

My Perfect Remedy: Rendang Dinding Sandwich

Yesterday I spent an hour or two persuading SOMEONE to go to the gym and then reality hits me… I haven’t even worked out in a while to the point that I have no clue where my shorts are. I had been cooking, travelling, backpacking, hitch-hiking friends, sleeping on friends’ couches or even moving from my bed to my couch and then back to bed from couch– all of which signalled that no attention has been paid on working out. Has not even been doing yoga/ zumba at home let alone visit Gemma at A Pole New Adventure on Carver Street (Sorry HUN!!!!Had been such a BUM). My only version of living healthily these days is probably the transformation from drinking redbull on a daily basis, eating crisps or chocolates with lack of sleep- walking around like a zombie to munching on granolas, cooking and resting.

Personally, there is nothing wrong with dining out and there are restaurants which offer healthy selections. However, at the same time we don’t have direct control with the production of the food and therefore we won’t know what is added. This was wisely brought up by my friend, Haz who is the producer for Oklat Mico. He commented that, with a lot of establishments’ being proud on using organic ingredients, but how are we to know that these ingredients are indeed organic and the food is healthy for us, afterall there could be a mismatch in between what customers have in mind and also the method by which restaurants are trying to maximise their profit margin!

It didn’t click until later on that possibly, the ingredients could be organic-freshly delivered every morning-but won’t that be expensive at the same time? Not to forget, what about the amount of salt used, what about the beef/chicken/veg stocks- are they artificial or are they freshly made and what about the use of flavourings/ MSG to enhance the taste?

It is still fresh in mind, the memory of the ‘EXTREMELY SALTY’ Paella that I had at Pollen Street Social sometime either last year or two years ago on Valentine’s Day– that was horrifying. The servers only apologised but didn’t offer to do anything about it either- questionable service provided by a one Michelin Star restaurant!

Another example is Mori– I never knew how to describe it- sometimes even referred to it as a ‘classy’ takeaway. Mori Shops are usually located at high end London areas such as St John’s Wood, Kings Road, Fenchurch Street, Marylebone High Street and Park Royal. Yes they do serve sushi which is indeed healthy- but also left to be displayed on the fridge throughout the whole day for a significant price to be paid. On top of that, their hot dishes such as miso marinated salmon; chicken teriyaki etc. can’t be freshly made. The turnaround time in between ordering and being served is so short that I doubt that either meal was cooked on the spot- if they did I really would love to learn on how to. For some of the dishes, to run a takeaway like establishment, I understand that the meal cannot be cooked on the spot but when it requires grilling- I just don’t see the reason on why they shouldn’t. As I thought about it, I became more curious- were these dishes frozen- when was it prepared, what sort of flavourings that were used etc., why a less classy sister- YOUMESUSHI provide customers with the option to purchase made by order sushi and why can’t Mori do the same, afterall Mori is more expensive than YOUMESUSHI! Yes it is safe to say that I won’t be dining out for awhile!

Anyway, for last night’s dinner I decided to make a sandwich because, after all, bread contains the least amount of calories. On my previous post, I mentioned that my dream will be to open a sandwich shop. It will not be any ordinary sandwich; the fillings will be westernised-Asian cuisine. Truthfully, this rendang dinding filling was my starting point. Of course, Malaysian staple is rice or in fact this is the same for most part of Asia. The difference is in terms of the types of grain used- Sushi rice for Japan, Basmati rice for India and Jasmine rice for Thailand etc. However, in Malaysia there are three main races- Malay, Indian and Chinese. Oh let’s not forget the ones we call ‘Mamak’. From my understanding, they are off the combination of Malay and Indian, often from the northern part of Malaysia such as Penang, Kedah and Perlis (mostly Penang!). In Malaysia, Mamak stalls/ restaurants offer variations of high calories-unhealthy breads such as Roti Canai, Roti Telur (Egg Bread), Roti Sardin (Sardin Bread) and so on. So even if bread isn’t a staple for us unlike French with their baguette or Italians with their Pizza, Ciabatta or even Focaccia, bread does play some role in our food culture.

I then recalled the time when I was younger, if my aunt made rendang or sambal for dinner, I would then have sandwich with rendang or sambal as my filling for breakfast the very next day. As previously mentioned, I had been championing ‘my sandwich shop’ fantasy to my friends, but this morning David then alerted me on this article which felt like a slap on to my face. The article was on ‘How Britain is Committing Crimes Against International Cuisine’ To be honest some of the filling do not make sense- lasagne sandwich (Really Tesco?!) and apparently paella sandwich. A paella sandwich will be the equivalent of making a ‘nasi goreng’ sandwich and a lasagne sandwich will be similar to a ‘mee goreng’ sandwich. THAT IS INDEED A CRIME. Although, the rebellious part of me went ‘WHAT WOULD HESTON DO?’.

But then again, if I included or forgot about one or two ingredients when I am cooking, my mum will already be next to me giving her disapproving face– let alone informing her that I will do such a thing to any of the Malaysian dishes (Oh and FYI, my mum does not cook AT ALL!). So, in contrast, for my vision, I will try to retain the traditional value of each dishes, only choose dishes that can be eaten with breads or as with my Malaysian Deconstructured Stuffed Omelette- to still keep the identity and integrity of it- with the exception on how it is presented. I didn’t alter the dish drastically but at the same time, the combination of the ingredients had been perfected over time (to be fair I did start cooking Malaysian food since I was 16- so it has been 12 years now and I think it is time to be inventive, or in my very own wishy washy philosophical artistic way- TIME FOR THE WORLD TO DECHIPER MY VOICE VIA FOOD!!).

On top of that, upon receiving a bad news from home, I needed a healthier version of a comfort food- NO MORE TESCO SAUSAGES PLEASE! Although my choice of making Rendang Dinding is debatable because of the amount of cholesterol that is often associated with beef- BUT HEY I HAD MOSTLY BEEN CONSUMING WHITE MEAT so my body needed some sense of balance. Plus my justification was that I didn’t use any artificial beef stock (no cubes/ oxo etc.) and I didn’t even use any salt, just the soya sauce used to marinate the beef- probably a lot of people out there will be cringing, but I can assure you that the level of salt contained in soya sauce is more than enough to create such dramatic flavour. Other than that, as per mum’s great advice, I used a lot of ginger and garlic.

Ingredients (For 4 Servings):
700 grams of stewing beef (cubed) – bought from the Asian grocery store £4.60
Ginger (a thumb is enough but I am on my high ginger intake regime so I used approximately 60g) – £0.60
Garlic- Half a bulb
2 Onions (one to be blended and one to be added to the sauce)
Chilli Paste (couldn’t find my dried chillies, so added 2 tablespoons of chilli powder with boiled water instead to make a chilli paste)
Soya Sauce (enough to marinate the beef)
Brown Sugar
Tamarind juice
White Bread and low fat butter (In my case I needed to get rid of the bread as it was expiring!)
Salad of your choice as garnish- (I have a bad habit of eating raw vegetables so I added raw cabbage and raw carrots for added texture/ crunch).

Methods:
Add beef into a pot and fill it with just enough amount of water to cover it. Let the water boil and remove the beef but keep the water.

Beef Stock- Ish

Beef Stock- Ish

Boiled Beef

Boiled Beef

When the beef has cooled down, find a meat mullet and mullet the beef- this is to create a shredded texture. Marinate the beef with soya sauce (for every tablespoon of soya sauce used, add half a tablespoon of brown sugar- otherwise use sweet soya sauce). Fry the marinated beef and put it aside.

Beef Marinated with Soya Sauce and Sugar

Beef Marinated with Soya Sauce and Sugar

Blend ginger with onion (Make sure that it is of a thick consistency- if I have lemongrass in hand I would have blended it together, but I didn’t have any).

The Usual Suspect for Rendang Dinding

The Usual Suspect for Rendang Dinding

Sauté the ginger and onion mix on the same frying pan. Add in the chilli paste. Add the beef and mix it together. Add the water used to boil the beef depending on your preference for the sauce. I also added a whole onion on to the sauce and cook it down.

Onions

Onions

Taste, add tamarind juice and soya sauce as per required.

For the bread, I cut them into circles, spread it with low fat butter and grill it for 2-3 minutes.

Bread, Buttered and Grilled

Bread, Buttered and Grilled

I then garnished the sandwich with raw carrots and cabbages.

Rendang Dinding Sandwich

Rendang Dinding Sandwich

In the end, I only spent £1.40 per serving for this dish as I already have most of the ingredients. It might sound a bit tricky but you will get used to it and it is really simple :D! It is also good as finger food or as a snack! ENJOY!!!