New wave of vegetarian, vegan eateries in Singapore offer fresh harvest

Published July 4, 2018
(CLOCKWISE from top left) Sesame mochi bread with mayonnaise, fried spinach pancake, peach gum with golden paste and wolfberry and winter pumpkin glutinous rice cake coated with cereal confetti at Tibetan-inspired vegetarian restaurant Ganglamedo.
(CLOCKWISE from top left) Sesame mochi bread with mayonnaise, fried spinach pancake, peach gum with golden paste and wolfberry and winter pumpkin glutinous rice cake coated with cereal confetti at Tibetan-inspired vegetarian restaurant Ganglamedo.

WITH more health-conscious diners looking to go green, a crop of new vegetarian restaurants has sprouted over the past six months.

But these are not your usual salad bars or raw food eateries. They range from vegetarian kiosk Great at Tanjong Pagar Centre to Tibetan-inspired restaurant Ganglamedo in Craig Road.

To cater to those looking for a plant-based diet, business owners are becoming more creative in the ingredients and flavours used — and shying away from mock meat where possible. They are also catering to the palates of “flexitarians” — casual vegetarians who are unable or unwilling to eliminate meat from their diet completely.

Anita Yuan, owner of Ganglamedo, offers plant-based items and a special cordyceps (type of fungus) menu — all in a fine-dining setting. She uses ingredients from Tibet as well as Chinese herbs and spices in the cooking, and chefs at the restaurant were sent to China to master healthy and nourishing recipes.

Over at Kilter Avenue, vegan restaurant HRVST is part of the lifestyle space which houses a gym. It is helmed by chef-owners Addis Tan, 29, and Dylan Choong, 35, who have worked at the likes of Tippling Club, Esquina and Cheek by Jowl. Choong is vegetarian, while Tan aims to go vegan three times a week.

Tan says: “As chefs, we have always had the idea to present vegan food like any other kind of food, without prejudice. We don’t want to be bogged down by preconceived notions that it’s too boring or too healthy. We are just making food that happens to be vegan.

KING oyster “scallops” with spinach puree, baby carrot, baby corn and toasted hazelnuts at vegan restaurant HRVST by Kilter Avenue.
KING oyster “scallops” with spinach puree, baby carrot, baby corn and toasted hazelnuts at vegan restaurant HRVST by Kilter Avenue.

“It’s perhaps not so much making vegan food cool, but to make it so commonplace that people don’t look at it as an alternative.” They also have plans to test a vegan street food brand called Hello Baby with a pop-up concept.

Older restaurants also note that diners are looking for healthier vegetarian fare. Over the past year, Yuan Oeij, 48, chairman of The Prive Group, has been working on increasing vegetarian and vegan items across the restaurant group’s outlets.

He says: “The direction is to provide offerings for vegans and vegetarians, and even those starting to embrace the plant-based diet. We may not be as progressive as some Western countries, but we are starting to pick up the pace.”

As for Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant, it has been collaborating with Taipei’s Yang Ming Spring Green Kitchen for three years and is offering “vegetable-forward” menus until Aug 5 at its outlets at UOB Plaza and Parkroyal on Beach Road.

CRISPY beancurd “Peking duck style” at Empress.
CRISPY beancurd “Peking duck style” at Empress.

Observing a “significant shift” towards healthier options, its executive director Wee Wei Ling adds that after the promotion is over, selected items will be introduced to the a la carte menu at the UOB Plaza outlet.

Self-described flexitarian Jeremy Tan, 32, makes it a point to go vegetarian at least twice a week. The sales manager says: “There are more options now — not just salads or vegetarian hawker food with mock meat.

“I like the wide range of dishes available at Green Signature and I also like the food from vegetarian chain Greendot. I doubt I can ever be fully vegetarian, but maybe, over time, I won’t feel like meat is missing from my life.”

New restaurants

GANGLAMEDO No mock meats here, just plant-based ingredients at Tibetan inspired vegetarian restaurant Ganglamedo.

The five-course set includes the highlight hot pot with a choice of soup base, as well as an assorted vegetable platter. A special cordyceps menu includes Nagqu cordyceps double-boiled soup and noodles with Chinese truffle and cordyceps. The dishes are also on the a la carte menu, along with other highlights such as fried spinach pancake and dry tossed cordyceps flower with carrot, radish and enoki mushrooms.

VEGANBURG’S plant-based Chili Krab Burg.
VEGANBURG’S plant-based Chili Krab Burg.

HRVST BY KILTER AVENUE Fitness and lifestyle space Kilter Avenue houses a gym and a vegan restaurant called HRVST.

Menu highlights include butternut squash fettuccine with tom yam broth, shimeji, baby corn, coriander oil and Japanese cucumber ribbons; grilled cauliflower with satay sauce, vermicelli and achar; and king oyster “scallops” with spinach puree, baby carrot, baby corn and toasted hazelnuts.

Desserts include matcha ice cream with blood orange puree, poached plums and pistachios.

New menus and old favourites

SI CHUAN DOU HUA Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant’s vegetable-forward promotion returns for a third consecutive year, with new creations by guest chef Sean Hsueh from Taipei’s well regarded Yang Ming Spring Green Kitchen, in collaboration with Si Chuan Dou Hua’s team of chefs.

New items include an appetiser of beancurd noodles with cheese and fresh fruit, and baked water bamboo shoots with Japanese miso. A new dessert, aiyu jelly with fresh lemon, is made with the seeds of the Awkeotsang creeping fig, which is native to Taiwan and other East Asian territories.

TARO and mushrooms served on Japanese magnolia leaf at Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant.
TARO and mushrooms served on Japanese magnolia leaf at Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant.

Other highlights include taro and mushrooms served on Japanese magnolia leaf, and stir-fried fresh peas in a vermicelli nest.

Returning favourites include bright green mushroom ball with spinach puree. The ball, which is encased in Vietnamese rice paper, contains several types of fungi such as abalone mushrooms and matsutake mushrooms.

EMPRESS New dishes on the ever-expanding vegetarian menu at Empress restaurant include fried cauliflower and lotus root with egg and romaine lettuce wraps; stir-fried sweet potato noodles with oyster mushrooms and crispy beancurd “Peking duck style”.

VEGANBURG To celebrate Singapore’s upcoming 53rd birthday, burger joint VeganBurg is bringing back its plant-based Chili Krab Burg for a two-month promotion.

A konjac “crabmeat” patty is topped with a sweet and tangy sauce, romaine lettuce, coriander, cabbage and vegan mayonnaise and served in a wholemeal bun. Add curry fries and ginger lemonade and complete the meal with VeganBurg’s new coconut pineapple ice cream.

The Straits Times / Singapore

Published in Dawn, July 4th, 2018

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