Smashed Potatoes and Belanga, The Gardens

1. 

Baby chat potatoes can be quite delusional.

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Some think they’re royalty.

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Some gather with the flock and graze on imaginary grass.

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The brave ones enter the waters like Jacques Cousteau and swim with the sharks.

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But my baby chats…..

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They get smashed. 

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It’s easy, really.  After boiling them in salt water, I smashed them with the back of a mug, sprinkled herbs and added a dollop of garlic butter on each potato, after which I chucked them into the oven and baked them until the skin turned crisp.

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There weren’t any spring onions in my fridge, so I chopped some coriander instead. (The gorgeous plate is a gift from the girl from Abu Dhabi.)

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Just before the potatoes were done in the oven, I sprinkled some grated cheese on them.  I later added some sour cream and topped them off with the chopped coriander.  Now that’s what I call smashing carbs. (And my apologies to them as they never lived to see the Queen.  Or roll in hay.  Or swim with sharks.)

2.

Hubby’s from Kelantan and I love Kelantanese food.  I can’t recall if I loved Kelantanese food before my Kelantanese man, or whether the Kelantanese man came before the Kelantanese food, or whether the Kelantanese food came as a result of the Kelantanese man.  And sometimes, we don’t have to overanalyse things to explain why we love something so dearly.  It’s all about acceptance and drifting along with the currents of Sungai Pahang.

Nasi kerabu

When trying Kelantanese food, there are two staples for me – nasi kerabu and nasi dagang.  The nasi kerabu at Belanga breaks away from the traditional appearance of rice stained in blue, a natural colouring obtained from bunga telang (clitoria).  The rice is a warm yellow, and it is served with various types of ulam or raw vegetables, chopped finely so that the vegetables can be easily mixed with the rice to form a fistful of refreshing green flavours.  I had my nasi kerabu with ayam percik, a barbequed chicken marinated in lemongrass, chilli and turmeric, in a slightly pinkish gravy.  The mound of rice was topped with kerisik (grated coconut) and more gravy.  A slice of hard boiled salted egg and some keropok (fish crackers) completed the meal.

Nasi dagang

On another occasion, upon Paprika’s insistence on eating rice, I tried the nasi dagang at Belanga.  I remember having a packet of uncooked nasi dagang rice sitting in my kitchen for a long time as I didn’t have any inkling how to cook it.  I eventually gave it to my mother-in-law as I figured she’d do more justice to that precious rice.  Nasi dagang has two key ingredients – rice, a combination of glutinous and wild rice (which gives it a slightly purplish tinge) and ikan tongkol.  Everything else is secondary.  The nasi dagang at Belanga was deliciously rich, a perfect foil for the creamy curry.

Nasi dagang

Paprika had the nasi dagang with kerutup daging.  Unfortunately, in Paprika’s words, “the meat was tough as nails”!

Laksam

What we both agreed was that the laksam was outstanding.  The white fish gravy with its somewhat grainy texture was a very good canvas for the rolled noodles (not to be confused with chee cheong fun).  A chilli paste is provided on the side if you want it more spicy.

Asam laksa

Also available is asam laksa (noodles in fish based soup).

Check out Fatboybakes’ review here.

Belanga
LG 230B, The Gardens Mall
KL 

Lee Lee’s Sumptuous Desserts – Durian Puffs

I don’t get it.  Why does a man have to watch practically all EPL games even if he’s just supporting one team (Liverpool FC)?  I had the misfortune of being forced to watch the Man Utd vs Arsenal game last night (we have just one TV, you see, and the internet was bonkers as usual), and I think that will probably be the last time that he’ll ever ask me to watch a game.

It was already the second half when we turned on the TV after coming back from the Celine Dion concert.

“I don’t think Cristiano Ronaldo’s that cute.”

“Well, he’s the number one pin-up boy for the gay community,” he responded with a deadpan look.

Several minutes later….

“If Manchester United’s from Manchester and Liverpool’s from Liverpool, where’s Arsenal from?”

“London lah.”

Hmmmm.  Why isn’t there a London FC then?

When Hargreaves took the free kick, the men in the “wall” didn’t look like they were interested in defending the goal.

“Why didn’t the men jump?” I asked.

“Hmmm.”

I could see that I was making him think for a bit.  This was going to be an intellectual experience for both of us, I knew.

Minutes later, I saw the ball bounce off the referee.

“What if the ball goes out?  Who gets the penalty?”

At this point, I knew that the intellectual conversation which I craved so much had ended.  He got up, went downstairs, and came back with some delicious, creamy durian puffs which I had purchased earlier from Lee Lee’s Sumptuous Desserts at The Gardens Mall.  With the durian puff in my mouth, there was no way I could do any more talking.  Mission accomplished.

Durian Puffs

Value for money – RM10 for 6 plump pieces (wrapped in thin crepes)

Durian Puffs

Filled with cream and durian pulp (Hand model – Paprika)

Lee Lee’s Sumptuous Desserts
Lot LG-K13B Lower Ground Floor
The Gardens Mall, KL.

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