Sunday Champagne Brunch at Mezze, Damansara Heights

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Bircher Muesli

Bald Eagle can be unpredictable in many ways.  He used to be a lot more unpredictable in the days when he was wooing me, but I suppose despite the years that have since passed, he is still able to surprise me occasionally with an unanticipated move.  There is, however, one area in his life where I don’t need a crystal ball.  When we’re out for breakfast at any western restaurant on a Sunday after church, he immediately zeros in on the Big Breakfast (sausage, bacon, toast, eggs, etc).  I suppose it makes sense for a hearty eater like him to order the largest item on the menu, what more when he eats just oats and muesli on regular days.

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Blueberry Pancakes

We received an invitation from the owners of Mezze (via Frat Mustard) to sample the Sunday Champagne Brunch (where champagnes are served at a 20% discount), and I thought it would be a good idea to see if Bald Eagle would deviate from his usual order.  Plus point about Mezze – location, which on a Sunday afternoon makes parking remarkably effortless.  Negative point about Mezze – also location, which on any night makes parking disturbingly dreadful.  The food is Mediterranean, which leaves me completely confounded, as it could represent cuisine from at least 20 different nations.  The credo at Mezze is this: “…food tastes best when shared with friends and family…a meeting place where worries are checked at the door…”  Lovely.

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Cinnamon French Toast

And the food?  It started off exceedingly promising, with Cinnamon French Toast (RM12.50) with butter and maple pecan syrup followed by Bircher Muesli, a delicious creamy porridge with nuts and fruits, served cold.  The texture is achieved by soaking oats overnight in apple juice and then adding the other ingredients together with cream and yoghurt to achieve the right consistency.  We washed all this down with Bellini, a cocktail made with sparkling wine and homemade peach puree.  Absolutely indulgent.

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Eggs Benedict

I liked the Eggs Benedict (RM15.50) too.  The muffin was lightly toasted and topped with crispy bacon, poached egg and hollandaise sauce.  At Mezze, one can choose from a range of toppings – bacon/ham, smoked salmon, asparagus or mushrooms, all at different prices.  Interesting trivia – I read in Saveur magazine several months back that eggs benedict may have been first created at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in the 1800s where a guest requested for this dish which wasn’t listed on the menu.  The name came about much later, of course.  Don’t take my word for it, though.  I read things like this in the toilet, and sometimes, my concentration wavers.

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Spanish Tortilla

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Lamb Pilaf

The Spanish Tortilla (RM11) is an omelette with sauteed potatoes and onions, and in Mezze, one can have a choice of either chorizo or feta in the tortilla.  The Lamb Pilaf Pie (RM23), on the other hand, is an unlikely concoction which hardly qualifies as Mediterranean but was apparently retained on the menu due to its popularity.  The idea of combining a pie with rice may work for some, but it didn’t strike me as a harmonious marriage.  Not one of my favourites.  I have no complaints about the preparation, though.  The basmati rice was cooked well with distinct and firm grains, and the spices lent a beautiful aromatic flavour to the rice.

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Mezze Breakfast

Bald Eagle’s usual (boring) order was, much to his excitement, available in Mezze too.  Known as the Mezze Breakfast (RM26, or RM28 with coffee), the dish consists of home baked beans (as opposed to beans from a can), mushrooms, grilled tomatoes, pork bangers and eggs done in any style.  We had scrambled eggs, which unfortunately wasn’t runny enough.  It’s funny how something as simple as scrambled eggs, when properly done, lift my spirits, but bad scrambled eggs turn me into a grump.

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Roast Beef with Yorkshire Pudding

The Blueberry Pancakes, despite the spectacular vision, were slightly leathery to me, while the Roast beef with Yorkshire Pudding was dry.

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Bottom right, next to pretty girl: Chef Richard Brewer

Desserts fared a little better than the final three dishes.  The Chocolate Brownie (RM19.50), made with Valrhona chocolate, topped with chocolate sauce and Haagen Dazs ice cream was sweet and delicious, while the Sticky Date Pudding was in a league of its own, made with muscovado sugar and mollases which lent it a slight salty taste.

Mezze
No. 132, Jalan Kasah
Medan Damansara
50490 KL

Tel: 03-2095 0122

Opening hours: Tue – Sat: 12noon to 3pm, 5pm – 11pm; Sun: 10am – 3.30pm (closed Mondays)

Thanks to Perin and Shantini Petrus for kindly hosting the lunch.

UPDATE (thanks babe_kl!):

“Effective Monday the 18th of January, Mezze will be open from Monday to Saturday from 5pm to 1am. We close on Sundays. The decision to stop lunch and our Sunday brunch is only temporary.”

A lesson to be learnt, I suppose, that restaurants and food blogging are dynamic and fluid. Note to self: Don’t wait a whole month after eating to blog about a place. 🙂

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Bellini

Launch of Eat, Drink and More by The Westin Kuala Lumpur and Le Méridien Kuala Lumpur

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Although this sounds suspiciously similar to Eat Drink KL‘s blog name, Eat, Drink & More is Starwood Hotels & Resorts’ new one-stop online portal offering food and beverage concepts and more within Asia Pacific.  I was there along with the blogging glitterati – Masak-Masak, Paprika, Adly and Fatboybakes, and online restaurant reservation portal tycoon, Jek Tan.  The event, which was held on January 13, 2010 at The Westin, brought together 5 restaurant concepts under one roof – Favola and Latest Recipe from Le Meridien, and EEST, Prego and Qba from The Westin.

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1. Spectacular in spectacles – L-R: Lady Cornelia, me and Paps
2. Favola logo in The Westin
3. Favola’s spread at the launch
4. The 2Ms – Martin B Jones (VP F&B, Starwood AP Hotels & Resorts) and Me
5. Tapas at Latest Recipe
6. LM Eye Openers on Ice by Jean Georges Vongerichten

A good variety of bites were available at our first station, Favola. Favola recently replaced Al-Nafourah in an Asia-Pacific-wide change in Le Meridien’s branded concepts.  The restaurant serves simple, classic fare at very reasonable prices.  (More in a future blog post.)   One which stood out was the grilled aubergine parcel with tuna, pinenuts and raisins and drizzled with vincotto, which I thought was a rather innovative use of ingredients for presentation.

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Aubergine parcel

We then moved to Latest Recipe‘s station which featured, among others, one of Jean Georges’ creations, the LM Eye Openers – basically fruit juices with a punch (not the alcoholic kind).  Latest Recipe is a buffet type restaurant with new and old recipes from the East and West, but there is also a Jean Georges Signature Breakfast (ala carte) which, the management has assured me despite my protests, is still available.  To digress a bit, Bald Eagle and I went to Latest Recipe about a month back for the Signature breakfast, but were disappointed to find out that not only were the waitstaff not knowledgeable about the menu, there was also no sign or information available on the Signature breakfast.

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1. Me and Lady Cornelia’s new best friend
2. Is the size of one’s pepper mill any indication of ummmm…?
3. EEST at The Westin
4. Latest Recipe at Le Meridien
5. Favola
6. Pretty pastel coloured macarons

Our third station was EEST, an Asian concept restaurant with five kitchens – Japanese, Vietnamese, Chinese, Thai and Malay. Here, we were showered with Kobe and foie gras, tiny taro baskets, dim sum and Wagyu rendang with rice in a rolled (like kacang putih) pancake package.   All very interesting twists to traditional dishes, some working better than others.  Prego and Qba were our fourth and fifth station, and again, we were amazed at versatility of the chefs in finding fun ways to present their food.  Prego is a casual dining Italian restaurant, and as we arrived, loud sounds of an inconsistent rendition of (maybe) Happy Birthday reverberated, and all I could think of was TGIF (the restaurant, not the phrase).  Qba is hot hot hot, a Latin American bar & grill which also houses an impressive Cuban rum and cigar collection.

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Eat, Drink & More’s website was launched yesterday, so I decided to give the website a go just now.   The search box is good as it allows one to choose a venue or a location quite easily, and it is only a 2 or 3 step process for one to locate something in one’s own city.   Unfortunately, the search box caters primarily for Starwood’s “branded concepts” (eg. Favola), i.e. a concept/venue which is consistent in quality and has comparable appeal and vibrancy with another similarly named concept/venue in a different location, so stand alone (non-branded) restaurants (like Prime) will not be as easily located in the search box as compared to “branded” restaurants.

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After locating a restaurant, one can make online restaurant reservations here by clicking on the button.

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What I like about it is that last minute bookings are accepted.   What I do not like about it is that I can’t make a booking if I choose to dine alone.  “The hotel does not confirm single diners over the internet.” Despite the shortcoming, this is a website that I will definitely bookmark for future use.  Just as I’m supportive of theQguides, an independent online restaurant booking portal, I am all for the metamorphosis of the way we do things if it allows me to be more efficient with my limited time.

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Thank you, Cheryl Lum, Director of Communications at Le Meridien Kuala Lumpur, for your kind invitation, and congratulations to the teams at The Westin and Le Meridien on your excellent execution!

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Note: Some pictures are courtesy of the management

Pork noodles at Restoran Makanan Sun Sea, Taman OUG

I’m fraught with guilt at the thought of blogging about food at a time like this.  Freedom of expression has taken a completely new meaning in our country.  My friend, Joan, quoted this passage in her article in The Malaysian Insider, and I’ve taken the liberty to reproduce the passage here:

“Hell is a world gone mad where we do not understand our neighbours; where politicians can declare crusades and holy wars against an idea…

“The way out of hell is love.  Love is the recognition of the Other; the acknowledgement that the person before us is a fellow human being whose life is an abundant store of emotions, feelings, memories of hope and loss, tears, smiles, laughter.  Love is the prerequisite of communication, even when that communication is difficult and one is not always understood.  But love dictates that we need to understand, or at least make the effort to understand; and not to demonise, to scapegoat, to sully, to abuse.  Love is the thing that stops the finger as it presses on the trigger; it is the thing that stills the hand before it reaches for the knife.” – “Qu’ran and Cricket” Written by Dr Farish A. Noor in 2007.

I really need to get the book.  For now, I’m blocking every other thought from my mind as my prose dwells on sustenance of a different kind.

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Sustenance, not for every soul, but definitely for mine.  Hor fun tossed in dark sauce, an enticing agglomeration of lard and minced pork.

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Soup, a melange of minced and sliced pork, pork innards, squid, prawns and a whole egg (poached in the soup).  The ingredients flavour the soup and make it sweet.  There is only a bare hint of MSG.

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Crispy lard makes a world of difference.  Recommended, only if you are able to ignore the grime on the floor.

Restoran Makanan Sun Sea
(Opposite OUG Wet Market)
Jalan Hujan Rahmat
Taman OUG, KL

Closed Wednesdays.