Nuffnang

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Penang Food Trail 4

Today we delve into the epitome of Penang food, hawker fare. A pleasure to consume and traditional ambiance (think eating by the side of the road).

We went to New Lane Hawker Centre, which is basically a street lined with push carts and seats set up along the pavements.


Look at the hustle and bustle of people at around 8pm at night. The crowd speaks a thousand words.


Mee Yoke or Hokkien Mee. One of the few street foods that are a must when in Penang. There were a few stalls selling the same things and we randomly chose a shop that served it pretty well.


Char Koay Kak. Fragrant and lovely. I love the 'chai por'.


Or Chien. Huge juicy oysters cooked in an omelette. I didn't like this so much due to the amount of starch in it. But there was a good amount of egg in there which made it a saving grace.
All hail the almighty Hae Ko Chee Cheong Fun. However, this wasn't as good as the one in Island Glades. They separated the sweet sauce, hae ko and chilli sauce. This means you had to dip into each sauce separately, reducing the actual enjoyment of the mixed taste.


Char Kuay Teow. It was well fried with waxed Chinese sausages. We didn't try the super famous ones that cost a minimum RM8 per plate but this was good by itself.


They called it the Air Itam Asam Laksa but it tasted slightly different than the one in Island Glades where it was supposedly the authentic one from Air Itam. I liked this more as it was sourer.


We ordered Wan Tan Mee for my friend's toddler son. It was okay, as I feel that KL has better versions of it.


Curry curry noodles! Penang styles are all the same that looks white and unappealing until you mix the sambal into them.


Yam Cake that didn't taste like it had too little yam and too much flour. Disappointing.


Sotong Kangkong. Basic.


I finally had my Muar Chee again. The texture was excellent but the peanut and sugar mixture was off. It had too much sugar and thus made it too sweet.


Leng Chee Kang. Refreshing.


ABC Special with a huge mound of ice cream crowning the summit.

New Lane Hawker Centre

Friday, February 11, 2011

Penang Food Trail 3

EBM's back to Penang with the third installment on the food trail. 

This time, we are headed off to a Malay restaurant called Hammer Bay. It's near Queensbay Mall, overlooking Pulau Jerajak.


You order by the huts and have your food near the sea. It has a nice view of the Penang Bridge as well.


The main attracted here is the Ikan Bakar or grilled fish. You can choose from a variety of any fish you wanted and we chose Siakap. It was a good grilled fish that's moist and juicy.


The fish is eaten with the following two sauces.


The fried sotong was absolutely delicious. It was battered and cooked with some curry leaves. Absolutely sinful.


This is the best tomyam I have ever tasted out of Thai restaurants. It's the type with coconut milk and filled with yummy seafood. Definitely a must-try. Nearly every table seem to have a bowl of it. We weren't wrong to follow the crowd.


Daging Masak Merah which was totally unusual. The beef was thinly sliced and quite honestly, tasted very much like 'Char Siu'. Very well made.


Daily dose of veggies. Nothing too exceptional about it and forgettable.

Overall, Hammer Bay is an excellent find and totally yummy.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Penang Food Trail 2

My colleague told me that Pulau Tikus has a pretty interesting western food that isn't like your usual western type deal. It wasn't a high class place but the food more than made up for it. It was a simple coffee shop where one person cooked and the food was eaten upstairs.


Simple menu and simply decorated.
Their style of cooking is interesting and delicious and this was one of them. Baked fish with bacon. It was done well enough that the fish was moist and juicy. 


Baked fish with lemon and orange. I liked the zing of the lemon and orange paired with the fish. In both cases, crabsticks were used. That was a little... odd but it did go well with the fish.


Another place that was a must-try going into Penang is the mamak mee at Padang Kota Lama near Esplanade and Fort Cornwallis.


It was a simple fair of fried yellow noodles with sotong spooned over the top. It was moist and wet and totally spicy.


Look at how the sauce clung to the noodles.

Keep posted for more EBM on the food trail.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Penang Food Trail 1

Dear readers, sorry about the long absence from 'flogging'. I was off to Penang and indulged so badly that I literally screamed when I stepped on the scales on my return. But that's another story that would never see the light of day forever.


Penang and food were synonymous. I was about to find out how much in this series of me on the Penang Food trail.

We landed on the island on the first day and was immediately whisked off to a place my friend assures me has the best chee cheong fun.


It was a modest coffee shop in Island Glades that was our first landing point. I used to live there but things has changed so much over the twenty years (ahem, yes I just showed my age) that I hardly recognised the place anymore.


We sat two shops away from Genting because my friend told me the Tau Foo Far is a must try. She was right. Smooth and silky and slides down the throat.


I tried the Soya Bean drink instead. It was good but in terms of thickness, I loved the one from the shop at Hutong Lot 10.


It's been an age since I had Asam Laksa Penang from Air Itam. It's oh-my-God good. It's completely different from the KL variety where the gravy is sour. Penangites like it with a slight tinge of sweetness but it works very well with the Hae Ko (prawn paste). The noodle was also soft and breaks when you pick it up with your chopsticks.


Deep fried popiah that came with the Asam Laksa. The sengkuang inside was juicy and the chilli has enough kick for a spicy maniac like me.


Curry Mee. While it looks really colourless, wait till you mix the sambal in. it turns a rich red colour. The taste is different from those we have in KL. The KL type is more like a curry chicken version but the Penang version is more focused on the spices. No complaints.


Hae Ko Chee Cheong Fun. This is fabulous. It's a good mixture of sweet sauce and hae ko that is sticky and sweet at the same time. I can't even find the words to describe the perfection that attacked me unknowing taste buds. A definite must-try.


This is definitely not the Muar Chee that you get in KL. The texture is so soft that it breaks up while mixing it in the peanuts. And the glutinous pieces were still warm. I wished now I had ordered more because I couldn't find Muar Chee of similar standard elsewhere.

That's part one. Stay tune for EBM on the Penang Food Trail.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Pantai Seafood Village @ Kampung Kayu Ara

Behind LDP is a cluster of a few shops that serves seafood. It seems quite popular as they seem to be packed even on weekdays.


Rows of aquariums filled with only the freshest seafood and cooked on demand. The prices tagged there are pretty shocking as well. They had a wide variety ranging from Spider Crab to the weird looking geoduck.


 Our wines for the night. Zamphire was one my brother brought back from Margaret River. It was a sparkly and tasted like champagne. Lovely paired with seafood.


See how it sparkles in glasses. Yum!


Huge bamboo clams steamed with garlic and fried shallots. While it was a simple dish, the freshness of the clams came through with the garlic adding a lovely tang to the flesh.


French beans in sambal belacan.


My favourite way of preparing Kai Lan. Nearly all the leafy part if cut into thin strips and deep fried while the rest of it is sauteed with garlic. The deep fried Kai Lan tastes like nori that you have at Japanese restaurants. I haven't had this in too many places. The other place that serves this to my knowledge is Kim Lian Kee along Petaling Street, who serves an excellent Hokkien Noodles as well.


Fried glass noodles that came out well. Not sticky and tastes flavourful.


Claypot yam chicken. The sauce in this was excellent and the yam was just delicious. I can't say much about the chicken because the rest of the family inhaled it.


Rice is always a must since there are a few 'rice bins' in my family. Enough 'wok hei' and the rice are fried enough that you can eat the individual grains.


My uncle's favourite pork knuckle. I can't comment much since I'm not really that big a fan of pork knuckle. I find it a little to fatty.


What is a seafood dinner without crab? Since all the crab was immediately slaughtered, the flesh was firm and sweet. The sauce was good over rice.


What's seafood dinner with a second dish of crab? Salted egg crab was our second choice. It was a sticky variety of preparing the salted egg that had the right amount of sweetness.


The prawn was ordered as an afterthought and I didn't really taste this as I was already too full but watching my family fall over it, I guess it wasn't that bad of a choice.

Pantai Seafood Village,
Kampung Kayu Ara


Sunday, January 9, 2011

Ireland Potato @ Gardens Midvalley

A new outlet mushroomed in Gardens Midvalley and I scurried over to it to get a taste of it. Why? Because it appealed to my potato craving soul.


This was a place that sells predominantly chips. Each little cup filled with starchy goodness. They have other things on the menu like onion rings and fried squid.

Mostly, their draw is the topping for the fries. They have the usual ones like cheese, meat sauce and honey mustard. They also have the weirder ones like pickled mayonaise, wasabi mayo and various fruit based sauces. 


Being a complete traditionalist, I went for the honey mustard one (and because they pasted a 'best seller' sticker on it next to the menu). The potatoes were rough cut and freshly fried before poured over with warm honey mustard sauce. Soothes the potato maniac in me. Oddly enough though, the fries tasted slightly fruity, almost an apple flavour. It could have been the influence of the honey mustard topping.


The other 'safe' choice of pickled mayo. It was only at the bottom of it that you could see the small pickled bits. The slightly more sour taste of mayo reminded me of Amsterdam where they sold fries on every street corner with a small container of fritte sauce which is basically their version of mayo specifically designed to be consumed with fries.

I love this place for it's simplicity of food and yet comforting as well. However, these fries didn't come cheap at RM8.80 a cup.


This is how this place works. You order at the counter and they write your number on a cup. The same number is written on your receipt. You collect your order at the counter in the picture. Through the glass panel, you can see the action going on behind the counter.

Each other is deep fried and served immediately. Each cup piping hot and crispy to a fault. Excellent for a snack.

Ireland Potato
Gardens Midvalley 
(the connecting path between Gardens and Midvalley, next to Bread Story)