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During my staycation at RWS, we settled our meals at the Malaysian Food Street for quite a few times since that is the only "foodcourt" there, the rest being all restaurants and cafes. This wanton mee ($4.50) is obviously nothing like KL wanton mee which I have tried before. But, to be fair, even without comparing to KL's, it is nowhere close to any other wanton mee in Singapore's hawker centres. The point is, I can find nicer wanton mee in hawkers at a cheaper price. Of course I expect the pric
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During my staycation at RWS, we settled our meals at the Malaysian Food Street for quite a few times since that is the only "foodcourt" there, the rest being all restaurants and cafes. This wanton mee ($4.50) is obviously nothing like KL wanton mee which I have tried before. But, to be fair, even without comparing to KL's, it is nowhere close to any other wanton mee in Singapore's hawker centres. The point is, I can find nicer wanton mee in hawkers at a cheaper price. Of course I expect the price to be high, afterall, this is a resort catered to tourists, but no excuses for the taste, it's not even nice!

The noodles disappointed me, I could taste the "jian" taste in the noodles, which I hated. The char siew are thick and juicy and the wanton was nice too, but I really didnt like the noodles. If the noodles of a bowl of wanton noodles is not nice, who would want to finish the noodles despite the ingredients being not bad, mind you, noodles is the main essense of this dish isnt it?
wanton mee
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2012-06-12 31 views
Maybe since I'm an ang moh I don't know how to properly judge a bowl of wanton mee, but I didn't find the KL Wanton Mee at Malaysian Food Street any different than what you get at any coffeeshop. I guess the char siew slices were a bit fattier, which I actually didn't like -- I prefer lean char siew that reminds me of crispy bacon. The noodles weren't anything special either - pretty sure they're store-bought. I did like the wantons though which were salty and had lots of minced pork (it's pork
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Maybe since I'm an ang moh I don't know how to properly judge a bowl of wanton mee, but I didn't find the KL Wanton Mee at Malaysian Food Street any different than what you get at any coffeeshop. I guess the char siew slices were a bit fattier, which I actually didn't like -- I prefer lean char siew that reminds me of crispy bacon. The noodles weren't anything special either - pretty sure they're store-bought. I did like the wantons though which were salty and had lots of minced pork (it's pork, right?) in them.

On the positive, the KL Wanton Mee is one of the cheapest things you can get at Malaysian Food Street at Resorts World Sentosa and it was under $5. But I'll definitely be trying a different stall the next time I'm there.

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2012-03-20