Thursday, May 8, 2008

The ieatishootipost East Coast Lagoon Satay Challenge!



One of the things that really frustrates me every time I visit East Coast Lagoon FC is the fact that I never really know which of the 10 Malay style satay stalls is really the best. I always end up ordering randomly from whoever does the best touting that night. Sure, there is Haron 30 satay (Stall 55) which is the one that a lot of people recommend, but having tasted it a few times, I remain unconvinced that it is really the best one there. I have this niggly feeling that there is a better Satay around just waiting to be discovered.

So, being a Scienty Fienty(as opposed to Arty Farty) type of a guy, there was only one solution to the problem and that is to do an experiment -- A Randomised, Double Blinded, Controlled Trial (yeah right) to find out which Satay is indeed the best.

Test Design

What I did was to mobilize a dozen test subjects, order Satays from every stall there and taste test each one to find out whether there is a clear favourite. Our unwitting but intrepid test subjects are all experts in their own rights, each with at least 20 years of experience in eating. Of course that's just counting biological age. The true "eating" age of some of them far exceeds their biological age as evidenced from the subcutaneous storage of unused calories.

Unfortunately for us, 3 of the stalls were closed that night, so we sampled Satays only from the following stalls: 49, 50,51, 55, 56, 58, 60.

We decided only to taste test Chicken Satays since that is the most popular choice. 10 sticks of Satays were ordered from each stall and each judge graded both the Satay and the quality of the peanut sauce.



Here then are our panel of Satay judges: From the far left: who, jems, khim, Melbournite, TeochewHKer, carnineviand, khim(again!), holydrummer, holybunny, holybro, J-star and Dodo. Big round of applause for them who unselfishly sacrificed their calories so that you can save yours! Clap clap clap clap!


The Aftermath

You would think that with 10 Satay stalls all competing for the same customers, that competition would be stiff. But the unfortunate truth is that a lot of them taste quite similar and most of them were quite lack lustre. Our judges were penning down more phrases like "terrible, no taste at all, not marinated enough", than adoring accolades.



There was however a real difference in the quality and style of the Satay gravy that was provided. These ranged from "watery, burnt nutty taste to "consistent" and "can taste peanut" You can appreciate from the picture just how wide a difference there was.

Three of the seven stalls sampled procured their Satays from suppliers, but some make it a point to cook their own peanut sauce. It seemed to me that the sellers are trying to differentiate their products with their sauces rather then on the Satay itself.


Chicken Satay from the winning stall

The good news is that there was a clear winner that night (with only a minority opposing). Our judges rated this Satay as "Tender and plump, grill taste good and can taste the chicken".



The accompanying peanut sauce was thick and chunky with generous amount of coarsely ground peanuts. The interesting thing is that the Satay from this stall comes from a supplier, but they do cook their own peanut sauce. And the other interesting thing is they are actually an Ikan Bakar cum Satay stall rather than a specialised Satay stall!

So, without much ado, let me present Musa Ikan Bakar Stall -- winner of the ieatishootipost East Coast Lagoon Satay Challenge. 4/5

Musa Ikan Bakar Stall
51
East Coast Lagoon FC
Open 4pm till late

Closed on Mondays

64422976




Post Mortem

Personally, I still feel that the overall standard of the Satay here can and should have been better. The problem is that there are so many stalls and no clear favourite, each stall does well enough just by enticing the passersby with their perfunctory "Satay sir?". They don't see the need to put in effort on their part to improve their Satay. Think about it, every stall we ate at literally serves the same chunky thigh meat Satay. No one thought about maybe adding the chicken skin, or even doing Chicken Mince like the legendary Fat Man Satay of the old esplanade Satay club. It is just complacency mixed with contentment - a lethal concoction for blah food.

Then, there is this funny thing amongst Singaporeans about not wanting chicken skin in their Satay. I am not saying that eating chicken skin is good for you. You should not eat too much of it especially if you have high cholesterol levels or are overweight. What I am saying is that the same people who frown at eating chicken skin in Satay are also happily munching away at BBQ chicken wings, chicken rice and wagyu beef . It's a form of gastronomic hypocrisy that has permeated our society.

I think that is what most Satay sellers assume.

As a result, you don't see any chicken skin in Satays in Singapore whereas they are still widely available in Malaysia. And then we all complain that the Satay is better across the causeway.

Satay is one of the "must try" dishes in the minds of many tourist that visit Singapore. Yet I can't even name one great Satay in any of the "Satay Clubs" at East Coast Lagoon or Lau Pa Sat! It is truly a great disappointment, but also a great opportunity for some enterprising young entrepreneur to rise to the challenge and give us a "die die must try" Satay for us all to enjoy.

35 comments:

Miss Loi said...

I go there eat duck rice or satay beehoon only :P

pedant said...

Is Musa's sauce the top left hand one in the group photo? Love its contrast.

Probably takes an Ikan Bakar chef to grill the meat properly.

Anyway, hopefully your effort would be the kick up the backside of these complacent hawkers. But somehow I've a feeling it won't change much. The customer traffic there would be enough for undifferentiated product offerings to survive.

And btw great sacrifice in the name of scientific verification for the testers ;)

Anonymous said...

None of the satay stall is nice. Dun waste time there for satay.

Satay bee hoon is nice and still got $2 order with today's inflation.

ieat said...

When you say none of the satays there are nice, I assume you have tasted every stall.

Our experiment tell us that out of 7 of the stalls we sampled, only one was deemed to to good enough to recommend and yet it only scored a 4/5.

I would still not say that none of the satays there are nice since there were 3 stalls we did not sample.

The team did sample 1 of the two chinese satay stall. The chicken and pork was pretty descent. We did not include it into this report since it is on Malay Satay, and I did not personally sample the chicken satay so I cannot vouch for it.

Anonymous said...

Over the years, every stall try 1 time, not shiok so dun go back. Now dont order satay when there.

Still trying to find good satay in Spore, chinese or malay also ok.

ieat said...

That we both agree.

Anonymous said...

Since no good satay at Lagoon, just tried the Haig Rd famous satay there for lunch since around the area. Also no shiok. Satay seasoning no depth no fragrance, gravy no kick.

Tried the Haig Rd Mona mee rebus at the same time, quite good. Like the Rahim mee rebus in the old days when he was at the Simon Rd market, not the one now at Ah Seah coffee shop. Recipe now changed with all sort of top up.

Next time must re-try those satays at Pasir Panjang FC.

ieat said...

Why don't you register an OpenID and write under a pen name so we know if you are the same anonymous who commented earlier? You comments will gain more credibility as well.

www.myopenid.com

sumosumo said...

you know.. surprisingly whre you can get good chunky succulent satay..??

at Jumbo seafood....

you ll be surprised. and not many people know that. whenever i go to jumbo, and the aunty asks if we want satay, whenever i order, i m usually not disappointed - surprisingly very good.

only thing is eating satay in a clean bright airconditioned chinese restaurant - the whole experience is abit salah lah...

go try..

remus said...

Can try the satay @ bukit batok lorry carpark (beside the PIE expressway). Having good review from alot of ppls.

Keropok Man said...

eee.. i utterly dislike the minced chicken satay of Fat Man Satay.

'chicken skin satay', you can get them from yakitori stalls like Tori-Q. i know they are yakitori. (but aren't they the same thing) :-p

liverpool1965 said...

want to try the lau par sat stalls?

snake86 said...

Dr tay, go timah el amin, order the SUPER STAY POWER CHICKEN!! they use thigh meat. damn solid. price, also solid :( 1sgd per piece lor

ieat said...

You do realise that I had a part to play in the super power chicken don't you? It's in my earlier blogs.

Anonymous said...

check out Old Pongool Satay at the Alexandra V FC (the name is misleading cos they are miles from Ponggl)...They sell out early in e wkds cos of orders for bbq parties....one of the beta ones, we sometimes order their half-grilled satay and otah and grilll them (to perfection read:chau-tar!!) at our bbq dnr.

kfs said...

LOL Scienty Fienty's so funny! Neva heard of that!

Few comments:
1) My fav satays of all time is the one u order to bbq urself: City Satay!!! So yummy!!! Ever since I ate it at a fren's bbq there was no looking back!

2) Has anyone tried China satay? What I mean is barbequed meat on skewers served in China-Chinese restaurants. They're seasoned with some sorta herb & they're really outta this world!

3) ieat you could do a similar test in Tanjong Pagar market! Not on satay but on... fish soup! Including me, there's about 6-7 (I've lost count) fish soup stalls there & the number seems to be increasing!

ieat said...

Where to find this China Satay?

There seems to be an increase number of fish soup places probably because of the healthier choice.

liverpool1965 said...

check with happy pot at gluttons bay ieat, they used to do "china" satays! :)

ieat said...

Oh you mean the Bak Kut Teh satay!

ladyironchef said...

ah, pity i couldn't make it for this one. so many satay to try!!

how u all remember which one is which? lol

jems said...

Easy. We wrote down the stall numbers on the plates and sauce bowls heh.

khim said...

actually, out of e satay we tried e night, Musa really stand out among e rest cos e satay is grilled nicely, a little bit chao tar, can taste e meat & marinate & also tender too.. =)

e sauce i can't really recall cos i'm not a "sauce" person.. when i eat satay, i prefer to eat it plain, thus e meat should be tender & moist, otherwise, dry satay without e sauce is CMI..

e beef satay from Musa thus CMI cos it's really dry..

e chicken satay is what we tested..

but i still think tat sha's power satay is (e best i've tried) tat time, but can't confirm his quality now as so many -ve feedbacks..

Keropok Man said...

err what is CMI?

khim said...

CMI = Cannot Make It.. =)

Holy Drummer said...

LOL this challenge is a tough one to conquer with so many differing opinions.

At Lagoon, I still stick to Kwong Satay (pork pls). Generally, I prefer how the chinese grill their satay because they don't use excessive honey or marinade to over-sweeten the satay, unlike most malay satay sellers.

Well I'd still stick to my satay bee hoon anytime whenever I'm there. Smooth-est satay gravy ever. Though a respected elder with us that night had offered a worthy challenger in Redhill market.

Surprisingly, most of us had our fix along with the satay challenge but unfortunately returned a verdict of 3.5 (for that particular night). Over-blanched and watery was the sentiment. I have to agree to a certain extent that the only flaw was the consistency, which I can put down to the timing.

The best time to grab your satay bee hoon is immediately after opening @ 6pm and immediately before closing @ 11-plus midnight. It is usually when the gravy is most potent and there are (though, rarely) a lot of 'liao' left. Catch them at the wrong time (read: peak periods esp weekends) with the crazy queue and the pressure shows in the brothers' cooking, leading to $4 looking bigger than $5 portion.

Back to satay, I must say that the most memorable satay I have eaten is actually from Oscar's @ Conrad Centennial and from a restaurant @ Lor 3 Geylang. The latter offers a huge skewer of juicy satay for a whopping $1.50 (if I recall correctly) but it is so huge, it's value for $1.50.

Oscar's offer supper sets and that's where I tasted, imo, one of the best satays in Singapore. Each skewer were filled with chunks of tender meat (assorted) and the peanut sauce can't get any better.

Now I wonder why satay that is potentially better is found in restaurants instead of hawker centres...

jems said...

need to side track a lil after reading Holy Drummer's comments.

Has anyone been to Island Cafe at Tangs? I have been to the outlet at Tangs Orchard (have yet to try the one at Vivo) and I do feel that their local eats are really quite good.

My personal favorites are their Soft Shell Crab fried Tanghoon (soft shell crab portion recently shrank though :(), crayfish laksa, the indonesian fried rice with satay, curry, keropok etc. Desserts like cheng teng and chendol etc are also very good.

liverpool1965 said...

island cafe's bacon sandwich too!

kfs said...

There's a couple of China restaurants in Chinatown- but the best China satay I've had so far is at this China restaurant next to Maxwell Food Centre. It's the last unit in the shop house just before you turn into the Maxwell carpark. & they're opened 24hrs!

Damien said...

So when doing a test on the satays at Lau Pa Sat. Last count, there were at least 10 stalls over there :)

ieat said...

Looks like you just kindly volunteered to be in charge! Can do it next week if you like. Organize it in the forum. Wed or Thursday night is good.

Damien said...

Will organize the satay session somewhere in early June. Next two weeks peak lah...

Mystcvie said...

Have you tried the Indonesian satay located on 3rd flr in Lucky Plaza? The restaurant name is Ojolali and the satay is closest to the authentic local Indo satay amongst all I have ever tried

kfs said...

dear mystcvie, will definitely go check out Ojolali cos I love Indo satay! So far I've only tried those made by family frens & was wondering whether those made outside r nice or not..

Anonymous said...

My family and I always order from Kwong Satay. They served the BEST satay here (personal opinion), especially their Pork satay. MUST TRY!

ieat said...

Yes Kwong does make very nice pork Satay. I have blogged about them under the Satay label. For even better pork satay you should also check out Chuan Kee at old airport road FC.

Post a Comment