Cuppage Plaza has always been our good source of Japanese food. We've tried sumiyaki, sushis, even izakaya food. This time round we were there for Ohsumi's Shabu Shabu. If you are a Chinese steamboat lover and a staunch believer that we get chicken, fish ... stock, or that myriads of herbs, with many ingredients to get a sweetened soup base, you'll be in for a surprise and maybe even a disappointment.
I am a Chongqing steamboat and fish head steamboat lover. So, I've brought with me, my own preconception of a steamboat meal to this virgin shabu shabu dinner. Inevitably, I felt sore and cheated over the lack of taste and flavors in this Japanese meal until I learnt out more about shabu shabu. Still I couldn't reconcile this meal with my taste buds. HY could and thought it was light and good. Well, it's just my personal taste preference, no one else's fault.
Plain water as Soup Base?
There was no tasty soup base to start with, only plain boiling water to cook our meat. This seemed absurp to me as a newbie to shabu shabu. According to what I learnt later, the idea of Ohsumi's shabu shabu was to taste the natural flavor of the meat, untainted by other flavors. We started dumping the vegetables into the steamboat and then as the soup start to boil we start cooking the meat one slice at a time.
Standard heap of vegetable, mushrooms, tofu, mochi and vermicelli that came with every standard set of meat.
Beef Set
This is the dish of regular sliced beef from the beef set cost S$42++. It was the most economical type of beef available. There's the wagyu set if you prefer more tender slices of beef at S$75++.
This was by far the 'healthiest' meal that I had out of Kurobuta pork, no offense to the Grilled and Deep Fried Kurobutas that I'm more smittened with. As for steamboats, Oh Sumi-masen, get me that 麻辣 Ma La Chongqing steamboat, I need more flavors please!
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