Home Options Dine in

Mixing it up

Michelle Zhu
Michelle Zhu • 6 min read

New-found heritage
SINGAPORE (Aug 27): After undergoing a revamp led by the restaurant’s lead chef, Sujatha Asokan, Botanico’s new bistro-style menu is full of twists and turns, often featuring rather odd combinations that prove surprisingly easy on the palate. The majority of these dishes are prepared from scratch in painstaking detail despite their misleadingly simple names. Cauliflower ($10++) is a prime example. The locally sourced low-calorie vegetable is made sinfully delicious after it is deep fried and smoked in an Inka wood-fired oven. It is then tossed in a cream mixture of cañ arejal cheese, a traditional product from northern Spain made from raw unpasteurised sheep’s milk and exclusive to the restaurant. Its creamy texture is contrasted with sautéed almonds and kaffir lime zest and leaves one wanting more.

Paying homage to her Singaporean roots, the chef also offers her own interpretation of assam laksa with a starter of Seabass Ceviche ($17++), a tangy concoction of seabass with green chilli, pomegranate and ginger flower as well as tamarind-dressed glass noodles. The shrimp paste ice cream that it comes with is a definite conversation starter; its hae-ko (shrimp paste) is not salty, as one would imagine, but blends very subtly with the milk to produce an intriguing umami aftertaste just short of sweet.

To continue reading our premium articles,
Upgrade your subscription to as low as $8.33/month to gain unlimited access to ALL of our premium articles!
Have an account? Sign In
Related Stories
Diana KhooChefs' tables
Diana KhooCabin culture
Michelle LinJudgement day
Trending
Get market-moving insights before anyone else
Never miss out on important financial news and get daily updates today
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2026 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.