The humble Aussie jaffle. Two bits of bread sandwiched together to create a pocket for molten cheesy goodness. And then Dan Hong comes along and stuffs it with Korean Army stew. It's as though he's on a one man crusade to bring budae jigae to the masses.
But you know what? It works. This Korean American hybrid, a stew (jigae) invented from army (budae) rations during the Korean war, combines noodles with kimchi, gochujang pepper paste, Spam and American cheese. It's spicy, salty, carby cheesy goodness - just the kind of thing you want in a toasted pocket.
At Ms G's this jaffle will set you back $18 but surely that's quality kransky and mortadella buried in there amongst the ramyum noodles and mozzarella. And it's the kind of tongue-in-cheek quirkiness you can expect at Ms G's, a mash-up of all things Asian in the middle of Potts Point.
Burrata with strange flavour sesame sauce, chilli oil, spinach and peanuts $22
Take cheese for instance. Burrata is the last thing you'd expect to find in a Chinese restaurant but here it's freaking out every Nonna with the addition of crushed Sichuan peppercorns, sesame seeds, rice vinegar and peanuts. Guaiwei strange flavour sauce is straight outta Sichuan province, more commonly used with cold chicken, but oddly complementary against the cold creamy lusciousness of mozzarella filled with cream. It's a ballsy move (ahaha) and it works.
Ms G's falafel, green tomato salsa and black garlic aioli $4.50 each
Vietnamese steak tartare with prawn crackers $21
While some dishes change on the menu, others will always remain. And with good reason. The Vietnamese steak tartare is too good to ever remove, a hybrid between steak tartare and the Vietnamese bo tai chanh rare beef salad. Those thick crunchy prawn crackers are the perfect carriage for seasoned chopped beef, a glossy egg yolk and a mountain of deep fried shallots.
Mini banh mi with chicken katsu and spicy fish katsu $7.50 each
Mini banh mi are about as far removed from your Cabramatta favourite as you can get, but that includes the juiciness of both the chicken and fish fillets, each coated in panko crumbs and deep fried to an expert crunch.
Cheeseburger spring rolls $6 each
Cheeseburger spring rolls are always a winner. It's that sharpness of dill pickles against the tomato sauce, beef mince and cheese that make these so ridiculously addictive.
Fried sweetcorn, dashi brown butter, parsley and furikake $18
Fried sweetcorn involves some serious knifework with each corn cob split into four quarters straight through the core. Butter and cheese on corn is a no-brainer but the addition of dashi and furikake, the seaweed seasoning usually used for sushi rice, lifts the umami intensity to a plate-licking eleven.
Masala fried rice $24
with spiced chicken, curry leaf, crispy skin and garlic chilli toppping
The fried rice tends to change styles regularly. When we visited it was masala, a big hit of curry flavours with prized smithereens of chicken crackling and a bucketload of fried garlic.
Crispy fried chicken wings with tom yum mayonnaise $17
We've almost finished our second round of cocktails by the time the crispy fried chicken wings arrive. These are so crunchy I could weep, except I'm too busy dunking these brittle skinned mid-wings (and yes, they're ALL mid-wings) into a tub of tom yum mayonnaise.
Salt and vinegar eggplant tempura $17
And because you can never have too much fried, we finish with salt and vinegar eggplant tempura. These have only a light spray of vinegar on them, but the batter is insanely good. You'd hear the shatter of someone munching on these from the other side of the (noisy) dining room. The eggplant is perfectly squidgy in the middle too.
Hongo Bongo $16
Strawberry granita, yoghurt mousse, mochi, watermelon and Calpis sorbet
There are four desserts to choose from, including the calorific overload that is Stoner's Delight Part 3 - doughnut ice cream, crispy bacon, peanut and pretzel brittle, Mars bar brownie, potato chips, deep fried Nutella and more - but we go for the lightest one, the Hongo Bongo.
There are strong similarities between this dessert and the previous Namira's Dream, named after Dan's daughter. The Hongo Bongo swaps out fresh strawberries, lychee tapioca and mascarpone mousse for fresh watermelon, mochi and yoghurt mousse. The strawberry granita and the Calpis sorbet features in both.
It's just the palate cleanser you want to finish on, and the mix of textures and temperatures creates different combinations with every spoonful.
Why's it called Hong Bongo? I suspect it has something to do with this...
If you missed the full episode of Mitch Orr's Chef's Night Out on Munchies you can catch it here.
Ms G's
155 Victoria Street, Potts Point, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 9240 3000
Opening hours
Monday to Thursday 5pm-12 midnight
Friday 12pm-3pm and 6pm-11pm
Saturday 12pm-11pm
Sunday 1pm-9pm
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Mr Wong, Sydney
Yesss!!! I love Ms G's. Think I'm due for a revisit. Loved the burrata and cheeseburger springrolls. The jaffle looks interesting but I'm not the biggest fan of mortadella, especially when it's been warmed. Has a super strange taste to me!
ReplyDeleteI freakin love Ms G's and it's been too long since my last visit. That army stew jaffle though!!
ReplyDeleteYou've just reminded me that it's far too long since I've been here!
ReplyDeleteYep looks like Dan Hong food. Nothing boring about it.
ReplyDeleteIs "Ms G" a riff on MSG? Clever.
ReplyDeleteStan.
Awesome looking jaffle, but ouch, that price point. I may start a jaffle cart when I get get back to Sydney.
ReplyDeletethose cheeseburger spring rolls! I could seriously eat 10 of those easily!
ReplyDeleteAn $18 jaffle is what is wrong with Sydney. And people whinge about the housing prices.
ReplyDeleteArggggh! That all looks so good! I want a huge plate of those chicken wings and eggplant chips, all to myself!
ReplyDelete