Bak chang at Restaurant Yook Tho Yin, Damansara Utama

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Maybe I need some rehab, or maybe just need some sleep
I’ve got a sick obsession, I’m seeing it in my dreams

I’m looking down every alley, I’m making those desperate calls
Im staying up all night hoping, Hit my head against the walls

bak chang collage

What you’ve got boy is hard to find
Think about it all about it all the time
I’m all strung up my heart is fried
I just cant get you off my mind

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Because your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang
I said your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang

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Won’t listen to any advice, mamma’s telling me to think twice
But left to my own devices i’m addicted its a crisis!

My friends think I’ve gone crazy, my judgment is getting kinda hazy
My status is gonna be affected if I keep it up like a love sick crackhead

Yook Tho Yin collage

Because your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang
I said your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang

I don’t care what people say
The rush is worth the price I pay
I get so high when you’re with me
But crash and crave you when you are away

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Because your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang
I said your chang, your chang, your chang, is my drug
Your chang your chang your chang

Heyyy heyyy your chang, your chang, is my drug

Adapted from Kesha’s Your Love Is My Drug

*******

The 1kg bak chang filled with sticky glutinous rice, salted egg yolk, pork belly, roast pork, lup cheong, green bean, chestnuts, dried shrimp, lotus seed, dried oyster and chestnut.  Made in conjunction with the Duanwu festival.  Love love love it.  RM20 per piece.

Restaurant Yook Tho Yin
No 13, Jalan SS21/37, Damansara Utama,
Petaling Jaya.

Tel: 03 – 7729 6534

Also check out A Lil Fat Monkey’s blog.

Nathalie’s Gourmet Studio, Solaris Dutamas, KL

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Chanting Chewbacca and I decided to converse in French in anticipation of our lunch at Nathalie’s Gourmet Studio. (Translation into English provided in Italics)

Me: Hey sister, go sister
(Lovely weather today, mah sister)

Chanting Chewbacca (CC): Soul sister, go sister
(Yes, but it may rain later in the evening…I’m baring my soul damnit)

Me: Mmm Hmmm Gitchi Gitchi Ya Ya Da Da
(I just had hair done, I don’t want to look like a wet poodle)

CC: Gitchi Gitchi Ya Ya here
(Your hair is resilient)

Me: Mocca chocolata Ya Ya
(Yes, yes, I found a bar of chocolate in it)

CC: Creole Lady Marmalade
(Lady Gaga found something in her hair too, but hers was a jar of marmalade)

Me: Voulez-vous coucher avec moi ce soir?
(So would you like to eat with me this afternoon?)

CC: Voulez-vous coucher avec moi?
(Ah, finally some credible French words.  Surely you don’t mean eat?)

Me: Christina Aguilera, Mya, Lil’ Kim & Pink
(I could eat a pink hippo and Lady Gaga but I’ll settle for macarons)

As you can see, I am an accomplished quadrilingual person, my first, second and third languages being English, American and Australian.  My Malay isn’t as good because I spent my formative years being confused about the pronunciation of certain words since they just couldn’t make up their minds.  Amazingly, I can read and write Tamil effortlessly, having memorised all the characters, but I speak it with an accent that could scare the kacang putih seller back to Singapore.  I don’t dare to speak Chinese for fear that I will order Fried Rice with cockles instead of salted fish (true story….been there, done that, can’t show my face there no more), while my French….sigh….I passed elementary level, good enough to tell the difference between poulet and voulez, but I still don’t know how to say rare, a little bloody, but hold the pepper please.

And so, at Nathalie’s Gourmet Studio at Solaris Dutamas, when confronted with my obvious Asian-ness, the handsome young chappie proceeded to describe a dish as being particularly and absolutely French, which perhaps madame may not be able to appreciate.  Attributing the tone to be kindly, rather than condescending, I smiled charitably and asked for the duck confit.  Firmly.  Smilingly.  The duck confit was nice, lacking in any gaminess, and a lot more tender than the squid stuffed with oxtail, as enticing as the latter sounds.  I wasn’t able to fault the squid, but CC and I agreed that the oxtail meat was too dry.  The accompanying sauce appeared to be a reduction from the braising of the oxtail, very flavourful and saporous.  Duck confit served with orange segments is always a match that will never go wrong.  We loved our starter, beef carpaccio with salad and mustard espuma (foam).  The salad consisting of a variety of greens, carrots, tomatoes and fennel was crisp and fresh, while the carpaccio, sprinkled with sea salt, was delicious.

Having tasted only substandard macarons in the past, and without having the pleasure of sampling the world’s best from Ladurée and Pierre Hermé, I’ve always shunned macarons and have never bothered to understand the obsession surrounding these petite confections.  I am pleased to say that after sampling 6 macarons made by Nathalie, I am now a convert.  The texture is amazing.  The shell is crisp, almost crumbly, but the inside has an almost ethereal quality, light and airy.  My favourite flavours are, without a doubt, lemon followed by passionfruit.  Both these flavours possess one binding characteristic, that is, they are both acidic enough to balance the extreme sweetness of the macarons.

Nathalie’s Gourmet Studio
Unit A4-01-5, Solaris Dutamas
Kuala Lumpur.

Tel: 03-6207 9572

Open from 10am to 6pm. Closed on Sundays. Menu changes monthly.

Also check out:
Masak-Masak
EatDrinkKL
One2Two

nathalie collage

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Beef carpaccio with crispy vegetables and mustard espuma

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Squid stuffed with oxtail, portobello and light puree

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Duck confit with a warm orange, celery and lettuce salad, porcini dressing

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My Perfect Weekend, and Kedai Minuman dan Makanan Ah Fatt

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“What’s your idea of a perfect weekend?” Toygirl recently asked me.

“What do you mean by perfect?” I asked her.   “Do you mean something achievable, or do you mean my dream weekend?”   As this juncture, the idea of sitting by the beach with a book and a cocktail and a tanned masseur kneading my knotted muscles seemed highly desirable.

“Something achievable.   Something you can do on a normal weekend,” she replied.

“Oh,” I was brought back to reality.   “I suppose it would be spending time with my husband,” I said, matter-of-factly.

We were at a brunch party with close friends, and the wafting smell of a batch of freshly cooked pancakes tickled our noses.  Laughter abounded.

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Black Velvet
Brunch collage
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“Actually,” I added, “this is an example of a perfect weekend for me.”

She smiled, because I think she felt the same way.

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And after all that food and wine, 8 hours later, nothing beats a satisfying meal of hokkien mee and fried chicken.  Call me weird, but I prefer tar-pau‘d hokkien mee.  The braised glistening dark noodles would have had ample time to absorb all the sauces leaving a reasonably dry, slippery dish that is smoky and fragrant with the smell of pork and lard.  And fried chicken with crispy skin that crackles under the molars, and flesh so tender it literally falls off the bone – it’s the perfect companion.

hokkien mee
Hokkien mee

hokkien bee hoon
Hokkien bee hoon

222 fried chicken
Fried chicken

Kedai Minuman dan Makanan Ah Fatt
42, Jalan 14/48 (near the 222 Shell station)
Petaling Jaya

(Note: Thank you, FBB for yet another wonderful party)