29 Jul 2007
With Him
2:46 am | 2 are hungry | Published in nothing |

Rendy is here YAY! So no post, sorry. I’ll see you in 2 weeks ;)

25 Jul 2007
QQ Rice Ball
12:48 am | 2 are hungry | Published in food,review,Singapore |

To close my day I’m posting this short post on QQ Rice Ball! Boy I AM hungry right now, at this very second! Hence the post. It somehow soothes me to see pictures of food when I can’t have any.

On a side note, I’ve been extremely busy the past weeks or so. Moved house and all. So I have good reason :). Believe me, I’VE BEEN EATING. Wish I have all the time in the world to show all of them! Anyway, let’s just make do with whatever we have kay.

QQ Rice Novena

I knew about this place first time from Joice, who is a fan of food show on TV. I myself don’t really watch TV. But these pictures were taken the second time I went there to pick up Passion Run running pack with Waiming. Story about that another time. In short I ran 5km at East Coast and it wasn’t so bad, I should run more often.

When you try to find the place, keep in mind that the stall entrance is outside, not inside the building. The stall is very small, so most of the time you can only have take-outs. They did have 2 tiny tables with 2 tiny chairs for each table the last time I went there, and one of them was empty so we sat and ate, while praying that the chairs wouldn’t crumble into pieces in the middle of savoring our rice ball.

So this is how it works. You pick your choice of rice (out of 6: purple rice, brown rice, mixed grain rice, wheat germ brown rice, red rice, and ice lake wild rice) and 5 fillings (out of 46: a few types of floss, some types of meat, vegetables, etc), then they will put the fillings inside the rice and makes it into a rice ball (although it’s more of an oval than a ball or onigiri shape).

QQ Rice Novena - fillings

It’s all about the fillings! I had a good time choosing what I wanted! First time I went there there was quite a long queue, so everybody picked up a piece of paper that they provided at the entrance which has list of the fillings with tick boxes on the side. You can then (try to) make up your mind while waiting. Second time I went there, it was quite empty, so we could just point.

Before we go to the rice ball, there’s reason why I chose this place out of many on my to-show list.

QQ Rice Novena - me

Me with short hair! +D

My hair actually looks pretty fine here, hence the need to show it ;D. Other times it can look weird. It’s mighty comfortable, but I think I start to miss my long hair..

Nuff with the hair! Let’s go to the rice balls!

I tried the mixed grain rice first time (because they ran out of purple rice, the one I wanted!), and second (finally) the purple rice. I love the purple rice!

QQ Rice Novena

YUMMY! I don’t really remember what I chose for the fillings. I think it’s dried spicy shrimp, mushrooms, crispy yellow beans, omelet egg, and floss.

QQ Rice Novena

This one is Waiming’s piece.

According to them, it’s best to mix dry (e.g. crispy yellow beans, meat floss) and wet juicy fillings (e.g. emperor vegetables, minced chicken meat). If you can’t make up your mind, you can order the recommended package ones. Personally I think you’d lose all the fun that way.

SO HUNGRY!

QQ Rice Novena - me

The rice ball cost from S$3.20-S$3.90. Add $1 for a drink (purple rice drink, soya purple rice, milk purple rice, etc). Add 80c for pudding (purple rice or mixed grain pudding). Tried the soya purple rice drink and purple rice pudding. The soya purple rice drink was so-so. It wasn’t cold and they didn’t have the (plain) purple rice drink that I wanted *disappointed mode here*. Come on, they should really prepare enough stock for everything! First time they ran out of purple rice. Second time they didn’t have any other drinks apart from soya purple rice and it wasn’t even cold! Not enough effort to satisfy customers I’d say.

I didn’t have a good picture of the whole rice ball. I found good ones here by Camemberu. Really wish I can have the rice ball now…

QQ RICE BALL
10 Sinaran Drive
Novena Square 2 #01-06
Singapore
www.qq-rice.com

Plus: Yummy rice balls! Love it! Note that this depends on how you can mix and match the fillings…

Minus: They seemed to always run out of stock of something. First was the purple rice, second was ALL drinks except for one!

15 Jul 2007
About Famous Food
11:41 am | 2 are hungry | Published in conversation |

S (Singaporean) no.1: So are you coming with us to dinner tonight?

Me: Where are you guys going?

S no.1: Bedok market. There are some good stuff over there. There’s this famous Yong Tau Foo.

S no.2: I’m gonna eat the chicken wings.

Me: Is it famous?

S no.2: Yea it’s quite famous.

Me: Cos I only eat famous food.

S no.2: It IS famous! Are you going? (asking S no.3)

S no.3: No I’m not. *half whispering to me, shaking his head* It’s really not that famous..

Me: Like B-list celebrity..

Culture note: If you live in Singapore, you’d know by now that people queue for the food stalls and restaurants that have become known by words of mouth, with no advertisement. It can be a stall that’s tucked away in the farthest hawker center or the end of the world, it really doesn’t matter. It can be cooked by uncle in sweaty singlet or German chef, it’s irrelevant. Service may suck bad, waiting and queuing time goes for hours, food tastes so-so, expensive some more, and you gotta eat standing with one foot in the middle of rain at open space field (okay, maybe not the last one). Bottom line is if it’s FAMOUS people will go :)

About Land of Meatballs
11:18 am | Noone is hungry | Published in conversation |

I know only one Swedish and I’m guessing not many people in Asia or Australia know even one person. So unless you’ve been there before, the things you know about Sweden is probably the fact that it’s located in Europe and they eat the kind of food you found at Ikea.

Hence this conversation occurred when our Swedish friend were about to go back to his country for holiday:

RC (Random Colleague) no.1: So you can’t wait to go back hey? Do you miss all those Swedish food?

Swedish-man: Yup yup. Can’t wait. Will spend 2 weeks over there in Summer time. Really miss the food.

Me: Yea you can eat meatballs every day (thinking about Ikea meatballs)

RC no.2: Oh but you don’t eat meat! (he eats fish though)

Me: O yea! Oh that’s too bad..

RC no.3: So what are you gonna eat?

Me: You can eat the pickled herrings.

RC no.4: And fish paste.

RC no.5: Oh you should bring some fish paste back to Singapore for us.

Swedish-man: Yes.. Absolutely..

Somehow I have a feeling that in our mind Sweden is just the giant version of Ikea. Like land of meatballs and herrings, probably with a touch of pretty furnitures.

On a side note, I totally love Ikea meatballs. I sometimes just go there to eat at their cafeteria and nothing else. Have to post the food sometimes :)

08 Jul 2007
Reef Walk @ Kusu Island
7:52 pm | 2 are hungry | Published in activity,nature,Singapore |

Back to Singapore for a bit, a few weeks ago I went with Blue Water Volunteers for a ReefWalk at Kusu Island. Seriously, I need to write this up NOW otherwise I’ll start forgetting the details! (already started happening)

Marina South Pier

We met up at Marina South Pier (near Harbourfront) to catch a ferry to the island at 5am in the morning! Yea it was still all dark. I’ve never been to this Pier before, it looks pretty cool, reminds me of the Southern Cross Station in Melbourne.

We were divided into 4 or 5 groups with about 10 participants and 1-2 volunteers each. Not long after, we got into the ferry. Took us about half an hour to reach the island.

ReefWalk - to the ferry

While we were in the ferry, it started raining. Great. Things to remember for your next outdoor activity: BRING SOMETHING IN CASE IT RAINS! Be it umbrella, poncho, parachute jacket, hat, whatever. Anything to help than to have nothing at all. We all thought that it wouldn’t rain that day because it was raining heavily the whole day the day before that. You’d think the clouds had run out of water, but noooo. Lucky I grabbed my disposable poncho just before I left the door, I was really going to leave it. But the rest of the party had almost nothing. Among the 12 people in my group, only me and my friend Callista brought disposable ponchos (who later she gave to Joice, my housemate), 3 people who were all ready with their comfortable strong parachute jackets, and another 3 girls who shared 1 big poncho like a tent. Oh, Joice brought a small umbrella which she lent to the rest of the people (all 4 of them). So yea they got pretty drenched at the end. Don’t forget that wind on beach can be COLD! Rain and wind with wet shoes… you can imagine. But anyway before we get to that part, we had very nice time, which I’m going to start now (nuff with all the complaints).

When we got to the island, it was almost pitch dark. And great thing was they forgot to tell us to bring torchlight in the prep email. So to emphasize how dark it was, I have to show you this:

ReefWalk - dark

That pathetic light is the one torchlight we had in the group which one of the volunteer brought.

Talking about volunteers, our group went with June (right below) and Regina (left below). Oh right, I have to tell you that all the pictures starting from this point were taken by Waiming, because I didn’t bother to take my camera out of the ziplock with the rain and all.

ReefWalk - Blue Water Volunteers

I found the girls nice, knowledgeable, and quite professional. It’s always nice to see people passionate about what they’re doing. June is actually a graduate from some kind of Marine Biology degree, so it’s her area. Regina assisted June. I saw her studying some papers on the way to the island. She either studied about the reef walk or exam :).

We waited under the shade for around 15 minutes before finally deciding to embark to the wilderness of the beach. The rain got better by that time although it was still showering. But we got no choice, it’s either walking under the rain or no walk at all. This kind of reef walk can only be done once a month, in early morning, during low tide. A few people were reluctant to go and get drenched, but everybody decided to go ahead at the end.

So this is the very early shot of seaweed we found all over the sand. I remember there are a few types: green, red, black? I almost forgot everything they told me by now :(.

ReefWalk - seaweed

It was pretty dark for the first 20 minutes or so, so it was quite hard to catch anything with bare eyes and no torchlight. But it brightened after a while and the view was great.

There were a lot of this purplish ‘thing’. It reminds me of cloth you use to clean kitchen. A bunch of clothes. By the way those shoes in the corner are mine. So obviously I just stood around pointing to things which I think Waiming should take pictures of.

ReefWalk

I call this the baby purplish thing:

Reef Walk

Some kind of alien-like object:

Reef Walk

Take notice of that diving shoe in the corner. That’s the best shoes you could wear during this kind of activity. I saw some at the army market before and they were pretty cheap too (~S$20). But I guess the quality and prices always range.

I feel like I’m supposed to at least know whether the stuff I’m showing here animals or plants, because our guides kept asking us that trivia. They later explained things to us. But now I’m just blank like a white paper. I mean of course I know crabs are animals, but how about that purplish thing and that alien-like object? I have no clue. My wild guess will be plants.

Joice kept asking the guide whether so and so can be eaten or not. Any sea creatures must watch out…

Reef Walk

This was what we did almost the entire time. Looking down. Searching for something interesting. When somebody found something, they’d first ask the guide, if it was truly interesting. If it was, then the guide would ask everybody in the group to come closer and pay attention while they were explaining why it was interesting. Not seldom that we had false excitement over a plank of wood or some dirt in the sand.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island

Nice view right? The rubbish-bag looking plastic we wore were the disposable ponchos. It was really annoying to hold it against the wind. Not advisable to wear it to the beach or anywhere with wind.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island

Another alien-like object. Looks like giant mushroom.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - crab

We (by we, I mean June or Regina) caught a few animals this way. They brought a couple of empty containers with them so we could temporarily catch them, show to everyone, have short talk or discussion about it, then free them back to the wilderness.

We got to see a couple of types of crab, which I can’t remember now. I think there were moon crab and another type. There was also hermit crab. But hermit crab is not exactly a crab. Well, at least not the crab that we usually eat. They’re the tiny crab-like creatures who use empty seashells for their houses. In my primary school time in Jakarta, some people sold these poor hermit crabs to kids, who often bought them home and fed them rice (including me). They’d usually die in a few days. Sometimes the pimp showed off their hermit crabs by having them pull tiny cart and all sort of other things. Now that I think about it, it’s really quite barbaric.

Another interesting type of crab is Fiddler crab, which has one claw much bigger than the other. On that beach they usually gather at one spot and we could see them from afar. Then they would look like they’re waving to us. But we didn’t get to see them that morning. Probably because of bad weather.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - unknown crab

Unknown crab. Pretty big one. We also got one tiny one and when we released it back, the guides kept telling us not to blink. Apparently it dig a hole in the sand and disappeared in the blink of an eye.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island

Coral that reminds me of beehive.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island

This is a good example of 2 organisms (the top dome and the bumpy things below it) fighting for space. Or whatever it was they needed in the middle. I think the dome was supposed to be winning.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - coast

View of the beach area. During high tide the water would go up to the mud line we see in the picture.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - coast

The greener side of the coast.

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - poor fish

The poor fish was stuck on the dry land (only about the size of our middle finger). So we saved it. But before that we took picture of it first ;)

Reef Walk @ Kusu Island - group photo

Group photo at the end of the day. As you can see most of us were pretty drenched. And for me the last half hour or so was very cold due to all the wetness and wind. My rubbish-bag-like poncho could only do so much. I can’t imagine the folks that were totally wet from head to toe. So message to all, be more prepared if you do any outdoor activity!

There can only be so many you can capture on camera. There were a lot of other things we saw that you didn’t see here. Snails on rocks. Small little fish. Oysters. Shrimps. Sea cucumber, which I touched for the first time. It’s long, black, and furry. Felt like touching big short snake with carpet-like fur. It looks like this (picture stolen from Naked Hermit Crab blog). Good way is to go see them yourselves ;).

We finished around 9am and sort of had to rush back to the ferry. It was still raining all the way through. I thought we would have time to go to the temple, which I heard had giant tortoise statues and ponds full of live tortoises. I did see one small pond with many tortoises inside (which I couldn’t take picture of, because of, again, the rain). I would want to go there again next time and take some time to explore the temple and other part of the island.

I know my post has not been the most informative about marine life. I found this blog quite comprehensive. I think he’s one of the volunteer for Naked Hermit Crab, another group of volunteers who lead this kind of nature walk at Singapore’s shores like Sentosa, Chek Jawa, Pulau Semakau, Kusu Island. The last few posts were on Sentosa, which I first thought couldn’t be so beautiful, but I could be proven very wrong.

Anybody who’s interested to go, here or other places, can ask me to go with you :). I love nature walk. Nature is fascinating.


UpdateI sent BWV link to this blog and Peter See, the ReefWALK Coordinator, answered some of my questions:

1. The three types of seaweeds are green, red and brown.
2. Both the purplish baby thing and the alien looking thing are animals. (!!) The former is a type of soft coral while the latter is a hard coral.
3. The crab, that your guides had caught and shown the group, is commonly known as the flower crab. This crab can be eaten and the best way to cook it is to steam it, and dig the meat into light soy sauce.

Thanks Peter! :)

Reef Walk with Blue Water Volunteers
Kusu Island, Singapore
www.bluewatervolunteers.org/reefwalk

Time: 5am-9am
Cost: $15

03 Jul 2007
Finally Bali Part 5: Tanah Lot
9:50 pm | 4 are hungry | Published in Bali,Indonesia,travel |

Straight after Bratan Lake, off we went to the majestic Tanah Lot Temple, in my mind the most famous symbol of Bali.

Bali Map - Tanah Lot

First thing I noticed was the number of ducks I found lying their feathers about.

ducks at Tanah Lot

Just next to the ducks, we started to see what Tanah Lot was all about.

Tanah Lot

Tanah Lot

It’s temple by the sea! Who would’ve had the idea in the first place? It’s GRAND I tell you.

Tanah Lot

Tanah Lot is “also called Tanah Let which means ancient land and also Tanah Lod, which means the land to the south.” ~ taken from indo.com

We went inside the cavity at that big rocks, and there were a few what looked like holy men, who sprayed (holy) water, slipped an orchid, and stamped some rice to foreheads of people queuing. Oh it’s also a donation post. For the pray, holy water, holy orchid, and holy rice, that is.

Us at Tanah Lot with holy rice

Me with baby, holy orchid in ear, holy rice on forehead, and jew hat. I told you you’re gonna see the hat again.

Sunset at Tanah Lot

Beautiful sunset without the sun. I don’t know where the sun was. We probably came a bit too late since we were stuck at Bratan Lake because of the rain.

Tanah Lot

My pretty boy. Okay he doesn’t like me to call him pretty boy, so I’m gonna call him my manly man ;).

I like all the blue-ness of the picture. Somehow all my pictures at Tanah Lot turned out all bluish.

Tanah Lot

The sky is blluuueee. I love the silhouette. But that time I was actually looking for the spot of Tanah Lot where all the famous pictures taken. I just found it latter when it got too dark to take good pictures :(. Apparently you gotta go up the small road near the ducks at the front, pass a series of small shops and cafes, and take the pictures from the hill, not the beach.

Tanah Lot

I know you can’t get enough of my hat, so there you go! (Damn my hair was long!)

I’m somewhat disappointed that I didn’t manage to capture better pictures at Tanah Lot like I would’ve expected because of bad timing. We almost rushed to the beach, up the hill, and back. Next time we definitely need to go earlier.

Tanah Lot ended our second day. So the next post you would see us in different clothes.

Tanah Lot
Tabanan Regency, Coast of West Bali
Indonesia

Admission: adult Rp7.500,-, car Rp5.000,-