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Adu Sugar, Bangsar

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Adu Sugar hits the sweet spot for patrons seeking a soulful showcase of Southeast Asian inspirations in their meal, with a focus on classic Malaysian flavours lovingly laced with Indonesian touches. It's a beautiful space in Bangsar spearheaded by chef Adu Amran Hassan, a multidisciplined talent who's skilled not only with the kitchen tools but the painting brush, turning the entire restaurant into a canvas for his artistry, illustrated by a ravishing mural and various paintings.


Our first encounter with chef Adu's cooking was in 2016, when he opened The Canteen at KL's National Textile Museum. In April this year, he moved to Lucky Garden, launching Adu Sugar, with a more extensive repertoire of ever-evolving specialities.

Come for dinner, when the venue illustrates its capabilities with princely platters of seafood, meat and vegetables. Dishes are expected to change regularly, but some recipes such as Javanese-inflected botok-botok (fish wrapped in coconut flesh and steamed with shredded coconut flesh) and asam pedas should remain often-present.

Recent Ramadan efforts included botok-botok made luxe with luscious salmon, gorgeously aromatic with jungle vegetables masak lemak, spiced up with Balinese sambal matah, rounded out with basil rice and pechel tauhu, alongside lamb asam pedas, a meaty change from the more common seafood preparation, served with salted egg, lotus root crisps and nasi ulam. The platters even came with a series of enlivening starters (tumpi crackers, jemput-jemput bawang, and mango with sambal kicap dip) and engaging sweets (pisang salai brownie, flourless almond limau kasturi cake, and kuih ketayap).


Botok-botok and asam pedas are both particularly popular in peninsular Malaysia's south, so it makes sense that chef Adu tackles them here, since he originally hails from Johor, with decades of professional experience that spans Langkawi to London.

The quintessential Laksa Johor also receives its due here for both dinner and lunch, blanketed in a gravy enriched with ikan parang and ikan tamban (RM24.99) . You'll also find everything from Mee Bandung with poached egg to Lontong Asli with dried sotong sambal, with Lemon Passion Fruit Tea (RM13) and nostalgic Malacca-made Long Chan sodas (RM7) to wash the meal down.

Ultimately, Adu Sugar is a worthwhile destination for classic cooking that pays homage to time-honoured traditions, refreshed nonetheless for contemporary customers without sacrificing what makes these recipes remarkable.

Adu Sugar Restaurant
10a, Lorong Ara Kiri 2, Lucky Garden, Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur.
Open Tues-Sun, 12pm-3pm, 6pm-11pm. Tel: 03-2201-1441

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Maldivian Food Markets

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Fish and fruits fill the food markets of the Maldives, with fishmongers slicing through tuna and fruit stall keepers serving up sweet coconut candy bundled in banana leaves and fresh coconut juice straight off the husk.


Lisette's Cafe & Bakery, Bangsar

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Inching near noon on a Tuesday, Lisette's is welling over with patrons, lured by a vegetarian-friendly buffet that crops up thrice a week. The cafe's namesake, Lisette Scheers (founder of Nala Designs), is in the front garden, chatting with a team from The Social Group of Restaurants, which has run this venue since mid-2018. Near them, several customers sip coffee beside one of the cafe's centrepieces, a vertical floral fence that comprises hundreds of faux peonies in pink, white and other hues.

We'll return to the buffet later (the cauliflower pancake and chickpea salad are calling out to us), but for now, we're swept upstairs for a peek at Lisette's latest pride - a one-of-a-kind ceiling mural that soars overhead, spanning the entire space, emblazoned with clusters of hand-drawn patterns that portray everything from birds in flight to flowers in bloom, reminiscent of classic Peranakan motifs.

The Social Group acquired the cafe, formerly known as DR.Inc, in August 2018 after Lisette decided to relinquish it and concentrate on Nala Designs. The cafe's new name remains a tribute to Lisette, who spoke to us about what makes this space special. "I think this is a 'soul' cafe because there's a personal touch everywhere," Lisette adds. "It feels like home. A lot of people that come here feel nostalgic, they feel like it's their grandmother's house or their grandfather's house."


The Social Group appointed Lisette to design its new ceiling mural on the first floor, which she did with amazing aplomb. Conceived and constructed with skilled originality, this artistic and culinary alchemy is what makes Lisette's a vital venue, designed to feed both the spirit and the stomach in a city that feels increasingly starved of sanctuaries for stressed-out souls.

The Group has also spent time collecting antiques to preserve the quaintness of Lisette's (such as plates from markets all over Europe, hand-carried back to Malaysia) and improved the cafe's facilities to make it more comfortable for customers.


Check out our video on Lisette's for interviews on what makes this cafe such a fan favourite.

Back downstairs, the "Beautiful Buffet" sees scores of customers filling up their plates with a mostly meat-free repertoire of over two dozen recipes from Southeast Asia and far abroad - mixed-pepper frittata to mushroom quiche to palak paneer, rosemary-roasted pumpkin to baked potato skins and fried tempeh balls, salads of bananas and young mango to bread with moutabel and hummus, Spanish tortilla to Johor laksa. The buffet is is 80% vegetarian, with some chicken and fish dishes.

The buffet has been an ongoing affair for four years; it happens Tuesdays, Fridays, Sundays and on national public holidays, with permanent temptations as well as specials for each day (Tuesday includes quail egg salads, for example; Friday has gobi Manchurian and vegetable korma among others; Sunday has highlights like organic chia pudding and bircher muesli).

Lisette says The Social Group has "elevated the kitchen to another level," particularly for vegetarian patrons like herself. The food is rich in flavours and textures - "it's got to be delicious, because at the end of the day, you want to go home with a full stomach. A lot of non-vegetarians come here and they like it because they don't even miss the meat."

The buffet, inspired by London's Ottolenghi, weaving together a hearty tapestry that crosses from Malaysia to Mumbai to the Middle East to the Mediterranean, costs RM35++ per person on Tuesdays and Fridays (from 1130am to 230pm) and RM55++ per person on Sundays and national public holidays (1030am to 230pm; Sundays also include brunch fare like eggs done your way, beef bacon, nitrite-free chicken sausages, baked tomatoes, baked beans and hash browns).

Beyond the buffet, Lisette's also offers an a la carte selection that heaves with everything from wholemeal brown toast with marmalade to truffled scrambled kampung eggs with smoked salmon; white poppy seed sandwiches with avocado, parsley and sunflower seeds to caramelised goat's cheese salad with curly kale, spinach, pomegranates and walnuts; poke bowls to Parmigiana burrata; Korean kimchi fried rice to Thai chicken green curry; spicy prawn tacos to beef burgers.

The most distinctive dish is the black rice nasi lemak, built with antioxidant-rich 'forbidden rice', firm to the bite and earthy-nutty to the palate, as aromatic as nasi lemak should be, completed with chicken curry, prawn sambal and all the essential accompaniments, making for a sumptuously satisfying nasi lemak.

The bakery component of Lisette's steals the scene at the front of the cafe, abounding with made-fresh-daily treats galore, prepared with pure butter and organic flour - focaccia and scones to almond croissants, Chelsea buns to beef pies, spinach puffs to cheese danishes, gluten-free cauliflower quiche to peach crumble. Fun fact: Lisette's houses the central bakery for The Social Group, so if you spot indulgences like burnt cheesecakes and salted pecan caramel cakes at The Social or El Meson, this is where those come from.

If you're here seeking solitude and solace, rest assured there's a calm before and after the lunchtime storm, particularly at the back of the cafe, with leafy touches of nature that might be a balm for broken hearts. The venue also expects to open in the evening for dinner and drinks soon.

Many thanks to Lisette's for having us.

Lisette's Cafe & Bakery
8 Jalan Kemuja, Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur. Daily, 8am-6pm; dinner service planned soon. Tel: 03-2201-7772

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Kanteen, Tropicana Avenue

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No mere cafeteria, Kanteen serves up a cheerful spread of contemporary and classic crowd-pleasers. The soft-shell crab croissant promises plenty of crunch for your cash, made punchy with a salted egg cheese sauce (RM26), while the nasi lemak ayam rempah is the perennially popular pick, the can't-fail coupling of aromatic rice with tender spiced chicken (RM20).

The rest of the menu is extensive, equally emphasising East and West, hopscotching from shakshouka, salmon omelettes and smoothie bowls to Korean spicy chicken, Malaysian satay and Southeast Asian noodle bowls, with some imaginatively playful pleasures like a quinoa sweet potato patty burger in the mix.

Fans of live entertainment can also bookmark Kanteen, with talented local musicians performing here on many Friday and Saturday nights.

Kanteen
Tropicana Avenue, Persiaran Tropicana, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Sun-Thurs, 8am-10pm; Fri-Sat, 8am-12am.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Whymsical Whisk, Damansara Kim

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Keto comfort fare comes to the fore at Whymsical Whisk: Local favourites are reinterpreted through low-carb, high-fat philosophies, resulting in char kuey teow constructed with reduced-calorie konjac flat noodles (RM18; the noodles furnish a pleasantly smooth, full-bodied bite, albeit in a recipe that's less indulgent and robustly punchy compared to typical CKT) and nasi lemak comprising cauliflower rice (RM20; fragrant and flavoursome, with a tenderly fleshy, reliably seasoned chicken leg and a fresh, textured sambal that conveys a kick).

Keto-friendly cakes seem like good-for-you versions that conform to healthy-baking stereotypes, though the cafe seems to have the best, purest intentions - the tiramisu cake evokes reconstituted dimensions instead of creamy-dreamy fluffiness, an acquired taste prepared with a Lakanto alternative sweetener that channels too much artifice (RM19), while the duck egg cheese cake is more powdery than sumptuous, undermined by off-kilter dynamics of dessert cheesiness as well (RM19). The Keto Latte features whipped cream, making for an airily aromatic cuppa (RM12).

Whymsical Whisk by Rexine Kaye
45-A, Jalan SS 20/11, Damansara Kim, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-6pm; Sunday, 10am-5pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

The Ganga Cafe, Petaling Jaya

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Nearly six years after wife-and-husband team Meeta and Prabodh Sheth took over The Ganga Cafe in Bangsar, turning it into the neighbourhood's hub for hearty, soulful South Asian vegetarian fare, there's now a second Ganga in town, bringing the brand's beloved chapatis and chaats, briyani and baingan ka bharta, parathas and paneer pakora to Petaling Jaya's Sea Park.

The PJ outpost's repertoire replicates what made Ganga great in the first place in Bangsar, channeling a home kitchen's wholesome warmth, extensive enough to ensure meat isn't missed, that flavours remain resonant even without eggs and MSG. The gang's all here at Ganga Sea Park - butter naan to bindi masala, pav bhaji to pani poori, kulfi to kesari. Ganga Bangsar's Sunday buffet brunch is not yet available, but it seems inevitable.

For PJ-ites, the ideal introduction to Ganga might be the single-platter meals - a standard thali of brown rice surrounded by three freshly cooked vegetable sides, two dhals, rasam, papadam, salad and dried chilli makes for a vibrantly nourishing lunch that's filling without flinging you into a food coma (RM11), while the chana bhatura is fried bread at its fluffiest, a puffed-up pleasure with potently spiced white chickpeas (RM12), served with the enthusiastic dedication that's another Ganga hallmark.

The Ganga Cafe
24, Jalan 21/19, Sea Park, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Daily, 10am-10pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Okinii, Petaling Jaya

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From the first slurp of the spoon to the final swoop of the chopsticks, a ramen meal at Okinii seeks to soothe and satiate. 

The effort poured into the Chicken Miso Ramen is exemplary, with eight hours of boiling for the chicken broth, laced with red miso and loaded with no lack of noodles, plus a kitchen-roasted chicken thigh roll (a substitute for porcine chashu, since Okinii shuns the swine), marinated kampung egg, scallions and a nori sheet. At RM18, it's ramen worth relishing, though it's more of a Malaysian Chinese interpretation, with broth that's poultry-sweet rather than umami-resonant. Other ramen varieties include seafood (with prawns and mussels) and even a vegan one (with carrots, bok choi and deep-fried ginger in a sesame broth).

Rice bowls are also offered, with oyakodon and gyudon beckoning from the menu, as well as tofu or torched salmon salads; sashimi is also expected to eventually be available. And after supping up the ramen, customers can sip on coffee - perhaps a cold brew (RM13) to combat the ceaseless heat (lattes and flat whites are fully feasible too). While a Japanese noodle joint and a third-wave caffeine bar might not seem like the most natural coupling, Okinii could change that - its small crew hopes to have close interactions with customers seated at the counter, though that might require the first move on the patrons' part to initiate the conversation, especially when Okinii's team is busy preparing the food and pulling each espresso shot.

Little Monsters, take note: Okinii is a very Gaga-friendly venue - when we visited for an early lunch, Shallow played 11 times consecutively on a loop until the barista came in and changed the music.

Fun fact: Okinii is Japanese for 'second place', a clue that the folks here formerly ran Setia Alam's Comma Cafe.

Okinii 
9A, First Floor, Jalan SS4C/5, Taman Rasa Sayang, 47301 Petaling Jaya, Selangor. 
Daily, 930am-6pm (note: dinner from 730pm currently by reservations only). Tel: 012-213-2590

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

SeaHouse Cafe, Maldives

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Perched atop the main ferry terminal of the Maldivian capital, SeaHouse Cafe offers a calm view of the waters, a lovely setting for savouring a meal of garudhiya fish broth with lonomirus chilli paste.


This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Porkville, Petaling Jaya

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Porkville's playful porcine riffs on crowd-rousing recipes might make for a fun meal: Babi penyet hogs the limelight as a twist on Indonesia's familiar chicken original, featuring tender deep-fried pork, smashed and smothered with sambal penyet (RM16); nasi lemak babi is memorable for its rich, sweet-spicy bacon sambal (RM3.50), and the Oinkster Burger's chief lure is its layer of chopped crispy barbecued pork belly (RM12.80; request this without the cheese slice, which does the pork no favours).

Porkville
Lot 3, Lorong Utara (B), PJS 52, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Tues-Sun, 12pm-330pm, 6pm-10pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

The Heritage, Bukit Damansara

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With a founder and a chef who are both Hainanese, the Hainanese chicken chop, Hainanese lamb stew and Hainanese fried noodles form the ideal introduction to The Heritage, which seeks to highlight the Malaysian Hainanese community's colonial-era culinary legacy. The chicken chop, prepared grilled or fried, offers nostalgic comfort, completed with roast potatoes and mixed boiled vegetables, rounded out by an onion gravy (RM23). It's a filling portion, so we passed this time on the lamb stew, which sounds even heartier, a three-generation-old recipe thickened with white radish, water chestnuts, ginger, fu chok, black fungus, fermented bean curd, goji berries and red dates.

While cocktails might not be linked to the Hainanese, The Heritage offers some engaging choices with Malaysian inflections. Butter Her Gin (RM28; butterfly pea and bunga kantan-infused gin, lychee liqueur, kaffir lime leaves, egg white) and Koko Kau Kau (RM31; dark rum, house-made coffee liqueur, Milo, frangelico, gingerbread syrup) both prove playfully pleasing, but a couple of upcoming cocktails sound even more fun and fascinating - a Hainanese coffee cocktail (vodka, Hainanese coffee powder and condensed milk, served with toast bread) and a Hainanese chicken rice cocktail (pandan-infused rum, cili padi, ginger and sesame oil, served with a slice of chicken).

Service is warm and the setting is welcoming, meant to evoke a Cameron Highlands bygone-times bungalow.


The Heritage
24G, Jalan Medan Setia 2, Bukit Damansara, Damansara Heights, Kuala Lumpur. Daily, 11am-12am. Tel: 03-2011-7687

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

The Botanist, Cyberjaya

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Green thumbs, gravy-smeared fingers: This family-run cafe is well worth the trip to Cyberjaya, serving excellent bao burgers and selling eco-friendly products in a lush tropical setting.

Three types of baos are available (RM12 each), built with handmade black sesame buns - the Mumu Rendang is lip-smackingly layered with 40-hour slow-cooked beef short ribs, boiled eggs and cucumber in an umami-rich rendang sauce. Other options include the Ko-Ko Chicken (crispy chicken with edamame mayo, pickles and slaw) and the Crumbly Cheese (mild cheddar with truffled mixed mushrooms and smoky garlic aioli).

House-brewed kombucha (RM8; pleasingly mellow) and cold-brewed green tea (RM5; very refreshing) ensure customers remain thoroughly hydrated. You can also purchase everything from chemical-free soap to non-plastic toothbrushes and reusable travel mugs here. Service is warm and welcoming.

The Botanist
Level 3M, Tamarind Square, Cyberjaya, Selangor. Open Tues-Fri, 12pm-8pm; Sat, 10am-8pm; Sun, 10am-5pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Bulgogi, Seoul

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A steaming-hot bowl of bulgogi, sweet and tender, makes for one of Seoul's most soulful, soothing lunches, perhaps best savoured in a nondescript alley away from the madding crowds.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Brasserie Léon, Taman Tun Dr Ismail

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Léon is a brasserie boiled down to its basics, specialising in steak-frites (steak partnered with fries) in the tradition of Parisian and Genevan institution L'Entrecôte. It's a fresh approach to what a French restaurant can be in KL, focusing on a single dish done delightfully, helmed by the Gallic and Swiss-trained team that formerly ran Cocott', a more elaborate European eatery, in this same location. Léon is a nod to its co-founders' heritage - it's the name of manager Rui-Yang Monico's grandfather, while chef Geoffroi Herin, who was raised in the somewhat similarly pronounced Lyon, remains the kitchen's ringleader.

Grilled Australian grain-fed beef striploins are the cornerstone of the menu, served in 180-gram portions according to your specific preference that you can tick while ordering on the one-page paper menu (rare, medium-rare, medium, medium-well or well-done), rounded out with Léon's signature sauce, house-made French fries and a green salad.

You have a choice of Angus (RM79.90) or regular beef (RM49.90) - we relished the former rare and the latter medium-rare; both furnished a satisfyingly full-bodied balance between a tender bite and a robust chew, with a rich depth of flavour that showcased meat that's aged and seasoned just right. The Angus might be persuasively smoother, but either one is more than enjoyable, prepared to a precision that many steak acolytes will respect.

What makes these distinctive nonetheless amid KL's swarm of steakhouses are the accompaniments - the herb-and-butter sauce is delicious even on its own, accentuating the beef's primal pleasure with a dose of lusty decadence, with secret ingredients like chicken liver - it's a sauce that Léon's founders managed to compare in a taste test with their Genevan inspiration, with positive, promising results.

These are no typical French fries either - like the sauce, the potatoes offer their own memorable character, with a crispness that's absolutely addictive (we polished off the entire plate of carbs). The salad might seem even simpler but it's lively and tasty; the dressing is still  a work in progress but currently illustrates buoyantly surprising Asian nuances.

If you don't consume beef, Léon's roasted spring chicken (RM19.90 for a half-bird with all the accoutrements) merits the visit too, fowl that's fleshy and flavoursome, gently smoky and gorgeously succulent, completed with classic savoury chicken jus that Mamé would also approve of.

Beyond beef, several starters illustrate the crew's capabilities - house-baked bread with house-churned butter is the irresistible coupling of crunch and creaminess (RM5.90), paving the path for other offerings like flame-cured mackerel, chilled and uplifting with cucumber and shallot vinaigrette (RM13.90), escargots with garlic butter (RM16.90 for a half-dozen, served out of their shells) and deep-fried brie with red onion chutney (RM15.90; a cheesy treat to keep us occupied for now until Léon's team potentially revives its popular raclette nights someday) - all as authentically alluring as anything you might stumble on at, say, a bistro in Ax-les-Thermes.

While quality is a standout, prices are also noteworthy - starters open at no more than RM16.90 each and desserts close at RM10.90, comprising vanilla-flavoured creme brulee (RM9.90), chocolate mousse made with 70 percent dark chocolate (RM10.90) and tiramisu with house-made espresso genoise in verrine-style glasses (RM10.90), testifying to Léon's mastery of time-honoured sweet temptations too. The French house wine clocks in just shy of a three-digit sum at RM99.90 per bottle, with Burgundy-aged Michel Couvreur whisky also beckoning from the liquor list (RM26.90 per glass).

All in all, Léon heralds a solid revamp and reincarnation of Cocott', worth discovering for both newcomers and fans of the former restaurant, as well as anyone who loves French restaurants or simply some lip-smacking steak and fries. Many thanks to the team here for having us.

Léon TTDI
1-1, Greens Terrace, Jalan Wan Kadir 3, Taman Tun Dr Ismail, Kuala Lumpur.
Open Wednesday-Monday, 12pm-230pm, 6pm-10pm. Closed Tuesdays. Tel: 03-2712-4481


Toriyoshi Yakitori Bar, Damansara Uptown

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Toriyoshi stands out among the Klang Valley's kushiyaki bars by serving up specialities with Malaysian influences: Try the nasi lemak yakitori don, unmistakably aromatic, accompanied by all the familiar anchovies, peanuts, cucumber and sambal, plus a runny egg and slices of smoky chicken meat, skin, heart and gizzard (a fair RM15 with radish soup, pickles and ocha).

Several chicken skewers also channel local inflections, such as sambal-slathered chicken breast (RM6) and buttermilk-bathed thigh (RM7). Other unconventional grilled offerings span freshwater lobster (RM15; skip this, since there's not much flesh beneath its exterior) and textured otak-otak (RM8), washed down with green tea (RM6) or a Japanese whisky highball (RM20).

Toriyoshi Yakitori
23G, Jalan SS21/37, Damansara Utama, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Mon-Fri, 12pm-3pm, 6pm-12am; Sat, 6pm-12am.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Ekkamai: Thai Set Lunches & Teh Time Treats

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Plaza Batai's bastion of Thai cooking is bringing out a wave of new specialities that could keep us lingering here from noon till long past sunset: An expanded selection of set lunches that offer delicious value starting at RM22.90++, Teh Time treats that'll tickle the fancy for Thai sweets, and fresh modern recipes for its a la carte menu (Thai tacos, anyone?).

Click above to watch our special video on Ekkamai and interview with its head chef Awee.

With more than two decades of professional experience, taking her from her homeland to London to KL, Ekkamai's head chef Awee is one of the most skilled Thai chefs working in Malaysia - it's no surprise though that many customers might not recognise her name, since she's an unassuming talent with no thirst for the limelight, preferring to let her work speak for itself.

Running in both Plaza Batai and Publika, Ekkamai's weekday set lunches currently number a lucky 13, extensive enough that you can eat here in the afternoon for two weeks and still not finish sampling everything. There's truly something for everyone, from the crowd-pleaser of Tom Yum Fried Rice with wok-fried chicken, prawns, kangkung and egg to the vegetarian-friendly Paneer Pumpkin Curry, a fun medley of Indian and Thai inspirations, prepared with hand-pounded red curry paste that's free of fish sauce, to Wagyu Radna Beef Noodles, smoky-charred koey teow in thick gravy with Australian wagyu rib eye slices, gorgeously grilled to medium-rare glory, sumptuously and surprisingly succulent for a set lunch offering.

Other options span favourites like Thai Laksa, Pad Thai and Pad Gaprow with Rice to Clear Boat Noodles, Bah Mee Pok Noodles, Pad Kimao Drunken Noodles (pictured above, wok-fried kwayteow with chopped beef tenderloin, chillies, basil and fresh lime) and more, a diverse and distinctive repertoire at RM22.90++ per dish (add RM8 to enjoy the Wagyu Radna Beef Noodles). The set lunches also come with a house-made drink and dessert of the day, with lovely possibilities like floral-shaped jellies.

When we visited Ekkamai slightly past 2pm, the lunch crowd remained robust, with some staying on for the restaurant's Manis Teh Time session, pairing a choice of Thai sweet-tooth temptation with two cups of coffee and/or tea for only RM19++. Indulgences include Thai Tako (coconut milk and water chestnut pudding); Steamed Banana And Tapioca; Khao Niaw Sangkaya (sticky rice with coconut custard); Khao Tom Mat (sticky rice steamed with banana, crowned with desiccated coconut) and more.

From Tako to Tacos: By the time tea is over, it might be worth sticking around for dinner, especially with engaging concoctions like the Tom Yum Tacos (RM22), a Thai-Mex triumph of crispy tortillas stuffed with tom-yum-spiced crispy dried shrimp and pomelo salad, pleasantly piquant. The Tom Yum Tacos are new to the menu, as are other originals like Thai Crispy Noodles - a Cantonese-influenced 'Kongfu Chow,' Duck Kiamchai, and Josper-Grilled Charcoal Prawn In Shell.

Many thanks to Ekkamai for brightening up our weekday with its lunch and tea. Selected food photos in this post are courtesy of Ekkamai.

Ekkamai
8, Jalan Batai, Plaza Batai, Bukit Damansara, Kuala Lumpur. Tel: +603-2095-2772
34, Level G2, Publika, Solaris Dutamas, Kuala Lumpur. Tel: +603-6203-9883

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Khorkhog, Mongolia

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Khorkhog is Mongolia's traditional barbecue, prepared for primal pleasure - free-range meat like mutton and horse, sweetly gamy, cooked with hot stones and water in metal containers over fire. The fat is the best part of the horse.


This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Guang, The 19 USJ City Mall

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Japanese fusion fun makes for memorable meals at Guang: Crunchy-crusted pizzas come blanketed with thin slices of shabu-shabu-style pork, plus minced pork and lap cheong (RM33), Hokkien Mee is reinterpreted as Hokkien Udon, stewed with pork oil and broth for sweet-savoury slickness, complete with crispy pork lard, prawns and an onsen egg (RM22).

Tempura might typically be a guilty deep-fried indulgence, but it's made doubly decadent here as Bacon Tempura - bite into the batter to reveal smoky cured pork belly strips, a bar snack gone hog-wild (RM18). The calorie count climbs even further with Guang's Kyoto Kurly Fries, matched with earthy soy truffle mayo (RM16), and the egg enthusiast's tamago topped with tobiko, mentaiko sauce, furikake, fried garlic and teriyaki sauce (RM16).

Guang
The 19 USJ City Mall, Persiaran Kewajipan, Usj 19, 47620 Subang Jaya, Selangor. Daily, 2pm-130am.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

AIM Cafe, Petaling Jaya

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AIM Cafe is part of an autism therapy centre, run by five Malaysians who hope to use this space to provide vocational training for young individuals with autism - the initials AIM stand for Autism In Malaysia. It's currently open only on Thursday and Friday evenings and all day long on weekends, as its founders hold day jobs on weekdays.

The venue is calm, friendly and relaxing, with Gula Melaka - brought in from the southern state - as a star ingredient in its sweet offerings, including waffles (RM14.90), cheesecakes (RM9.90-RM11.90) and with milk (RM7.90), the components of a pleasant cafe experience.

AIM Cafe PJ
8, First Floor, Jalan 17/54, Section 17, Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Thurs-Fri, 5pm-10pm; Sat-Sun, 11am-10pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Helado Desserts Cafe, Plaza Arkadia

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KL's first sweets stop to exclusively showcase New Zealand's Much Moore ice cream brand, Helado (Spanish for ice cream) is founded by a team of Malaysians who fell in love with the Kiwis' ice cream while travelling in the Land of the Long White Cloud.

Expect award-winning flavours that richly embody the NZ spirit, such as Hokey Pokey, as well as smooth, crowd-pleasing favourites like Salted Caramel Seduction, Maple Fudge With Walnuts, Boysenberry Ripple and Limonata Cheesecake - satisfying stuff from an Auckland-based company that's reputedly been producing ice cream for more than three decades.

A substantial tasting platter of three flavours costs RM35.30. The menu may be expanded to other meals eventually, as this friendly venue is also planning to offer 'suspended meals,' the system in which you pay in advance for a meal that someone else can claim for free later if they lack cash.


Be sure to check out the mural upstairs that's meant to depict rustic farm life in New Zealand.

Helado Desserts Cafe
D-G-10 Plaza Arkadia, Jalan Intisari Perdana, Desa ParkCity, Kuala Lumpur. Daily, 11am-11pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Ger Lunch, Mongolia

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Life is rustic in Mongolia's traditional ger tent dwellings, and so is lunch, with lovingly home-cooked meals of meat soups and salted milk tea as staples to warm both body and spirit.


This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com
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