Paramount Coffee Shop, Sungei Wang Plaza and Saika Vinegar Drink

1.

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It was the world’s cheapest sang har meen.  Or at least, that’s what it appeared to me in my well-protected cocoon. At only RM8.50 a plate with some fresh juicy prawns thrown into a lovely eggy sauce, I certainly had no complaints.

I am not sure if I shall be able to find this coffee shop again on my own though. Ecstatic Eeyore had led me through a maze of shops quite like the catacombs of Rome, where amidst some beauty salons and shops selling cheap nail polish and hair products, there stood a coffee shop, rather displaced in the surroundings. It was a real coffee shop, not one of those beautified kopitiams made to resemble the real thing with muted yellow lighting for subdued ambience and without the 20 year old grime. This one had white tiled walls, bright fluorescent light and a couple of stalls selling chicken rice and chap fan (mixed rice).

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Also good was the lor meen (RM8.50) with a thick gooey sauce made even more delicious with a dash of vinegar.

Paramount Coffee Shop
2nd Floor (near the arcade), Sungei Wang Plaza,
Jalan Sultan Ismail,
Kuala Lumpur.

Open for lunch only.

2.

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When I visited my friend, Machiko, in Singapore last year, in addition to enjoying some glorious Japanese food with her (because eating Japanese with a Japanese epitomises the saying “You complete me.” Tom Cruise be damned), she offered me an interesting beverage.

“It’s rice vinegar,” she smiled. “It’s good for your health.” She had poured one part of vinegar and diluted it with three parts of water. I sniffed it. It definitely smelled of vinegar.

Always game to try new things, I took a sip. It tasted like vinegar, obviously. But to make it more palatable, other ingredients had been added to it. My Red Grape Vinegar drink had grape juice sourced from the Nagano prefecture in Japan, and it tasted like a sourer version of Ribena.

After a couple of sips, putting aside all thoughts of drinking vinegar and imagining that it was just another drink, I thought it was rather good. Of course, I’m addicted to all things sour. I love anything with an acidic taste, and my salivary glands immediately work at full speed at all thoughts of sour food items. Like now. My saliva’s dripping faster than the Victoria falls in Zimbabwe.

“The Japanese have been drinking vinegar for years,” Machiko explained. “It is used as a digestive, for lowering blood pressure, for reducing fatigue and for improving calcium absorption.” It was almost the Medicine Man’s panacea for all illnesses. Me? I just liked the taste. I gave it thumbs and toes up.

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This year, a package arrived for me from Singapore. Machiko had sent me three bottles of the vinegar drink which I loved so much. Aside from the Red Grape, there was a bottle of Acacia Honey Vinegar drink and a bottle of Citrus Sudachi (citrus fruit with a zestier flavour and aroma compared to lemons or limes) Vinegar Drink. My personal favourite is still the Red Grape, but the others are pretty good too. The Honey tastes closest to the original flavour, while the Citrus is very refreshing. A great idea is to use this in a salad (as one would do with balsamic vinegar) to give it a light and zesty flavour.

A 300ml bottle retails at S$17.  Further information can be found on their website.

Saika Products,
61 Heng Loong Building, Bukit Batok Crescent, No 08-07,
Singapore, 658078.

Tel: +65 6316 2790

Baking 101

Cream Cheese Marbled Brownies

My two idols, Fatboybakes and Boolicious were espousing the virtues of baking.  I listened keenly, wanting so much a little bit of this happiness which was theirs.  They made baking seem…..almost….magical.

So with a grocery list in hand, I went to Bangsar Village to get the ingredients for Cream Cheese Marbled Brownies, a recipe which Fatboybakes had referred to as the easiest recipe ever posted on his blog.  It was like God saying how easy it was for Him to create the world in 7 days.

Fatboybakes had indicated that he had taken only 10 minutes to blitz the ingredients together.  I figured that since I wasn’t an experience baker, I’d take hmmmm maybe 20 minutes.  I laid out the ingredients on the kitchen table, and with a Martha Stewart-like air, I waited for the magic to envelope me.  20 seconds passed, and I didn’t feel anything.  Well, perhaps it would come when I started blitzing the ingredients together.  Tum-de-dum, I hummed.

I took out the cake mixer, turned it on to test it, and to my horror, I discovered that it wasn’t working.  Now that’s what happens when you store away something for 5 years without any protective covering.  It was already 10.30 at night, the ingredients were waiting for me, and I had to get moving as I had allocated sufficient time to take a shower after baking  and to catch the repeat of the American Idol show at 11.30pm.

So I rolled up my sleeve, chucked the 250gms of cream cheese into a large mixing bowl together with 1/4 cup of castor sugar (an estimate since I could only find my 1/2 cup scoop but not the 1/4 cup) and whisked it manually.  Now if you ever want to work out your biceps and triceps, you should try this.  After 5 minutes,  the cream cheese had yet to change its shape.   Heck, I wasn’t going to be fussy, was I?  What else did the recipe call for?  One teaspoon of cornflour.  Check.  And yes, one egg.  that was easy.  I had chosen only the best ingredients for this brownie which I was going to lovingly bake for my husband.  Bangsar Village was selling ayam kampung eggs (free range eggs) at RM2.80 for 4 eggs.  So the shells looked like they had been splattered with white stuff (no prizes for guessing what), but I figured it added to the authenticity of the eggs.

So far so good, but the magic still seemed far away.

Now what?   

Use the zest of one orange and the juice of the same orange.  I wasn’t about to waste my precious time grating oranges, so I figured the next best thing was to pour in some orange juice from a carton.

I poured in a splash figuring that it would equate one orange.  Stir stir stir.  I looked at the stuff in the bowl.  It looked lumpy.  Obviously, my biceps needed more working out.  Whisk whisk whisk.  Sprays of orange juice mixed with cream cheese splashed onto my blouse.   Beads of sweat appeared on my forehead.  My carefully coiffeured hairdo got undone, and I looked worse than a raggedy doll.

“Relax, you’re half way through,” I told myself.  “The rest of the recipe should be easy.”

I turned on the oven at 180 degrees to heat it up before I went on to the next step.

Melt 250gms of chocolate in 60gms of butter.  I had bought Hershey’s Unsweetened Chocolate (which Fatboybakes had assured me was perfectly fine for this recipe), but at 113gms per bar equalling 226gms for 2 bars, I didn’t worry too much about the remaining 24gms.  Feeling quite the accomplished baker, I didn’t bother to measure out the 60gms of butter.  I measured a quarter portion of the slab and chucked it into the pan, then threw in the chocolate, remembering to break it into smaller pieces only when I had reached the second bar.

I smelt peanut butter in the air.  Puzzled, I looked for the source.  Sitting on top of the really hot oven was a plastic container filled with finely chopped peanuts which I had used for another recipe a long time ago.  Now, children, what happens when you place plastic on heat?  Uh-uh.  Yep.  Exactly.  I reached for the container and lifted it.  Big mistake.  By that time, there was a gaping hole at the bottom of the container and bits of peanuts drizzled onto the oven, all over the counter and on the floor.  Looking at the chocolate melting on the stove, I knew I had to work fast.   Wipe wipe wipe.  Now I know why I don’t have babies.  I’d have fainted from all that cleaning.

At least I didn’t burn the chocolate.  But by this time, I had noticed that the chocolate was hardening again.  “Warp speed!” I yelled to myself.  No, none of that air of zen was present at that point.  I grabbed the bag of sugar and measured what I estimated to be three quarters of a cup and threw in half a cup of flour only to realise that I should have sifted it first to remove all the lumps.  Too late. 

I tasted the mixture.  It was bitter.  Duh.  I had used unsweetened chocolate.  I poured in more sugar, not bothering to measure it out anymore.   The recipe also called for 2 eggs + 2 tablespoons of cold water.  I was so preoccupied with figuring out the cold water bit that I hadn’t realised that I had added just 2 teaspoonsful of cold water.  No problem.  I added another tablespoon of cold water into the chocolate concoction.

Almost there.

Breath in, breath out.

Line an 8″ square pan.  I hunted for my baking parchment which I knew I had stored away somewhere.  Murphy’s Law.  When things go wrong, they really go wrong.  Of course I wasn’t able to find it, so I resorted to the old fashioned method of buttering and flouring the pan.  I still had some extra butter after applying it to the pan, so I threw it into the chocolate mixture.  Waste not, want not.

I poured the batter into the pan, and then added the cream cheese.  With a fork, I decided to make some artistic swirls ala Michelangelo.  Instead, the cream cheese sunk like the Titanic to the bottom of the pan.  The whole thing looked like a horrible mess.

My ordeal was not over yet.

Shortly after I put the pan into the oven, I realised that the RM20 bottle of vanilla extract was still sitting in its packaging.  I let out a yelp and ran to the oven, dragged the hot pan out, got burnt in the process, sprinkled some vanilla extract on the surface and stirred it in.  An unconventional approach, no doubt, but hey, better late than never.

Five minutes after the cake had begun merrily baking in the oven, I noticed that the oven was set to the “grill” function.  I looked heavenward and wondered what I had done to deserve this.

Drenched in sweat, with the air permeated with the smell of vanilla and chocolate and peanuts, I heard the opening credits for American Idol on TV.

To Fatboybakes and Boolicious – therapeutic, you say?  MY FOOT.

Cream Cheese Marbled Brownies

The house still smelt of peanuts the next morning.

The Girl from Abu Dhabi may view pictures HERE.

Fukuya, One Bangsar

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1.

Turning on my computer at home is like being in a new relationship.  “Will I get lucky tonight?” sums it all up.  And right now, it looks like my hymen is going to stay intact for a while longer.

The recent elections has taught us one thing – more power to the people.   With flexed muscles, bulging biceps and a boost of foolhardy egocentric power, I now propose a vote against my broadband service provider

I apologize for the lack of updates.  Blame it on them.  I’ll be glad to give you their number.  I hope you like elevator music.

2. 

When I travel, I rarely buy souvenirs for myself.  But wherever I go, I can’t resist one thing – hats.  I am not talking about the kind of hats those high society women wear to Ascot.  No, no, absolutely not.  My hats are far more eyecatching, I assure you and I’ve learnt to wear them with more finesse than an elephant can muster (which isn’t saying a lot, but I never did claim to be graceful).

Naturally, my green hat which I bought at the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin came in useful on St. Patrick’s Day.  I need to find more “green” events to parade this hat, but for that day, we maximised the 10 Euros worth by rotating it among ourselves.

Anyway, there were a lot of Irish folk at Mont Kiara last Saturday as Malaysians renounced their nationality for the sake of a free beer.   The St. Patrick’s Day celebration, hosted by Guinness, saw lots of food, drinks and leprechauns with chinese accents.

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For more stories, check out Boolicious’ take on the event.

3.

Just hours before the partying, we were having a more subdued affair at the newly opened Fukuya at One Bangsar.  I must say that I went there with some apprehension.  When it comes to Japanese food, my first criteria is always freshness, and a close second is creativity, like in the pairing of foods and their presentation.  How can I not have high expectations of Japanese food, especially taking into account the extravagant prices we pay?  My first time at Fukuya (at Jalan Delima KL) was when we celebrated Paprika’s 23rd birthday.  A sweep of the billowing black curtains at the main entrance revealed a restaurant akin to a rich man’s home complete with  courtyards and secret rooms. But the food was so ordinary that we felt a little shortchanged. 

However, I do believe that everyone deserves a second chance.  Boo had tried the lunch kaiseki and had given it a glowing review.  Affected by her enthusiasm, I agreed to have lunch with her and Splashie Boy at the Bangsar outlet.  I ordered the Mini Kaiseki which seemed quite a steal at a little over RM50.  The appetiser came beautifully presented.  A delicately flavoured sea-urchin tofu that literally melted in the mouth, a grilled clam, a couple of rather chewy pieces of squid and plum-simmered ice fish made up the first course.  The soup was a very clear, subtly flavoured clam soup with a hint of flavour derived from the thinly sliced leeks.  My sashimi platter was a generous serving of thickly cut pieces of fish, and I thought the most outstanding one was what appeared to be white tuna which had a nice creamy taste.  The next serving was a beautifully paired combination of grilled salmon with pickled young papaya which resulted in a combination of sweet and savoury with a bit of crunch.  I loved the simmered dish – beef that literally melted in my mouth as I took every bite.  The tempura was crunchy and a delight to eat.  And the shokuji dish of noodles made for a simple ending to a meal that got me gasping with delight at every bite.  The dessert that day was fresh fruits and a lime sorbet that was very refreshing.

Fukuya is now a firm favourite for me as far as kaiseki lunches go.

Fukuya
One Bangsar, 63B Jalan Ara,
Bangsar Baru 59100 Kuala Lumpur.
Tel : 603 2282 1111
Fax : 603 2282 5959

Operation Hours
[ Lunch ] Noon – 2.30pm
[ Dinner ] 6.30pm – 10.30pm

Also see SC’s review here.

appetiser

No. 1 – Appetiser

  plum simmered ice fish

Plum simmered ice fish – woooooo look at the eyes

soup

No. 2 – Soup

sashimi

No. 3 – Sashimi

grilled dish

No. 4 – Grilled dish

simmered dish

No. 5 – Simmered dish

fried dish

No. 6 – fried dish

noodles

No. 7 – Noodles

dessert

No. 8 – Dessert