Each Dish at Salted & Hung has a Special Story behind it, says Expat Choice Reporter Alpana Singh

Published - 26 November 2021, Friday
  • Chef Drew Nocente

On a rainy, weekday afternoon, I found myself at 12 Purvis Street, at the exclusive restaurant Salted & Hung. But the weather was the end of how dreary my afternoon was going to get, because my next hour and a half was a lovely culinary journey, full of stories and learning.

When Chef, and owner Drew Nocente started Salted & Hung, he brought together two things that mattered the world to him. One was his love for cooking, and food, and the other was his deep passion for zero waste, and sustainability, and these were the main raisons d’etre for the restaurant.

Growing up on a farm in Australia, Nocente, has a respect for what nature provides for humankind, and he brings this into his restaurant. We live in a world that is fast diminishing due to our needs and lifestyles, and it becomes increasingly important for us to make informed lifestyle choices, for example, eating at restaurants that make a conscious effort to sustain the environment.

Vintage beef

 

I experienced the new 8-course meal, called The Art of Sustainability ($198++), which brings Nocente’s philosophy of minimal waste cooking to each and every item brought to the table. The restaurant has now done away with a la carte items,and instead offers elaborate set meals. The ingredients are all interconnected. For example, the delicious charcuterie set starter has an excellent selection of house cured meats: duck, pork, and beef.

In turn, the trimmings from these meats is used in the green lip abalone starter, which was a decadent mouthful, and perhaps my favourite starter. The abalone had been grilled in a butter made from the liver of the abalone, yeast extract and butter. The most special thing about this dish is that it was served with the abalone shell as a gorgeous cover. But this is not where it ends for the abalone shell, it is further utilised, in the form of your cutlery-rest, as well as the steak knives.

Another remarkable starter was the decadent caviar. In this, a cured kingfish is mixed with creme fraiche and topped with kaluga caviar. It is served with crunchy, collagen chips which have been made with a broth of radish, and pickle trimmings and the turbot fish’s skin and fins. The broth is made into a paste, dehydrated and then fried to make these crispy chips.

​​​​​​​Turbot

The star of this menu is of course, the Turbot fish (pictured above) which was an absolute delight to sample. What is even more applause-worthy is that each, and every part of the fish has been utilised to make this five star dish. The turbot filet is aged in the chiller for 5 days, rolled into a tubular shape, like a roll, and further slow-cooked for 30 minutes. The result is a soft, melt-in-the mouth flesh.

This filet is best enjoyed with the vin Jaune sauce, which is made from the fish’s bone stock, and its liver, along with other ingredients such as caramelised onions, yuzu, and parsley. But the most interesting thing I had with this meal, was an incredible Dashi tea, full of robust umami flavours.

Now, in order to make this beautiful tea, the bones of the fish are hung out to dry for two weeks. You can actually see the carcasses of the fish drying in the restaurant’s minimalistic kitchen. The dried bones are then rubbed with Koji-a type of edible mould. These bones are further aged for another 3 weeks, and then used to make a broth with fish soy, stock, and mushroom dashi. And this becomes the dashi tea, a broth savoured slowly, while you eat the fish.

Salted & Hung

The other main dish is the dry-aged, grass-fed vintage beef, which I am happy to say was not at all dry or chewy, but tender, easy-to-cut, with an almost melt-in-mouth texture. The sauce for the steak has been made with the t-bone, and beef trimmings, while the unique carrot ketchup has used the carrot skin, and trimmings, The steak knives handles were beautiful, made from recycled abalone shell, from abalones used in the restaurant itself.

The dessert plate was an absolute delight, with Nocente paying homage to his childhood, growing up on his family farm, where he remembers picking apples. It is a simple, yet delicious end to the meal, with apple pound cake and slow-cooked apple pieces sprinkled with apple pie-sugar, almost like a lovely apple pie, minus the pastry.  It was served along with a tangy, apple kombucha which comes in a delightful, thimble-sized, copper mug.

But Nocente’s  sustainability philosophy is not just used in the meals, it extends to all parts of his restaurant. The team sources produce from trusted vendors, and farmers from Australia, that have established good-farming practices. For example, the beef they use in Salted & Hung, is cuts from 8-year-old retired, breeding cattle. For micro-herbs, they looked locally and get them from local vendor Pocket Greens, to whom the restaurant, in turn, gives its compost, made from kitchen scraps.

In the kitchen, plastic necessities such as cling wrap, garbage bags, and disposable packaging have been done away with and have been replaced with biodegradable versions. For smoking their ingredients, coconut-husk charcoal was introduced, making use of the part of the coconut which is thrown away. Also, when you eat here, you will not find any single-use straws, and instead of a paper coasters, your drink will sit on a marble one.

The staff at Salted & Hung take great pride in telling their diners the philosophy, and the ethos of their restaurant, while serving you the delightful food. I cannot wait to see what the restaurant will do next.​​​​​​​

a. 12 Purvis Street, Singapore 188591

e. info@saltedandhung.com.sg

w. www.saltedandhung.com.sg/

s. www.facebook.com/SaltedandHung

t. +65 6358 3130​​​​​​​

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Comments

Premkumar

  • 1 comments
  • CONTRIBUTOR
RATED 7 / 8

A beautiful synergy of old values of cooking with the current values of conserving and preserving nature. 

Very expressive and detailed.

John Gordon

  • 778 comments
  • ELITE
RATED 7.5 / 8

Salted & Hung is an ode of respect to ingredient and produce; and the embodiment of a personal ethos. Chef Owner Drew Nocente (main image) has crystallised the values of his growing-up years, and the inspirations of his culinary journey, into the bedrock of his contemporary gastronomic restaurant at Purvis Street.

He calls his philosophy ‘Zero Food Waste Dining’. The methods and approach he uses in the kitchen to make this happen he calls ‘Minimal Waste Cooking’.

Eager to plumb the depths of his convictions, his ethos evolved. Drew re-looked and rethought menu and technique with an eye to maximising every ingredient – and finding new ways to use the under-valued and often-discarded.

Drew replaced the existing a la carte menu with a tasting menu that revolved around the creative use of the ‘whole animal’ — be it pig, cow, bird or fish — from protein to innards, skin to bone.

The signature dish on the menu is the epitome of Zero Food Waste Dining. Every part of the Aged Turbot pictured below, from fin to innards, is fully utilised in the three elements of the dish -- ‘Turbot’, ‘Turbot Tea Broth’ and ‘Turbot Liver Vin Jaune’ sauce.

The turbot fillet is aged for 5 days in a chiller to enrich its flavours, then rolled and slow-cooked to perfection. The skin and turbot trimmings are fermented into a garum that is later used to season the vegetables.

The dish is then finished off with a sauce made from the Turbot liver and Vin Jaune. Lastly, the turbot bones are hung and dried for 14 days in preparation for making dashi broth, along with local herbs and flowers lending an aromatic flavour to the dashi tea.

The Vintage Beef pictured below presents a sirloin steak grilled over coconut husk charcoal and Japanese Binchotan, and paired with carrots. The cuts come from matured breeding stock that freely roam the pastures for retirement. Fed only grass, the animals live in idyllic conditions and are not processed until they are at least 60 months old – more than twice the age of regular cattle

Not a single by-product went to waste. Each dish was made from scratch using traditional techniques like curing, ageing, pickling, fermenting, smoking and grilling. The trimmings were used to make broths, sauces and seasonings that enhanced and deepened flavours.

In the kitchen all single-use plastics -- cling wrap, garbage bags, disposable packages -- were switched to their bio-degradable versions. Coconut-husk charcoal was introduced.

From young boy on a farm, where his core convictions were born, to consummate consumer of produce through profession, to advocate of Minimal Waste Cooking and Zero Food Waste Dining, Drew Nocente’s personal and culinary journey has come full circle.

At Salted & Hung, restaurant and chef work in symbiosis to spread the message of reducing food wastage through recycling, up-valuing, and upcycling to diners and the public at large, sparking awareness and stimulating conversation. It is philosophy, objective, and hope for a new generation, served in the most palatable way imaginable.

The 7- and 10-course menus -- A Taste of Sustainability ($148++) and The Art of Sustainability ($198++) -- showcase Chef Drew’s clever manoeuvring of ingredients, and his culinary approach of Minimal Waste Cooking.

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