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Celebrations are an outward expression of life’s memorable milestones. For 22 years and counting, our French fine dining restaurant, Saint Pierre, has housed some of the most eventful memories for our clients. From a small and intimate wedding solemnisation, a lavish employee appreciation dinner to a best friend’s birthday cocktail party for 50 people, we have hosted just about every imaginable occasion. We take immense pride in being chosen by our guests to mark significant snapshots of their lives at our venue. Ensuring that each celebration at Saint Pierre is unforgettable falls squarely on our team

Modern French Cuisine with an Asian Accent

One of the first touchpoints of every guest interaction at our restaurant in One Fullerton is, undoubtedly, the view. Each table offers a daytime panorama of the breathtaking Marina Bay waterfront. Come evening, the skyline becomes a mesmerising canvas of lights, adding a sense of hushed elegance to the celebratory mood.

What earns a place in our diners’ hearts is the impeccable execution of Saint Pierre’s Asian accented modern French cuisine by 2-Michelin Starred chef Emmanuel Stroobant and his culinary team. You’ll be pleasantly surprised to find familiar ingredients in the Anjou pigeon with carrot purée, Sichuan peppercorns and buah keluak (black nut) sauce. Or, Manjimup marron with wild basil jelly, buttermilk Jerusalem artichoke purée and Hanaho flowers. These signatures speak of Chef-Owner Emmanuel’s nuanced understanding of the ingredients in Asia as well as years of training at some of the finest Michelin-Starred restaurants in Belgium. Taste the difference, whether it is in the Champagne Snacks, Manjari Chocolate, or the array of flavours in the Opulence menu.

BYO Tuesdays: A Celebration of Wine

We believe any celebration shouldn’t just begin and end with food. Wine plays a crucial role in your fine dining experience at our restaurant. And there are few better than our wine consultant and Singapore’s first Master of Wine, Tan Ying Hsien, to entrust this responsibility. With Ying Hsien’s vast knowledge and finely-honed palate, we curate the best vintages from our selection of over 600 wine labels to complement the cuisine. Can’t decide? Just approach our friendly sommelier to navigate the wine list or to make some astute recommendations based on your event, taste preferences and budget.

Another bonus for wine lovers is our BYO Tuesdays, a long-standing tradition of Saint Pierre. To make a special occasion more memorable, guests can ask for a bespoke menu to complement their own treasured bottles for a corkage-free Tuesday evening or request Chef Emmanuel to design a special wine and food pairing menu.

Where Service is More Than Just a Word

In an era of modern technology and convenience, the missing link to establishing an authentic relationship with our diners is still, first and foremost, good old-fashioned warm hospitality. Saint Pierre’s seamless service is overseen by our amiable Restaurant Manager, Joanne Wai, who works closely with Chef Emmanuel Stroobant to exceed guests’ expectations. 

“While it is important that our food and wine offerings are exceptional, it’s how we make our guests feel cared for each time that will keep them coming back. No detail is too small to overlook, whether it’s serving the temperature of water to their liking or making sure that their dietary requests – whether it’s gluten-free or vegan – are met,” says Chef Emmanuel, adding that guests can also assess the Elegance Vegetarian Tasting Menus, which can be adapted to suit vegans. 

To begin your journey here; contact us today to plan your special occasion at Saint Pierre.

Andrew Leci

04 September 2020

“From my heart to your table” – Emmanuel Stroobant, owner of Michelin-Star Fine Dining in Singapore. If it wasn’t so genuine, it might even be a tad pretentious, but Emmanuel Stroobant knows what he’s doing in the kitchen, and appears to be well on the way to realising the human being he wants to be

Emmanuel Stroobant applies much of his philosophy on life to his food, and before you begin to think that this article bears all the hallmarks of a psycho-spiritual treatise that attempts to blend the subjects of world views and cuisine, fear not.

Stroobant will aver that his work-life balance is as highly developed as his culinary creations, and he may well be right. When it comes to making decisions that affect the job and family, making the right ones is important – for the mind and the soul. When it comes to exercising and relaxing; using the brain and finding ways in which to empty or cleanse it, balance is also key. And nothing is more important than balance when it comes to creating delicious, imaginative, and often innovative food.

Michelin-Star Fine Dining in Singapore

Stroobant strikes one as being a reasonably happy man – or at the very least content. And why wouldn’t he be? His mini modern french restaurant empire is all set to flourish again, having endured the ravages of the circuit breaker.

It’s worth noting that his flagship restaurant, Saint Pierre, got way ahead of the curve in terms of alternative solutions when Michelin Restaurants were not allowed to accept guests in-house, by curating virtual dinner party experiences from the get-go. Saint Pierre’s lavish, high-end bento boxes full of goodies were delivered (they still are) to various locales, and while diners were ‘mingling’ via Zoom, Stroobant popped in for a ‘chat’ from time to time, to talk about the food and enable diners’ interaction with a Michelin-starred chef. Smart idea, and from what I can gather, very well executed.

modern french restaurant singapore

The team at Saint Pierre also took time during the hiatus to hone their skills, develop dishes and prepare to hit the ground running once diners could be in situ again, and the new menu bears every sign that the time has been well spent.

What’s remarkable about a meal at Saint Pierre is the sense of complicated simplicity. Each dish has one name – we are now being spared, thankfully, four lines of description for each menu item that insists on provenance and tells you about a farmer called Juan who hand-reared and bottle-bed a wagyu beef cow for a year – and a couple of other words relating to the composition. That’s all you need to know really, because the rest is about trust, and anyone who’s eaten Stroobant’s food has absolute faith in the man to source only the best ingredients and then turn them into a delectable culinary reality.

michelin restaurants singapore

No less than five ‘snacks’ greet the diner over a glass of Champagne at the meal’s beginning. The Sakura Masu (cherry salmon) in a tiny taco casing is excellent, and so too is the Bafun Uni (a gorgeous deep orange sea urchin) sitting atop a bain-marie-baked egg custard. The ingredients are simple, but they complement each other perfectly. There are complications – the inclusion of green olives and green shiso have a part to play in the melange – but they merely serve to enhance the overall flavour and bring the best out of the star turns.

If I had to have a quibble, it would be that the shiso jelly didn’t have quite enough bite to offset the rich fattiness of the Chutoro and could have done with being a little more acidic (even salty) to stimulate taste buds and create contrast, but the blow-torched Omi Beef with watermelon radish (cooked in a Chardonnay pickle – superb) and mushrooms (enoki and button, cooked in ponzu) was masterful.

 french restaurant singapore

As with every dish, Stroobant knows exactly where his ingredients come from and will have no qualms when it comes to quality control and assurance. One of the reasons for this is that he has a ‘personal shopper’ – a mysterious individual, somewhere in the world (probably Tokyo, as you can clearly see the Japanese influence in his food and preparation techniques), who sources everything for him.

Now, I always thought that having a personal shopper would be a super idea – firstly because I hate shopping, and secondly because I hate shopping. While I am not totally averse, however, to food shopping – it can be fun – the idea that there might be someone out there scouring all the best markets and securing only the best products for my gratification is positively mouthwatering in itself. Stroobant does this, and has this facility, ensuring that when he gets to work with his raw ingredients, nothing is left to chance. This is why he can afford to keep it simple.

There is no greater testament to this than in the Marron, although finger lime, turnip, and radish cress are part of the ensemble. The crayfish from Western Australia is poached for around 40 seconds and then barbecued. It’s as simple as that – nothing added, nothing is taken away. The ingredient is so good that it needs nothing else, but the turnip and finger lime ‘tea’ in which the star attraction is bathed is perfection itself – drawing the delicious sweetness out of the marron with a root-vegetable earthiness that is wonderfully antagonistic and complementary at the same time. It’s a quite wonderful dish.

 french restaurant singapore

Saint Pierre Crab – Hokkaido Hairy Crab, White Corn, Almond

How about some Hokkaido hairy Crab? Yes, please. Once again, simply cooked – poached in a court bouillon and deshelled. The nage that accompanies it (white corn, lemongrass, ginger, Chardonnay vinegar, white wine, and tomato water) is reduced and enriched with coconut cream. Complex? It does sound so, but every single element is present and accounted for, and nothing is either redundant or surplus to requirements in a beautifully curated dish.

I could go on… and on. I think I have already done so. I must mention the Beef – Ōmi A5 grade wagyu from Chiba, Japan – served with a simple beef and wasabi jus, and augmented by pickled shallots and girolle mushrooms (also pickled). This menu item has one of the most unusual ‘side dishes’ I have ever experienced, with a sweetbread ‘confit’ in duck fat and finished with honey basking in a fermented onion and cumin foam. There are no words…

French Fine Dining Singapore

Royal Belgian Osetra caviar, Hokkaido scallop, and buttermilk

I’d love to be able to mention the Caviar dish that approaches the sublime, but I have run out of time and space. Suffice it to say that the raw ingredients, once again, are creatively sourced, top-notch, and nigh on faultless.

Perhaps now you can understand why I described the cuisine at Saint Pierre as simple and yet complex. It’s the little touches; the subtle ingratiation into a dish of ingredients that play such an important role in the overall effect, but take nothing away from the purity and simplicity of the taste and quality of the main event. It sounds easy enough, but it’s not. Getting the right balance takes years of experience and innumerable trials and errors. Stroobant has that experience, along with a passion for good food and a commitment to sharing his expertise for the delectation of others. That seems to be at his core – one he works hard on in his yoga practices.

french dining singapore

Saint Pierre Strawberry – Tochigi Strawberry, Yuzu, Basil

Tochigi strawberry made with Valrhona yuzu chocolate, raspberry vinegar, and lemon sponge

Emmanuel Stroobant is a lean, mean cooking machine who would be almost impossible to carbon date were it not for the furrows on his brow and a face that looks lived in, but comfortably so. With a life philosophy carried through into his conception and preparation of food, visitors to Saint Pierre (and their taste buds) should embrace the new menu and some quite exquisite dishes with equal passion.

Saint Pierre

1 Fullerton Road

One Fullerton, 02-02B

Singapore 049213

Tel: +65 6438 0887

Original Post: 

https://www.robbreport.com.sg/saint-pierre-review-emmanuel-stroobants-two-star-modern-french-restaurant-at-one-fullerton-in-singaporeis-back-in-business-and-has-us-smitten-with-hairy-crab-marron-and-caviar/ 

By Sihan Lee

September 10, 2020

Nestled in the heart of Marina Bay, near Fullerton is Saint Pierre—one of five 2 Michelin-Star Fine Dining and modern French restaurant in Singapore, with years of history in French fine dining excellence. In the wake of the pandemic, I was blessed to be able to experience chef Emmanuel Stroobant’s unreserved cooking that was a demonstration of fervor and elegance.

The champagne trolley paved the way for me to enjoy the snackage followed by an onslaught of amuse-bouches. I worked anticlockwise, devouring artful morsels of sakura trout with creme fraiche in a delicate mini taco, bafun uni perched on chawanmushi alongside shiso leaves and squid poached in nori butter, enhanced with a frothy hollandaise sauce that revealed surprising hints of lemongrass and bay leaf. The Omi beef roulade stuffed with enoki and button mushrooms cooked in ponzu was not too shabby either.

In order to understand the french fine dining cuisine here, one must familiarise themselves with an ensõ or Zen circle, which is akin to the highest form of an artist’s self-expression. And Emmanuel Stroobant restaurants attempt to do that by using Japanese produce to create emphatic flavours on a plate. Behold, the iconic caviar dish bolstered by a snappy mixture of Hokkaido scallop tartar, Jerusalem artichokes, and buckwheat. It was an earnest attempt to play on texture. Thankfully, a ring of buttermilk parfait imbued with horseradish and basil oil provided the necessary acidity to cut through the richness of the caviar.

French Fine Dining Singapore

The wine pairing was worth pursuing as it wasn’t besmirched by the predictable options I could have easily rattled off in my head. I started with an indigenous grape variety, Assyrtiko, that was a playful third wheel to the prestigious marriage of Hokkaido scallop and caviar. Hailing from Santorini, this ancient grape was brought to life in Clare Valley, Australia, by famous winemaker Jim Barry, whom upon the first try, was smitten. In this stellar pour, the 100% Assyrtiko had its usual clay foundation enhanced by a delicate backbone of sweet peaches and melon.

 Michelin-Star Fine Dining in Singapore

A flinty Meursault with a bouquet of marzipan and lemon zest from Domaine Philippe Pernot Belicard proved to be a solid pairing with the Hokkaido hairy crab swimming in corn nage and also the marron, that was first barbecued tableside, before being tossed in herbaceous turnip tea, finger lime, and kohlrabi.

 Michelin-Star Fine Dining in Singapore

The final main course was Emmanuel Stroobant’s way of going for broke. The Omi A5 grade wagyu served with a wasabi-infused beef jus, alongside petit pois, pickled shallots, and girolle mushrooms was a dream combination. Only to be propelled further by the sweetbreads confit in duck fat and finished in honey.

 Michelin-Star Fine Dining in Singapore

As anticipated, dessert came in a round form, with reference to the ensõ. It was a refreshing interplay of Tochigi strawberries and basil, but despite its good looks, felt like gratuitous posturing. The server at Fullerton french restaurant, Saint Pierre, asked if everything was up to mark upon seeing my barely eaten dessert, and I said, “It’s not you, it’s me. I’m just not a dessert person.

Nevertheless, the finishing touches like the cheese platter, petit fours and rousing goodbyes—made french fine dining at Saint Pierre uplifting. Bookmark this restaurant for special occasions, regardless of whether your partner is a sucker for gustatory pleasures. With top-notch ingredients and serious chef skills, Stroobant holds his own in a sea of Michelin-starred modern french restaurants in Singapore.

Original Post :

https://www.hnworth.com/article/spend/dining/2-michelin-star-saint-pierre-come-for-the-food-not-the-view/