Lunch at Cilantro, Micasa All Suite Hotel, KL

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I was reading Aly’s blog about her ever changing tastebuds, and that got me thinking of my own quirkiness when it comes to food.  I’m glad that I’ve never been pressured to conform.  I always have packets of instant noodles stashed away in my kitchen for days when I crave simplicity, and like I confessed to Aly on her blog, when I am at the cinema, I love eating Twisties BBQ flavour mixed with a fistful of Bald Eagle’s caramel popcorn (when he isn’t looking).  Ah the joys of junkfood!  I’m far from a morning person and spend just forty minutes getting ready for work before I zoom off in my car.  As a result, breakfast is always eaten in the car.  I know that there are more practical ways of doing this (like making my own healthy sandwiches), but I have made it a habit to stop by at the neighbourhood store to grab a cold can of Nescafe and a Gardenia bun, both of which I enjoy on the 35 minute journey to work while listening to Hitz fm.  There are two little ladies who sweep the road outside the neighbourhood store.  These ladies are drawn to my car the way Fatboybakes is drawn to whisky.  The second I park my car, I find their brooms near my tyres and under the carriage, sweep-sweep-sweeping the dry leaves away like busy little ants.  They are always oblivious to the droning of my engine, concentrating on the task at hand, almost like they have been indoctrinated with the road-sweeping idealogy. Mother Nature’s little helpers. *smile*

As much as I enjoy the simple things in life, I also enjoy the little luxuries that I manage to slip into my daily work life.  Like long Friday lunches.  When Cilantro announced that the restaurant was open for lunch on Fridays, Chanting Chewbacca and I could talk of nothing else.  The lunch menu changes weekly with a four or five course menu at RM150 nett per person (inclusive of a glass of Kir Royale).  Best of all, if you’re in the mood for a long leisurely lunch, bring your own bottle(s) of wine because no corkage is charged.  The meal is substantial, so wear loose clothes. For us, dinners at Cilantro are reserved for special occasions as it can cost more than RM300 per head; lunches are just as satisfying with no deterioration in the quality of ingredients.  The foie gras is still seared to perfection in true Takashi Kimura style and the food continues to excite.

It’s Friday.  I have an hour to decide if I want to go to Cilantro.  Today’s menu is:
Hokkaido Sea Urchin with Artichoke Veloute
Kumamoto Oyster with Ginger Vinaigrette
Open Ravioli of Porcini with Egg Mollet and Shaved Summer Truffle
Pan Fried Turbot Fillet with Baby Squid and Capsicum
Alternatively
Two Way Preparations of Wagyu Beef
Kyoho Grape with Vanilla Ice Cream and Granite
Coffee or Tea

Decisions.  Decisions.

Cilantro (website HERE)
MiCasa All Suite Hotel
368B, Jalan Tun Razak
50400 Kuala Lumpur.

Tel: 03-2179 8082

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Poached Lobster a la Minute with Kyuri and Avruga

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Pappardelle Pasta with Crispy Duck and Foie Gras

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Slow Roasted Grain Fed Lamb with Dauphinoise Potato and Summer Truffle

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Warm Apple Pie with Vanilla Ice Cream

A Wedding and A Wine Makers Dinner at Sage, The Gardens, KL

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Wedding cake by Just Heavenly

Can we pretend that airplanes
In the night sky
Are like shooting stars
I could really use a wish right now
Wish right now, wish right now
Can we pretend that airplanes
In the night sky
Are like shooting stars
I could really use a wish right now
Wish right now, Wish right now

************************

A couple of weeks back, my friend recommended that I use the above song as my caller ringtone, primarily as a joke, but little did he know that it aptly reflected my mood this month.  I will not pretend that I have been struggling through the month; “struggling” implies fighting, but in my case, my time has been filled with activities, from planning surprise parties to lavish dinners and mostly, plain hard work.  The thing about work is that it occupies my mind all the time and while I am okay about spending a couple of hours eating and socialising with friends, I wrestle with but am inundated with the idea that I am “disloyal” to my work when I sit at my computer and attempt to put a few words down on my blog.  My many attempts to write a blog post these couple of weeks have left me staring at a sentence or two in draft mode because I then stray to some unfinished work-related document instead.  It’s Sunday today, I’ve just finished 6 hours of productive work, so I figured I’d reward myself with a couple of hours of blogging and reading blogs.

j and h

Sage has always been one of my favourite restaurants for its consistent delivery and excellent service. So when I received an invitation from my friends, J & H, to attend their wedding reception at Sage, I was thrilled.  The gorgeous cake you see above was made by Just Heavenly; not only was it a sight to behold, it also tasted amazing.   My constant gripe (something that H also mentioned in one of his many speeches that night) is that most wedding cakes are just pretty on the outside but the cake is generally dry and inedible.  Not this one.  The cake was a moist and delicious butter cake which I had no qualms gobbling down.  Great job, Just Heavenly.   Dinner consisted of a tasting menu of Tranche of Yellowtail with Avruga Caviar and Akame Herb, Cream of Porcini Soup with White Truffle Oil, Roasted Atlantic Seabass with Prawn and Alaskan King Crab Sauce (alternatively, Grain Fed Black Angus Beef with Mashed Potato, Meaux Mustard) and Mango Melba with Vanilla Ice Cream.  To sum it all in three words, O-M-G! (excuse my lack of verbosity) To the few of us who opted for the Seabass, we were rewarded with a mindblowing experience.  The sauce in which it was served was bursting with the flavour of shellfish.   I am still orgasmic at the recollection of that meal.

WINE MAKERS DINNER – WYNDHAM ESTATE

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2003 George Wyndham Cabernet Merlot

Another meal at Sage saw the pairing of Wyndham Estate wines with an exquisite selection of foods prepared by Chef Daniel.   Award-winning Chief Winemaker Nigel Dolan of Wyndham Estate, Australia, was in KL on May 26 to showcase Wyndham wines, and I received an invitation (thanks to the kindness of Marian Eu of Scribe Media Link) to partake of this experience.   Dolan is described by Winestate publisher Peter Simic as being “a master at producing reds with a beguiling mix of elegance, complexity and intensity”, so it was also an honour to meet the man in person.  The Shiraz seems to be specialty of Wyndham Estate, although we were equally impressed with the crisp George Wyndham Semillon Sauvignon Blanc with its citrusy character that was served together with the hors d’œuvre.   The wine served with the Tranche of Hamachi with Avruga Caviar was a 2006 Wyndham Bin 222 Chardonnay which was described as having greater complexity with its ripe peach and melon aromas, but we felt that the hamachi would have been better served with the earlier Sauvignon Blanc.

A short note on wines with Bin Numbers: The BIN range is Wyndham Estate’s most famous range of wines and it is the entry level into the Wyndham Estate brand.   This range is all about soft generous flavoursome wines designed to excite the senses with its intense, fruit-driven style.  Wyndham Estate BIN 555 Shiraz is the flagship wine and has won more than 200 awards since the 1986 vintage and it is the most popular Shiraz sold in Australia.   Fatboybakes, who was in our party, quipped (in the presence of Mr Dolan) that Bin 222 was named when the owner saw three swans in a pond by his vineyard, hence 222.  He added that the Chinese also believed that our feathered friends would bring luck.   We were gullible enough to believe him that night.  Bleh.

Two reds were served that night, a 2003 George Wyndham Cabernet Merlot and a 2005 George Wyndham Shiraz to accompany the Smoked Venison with Foie Gras and the Wagyu Beef respectively.  The Cab Merlot was more full-bodied than the Shiraz, the former displaying a gorgeous deep purplish/crimson hue that reflected seductively off the white tablecloth at Sage.  Both wines are excellent for pairing with beef, lamb, game meat and cheeses.

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Tranche of Hamachi with Avruga Caviar and Japanese Herb

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2006 Wyndham Bin 222 Chardonnay and Royale of Abalone with Sea Scallop and Yuzu Citrus

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Smoked Venison with Veloute of Mushroom, Foie Gras

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Wagyu with Truffle Mash, paired with 2005 George Wyndham Shiraz

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Clockwise from top left: Sage, Mr Nigel Dolan, Roasted Fig Tartlet with Vanilla Ice Cream, Mango Sorbet

Thanks, Marian and Wyndham Estate, for your very kind invitation.

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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