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As a longtime fan of cooking competitions like MasterChef and Culinary Class Wars, I never imagined I'd one day find myself in the heat of a real kitchen battle. But life has a funny way of surprising us.
The setting was a media preview at Sentosa's Halal restaurant Good Old Days, where renowned local chef Shahrizal Salleh - better known as Chef Bob - was unveiling his latest culinary creations. With stints at Grand Hyatt and Ritz-Carlton under his belt, plus successful ventures like The Landmark buffet and Bobmi's Indonesian Bakmie, Chef Bob is no stranger to Singapore's food scene.
The plan was simple: sample his three new fusion dishes that would grace Good Old Days' menu for seven months - Nasi Lemak Goreng, Assam Pedas Pasta, and Ginger Fish Horfun. What I didn't expect was being volunteered (or perhaps foolishly volunteering myself) for an impromptu cook-off against the master himself.
Kitchen Nightmares (The Amateur Edition)
The challenge? Recreate Chef Bob's signature Assam Pedas Pasta side-by-side with him while hungry journalists watched our every move. Ingredients included fresh prawns, Thai asparagus, laksa leaves, onions, asam pedas paste, evaporated milk and pappardelle pasta.
"How hard could it be?" Famous last words.
From the first chop of onions to the final plating presentation (his resembled elegant cylinders while mine looked more like sampans), every step revealed my embarrassing lack of professional kitchen skills. While Chef Bob moved with effortless precision between pans without breaking sweat (literally), my station looked like a culinary crime scene.
The blind taste test should have been humiliating but delivered shock results instead.When every participant chose "cylinder"(ChefBob)over"sampan"(mine),I preparedfor gentle ribbing...until they announcedthe amateur dish had won!Even now,I suspect chef might have thrownthe matchto boostmy confidence,butI'll takeit!
Tasting Perfection
With pride intact post-victory,I turned attentionto sampling all three dishes properly.First up,the controversialAssamPedasPasta($12.80).As someone who usually avoids assampedas,I approached cautiously but left converted.The tangysauce married beautifullywith wide pappardelle ribbons designed specificallyto hug flavors.CrunchyThai asparagusand plump prawns added delightful texture contrasts.
The comfortingGingerFishHorfun($10.80)-areturntoChefBob'searlycareerclassics-delivered silky noodlesin rich egg gravy.But star attractionwas undoubtedlyNasiLemakGoreng($12.80).This wasn'tjust fried rice-itwas revelation.Fragrant coconutrice perfectlywok-hei'd pairedwith crispy turmeric chicken,sunny-sideupegg,and all classicnasi lemak accompaniments.Sampling portionleft me craving full plate.
"Creating new dishes requires balancing innovationwith respectfor tradition,"Cheftold meduringour chat.He explainedhow each dish underwentmonths refinement beforemenu inclusion-even pasta shapewas deliberate choice."Pappardelle carries sauce better than spaghetti would,"he notedprovingthatindetails lie perfection.
Sitting there surroundedby empty platesand satisfiedjournalists,I realizedthis wasn't justanothermedia event.It became personal journeyfrom nervous amateurtosurprise winner-andmore importantly,a newfound appreciationfor culinary craftsmanship behindevery great dish.
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