San Sui one evening for yakitori…I’ve been on several trails these days unknowingly. Facing MBS and also the floating platform, I was hoping for a fireworks display but they were not rehearsing that particular Sunday…what luck!

For the sake lover.

Tables that were soon filled.

Thoughtful napkins.
Assorted Vegetables Sticks with Miso Dip ($ 7)
These are normally given as appetizer but San Sui
charges for them. Really fresh selection of vegetables and a super
addictive miso dip that left me scraping for more. I guess this is one
of those times that I pay for what I get.
Kawaebi Karaage ($13)
Irresistible crisp crustaceans which I conclude,
the Japanese tend to go for lighter seasoning even though these are
usually eaten with beer. These light babies thankfully do not scratch
the gums much!
Hot Spring Egg topped with Sea Grapes ($ 8)
Tempted by the images in the menu, this poached egg
and sea grapes was quiet ordinary in taste, it was more a textural dish
(think crunchy, wobbly and somewhat gooey) than one bursting with
flavour.
Dried Stingray Fins ($13)
Finally I put a name to this dish first encountered
in South Korea! Chewy like cuttle fish, this mildly sweet snack is
addictive…madly so with a mayo dip too!
Chicken Fillet w/ Cheese ($ 4)
A more palatable take on this than Nanbantei,
succulent chicken chunk with a layer of melted cheese. The cheese was
not all that great though.
Chicken Fillet w/ Cod Roe ($ 4)
Black Pork Belly ($ 6)
This fatty cut was really oily but also worthy of
the hour long zumba class I had earlier. Well charred and well greased
pork chunk. Pork belly, is the reason why I love pork.
Deep Fried Prawn with Fresh Dice Mango ($18)
6-8 pieces is the portion size that their sushi
comes in. Overall decent sushi but lacking in wow somehow, it could be
the tempura prawn that had a batter too thick.
Buta Katsu Ponzu ($18)
A July special, this pork loin came with a dipping
vinegar which uplifted the taste but several notches. Not the most
tender cut, just decent.
It is surprising that the non-yakitori dishes were
more outstanding though this is supposedly a sumiyaki bar, mainly. Food
is generally good and at such a stellar location, it is a decent place.
Service is attentive and it is filled with
expats – authenticity guaranteed.
San Sui Sumiyaki and Bar
One Fullerton, #01-05




They rehearse every Saturday in the lead-up to National Day, fyi, so now's the time to check out all the Marina Bay area restaurants. Have fun! :)
ReplyDeleteyea the rehearsals are on Saturdays, one more left before the actual thing?
ReplyDeleteI agree their yakitori items weren't as good as their non-yakitori items.
thanks guys! yeah I guess..haa, fingers crossed on that! xinli, have you tried the clarke quay outlet?
ReplyDelete