Pan Heong, Batu Caves

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Kau yuk mai fun – a sight for sore eyes

You know that feeling of being overwhelmed when you’ve got too much on your hands and you don’t know what to do first?  I came back this week from a lovely holiday in Australia, my memory cards bursting with pictures and stories to share with all of you, and it’s already Friday, and I have yet to write a single sentence about the holiday.  There is so much that I want to tell you, but it will have to wait until I compile all my photographs.

For now, let me share with you what I had for lunch today.

I’ve always been fortunate to have a two-hour lunch break on Fridays.  Sometimes, I eat in together with the Partners, while at other times, when the mood strikes, I explore far-off places with my Makan Club.  Pan Heong was first introduced to me by Ecstatic Eeyore a couple of years ago, and I knew we’d be good friends thanks to this mutual love for food.  Our obsession for food is apparent in our daily greeting – So….what’s for lunch today ar?  Upon leaving each evening, the standard question is – So….what’s for dinner tonight ar?  It is a characteristic that is uniquely Malaysian, a compulsive curiosity about the other person’s meal.  Can’t visualise this?  Say you’re enjoying a nice chinese dinner with your family, table groaning with the weight of the food from all different food categories to ensure that your family’s dietary requirements are met.  Someone walks by.  What does she do?  She slows down her pace, turns around and stares at the food on your table.  You look at her, willing her to stop invading your privacy, but she continues examining your food, making mental notes on what she should or should not order for herself.  Thankfully, she stops short of asking you for recommendations, hence preventing any untoward incident involving a swinging DSLR against her rebonded head.

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Porridge with century eggs and fish

Pan Heong.  We love the porridge, smooth, creamy and rich with generous slices of toman (snakehead) fish and century eggs, mildly flavoured with julienned ginger and sprinkled with coarsely chopped scallions.

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Wat tan hor

The wat tan hor is a sunshiny yellow, an evidence of the number of eggs used in the sauce.  Cuttlefish and prawns add flavour to the base.  My only gripe is that the sauce was thinner than what I used to enjoy before.  Nevertheless, the sauce is still highly, for want of a better word, egg-y, and should satisfy many out there.

The kau yuk mai fun (noodles in stewed pork) is sinful enough to make me want to skip the next three meals.  The meat is fatty and oily, but surprisingly, the noodles still have a nice springy texture.  Despite that, the noodles are still coated with some of the oil from the canned stewed pork, and mental images of pork floating in oil prevent me from taking more than one serving.  As far as flavours go, this is very tasty.  Let’s face it, how can one resist stewed pork?  All that whatchacallit seasoning that goes into each can makes it rank high up there with ganja.

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Nam yue pork

I absolutely love the nam yue (fermented red beancurd) pork.  The surface is so lightly crisp without being hard, and the meat, tender and biteable with just the right amount of fat.  Delicious!

Prices are very reasonable.  Porridge for 5 cost RM19.90, wat tan hor for 3 – RM10.50, kau yuk mai fun for 2 – RM15, and the nam yue pork – RM11.  Parking is horrendous at lunchtime as you’re fighting with the traffic from the nearby school.  Be prepared to curse a little.

Pan Heong Restoran (Map HERE)
No. 2, Jalan Medan Batu Caves 2,
Medan Batu Caves, 68100 Bt Caves.

Tel: 03-6187 7430 (Call before going, as they close on random days in a month)

Business hours: 8.00am to 3.30pm.

(Photos taken with mobilephone as DSLR was inadvertently left behind)

Kissaten, Jaya One

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夢ぢには

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あしもやすめず

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かよへども

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うつつにひとめ

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見しごとはあらず

kissaten

Though I go to you
ceaselessly along dream paths,
the sum of those trysts
is less than a single glimpse
granted in the waking world.

-translated  from Japanese, Poem No. 658 in the Kokin Wakashu written by Ono no Komachi-

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The Mentaiko Spaghetti (RM18.90), cooked al dente, is nice. When tossed, the surface of each strand is lightly coated with roe which ensures that each mouthful is filled with a burst of flavour.  The Crunchy Stewed Pork Slice (RM6.90) comes in thin slices of rolled pork belly, almost gelatinous in texture with a nice bite to it and coated in a sweet sauce.  The alfalfa sprouts that come with the pork belly provide good contrast to the flavours.  For dessert, we had their Cheesecake (RM6.90) which was very mild flavoured and plain, suitable for those who like a lighter textured cheesecake.

Kissaten’s decor is attractive in its simplicity.  Stark white, it doesn’t feel cold at all.  The menu has an interesting mix of japanese, chinese and western food from burgers and spaghetti to lam mee and ramen.

KISSATEN Coffee and Restaurant (website here)
L12A-1-1, Palm Square
JAYA ONE
72A Jalan Universiti
46200 PJ

Tel: 03-7954 1990

Opening hours: 11am – 11pm daily (Closed Mondays)

Also check out: Black Tie White Lie, Masak-Masak, Sweets for My Sweet Tooth, Memoirs of a Chocoholic, Motormouth from Ipoh, Ling239, Shell Food Station.

Christmas Comes Early for LL / Pick N’ Brew, 1 Utama

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Christmas and New Year Come Early for Lyrical Lemongrass and friends (check out the hunks!!!)

1.

Meeting Fatboybakes has definitely improved my social life. How else does one get a party thrown in one’s honor, or in Fatboybakes’ words: “All in honor of AWHIFFOFLEMONGRASS who’ll be blardy partying in Sydney for xmas and new year. CIS BEDEBAH.”  Awwww.  I have tears in my eyes.

FBB’s menu (printed on tracing paper, just like in the fancy restaurants) boasted a lavish tea time spread, much like those described in Enid Blyton’s storybooks, that included foie gras pate, assorted cheeses, bacon & mushroom pizzas, Spring Golden sakura pork char siu, Mr Ho’s Salted Ox Tongue and cold cuts, garden salad, mushroom and pork stuffing (sans turkey), absolutely perfect freshly baked scones with the most sinfully delicious clotted cream and jam, rum and raisin tart that had enough alcohol to get one tipsy, his latest creation – the Spencer’s 4 Seasons X’mas moussake (moussey cake? cake and mousse?  see picture top right corner) and christmas panforte.  Oh, and loads and loads of Macallan to ensure a healthy glow to the skin.  Did I mention that this was just for tea?

And so we sang carols and exchanged gifts, and when the clock struck 7.30pm, we took off our Santa hats, started the countdown and sang Auld Lang Syne to welcome the New Year.  Spending Christmas and New Year with my dearest friends is the best feeling in the world.  Thanks, FBB, for a wonderful party!  You go girl!

2.

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Eggnog latte (RM15)

There are other ways to enjoy a good Christmas meal, of course. (Sans the hunks, unfortunately.)  One way that won’t burn a hole in your pocket is to try Pick n Brew’s RM28 Christmas All Day Special (available in the month of December from 11.00am to 9.30pm) consisting of a soup (changes daily), a choice of main course (from beef, lamb, fish or chicken) and a drink.

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Oven baked stuffed chicken on soft mushroom polenta and sauteed vegetables

The chicken breast was baked with a garlic cheese stuffing that hinted of rosemary. I absolutely loved the polenta mash that was cooked with couscous which gave it a nice grainy texture. I must warn you, though, that if you’re planning on doing some cuddling, this is NOT the dish for you as the flavour of the garlic is potent.

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Beef escalope and lobster tail with sauteed mushroom and grilled potato

Instead, try the beef escalope and lobster tail, a much smaller portion compared to the chicken breast, but less of a date-killer. The meat is lean, tender and juicy and even though the lobster tail isn’t more than a mouthful (now you see it, now you don’t), the meal is well balanced with a lovely fruity balsamic sauce (which actually reminds me of a vino cotto) that brings out the flavour of the meat quite well. The beef is slightly thicker than normal, though.

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Mixed grain cookies

For an additional RM10 (or RM15 without the meal), one can opt for a glass of wine or an eggnog latte instead. The eggnog latte comes with a dash of brandy, a nice thick concoction that is really good. Pick n’ Brew also offers, for RM12 (from 3pm to 6pm), a choice of their gourmet coffees and teas and a plate of 5 cookies (mixed grain or chocolate chip) or chocolate log cake. The mixed grain cookies are delicious – somewhere between muesli and sweet cookies.  (So that one can enjoy the cookies and feel like one is still on a diet.)

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The ambience at Pick n’ Brew is more like a cafe, but with a higher comfort level as compared to a coffee place. It has an enclosed smoking area, separate from the non-smoking section, quite unlike certain restaurants that make a mockery of the smoking/non-smoking demarcation of space. The christmas menu is surprisingly good value for money and the presentation takes it a class above normal cafe food. There is the usual pull between what Pick n’ Brew represents, and I still can’t figure out what their niche is. Finally, thanks, Jackson, for your kind invitation to sample the Christmas Menu at Pick n’ Brew.

Pick n’ Brew
F233, 1 Utama Shopping Centre
Bandar Utama, Petaling Jaya.

Tel: 03-7726 0102

Note: Christmas All Day Menu is also available at Pick n’ Brew Hicom-Glenmarie outlet from 11am – 7.30pm only. Eggnog Latte is not available at Pick n’ Brew Hicom–Glenmarie.

Credits. A special thanks to:
1. Fatboybakes, for the X’mas/New Year party photographs, and
2. HairyBerry, my Weekend B^*ch ©, for the gorgeous photographs taken at Pick n’ Brew.