Shinji by Kanesaka only opened at The Crown Towers Macau earlier this year. Having paid a visit to the honten almost exactly 5 years ago - and having read e_ting's post on her visit a couple of months ago - I was pretty confident that the quality of food would be pretty high. For this lunch, it was poor Emily's turn to sacrifice part of her weekend and waste it on a couple of nobodies from Hong Kong...
We were very kindly offered the omakase lunch so that we could sample a wider range of Chef Osumi Toru's repertoire. So glad that we decided to have a light breakfast!
Corn soup (とうもろこしのすり流し) - made with dashi (鰹だし) and garnished with a couple of green soybeans (枝豆). A nice and refreshing start.
Rosy seabass (喉黒) - lightly torched (炙り).
Japanese horse hair crab (毛蟹) - covered in a layer of yuba (湯葉), served with a ponzu (ポン酢) jelly, and garnished with a dab of crab tomalley (蟹味噌) and minced ginger on top. Very nice.
Glass shrimp (白海老) - my first substitute. Garnished with a dollop of marinated bonito guts (鰹酒盗), as well as perilla (紫蘇) leaf chiffonade.
Pacific saury (秋刀魚) - lightly torched. Love that tasty fish oil.
Pickled mustard (榨菜) - a little surprised to find a Japanese chef serving this as a palate-cleanser... especially since it's kinda spicy.
Fat greenling tempura (鮎並 天婦羅) - topped with a tomato tempura, and perilla chiffonade. The acidity here cut down the oiliness of the tempura.
Geoduck (海松貝) - crunchy as expected.
Japanese hairtail (太刀魚) - lightly torched but still very tender, although the skin was rather crunchy. Served with minced spring onion (葱おろし) and dressed with a little yuzu (柚子).
Octopus (鮹) - slow-cooked and very tender.
Tilefish (甘鯛) - nicely grilled. Served with some sweet white miso on the side in addition to the lime.
Striped jack (縞鰺)
Squid (烏賊) - with a little sudachi (酢橘).
Splendid alfonsino (金目鯛) - nicely torched on the skin side. I love this fish... especially when you melt the fat a little with some heat.
Baby seabream (春子鯛) - only around 6 months old. This was marinated much in the same way that chefs marinate gizzard shad (小鰭).
Horse mackerel (鯵) - a beautiful, fatty piece. With some perilla in between the shari (しゃり) and neta (ねた), and topped with some asatsuki (浅葱).
Gizzard shad (小鰭) - I've never had it served quite like this before... just one single stroke splitting it in half. Love the vinegar marinade.
Salmon roe (イクラ)
Japanese green sea urchin (馬糞雲丹) - from Rishiri (利尻).
Clam (蛤) - not quite drenched in the sweet sauce the way Jiro does it, but still a little sweet. A little yuzu.
Conger eel (穴子) - grilled and lathered in sauce, with a sprinkle of sansho pepper (山椒).
Ark shell mantle roll (赤貝のひも巻き) - Osumi-san makes some interesting rolls, and for me he used the mantle of ark shells together with cucumber - instead of tuna. Pretty cool.
Egg (卵) - this was a lot creamier and mushier than most versions I've had -almost like a cheesecake. Later I realized that this was also the style at the Kanesaka honten.
The dessert was a combination of fruits and sweets. A chunk of Miyazaki mango and a chunk of Melox (メロックス) melon from Shizuoka sat underneath some sake ice cream, which came with some peach coulis and... yup... gold foil. Besides the single Kyoho (巨峰) grape was a citrus wedge. This would be a jelly made with hyuganatsu (日向夏) citrus, with chunks of the flesh inside.
Our last nibble would be some dorayaki (どら焼き) - Doraemon (ドラえもん)'s favorite.
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