Located on the corner of 6th Avenue and 7th Street, Tamarind Hill is a quaint little restaurant that is nicely decorated and furnished. The lighting was a bit odd at this time of day and I ended up with shadows and bright sunlight striating the food. This is where I needed a piece of white cardboard to help me redirect the light. However, I'm not sure if I want to carry a piece of white cardboard around. Mind you, I never thought I'd lug a DSLR around either. The things I do for blogging! Next I'll be carrying around a
We started with the Roti Canai. It was fluffy, slightly sweet and not oily. The curry dipping sauce was mild and not overpowering. Arriving at the same time were the Chicken Curry and the Beef Rendeng. Both came with a bowl of rice, which is never enough for the amount of sauce. I really liked the chicken, it was packed full of properly cooked ingredients in a creamy coconut curry. Although the menu states there is both fennel and cloves in the sauce; I could barely detect the fennel flavour. Good thing, Viv hates
A good contrast to the smooth chicken curry was the beef rendeng. Although it was a coconut-based sauce, it had a more robust flavour due to the addition of ginger, onion and lemongrass. It was spicy; yet an underlying heat which went really well with rice. The beef itself was tender; but some of the pieces were slightly dry. Of course with all this meat, we ordered the Sambal Green Beans. Mind you, they are fried and then stir fried with more oil. Not sure if that helps our health quotient or not. The beans were
We were quite satisfied with our meal at Tamarind Hill. The food was solid, the prices were reasonable and the portions were decent. However, the one thing that stood out as a negative was the service, or lack of. The staff was actually quite friendly; but for most of the time, there was only one person handling the whole restaurant (about 9 tables full), the phone and
The Good:
- Flavourful dishes
- Reasonably priced
- Decent portions
The Bad:
- Lack of servers
3 comments:
woah.. i think they kinda suck although price is kinda reasonable.
But, very different taste from the original..(im an indonesian). I know the malay food real taste.
Sorry, but need to say, they kinda suck...
Sure, that's perfectly fine, besides, everyone has their own opinion. That's why we eat at different places. I do realize that there are very few, if not no Malay restaurants in the GVRD that can compete with those in Indonesia or Malaysia. The same can be said for almost every different ethnic cuisine here. However, what I'm trying to do is compare locally and we have to live with what we got. So unless something is inedible, I'm not inclined in saying it "sucks". That's the very reason I want to travel to Europe too, to experience authentic food in the original places.
They just opened up their second location in the North Shore.
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