Eat

WORTH THE SPREAD

From mala butter to slow-cooked beef jam, freshly made artisanal flavoured butters and spreads have never tasted so good. Stock up on these gourmet indulgences for easy treats right out of your fridge.

Portrait of Tammy Strobel

MALA BUTTER

Containing the mildly numbing Sichuan peppercorn for an addictive spice kick, this spread is great as a pairing with deep-fried lotus chips, flavouring for nuts, and glaze for roast beef.

RED WINE BUTTER

This fruity butter, infused with Merlot, Malbec or Shiraz, is a meat-lover’s favourite. Pan-sear it with steak, grill it with lamb, slather it on chicken wings, or smear it on cheese and crackers for easy finger food.

MENTAIKO BUTTER

This pollack fish roe-infused butter is a big hit, and some of the ideas for its use came directly from avid fans. Try basting it on salmon for baking, stir-frying with squid, and even tossing in hot cooked Japanese rice for a quick snack.

MATCHA BUTTER

The only sweet butter in Shaun’s line-up, the matcha butter is recommended for smearing on doughnuts, incorporating into cookie dough for baking cookies, or infusing into cream to make a sauce.

JAPANESE CURRY BUTTER

The unmistakable aroma of Japanese curry makes this a winner with breaded white fish and even white wine mussels – just use the beurre monte (whisk cold butter with the warm sauce when it’s off the heat) technique to achieve a satiny sheen and velvety texture.

With social distancing measures changing our dining habits, chefs and restaurateurs have had to adapt and find new revenue streams. Rising along with the trend in sourdough bread and other bakes is the seemingly basic but most decadent pleasure of all – spreads to slather and smear over your daily toast. What may literally be bread and butter issues for some, has become elevated in the hands of Michelin-starred restaurants, wholesome delis and chefs-turned-home-based-businesses.

1 FLAVOUR GENERATOR

Chef-owner of Steakville restaurant Shaun Gian found himself with free time when his restaurant was closed during the circuit breaker. That was when the Shatec graduate – who says he gets restless when he doesn’t have anything to do – started trying out new things, such as churning raw cream into butter.

“I was interested in trying out different finishes for my steaks by using flavoured butter,” explains Shaun. He experimented with different ingredients, learning how to balance the salt content and ratio of spices and ingredients to achieve the final product. Thus, The Unusual Butter brand with nine initial flavours – including mala, mentaiko and red wine – was born.

For the seemingly simple Garlic Butter, he was inspired by a Japanese restaurant in Osaka to incorporate fried garlic and shoyu into the butter, creating the most sophisticated flavour in his range, according to him.

To date, he has sold more than 4,000 tubs of butter.

BUY Nine savoury flavoured butters ($10 for 125g each) from beefmarket.sg 
My Reading Room

"SALTED & HUNG"

Modern Australian restaurant Salted & Hung hits it out of the park with bold trimmings.

2 MINIMAL WASTE, MAXIMUM TASTE

Salted & Hung is where you’ll find chef-owner Drew Nocente up to his elbows in perfecting cooking techniques. Whether smoking, curing, pickling or grilling, he looks into using every part of each ingredient, right down to skin and bones, for flavour. It’s part of his upbringing on a farm in Australia, where nothing was wasted.

The airy whipped lard is made from usually discarded pork trimmings, and scented with shallots and honey to perk up the palate. Also on the deli list is a deliciously addictive Kelp Butter, made from leftover nori and wakame from oil infusions.

“The kelp was still full of flavour so we churned it into our house-made butter to create something new and full of umami,” explains Drew. “We’ve heard from our customers that they use the deli spreads to complement everything from Western to Chinese dishes.”

BUY Kelp Butter ($9 for 150g) from saltedhung.oddle.me
 
My Reading Room

"BURNT ENDS"

"Burnt Ends has a meaty Beef Marmalade you didn’t know you craved."

3 MICHELIN-STAR POWER JAM

It’s not easy scoring a seat at Burnt Ends, the one-Michelinstar restaurant with a two-month waiting list. However, thanks to the takeaway programme that it launched under its bakery concept, you can still get your hands on some very select items, such as breads and doughnuts. If you're a meat-lover, the signature Beef Marmalade is a must-try. It's made up of smoked beef brisket that’s cooked down with bacon, garlic, onions, shallots, beef jus, malt vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, salt and pickled mustard seed, along with complex sweetness from brown sugar, molasses and glucose syrup. The result is reduced over nine hours to achieve a glossy, juicy, beefy marmalade that just calls for toasted sourdough and pickles for a perfect ploughman’s lunch.

BUY Beef Marmalade ($38 for 300g) from bakery.burntends.com.sg
 
My Reading Room

"Tuck into madefrom- scratch goodness at Plentyfull Bakery & Deli."

4 PANTRY PLAYGROUND

Claudia Sondakh, owner and founder of Plentyfull, went from the fashion industry to food with a mission: to respect the integrity and taste of fresh produce. While the restaurant at Millenia Walk has closed down, its pantry and deli at Great World City continues the commitment to ensuring that what you eat is good for you.

Claudia says: “There are definitely more people who are becoming conscious of what they eat, and who enjoy artisanal deli products. Work-from-home may have helped in this matter.”

Plentyfull’s larder section, which features some of the ingredients used for dine-in, includes the delightful Truffle Butter and Spiced Apple Butter, which complement its in-house bread selection. Claudia loves the Truffle Butter on miso baguette topped with uni, or simply roast potatoes. The Spiced Apple Butter goes well not just on bread, but also with savoury dishes such as crispy pork crackling, roasted ham or even a decadent piece of goose liver.

BUY Spiced Apple Butter ($8.90 for 180g) and Truffle Butter ($15 for 80g) from Plentyfull Bakery & Deli at Great World City
 
My Reading Room

"Chef Sam Chablani has painstakingly perfected his Dirty Delicious Umami Butter over the last four years."

5 NO BURN, NO TASTE

Chef Sam Chablani's philosophy of "no burn, no taste" has become a personal brand, as has his Dirty Delicious Umami Butter, which he launched during the circuit breaker.

“I came up with Umami Butter in 2016 when I was running a restaurant called Fat Lulus,” Sam explains. “Actually, it was one of the chefs working in the restaurant who insisted I place it on the menu. He was hosting his wedding lunch at the restaurant and asked me to make a bread and butter course. I think the butter got more attention than the bride,” he quips.

The butter has since achieved cult status for those who have tasted it – from the creaminess of the texture to the lingering, full flavours on the palate long after you’ve munched on your toast, steak, pasta or whichever vessel chosen to hold it. Sam shares: “There are four ingredients: butter, cheese, salt, and Japanese seaweed. That’s all I shall reveal. I’ve started adding more components to it such as lemon and garlic. That will be the next flavour.”

Sam credits the butter for turning him from a restaurant chef into an entrepreneur. “Umami Butter has allowed me to always be part of my butter addicts’ households. I can constantly be cooking and feeding them flavour, even when they are not dining with me,” he muses.

BUY Dirty Delicious Umami Butter ($18 for 140g) from www.noburnnotaste.com 

TEXT JUNE LEE PHOTOGRAPHY VERONICA TAY & TAN WEI TE STYLING SHAN