Showing posts with label The Inimitable Hobart's Asian Teahouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Inimitable Hobart's Asian Teahouse. Show all posts

Monday, September 10, 2007

Dom's Teahouse By Night


ot everyone has been to the Teahouse down at Blackman's Bay in Hobart. But if you do you'll soon realise just how small the dining room is compared to all the other premises which I have operated over the years. Considering the demand pull of our small outlet's service to the residents of the ever sprawling suburb down here chances are by the weekend we shall be running out of room if you don't book early enough for your table or if you turn up at our eating house in an impromptu manner. You might feel like you have wasted your movement since you have done your commuting distance or disappointed because your nightout or dining time fail your planned expectation. Perhaps you will find this tidbits of information useful; our restaurant telephone number being 62297633. Generally speaking you will find us here around 3 p.m. in the afternoon because we just trade at night. The only exception being Monday because it is our only day off from work.

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Country Simplicity


Downsizing has never been part of my vocabulary when it comes to organisational matters. Rather I prefer this to be treated as a proper 'right sizing' of my own situation values. It is merely a matter of taste and control , a control of my own destiny. I have never been comfortable with larger premises any more than the ones down at Salamanca Place nor the one at the ex RSL Club at 6 Victoria street in the middle of the city. I know what it takes to run just a small personalised but labour intensive industry a simple eating house such as this. I do dread the idea of being carried away by imposing Body Corporate with its Chairman,a President,a Treasurer and a paraphernalia among other things including the much detested Annual General Meeting .

Friday, February 16, 2007

Happy Chinese New Year To All

DOM'S ASIAN TEAHOUSE CHINESE NEW YEAR GREETINGS






在DOM的茶館都可能要在世界各地的華人社會
非常幸福和繁榮 農曆year.
may大家都在進步,你的事業,並努力改進.
預祝你和你的直系親屬非常幸福與和平2007.




Sunday, December 17, 2006

Playing With Musical Chairs

Festive Season Celebration Down South Coast
2006 Christmas party in session at Dom's Teahouse
Well, it is this time of the year again. I must admit as trading operators we are treading on a very trying time. Christmas period leading up to the New year and a few weeks beyond into the holiday period has to be one of the busiest in our hospitality calender year. I get less time to spend behind my desktop as the business draws most of whatever surplus leisure time I have away.

Monday, November 13, 2006

A Cultural Melting Pot

The dishes that ultimately Distinguishes us above Others


Thai Prawn Pepper Fry

Hot sharp piquant and fiery. That is the 'clearing out' taste sensation one is left with the aftermath of onslaught. Prawn cutlets are fresh succulent and naturally sweet. They blend deliciously with a tangy fashion in a distinctive mix of tamarind sauce , sambal paste, belachan, grated tomatoes, fiery ginger garlic, and freshly chopped hot peppers.Tamarind is available in paste or sauce form from the nearest specialist grocery stores and it is generally used in curries, relishes and Tom Yum soups. As it has a sour, acidic flavour, a good replacement would be lemon or lime juice.
Other added ingredients are more complementary and supportive in terms of presentation and taste. In this dish I chose to use red and green strips of diced capsicums and so in the tradition of what Thais are generally eating I will include as well a few tit bits of fried bean curd. but they are certainly not as critically crucial and vital as the mixture of sauce that the prawns dish will turn out to rely. The Teahouse Thai Prawn Pepper Fry remains an All Time Greats since 1978. And that indeed is not really an understatement.

Malaysian Sambal Goreng


In Malay it means it is a mixture of meat and seafood cooked in mixed spice and Sambal sauce. This is a popular combination dish in our restaurant . Most go for the variety of fresh vegetables, bean curd and meat and seafood cooked in a tasty sambal belachan sauce Yet again like our Sambal Ayam Ketchap this is a unique dish to Dom's Teahouse that is second to none.

Breast Chicken With Whole Chilli & Cashew Nuts

A very Thai dish cooked in their traditional way by using even imported Thai dried chillies. Apparently it goes down very well with our customers down at the Bay. Partly because we use only choice quality of breast chicken fillets and no other cheaper chicken cuts. The secrets in this dish is a combination of sauces that makes up for its dissimilar and distinct flavour.


Beef Rendang (aka) Rendang Daging

The sinew of our underlying strength lies in the fact that for years I have developed a changing strategy. Whereby staying the course ( sounds like George Bush?) of intense competition and wearing times it literally means adopting a measure of everchanging strategem seeking subterfuge in a more emboldened form of multiculturalism having to multi-task and synergise constantly at a menu that represents a cluster of food which has been increasingly harmonised as one hell of a cultural melting pot. But with some certain clear exceptions perhaps the Beef Rendang remains truly the same Rendang that we set out in the very outset.It has indeed surpassed its time.

Rendang in Malaysia and Indonesia is cooked with beef though occasionally it sometimes can be with chicken. Back in the villages amidst the breeze underneath the swaying palm trees and idyllic setting further away from our madding crowd their festive cooking takes virtually a whole day. A slow process if you ask me for a fast track person. In fact many hours it will take to cook rendang in order to allow the meat to absorb in the mixture of spices condiment and coconut milk and till all the liquid has almost disappeared the natural oil oozes out and meat remains tender and soft. Because the dry form of rendang is rich and thick in coconut gravy and concentrate in spice this dish is therefore ideally served along plain steamed rice.

Dom's Teahouse Malaysian Beef Curry (Gulai Daging)

Human beings are good carriers. Not the disease I mean but of interchanging ideas. The British popularise this curry business in Europe and elsewhere since 1830's when Queen Victoria was at the Realm of Pax Britannia and W E Gladstone doing the biddings at her behest.You take the pick . I didn't particularly take to their Malligatawny soup, do you ? Nevertheless, the best curry house in the world is in London's East End . Elsewhere Curry burger with a Beer is a hit. As a matter of fact geographically speaking Malaysia and Singapore is at the crossroad of 2 ancient civilisation and these young countries just couldn't possibly escape the influence of China and India for the last thousand of years.

Curries differ from region to region in accordance to the local ingredients being called into use. Indian uses cumin tumeric and saffron. They are more likely to use potatoesThai tend to use kaffir lime leaves lemon grass and chillis. In Malaysia where coconut is abundant the milk is ever present in curry dish and sweets too come to think of it. Malaysian and Indonesian also use the dried form of shrimp paste in their curries.


Fried Rice in The Making

The boss slave himself at the helm dutifully shuffling away conjuring up yet perhaps another masterpiece.This time he is doing an Indonesian version of spicy fried rice.


Indonesian Nasi Goreng


The classic Indonesian and Malaysian fried rice. Some has a fried egg on it. But I thought I would do better by beating lots of eggs together fry them in a pancake pan individually then pile them tidyly together in a stack and slice them into long nice looking shreds before strewing them onto the rice dish. This dish is stir fry with belachan (shrimp paste) sambal oelek bajak ketchap soy sauce and other spices. Materials include shredded raw onion chicken pieces shrimps shallots and fresh bean sprouts.

We do consider ourselves very lucky to have a strong contingent of Dutch elements in our community down at the Bay. For the Asian Teahouse with its Sambal Bajak and Sambal Oelek must have reminded them to some extent the old East Indies & Malacca when they were then former colonies of the then Dutch Netherlands. Any European bound global tourist will tell you that Nasi Goreng along with Bahmi Goreng is a popular Asian dish in Holland's restaurants today.