Bangsar Seafood Garden Restaurant, One Bangsar

It was probably the largest group of food bloggers assembled for a food review at Bangsar Seafood Garden Restaurant yesterday courtesy of an invitation proffered by Jade and facilitated by Fatboybakes.   Thanks to Paranoid AndroidFrat Mustard and a couple of others, we were also assured of our daily tipple, thus ensuring that our tastebuds were suitably prepared for the food review ahead of us.

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Boneless chicken with fruit sauce

Crisp skin and moist meat with a slice of mango to offer a balance of flavours.

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Steamed red snapper with bean sauce

Fresh and lovely, although I’m not a very big fan of fried fish.

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Stir fried prawns in curry

Thick, rich curry – very spicy, so order at your own risk.

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Braised beancurd

The beancurd was served with the right balance of side ingredients – broccoli, yam, carrot, water chestnuts.

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Stewed chinese cabbage with dried scallops and mushroom

This is one of my favourites.   A whole cabbage stewed, well infused with the flavours of seafood, and served with fried bits of dried scallops and mushrooms.

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Egg omelette with crab meat

Lovely in appearance, taking away the monotony of presentation of the humble fried egg.

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Fried rice with prawns

If there were any more prawns in this dish, it may as well be called Prawns with Fried Rice.   Tasty, but by this time, we were stuffed.

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Stir fried crab with salted egg yolk

I love how the salted egg yolk clings to the shell which begs a good licking.  Thick and lovely with the right amount of spiciness.

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Stir fried crab with salted egg yolk

My favourite piece.  Loads of salted egg yolk trapped in the shell.

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Butter crab

The star attraction, without a doubt.   Thick, with a smooth consistency, the butter (or rather, margarine) sauce is absolutely delicious.   Curry leaves add flavour.

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Fried buns

The tiniest pieces of buns I’ve ever seen.  Each bun is the equivalent of a mouthful.   I’m not sure what they taste like.   Sean grabbed the last one.  He’s fast in everything he does.  Blogging, eating, drinking….

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Mango cream with sago

Overall, I couldn’t quite fault any dish, but with the exception of the crabs and a couple of other dishes, it was pretty standard Chinese restaurant fare.   Nevertheless, the restaurant is lovely with modern furnishings, ample carpark, and it’s halal, so it’s great to propagate the concept of 1Malaysia over a crab or two.

Come Ramadan, Bangsar Seafood will be having several special Ramadan Set Menus ranging from RM498++ (10 persons) to RM898++ (10 persons) with 1kg of crabs free of charge.  Not too bad considering how expensive Ramadan buffets at hotels cost these days.

Bangsar Seafood Garden Restaurant
63, One Bangsar
Jalan Ara
Bangsar Baru
59100 Kuala Lumpur

Tel: 03-2282 2555

Website HERE.

(Nirvana posts will continue after this!)

INFO:

Ramadan Set Menus:

Dine in style, this Ramadan:
Enjoy 9 signature dishes. Devour 1 KG of crabs for free.
From RM 498+

RM 498+: Appetizer, Shark’s Fin Soup, Chicken with Ginger, Spicy Fried Fish, Lychee Prawns, Signature Beancurd, ‘Kampung’ fried rice, Custard Buns, Dessert

RM 598+: Appetizer, Sharks Fin Soup, Chicken with Plum Sauce, Pomfret with Bean Sauce, Prawns with Sweet Corn Sauce, Steamed “Sang Gan”, Tom Yam Noodles, Banana with “Gula Melaka”, Dessert

RM 698+: Appetizer, Double boiled soup, Roast chicken, Red snapper, Otak Otak Fried Prawns, Braised Sea Cucumber, Oyster Fried Rice, Chinese Pastries, Dessert

RM 898+: Homemade appetizers, Sharks Fin Soup with Pumpkin, Boneless Duck, Curried Garoupa, Braised Seafood, Mango Prawns, Garlic Fried Rice, Banana & ‘Gula Melaka’, Dessert

Hatyai Street, One Bangsar

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Thai newsprint is placed on the table and covered with a glass sheet – quite a novelty!

1.

I am glad that Boo persuaded me (with little effort, actually!) to go to Hatyai Street, the latest restaurant at One Bangsar.  I had driven past the restaurant several times, but always had the misconception that the food would be overpriced.  Of course, pricing is relative.  A single portion costs anything from RM12 to RM14, and the servings are substantial.  When I first went there with the girls, we ordered enough for an army and our total bill came up to RM183.50 (after tax).  I went there a second time with Boo and we decided not to be overambitious.  This time, our bill came up to RM43 for two.  So I leave it to you – the ambience is nice, the airconditioning is very cold (bring something to keep you warm…like a hot water bottle), the service is…okay lah, and the food is well presented.

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My, what big trotters you have

Now that we’ve got prices out of the way, let’s talk about the food.  The braised pork trotters is amazingly good.  The taste is familiar, more like our chinese style of preparation, and I enjoyed it throughly.  When I first tried it, I thought it was rather fatty (not that I’m complaining), and the second time I had it, the meat was lean and extremely tender.  In both instances, I was not disappointed.

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Thai laksa (fish)

I expected the thai laksa to taste like tom yam (being the ignoramus that I am), but it tasted more like a creamy assam laksa. I didn’t really like the noodles which were clumpy, but I’d vouch for the gravy anytime.

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Crispy pork knuckle

The crispy pork knuckle would go very well with beer. It is served with a spicy green chilli blend and sweet soy sauce.

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Mango kerabu with salted egg

Kerabu is always a great complementary dish to the spicier, saltier, porkier Thai dishes. The mango kerabu was tossed with salted egg and crisp fried shrimps. On my second visit, I tried the pig skin kerabu. As sinful as it sounds (and I’m sure it is), it didn’t feel unhealthy. The skin was sliced into slivers and tossed in lime juice. It had a gelatinous texture and looked like seaweed.  It was very tasty, of course.

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Kailan with fried pork belly

We didn’t want to skip our greens, and when we saw this dish listed on the menu, we knew that we had to have it. (And it wasn’t because of the word “kailan”.)  I didn’t taste much of the pork belly, though.  Must have gone into Precious Pea’s stomach, methinks.

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Glutinous rice with durian

Out of all the desserts that we tried, I was happiest with the glutinous rice with durian. It was rich and fragrant and everything I could ask for in a dessert.

Hatyai Street is closed on Mondays. On other days, it is open for lunch and dinner.

Hatyai Street
No. 63E, Jalan Ara
One Bangsar, Bangsar, 55900 Kuala Lumpur
Tel: 03-2283 3116

Also check out Precious Pea’s, Boolicious’ and Joe’s blogs. 

2.

Unkaleong said I sounded angry in my previous post.  Anger is only one aspect of it.  I was depressed, furious, confused and even feeling guilt.
 
Yesterday, the newspapers reported that a snatch theft victim was run over by a three-ton truck when she fell on the road after a motorcycle pillion rider grabbed her handbag.   Only a few days earlier, I was a victim as well, but thankfully, I wasn’t hurt in the process.  I was shaken, and cried until I had no tears left, and after that I had time to think about what happened.  The stark reality is this – we should stop blaming foreigners for crimes conducted in our city.  These are our people who grew up on our soil, who went through the same educational process, and face the same socio-economic conditions that we generally face.  What went wrong?

I have no answers.  But this, I know – there will be retribution.

As cliched as it sounds, life will go on for me.  And I thank God everyday for that.