Sunday, June 3, 2007

Kay Lee Roast Meat Joint: Move over Colonel Sanders, I also got 11 Herbs and Spices!

With iwatch_ueat and SCS Butter


I am beginning to realize the only common thing about Char Siew is the fact that it is long strips of marinated meat! No, some people don't even BBQ their Char Siew and it still passes off as Char Siew. (I am not in anyway endorsing this, but I even see it in Hong Kong!) It does not have to be red in colour, some are dark brown or even near black. And the number of recipes for Char Siew abounds. My last post on Char Siew featured a Teochew style Char Siew which uses Tau Cheo (Fermented Beans) and malt. The Fatty Cheong Char Siew was an Oyster Sauce and caramelised sugar version. Now I discover Kay Lee's Zhu Jiang version which uses Yao Chai (Herbs) in the marinade!



The Lao Ban Niang is a colourful character who is fiercely passionate about the Zhu Jiang heritage of her Char Siew and Roast Duck. She insists that she has tasted all the best Char Siew in Singapore and still feels hers is the best.

"We don't use any MSG in our marinade! My sauce is the only one of its kind in Singapore. When you taste it, it leaves a Karm Karm (Astringently sweet is the best I can describe this word) taste in your palate, AND you never get thirsty from it!" She boldly declared. Even the method of chopping the duck is special. She chops it diagonally, insisting that it makes a difference to the texture of the meat.

The only thing I love more than people with passion is expressive people with passion!



The Char Siew here is very shiok and, as the Lao Ban Niang said, the sauce is very special. And most importantly they use the pork "Armpit" meat which is beautifully marbled. It's wonderfully tender and chewy at the same time. 4.5/5

SCS Butter and I had differing opinions on the duck. I thought it was one of the best ducks I have tasted in Singapore though it still lacks that extra ooompph that I referred to in my last Roast Duck post. The special thing about it though, is that the skin is crispy which sets it apart from a lot of other Roast Ducks. 4.5/5



The Sio Bak here is very good. The skin is crispy and the meat has got enough five spice and salty flavour. Unfortunately we ate it in the afternoon so it was not fresh out of the oven. It would have been even better then! 4.25/5

The steamed soup here is excellent. I liked the watercress soup just slightly more than the winter melon. Those who are fat conscious should skim off the layer of fat on top of the soup which is evidence of how long the soup has been steamed. Lao Ban Niang claims that they are slow cooked for 6-8 hours to extract all the flavours. Again she claims that no MSG is added! With the soup so tasty, I was of course a bit skeptical. But we all can say that we did not have that "post MSG thirst" that you usually get with poor quality MSG.



I have saved the best for last!

This is my discovery of the month! Hakka Salt Chicken! I am not sure if there are other stalls in Singapore that sells this but this is the first time the 3 of us were eating this dish. The chicken is first boiled then roasted. After it is chopped into bite sized pieces, a special condiment made from fried garlic, ginger and lemongrass is liberally spooned on top of it. I think God must have made Chicken and Ginger to go together! Somehow the combination just tingles the tastebuds like a well composed symphony. First bite was a "Phwa Sayah, where have you been all my life" experience. If you don't come all the way from Choa Chu Kang for the Char Siew, you must come for this chicken! 4.75/5

Conclusion

Excellent roasted meat with a unique sauce that is not commonly found. The hidden pearl is the Hakka Salt Chicken which is a really Must Try!

Kay Lee Roast Meat Joint
125 Upper Paya Lebar Road
67438778
kayleeroastmeatjoint.com

10am to 7pm

Closed on Tuesdays

14 comments:

Foodzilla said...

I've been to Kay Lee since I was a kid, but stopped going there for a while now...coz the lady boss has these mood swings! On a gd day, she's a great person, on her nasty day, she screams and yells at you. I don't deny that they sell great char siew, roast pork and duck but to have to put up with her temper and moods was a bit too trying for me so I stuck with Alex Eating House on Beach Road, which I found to be a great alternative too!

Anonymous said...

i went to kay lee on saturday just before this was posted..and i was shocked by the extravagant prices they charged...we ordered a platter for 3 pple that included duck charsiew roasted pork and sausages and one soup and rice for the 3 of us..and it amt to arnd $32...thats quite a lot to pay for roasted meat at a coffeeshop i must say....

Anonymous said...

really nice site! wouldn't it be nice to see an entry on you whipping up a dish at home since you are such a foodie? food for thought! cheers.

Bugger said...

Yay! Glad you finally blogged Kay Lee! My fav roast meat stall though it is on the pricey side.

Now can you go try the Hougang pau too? :)

ieat said...

Which Hougang Pau? Please email me leslie.tay@gmail.com. I am looking for famous places in Hougang too, so if you have any please let me know!

Damien said...

Expensive char siew and duck.

There was an incident whereby i counted $11 worth of char siew - a mere 25 slices.

Used to frequent the place until once day kena scolded by the auntie for changing my order.

stay-at-home mum said...

Their pai kuat is also "die die must try". Used to patronise them quite regularly but stopped after they moved. Must re-visit them again.

Anonymous said...

the lau pan nia, something very wrong with her. her temper is very hot. you got better roast duck, char siew etc at gim moh food center

Anonymous said...

haha at least u kena from the lau pan niang.. I for nothing kena from the kah-kia! duno why they were in a foul mood also (maybe woke up on wrong side of bed or sth) but i was quite the terrified cos they were slamming drinks and chilli saucers on my table! the duck is a waste of my time but the charsiew saved the day! for someone who doesn't really eat charsiew, it made me wana go back! it was worth the hot walk under the sun plus the abuse lol.

sbimbycat

Mr. Anonymous said...

Having tasted Lau Phua Chay and Fatty Cheong, I feel this is much better than the other two. The use of armpit meat was good and the sweetness of char siew was perfect. However I would not give it a 4.5 as it was not crispy enough. Perhaps its the use of the type of meat but I have tasted better Char Siew from other Zhu jiang stores. I feel Char Siew should have some crispness since its roasted. As for the salt chicken, this is the first time I'm trying this dish so I reserve comments on that.

There are 2 zhu jiang roast meat stores in Toa Payoh central facing each other and it seems that both are open by brothers. I've only tried the Guo ji so far. Well the roast meat are above average, its the noodles that kept me coming back. They stir the noodles in generous amount of pork lard oil before serving. Just eating the noodles plain alone is good enough for me.

Having said so much, I'm thinking of trying out the opposite store after writing this since Kay Lee failed to fully satisfy me.

Anonymous said...

hi just went to kay lee today but the whole building is like under demolition or something. Anyone has any idea where it has relocated? Need help here, miss kay lee since i recall eating there when i was young

ramenxyz

ieat said...

You probably went to the old place. Have you checked out the address in the blog? That is the new place.

Anonymous said...

Visited Kay Lee twice last week after reading this blog. I must say their price is exorbitant. First visit amounts to $12.50 for salt chicken, sio bak and one soup. All single serving. Plate of rice + Salt chicken + sio bak = $8.50. Soup is $4. I went during lunch time and pay up without questioning. I decided to pay them a second visit to check on their price. This time I ordered a roast duck (drum) and roast pork slice. It cost me $11.50. I pay up without questioning again. I will boycott this stall with immediate effect and urge ppl to avoid this stall. Their attitude also sucks big time.

matsu said...

Thanks for your recommendation.
Went today with partner and tried roasted duck, pork and char-siew plus a lotus roots soup and chrysanthemum tea.
To my partner, SGD24 is bit on the expensive side and the food was not worth the trek. Saving grace was the chrysanthemum tea and soup!
I felt the roasted pork and char-siew were great but lacked the X-factor. The roast duck was anonymous - the less said the better.
Went during off-peak hours so did not experience the 'authentic hawker attitudes' the fellow foodies experienced.
Maybe there should also be a 'Respect thy customer campaign' or something...
Verdict: Will only drop by if around the area.

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