Monday, August 2, 2010

Shoya Japanese, Melbourne

Sometimes bad planning turns into good luck.  Landed late in Melbourne last night and wanted to try Hutong Dumpling Bar, but of course didn't book and even at 8pm on a Sunday night it was booked out.  Flower Drum across Market Lane looked too intimidating and I probably couldn't afford it... then I noticed Shoya.

Unage canape
It was discreet but alluring, or maybe the lighting was low and flattering.  They showed me to a counter table at the sushi bar; and unlike other (cheaper) sushi bars, the chef were Japanese - always a good start.

Starter of unage canape was a delight.  The miso marinated eel topped with crab meat salad, salmon caviar and truffle.  The eel taste was much more subtle than I imagined, maybe pulled back by the miso, contrasted well with the stronger crab meat salad, with the salmon caviar providing the taste explosion.  You can tell I'm no connoisseur because I couldn't distinguish much from the truffle.

Maguro steak
Main was a feast for the eyes as well as the mouth; squares of tuna fillet steak sprinkled with thinly sliced seaweed and pan seared.  Again the taste was subtle but unmistakable.  The play of fish as chunky steak cubes was cute almost playful.  The sauce looks and tastes like a sweet jam and the red pepper corn flared momentarily with hotness.  Delightful.



For a food blogger, dining alone has its advantages, I was able to take pics and notes and still stayed relatively inconspicuous, got some great candid shots.


Not cheap, but highly recommended.


Shoya Nouvelle Wafu Cuisine on Urbanspoon

5 comments:

  1. Oh I love Japanese food. Those tuna cubes look so good, give me a whole tray of those babies please! Thanks for the heads up on this place. YUM!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Phuoc meaning to tell you noodlies is doing something very fun with Pho... to be launched in selected Cumberland newspapers including Fairfield Advance this Wednesday.. stay tuned!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Those tuna fillets look stunning although I think I would have eaten three servings of those as my main. Am impressed by the inclusion of truffle - I tend to eat the truffle on its own to appreciate its texture and flavour exclusively.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hey Helen, have to tune up my taste buds, struggled to distinguish the truffle.. maybe need more practice!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I just added your blog site to my blogroll, I pray you would give some thought to doing the same.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Related Posts with Thumbnails