My well traveled auntie (Tita) brought a few of us here. She says this family that owns this spot used to live in Indonesia for many years. Then when they moved back to the Philippines they transformed part of their home to serve as both restaurant and home. Cool and ideal scenario.
Very stylish digs, airy space with lots of natural light and wooden accents. Lots of cool traditional decor from Indonesia as well.
Bakwan Sayur (4*) These are crisp vegetable fritters. Nice and petite with a lacey crisp batter. Real similar to an Indian Pakora or a Philippine Ukoy. From what I heard this is a popular street food but here they plate it nice with an intense dark sauce with a subtle tang and sweetness.
Gado Gado (5*) Super unique salad. I've had Indonesian food in the states many times but I've never seen this dish. Here they take bigger chunks of cabbage and a dark leafy green that may be water spinach and blanch both so it loses its rawness but still a bit crisp. Other shredded veggies go in and all coated in this amazing peanut dressing that was savory with a touch of sweet. Garnished with hard boiled egg wedges, this was a spectacularly unique salad. A must get imo.
Bakmi Goreng (4*) Stir fried thick noodles with a uniquely Indonesian sauce that is meant to absorb into the noodles versus swimming in a sauce. Very nice springy texture on the noodle and the flavor had a pinch of curry flavor that made you just mildly ponder about it. Just enough to make you go hmmmm.
Beef Rendang (5*). Very petite portioning, but 1-2 pieces was totally suffice for the lunch sampling we did. The beef in this country is much leaner than in the states. This was done tender but still has a nice chew. The sauce is where this place elevates, very complex a yet still beefy. Maybe a touch of coconut milk like a French sauce might use a pat of butter to finish, stealthy yet effective. The best version of beef rendang I've ever had.
Nasi Goreng (4.5*) A fried rice prep that was super similar to the noodle dish we got except instead of fried noodles this was fried rice in Indonesian flavors embedded into the rice. Topped with a fried egg, if I lived near here I'd get this, the beef dish and that salad weekly. Real special.
Es Teler (5*) This is an Indonesian version of Halo Halo or Viet Che. And the menu states avocado in their version but they were out but we still ordered one. Here they take the shaved ice and run it into a blender with the sweetened coconut milk so it becomes very smooth and creamy yet thick enough to stand on its own. So they serve this in dramatic fashion with the frozen part towering about 7 inches above the rim of the bowl. On the bottom lied jackfruit slices and thick shreds of young coconut. Friggin jaw dropper of a finish. And now I'm wondering how that avocado could have added to the amazement as I'm thinking it would have been even better with the richness avocados can lend.
Place had a lunch rush even tho it is tucked away from the street. It is not in a retail strip so a true gem in the rough. Just want to help unearth it here for others. read more