Penang Curry Mee @ Bandar Menjalara, Kuala Lumpur

To find a good & genuine Penang style curry noodle in Kelang Valley is not easy. So far I found one in Okay Coffee shop" in SS2, one at Lorong Seratus Tahun @ another part of SS2 and now I found another one at Bandar Menjalara, Kuala Lumpur. When I say Penang style it means light & whitish curry soup which comes with pig's blood cube & other ingredients.
It would be lovely if there were mint leaves in it. Anyway the taste was good and delicious.
For a typical Penang Curry Mee it must come with pig's blood cubes, slices of cuttlefish, cockles, prawns, tau pok and a special thick & dark chilli paste normally in the spoon.
Hokkien Mee as they called it in Penang (KLites would call it Prawn Mee) is also available in this stall.Nothing really fantastic about this noodle but truly a Penang style prawn noodle and I like it.

Curry Mee Stall @ Restoran
Ho Ho Steamboat
Jalan Medan Putra 3
Bandar Menjalara
Kuala Lumpur
GPS : 3.190648,101.625203

Chocolate Cupcakes with Mango Buttercream

Where should I start. The topic for this months Aspiring Bakers is Enjoy Cupcake, and Ive got something to say.

Now, what defines a cupcake? Whats the character of a cupcake? In my opinion, all cupcakes SHOULD / MUST have a frosting of any type, either filled or iced on top. Any naked cupcakes or muffins ARE NOT (and should not be) CUPCAKES. Its not about the method, nor if its butter or oil based. If Isabella from Junior Masterchef Au can make a cupcake using cream instead of butter, you know, cupcakes doesnt need to comply to just butter or oil.(actually this cupcake recipe below mixes wet and dry ingredient like the said muffin method., so does it NOT make it a cupcake?) Or have you seen the Cupcake Wars judges served with deliberately unfrosted cupcakes saying they are cupcakes ? See, I get very sensitive when people talk about naked cupcakes as cupcakes. If its a naked cupcake, its just a cake in a paper cup. If its a cheesecake in a cupcake, its just a cheesecake.period.

Ok that is point number 1.

Now theres point number 2.

I know its non of my business on what other people bake (and it isnt yours either to what I say), but doesnt aspiring in Aspiring Bakers mean something? To aspire, is to direct ones hopes or ambitions towards achieving something. If baking what! you alr eady bake all the time means achieving something, then it defeats the entire purpose of this expanding group. Im not saying that one needs to bake some mega awesome super difficult cupcake, but its about making some changes and be daring to attempt something new. If for all your life youve only baked butter / vanilla cupcakes. Why not try chocolate! If youve been baking cupcakes (or I call them muffins) without frosting, why not make a simple buttercream or whip up some cream and frost it! If youve been making buttercream the american way all these time, why not try another method or medium, like Swiss meringue / Italian meringue / French meringue/ ganache? If youve been making some awesome cupcakes all these while, why not, make something different by inserting a filling, or make a third element to accompany it, or a fondant figurine? See, at every stage or level you are at, regardless whether you are a professional or an amateur, there are always something new to try, something different to attempt and something bold to shout out to. And I think that should be the whole point of the group. To encourage people to get out of their comfort zone and at least, make something out of their normal bakes, and not treat it like a who-has-the-most-post-thus-higher-hits-and-comments competition. Its just a matter of quality vs quantity.

And with all that, I DO NOT have any intentions to make myself a step higher from you, or start anyunnecessarywar. As a blogger, it is my responsibility to share, learn and inspire.

Now, If youre still interested in scrolling down, please do. If you feel like giving me a tight slap, please close this window.

Look, its just my own opinion. You may or may not agree with me, its up to you.

Cup! cakes oh cupcakes. Ive had been making you for my entire 1 year of working. It was a waking up at 5am, drive to work and bake bake bake till its time to go home process for the whole year. Thousands and thousands have been mixed, baked and frosted. At one point, I was totally disgusted when I see a cupcake. A few years later where I am getting a balance of making all bakes, it gets a little better. And because cupcakes has a special meaning to me, Ive decided to join this months Aspiring bakers challenge (Ok Ive wanted to join last months, and last last months as well but just never got the time to make them)

I reckon if Im going to make a cupcake not for commercial purpose, then I might as well make it over the top. This one here is not enough, Im thinking of something even more elaborate (If I have the time to make it).

Its a Chocolate cupcake fill and frosted with Mango buttercream (pate a bomb) and pineapple and chili mango phyllo parcel. (argh, I should have made it like a ravioli so it looks like a hat on top!) ; and some with oven dried pineapple, drizzled with mango sauce.

The names kinda complicated but it is so easy to make this cupcake. French meringue buttercream is my absolute favourite. Its the same used in Opera and it is another special cake that holds a special place in my heart (With all these cakes and all occupying my heart, there wont be any more space when I find a partner. LOL!!!!) I also tried using the parchment paper as the paper cup cause it has this rustic look (and cheaper)

Chocolate Cupcakes with Mango Buttercream

(makes 12)

Components

1. Chocolate Cupcakes
2. French Meringue Buttercream with Mango
3. Dried Pineapple garniture
4. Chili, pineapple and mango phyllo triangle
5. Mango sauce

Chocolate Cupcakes

30g cocoa powder
15g dark chocolate, melted (Valrhona guanaja 70%)
160ml boiling water
2 eggs
80g sour cream
1 tsp vanilla
150g cake flour
150g brown sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
113g unsalted butter, soft

1. Preheat oven to 160 C. In a bowl, combine cocoa powder, boiling water and stir till smooth. Add in melted choclate and stir.

2. In another bowl, lightly whisk eggs and sour cream. Pour in 1/4 of the chocoalte mixture and stir

3. In the mixing bowl, beat the dry ingredients and the rest of cocoa mixture and softened butter on low speed. Then increase speed to medium and beat for 2 minutes, till lightly aerataed. Add in eggs in 3 batches. Scrape bowl and mix well (for about 1 to 1 1/2 mins)

4. Pour into paper cups at 3/4 full. Bake for about 15 minutes or till cooked.

French Meringue Buttercream with mango

1/2 medium mango, diced (or puree if you like)
3 egg yolks
100g caster sugar
30ml water
225g butter, cubed.
pinch of salt

1. In a pot, bring caster sugar and water to 118C at a medium heat.

2. When its about 105 C, whisk egg yolks in a mixing bowl till its light and volumed.

3. When the sugar syrup has reached 118C, slowly pour into egg yolks while whisking at the same time. Whisk till it doubles in volume and becomes thick (about 3-4 minutes). It will be slightly warm.

4. Add in butter slowly (1-2 at a time) into the pate a bomb and whisk. It will be soupy at first but just continue whisking till comes together.

5. Add in the mango and whisk away.

Dried pineapple

few slices of pineapple

1. Peel, and remove the pineapple eyes.

2. Slice thinly and pat dry.

3. Put them over a parchment paper or silpat and let it dry in the oven at 150 for 20 minutes, then flip over, another 10-20 minutes. This depends on the thickness of the pineapple. The thicker, the longer it takes.

Chili, pineapple and mango phyllo triangle

4 sheets phyllo pastry
1/4 cup melted butter
1 tbsp caster sugar
100g pineapple, cut to cubes
1/2 medium sized mango, cut to cubes
1/2 red chilli
2 tbsp caster sugar
1 tbsp water

1. Cut pineapple and mango into cubes. Slice red chilli into diagonal slits.

2. In a pan, cook caster sugar and water till it becomes a light caramel. Toss in the mango, pineapple and chili. Stir till its all coated with caramel. Turn off heat and set aside.

3. Cut phyllo pastry to 4 quarters. Take 1 sheet, brush with a little melted butter, place another sheet on top, brush with little melted butter, then add about 1 spoon of mango, pineapple mixture. Fold into a triangle then press lightly. Continue with the rest of the phyllo sheets and lay them all on a baking paper.

4. Bake at 180 C for about 20 minutes, or till theyre browned.

*Use and serve this immediately cause it will turn soggy after a while due to the liquid in the fruits.

Mango sauce

Heh, this one requires no recipe. Any leftover mango flesh, just blend it with some lemon juice, et voila you have a mango sauce!

Assemble

Chocolate cupcake, piped with mango buttercream, then place either a dried pineapple, or a phyllo triangle or both. Drizzle with mango sauce.

information

Double Battered Apple Doughnuts

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Given the choice between being home and not being home Im the girl that always chooses home.

Brooklyn is amazing. San Francisco is delicious. Baltimore is bonkers. Home is my heart. Home is where I keep my jar of Sharpie markers, my clean white sheets with the familiar smell, and my giant mankitten.

Home is also where I keep my fry thermometer and bowl of apples.

Home will come soon until then, I still have some new sights to put my eyes on. Until then please enjoy these fried apple things I made.

sf.bklyn.bmore

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Imagine what onion rings would taste like if they were made out of apples instead of onions and then topped with sugar.

Totally easy to imagine, mostly because its done and done right here.

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I never seem to have much luck with an apple corer. God made apple all wonky and crooked. The core never goes straight down. I use a small, 1-inch circular biscuit butter do chop the core out of apples.

See there? I just popped the holes out!

The beginning of apple doughnuts!

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This is a double battered creation. The first batter is a milky cinnamon sugar batter. This lays the base for the second batter crispy panko bread crumbs.

The milk batter adds sugar, spice and flavor, the panko bread crumbs keep the doughnuts crispy. Also anything double battered is inherently awesome.

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They look just like onion rings, but theyre dessert!

Ps. I also consider onion rings to be dessert but maybe thats just me.

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I love to sprinkle these fried apples with powdered sugar, and serve hot out of the fryer. The batter is spiced and crunchy, the apple inside is tender with just a hint of crunch. Theyre cooked but still maintain a bit of crunch.

Crispy Apple Doughnuts

makes about 24 rings

Print this Recipe!

For the Panko:

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2 cup s panko bread crumbs

2 tablespoons granulated sugar

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

For the Milky Batter:

1 cup flour

2 tablespoons cornstarch

1/2 cup granulated sugar

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

3/4 cup milk (I used 2% milk)

1 large egg

4 Fuji or Granny Smith apples

oil for frying

In a medium bowl, whisk together panko crumbs, sugar, and cinnamon. I like to use my fingers to crush the panko crumbs into a finer breadcrumb. Set aside.

In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cornstarch, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking powder, and salt. In a small bowl, whisk together milk and egg. Add the wet mixture to the dry mixture and whisk until no lumps remain. Set aside to rest while you peel and slice the apples.

Peel the apples and slice into about 1/3-inch thick rings. Use a small biscuit cutter to cut out the core. You can also peel the apples and use a apple corer to core the apple before slicing it into rings.

Soak apple slices in milky batter mixture. Set the panko mixture next to the milky batter. Heat a heavy bottom sauce pan with 2-inches of oil to 350 degrees F, measuring heat with a candy/fry thermometer.

When oil has reached 350 degrees F, use pair of tongs to remove a few rings from the milky batter, and coat in panko crumbs. Once throughly coated in crumbs, use tongs to carefully place rings in hot oil. Fry about 4 rings at once. Fry until golden brown, flip over and fry until golden. Remove from oil, place on a paper towel and fry the rest of the apple rings. Bring the oil back up to 350 degrees before adding additional apple slices.

Keep the fried apples warm in a 200 degree oven while the others fry. Sprinkle generously with powdered sugar and serve.


Govinda's @ Brisbane CBD

It has certainly been a crazy week for me.


Although not cast in stone, throughout the week I have been thinking about a potential move away from Brisvegas. Look if it was 6 months ago and I was single, I be happy to pack up my bags immediately. Now, I have got furniture to think about transporting and whether my other half will find a job too. Of course it goes without saying, Brisbane and I have gone from an unwilling relationship to being good friends.


I guess that is also compounded by work piling on tables by the day. Oh well such is life.


When it is all official, readers, you will be the first to find out.


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Now back to food, gosh, don't think there was ever a period I haven't blogged for a whole week and a bit.


Friday afternoon and somehow or rather Govinda's became the lunch spot that day for the Wife and I.


Apparently, it is a all you can eat vegetarian buffet although I couldn't see any description of that sort on the menu board. The first serving is done canteen style and dished out for you and if the rather big portion doesn't satisfy you (I didn't see a single one that day go back for seconds), that would be the time to confirm whether it is all you can eat.


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For AUD 12 you get the above, dessert and a drink. Not too bad.

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Open up the Pappadum and you get an assortment of vegetarian dishes piled on rice. Overall, not fantastic but rather consoling that it was all vegetarian and it should make me more healthy.

Take note that the assortment of items are fixed according to day, so you might want to drop by on different days, unless you are happy with eating the same dish.


If vegetarian indian is not your thing, they do a couple of vegetarian western dishes, like lasagna, pastries and chips.

Address and contact details:

Govinda's on Urbanspoon

Verdict: 3 stars out of 5 stars. Something different is what I would call it since my staple lunch diet over the last week has been sushi roll after sushi roll.

BBQ @ Chef Choi Restaurant, Jalan Ampang, Kuala Lumpur

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I almost forgot that I had these gorgeous pictures lurking around in my SD card.


Luckily, I managed to pull these out from the murky depths of my memory card to blog about this.


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Strangely enough, despite this dinner being held many moons ago, the memory of everything has been etched in the brain.


We started off sensibly with the green salad. Crunchy lettuce leaves jostled for space with glistening red cherry tomatoes and sliced cucumbers on the large plate. It was no ordinary salad as we had a choice of two unusual and delicious salad dressings, first a creamy cilantro lemon and a light sesame shoyu one.


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One of the biggest highlights of the meal were these fluffy golden brown yorkshire puddings.


These were perfectly risen and incredibly addictive especially with the brown gravy served on the side.


Honest! ly, if I was not expecting a huge feast I would have happily eaten these crispy battered puddings for dinner that night.


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The BBQ menu here (available on special pre-order) features the best of moo, baa and oink...

Not a place that serves anything of lesser origins, the meats are all of premium quality and so well prepared that it can give the best steakhouse in KL a run for its monies.



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For instance, steaks in KL seem to be puny and thinly cut that I often wonder if they can qualify for that term, steak.


Chef Choi's steak florentine is one hefty version - two fingers thick - juicy with a pink centre - cooked to meaty perfection that will have a steak lover crying for more.


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The steak florentine scores in terms of flavour but the prime rib on the bone wins the hearts (and tummies) of those who prefer a more tender cut.


Both are equally good but a little different in their ways.


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Don't forget the oink...in a form of a crunchy roast pork belly Chef Choi style.


Just a shade dry, it scored beautifully though in the crunchy crackling section. I'm officially in love with that golden brown crunch. Maybe I can be like Oliver and ask for more please?


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Even the baa gets the best treatment ever - infused with rosemary to give it a hint of that herb and studded with garlic cloves.


The meat is juicy and cooked to pink perfection that needs no embellishment except a grind of black pepper.


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We also dine on rich buttery boulangere potatoes. Each mouthful is simply heavenly that you don't care the starch and butter goes to your hips straight away.


There is also spaghetti alla vongole and a Spanish treat in the form of seafood paella, all in its fluffy glory and nary a soggy grain that can be usually found in versions served in restaurants here.


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Last but not least, there's a touch of French in the desserts with a decadent apple tartin.


The classic one has a beautiful flaky puff pastry with sliced apples drizzled with even more decadence in the form of fresh cream


Ahhhh, definitely a meal to remember forever and ever.


Chef Choi Restaurant
159 Jalan Ampang
Kuala Lumpur


Tel: 03-2163 5866


(Non Halal. The BBQ menu is only available for special order. Call ahead to arrange. For more pictures see the Flickr set.)


* The food was paid by the restaurant.




La Vie En Rose & PH Pastry House

A Tale of Two Houses: two very different restaurants _ La Vie En Rose & PH Pastry House _ opened this month, sharing one similarity: both were transformed from residential bungalows into beautiful eateries that could become firm favorites for KL's foodies.

Let's kick off with La Vie En Rose; an abandoned location for 15 years at Jalan Raja Chulan, this is now an immensely charming outlet where strains of Edith Piaf's signature song waft across the romantic alfresco setting in the evening.

La Vie En Rose joins the ranks of French restaurants like Le Bouchon, Cafe Cafe & Ma Maison, dishing out delicious traditional fare cooked by Toulouse-born chef Jean Michel Fraisse.

Complimentary bread with duck rillettes. Fraisse is no stranger to KL; he landed here in the 1990s, eventually founding the French Culinary School in Asia & spearheading eateries like Cuisine Studio & Urban Picnic.

Pate en croute with sweet & sour pearl onions, red cabbage, mustard seeds & blackcurrant chutney (RM22++). Artisan bread is painstakingly baked on the premises, while many other premium ingredients are imported, but prices are far from crippling; a three-course dinner without wine should cost below RM150.

Musketeers' salad: duck confit (with smoked duck bacon), sauteed mushrooms & violet dressing (RM28++). La Vie En Rose's menu is a tribute to time-honored recipes, some of which Fraisse learned from his mother; this is the type of hearty, no-nonsense nosh that we envision when we watch a movie like Ratatouille.

Chicken Marengo, a recipe favored by Napoleon Bonaparte _ grain-fed free-range chicken, sauteed with yabbies & tarragon-flavored tomato concassee (RM58++). Our only complaint about La Vie En Rose: while driving here, customers must make a perilously sharp turn up a hill (slightly past a Shell gas station, before the St Andrew's Presbyterian Church). Parking is scarce, though La Vie En Ros! e is wor king to resolve these issues with city council officials.

Tea-smoked Muscovy duck breast with warm organic green lentils (RM58++). Notice a pattern in this post? We prioritized poultry for our orders, but there was no tiresome feeling of deja vu, since each recipe was uniquely enjoyable in its own fashion.

Wishful drinking: beer served in champagne glasses. But it's no regular booze; reputedly the first beer created to pair with food, Estrella Damm Inedit is the brainchild of Damm brew masters & Ferran Adria, Juli Soler & El Bulli's sommeliers' team (RM120++ for 750ml).

La Vie En Rose currently opens for dinner, Tuesdays through Saturdays, with last orders at 10:30 p.m., and for brunch on Sundays. It also sells everything from olive oil to pasta machines. We have faith that it'll prove itself to be one of 2011's best new restaurants.

OK, next up: here's a look at PH Pastry House, a former family residence at Imbi that's cultivating a chic, contemporary bakery-cafe vibe.

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PH Pastry's trump card might be macarons; by the end of November, this outlet _ run by a trio of Malaysian entrepreneurs _ promises to introduce funky flavors of savory macarons, such as foie gras, black & white truffle, extra virgin olive oil & smoked salmon with dill.

In the meantime, try the "Guilty Confession" Sarawak pepper macaron, comprising salted caramel, apricot ganache, sea salt & pepper _ sweetly sticky, with a subtly spicy aftertaste. It costs a hefty RM7.90, but PH offers cheaper varieties (rose, green tea, dark choc) for RM3.90.

Pumpkin soup (RM9++). PH Pastry's business hours will please many customers; breakfast starts at 7 a.m. daily, with the outlet remaining open through 10 p.m. Last orders are at 9 p.m.

Pasta Puttanesca, with smoked salmon, egg, anchovies, tomatoes & capers (RM13.90++). PH Pastry's food is fair, considering the prices; the manager says the menu is a work in progress, but expect to see everything from pizzas to poached cod fish here in the months ahead.

All in all, PH Pastry has potential. Let's put it this way: have dinner at La Vie En Rose, but for a casual breakfast or lunch, PH Pastry might prove perfect.

Best bets for beverages at PH Pastry: milkshakes, coffee & affogato.

At PH Pastry, beer is available, but not wine, for now.

La Vie En Rose,
39, Jalan Raja Chulan, Kuala Lumpur.
Tel: 03-2078-3883

PH PastryHouse,
54, Jalan Utara, Off Jalan Imbi, Kuala Lumpur.
Tel: 03-2141-2208