Tony Johor Kaki Travels for Food ยท Heritage ยท Culture ยท History

Adventurous Culinary Traveler's Blog with 65 million+ reads ๐Ÿ“ง johorkaki@gmail.com

KPT Coffeeshop Popular No Signboard Fish Soup · Pork Organ Soup @ 127 Bukit Merah Lane 1

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

Chef Benny Se Teo told me about this no signboard fish soup · pork organ soup stall at Bukit Merah in the same coffeeshop as Poh Cheu Teochew kueh stall. "Can fight with Mui Siong" the most famous stall for pork liver in Singapore ๐Ÿ˜ฎ That's a very serious claim that must be investigated as soon as possible ๐Ÿ˜‚

Stall name: No Name Fish Soup Stall


Address: 127 Bukit Merah Lane 1, Block 127, Singapore 150127 (stall inside KPT kopitiam)


Nearest MRT: 15 minutes walk from Queenstown station


Hours: 7:00am - 2:00pm (break time 10:15 - 10:45, Sat & Sun off)


No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

The no signboard fish soup · pork organ soup stall was the only stall (other than the drink stall) opened at KPT coffeeshop today. There was a constant long queue which quietened down near to closing time after 1pm.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

They actually do have a yellow signboard but it doesn't have a stall name - just the menu which lists fish soup · fried fish soup · seafood soup · pork organ soup.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

As I wanted to try the pork liver, I ordered pork organ soup and asked for the more liver. The lady boss kindly obliged. This set for $5.50.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

The bowl was filled to the brim with thick pork liver slices on top, so that they do not get overdone. That's very thoughtful of the chef.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

The pork liver was cooked to medium rare doneness. Chef Benny is right - I like this better than at Mui Siong as the soft-crunchy pork liver had a bit of creamy chewiness. It felt more "natural" as it did not seemed to have been treated with tenderisers such as cornstarch.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

I wanted my liver cooked to a greater doneness nowadays, so I pushed the liver slices deeper into the piping hot soup. As the liver slices were not tenderised, they soon turned out firmer and less juicy when cooked to medium doneness. (Mui Siong's liver can withstand longer poaching without losing their soft-crunchiness.)

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

I like these pork slices. They were huge, soft-tender and tasted sweet.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

I like these pork balls too. They tasted savoury sweet and were soft-tender to the bite.

There were lots of kiam chye (salted vegetable) and fresh nappa cabbage in the soup. However, there were no pig intestine or stomach in this pig organ soup.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

The soup had deep savoury-salty and tangy flavours with sweetness coming from the cabbage and fresh ingredients like pork. The flavours were robust with savoury-salty dominant. The soup had a yellowish hue and medium body from long boiling of fish bones, etc. 

Still, the lady boss will ask if you want milk in your soup. I always reply "no thanks" at every fish soup stall. The soup was piping hot practically to the last spoonful. Simple plain rice is the best complement for this soup.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

Dried pork skin softened by cooking sponged up the soup's savoury-salty, tangy flavours.

No_Signboard_Fish_Soup_Pork_Organ_Soup_Bukit_Merah

I like this soup stall. The portions are generous. The base soup is tasty, loaded with fresh ingredients, expertly cooked - everything was cooked to just the right doneness, retaining its best texture and flavours. They are also obliging in customised orders. I saw someone with fish slices and pork liver - my favourite things ๐Ÿ˜‹ Next time I want that too ๐Ÿ˜„




Written by Tony Boey on  on 22 Feb 2022

๐ŸŽ— Opinions in this blog are all my own as no restaurant paid money to be featured. 

To ensure neutrality, this blog is powered by voluntary contributions from appreciative readers to Tony Boey Johor Kaki PAYNOW 96888768 in Singapore $.


No comments:

Post a Comment

All comments submitted with genuine identities are published