Showing posts with label Carpenter Street. Show all posts

LUNCH' TIME CRAVINGS: SAIGON FUSION, VIETNAMESE CUISINE

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G
oin’ bonkers is the word I would use when someone is able to eat the same dish every day for a long period of time. Not in the case for Allan, the owner of Saigon Fusion though! He could not get enough of Pho when he spent his time at University in Cambodia, having a bowl of it almost every day through his time there. He loved it so much so, that when he learned that the Pho he was eating came native to Vietnam, he travelled there to learn how to make it, and learn how to make it he did.

Many years later after he discovered the need for foreign comfort food in his favourite street, Saigon Fusion was born. With the help of his wife, they make the lovely power couple responsible for one of the few Vietnamese restaurants available in Kuching.

As for its name, unfortunately this trip I didn’t get a chance to have the Fusion section of Saigon Fusion, but I did promise Allan that I would come back for their Fusion dinner menu. What I did come here for is authentic Vietnamese flavours and dishes, so shall we get pho-kin’ get started?


To prepare my palate for some Vietnamese food, I ordered a cup of the Vietnamese Premium Coffee. It is a drink that is a blend of Vietnamese butter roasted beans and the all elusive Civet coffee bean poop, Kopi Luwak and lots and lots of condensed milk.




The drink itself is pretty interesting, as the roasted butter is quite prominent as it adds a good buttery salty aroma while the taste of Luwak feels absent as the distinct nutty and earthy flavour of it is lost amidst the strong butter roasted coffee. The preparation for one’s taste buds for sweetness has to be mentioned as the condensed milk per coffee ratio is almost 1:3, so the apparent Vietnamese key here is to either ask for less milk or to slowly spoon the unwanted milk out.


If coffee is not your thing and you want something refreshing, the water infused with pandan and fresh herbs comes free. It is mildly sweet but wholly thirst quenching and worth thickening the skin on your face for many refills. Another tip is you being able to ask for a jug of it, if you know that you can drink that much water or to share among friends.


The mark of every Vietnamese restaurant has to be the quality of its pho. I have not had much Vietnamese pho-d in my lifetime, but it is common knowledge that what Vietnamese broths are known for is balance. In the case of pho, it would be the balance of rich beef stock with a deep, concentrated savoury sweetness; the freshness of herbs; and the acidity of lime and fish sauce to cut through it.

In the case of the broth in Saigon Fusion; the richness of beef is not as present as I’d like it to be, while sweetness is something rather prominent but not sickening as it is from the natural flavour of onions that are visually present.



According to Allan, the region from where he learned the trade enjoyed flavours that lean more on the sweeter end and that the flavour of his stock evolves depending on the time of day that you’re eating it – which means that it gets beefier the longer it sits in the pot. Note to self, come back again at night.


The tender, chewy and wobbly beef tendon is also slightly sweet while the rice noodles are just slightly overcooked as they lacked that springy texture that one longs for. If you have a small appetite, this is a comfortable portion for two.



If you are looking for something less noodle based, Broken Rice is what you will be looking for. Broken Rice is a staple in Vietnam, excluding Pho and it is to them what Chap Fan or Chicken Rice is to us but mind you, much better. A Broken Rice dish usually comes with an egg, marinated meat (usually beef or pork) and pickled salad and a drizzle of sweet or fish sauce. In the case here, we’re having Sugarcane Shrimp as the marinated meat.

Broken Rice is popular in Vietnam due to how cheap it is as it consists of rice that is damaged from the mill. It is also cheaper than full grain, as the latter has a longer shelf life, which is important as Vietnam is a large exporter of rice. What started as eating leftovers became a much loved staple. Here in Saigon Fusion, Broken Rice is a lot nicer on the eyes as opposed to the messy but more authentic version of this Vietnamese street dish.

Let’s fix that, shall we?


Much better. As you can see, the egg is light and thin while cooked nicely as the yolk flows and coats the rice nicely when broken. The pickled salad is fresh while slightly sweet and sour, but the Sugarcane Shrimp is where the dish shines. The mince is juicy and fatty, while managing to be both crumbly and juicy. Eating it from the sugarcane emits the natural sweetness from the sugarcane as well. I would gladly have this as a patty to go in between buns as a burger as well.



Finally, we’ll have the Summer Spring Rolls or Vietnamese Spring Rolls to finish this meal off. Unfortunately, the Spring Rolls are bland while most flavour comes from the Sweet and Sour Sauce and the Peanut Sauce (delightfully, creamy and nutty).




The elements seen through the clear rice skin unfortunately are not seasoned well. The prawns and pork strips were rubbery, slightly overcooked and bland. The fresh greens did not do much either other than provide a slight crunch, while the rice skin was sticky and very chewy. For RM18, you will be the judge of whether or not this is worth what you are paying for.

Saigon Fusion is a restaurant with much to offer and is definitely worth a few more trips to try as many things on their menu, especially for Dinner. Their operating Hours are from 11am - 2pm (Lunch) and 6pm to 10pm (Dinner), but do drop a call to Allan at 0198891139 to either book a table, or to check if they are open.

Also check out their Facebook page for further information and updates by clicking HERE.







CARPENTER STREET SERIES: THE WRONG PLACE

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Y
ou would not be the first to judge the rather new food establishment “Wrong Place” as just a gimmicky name. Similarly, you would not be the first to realise that it is anything but just a gimmicky name, but rather an establishment that serves to challenge misconceptions and to uphold the phrase, “Do not judge a book by its cover”.  Wrong Place you will realize is anything but the wrong place to be in.



This is, if not the first to embody the indie-rustic vibe that the new wave of cafés along Carpenter Street is known for. What does set it apart is the ever changing and evolving nature of its look and feel. It should not be a surprise if you notice something different around you in this diner of sorts from new chairs, furniture in different locations, and different artwork from when you made your last visit.

This constant change here reflects the personality of owner Ivan Chen who believes that sometimes, a different path to your destination does not mean that it is wrong. Changing and using different routes make getting to the destination exciting and fresh. In this manner, different and ever changing styles keeps your dining experience exciting and fresh as well.


Similar to its décor, the food has also gone through a few specials and changes since its inception, and the ones that are sampled in this article were recommended for its originality in relation to food that is served in other restaurants.


We’ll begin with a signature drink, the Peanut Butter and Banana Smoothie. It is worth noting that you would be foolish to underestimate what RM8 could get you here, considering the fact that at that price in some cafés, RM8 could get you only a simple black coffee at best. If you are having a meal here, it would be wise to share it if you do not have a big appetite.

Why would you need a big appetite one might wonder? This Smoothie is thick. But in a good way. You would be hard pressed to find a drink elsewhere with flavours as authentic as these, with the goodness of savoury peanut butter and sweet banana just hitting you in the taste buds. Again, this is a good thing. There are of course other choices as well, and I am sure they carry flavours as authentic as this one.

Their food menu as you will come to notice is a pretty interesting mix of local and western diner and street food. Once again, throw away your ideas of a conceptualised café/diner/restaurant out the window. This is the wrong place for that kind of idea. Instead, you will notice quality throughout but for an example of uncommon Kuching food, we’ll be going through a few recommended items. These items will come with an À la carte choice or with either an addition of salad or fries for an extra RM2.

While the fries are fairly standard but the salad is rather lacklustre being a mixture of pale and purple lettuce and a couple onions while being squirted over with some dressing. It’s nothing to sing about, but for RM2 you do get what you pay for in terms of a low cost way of getting something fresh on your plate. 



The Mary Lamb Rose Stew is a hot dog of sorts that is a long bun topped with stewed lamb, carrots, potatoes, onions and some lettuce. The lamb is scented and flavoured well with the rosemary that it is stewed in, till juicy and sliced to bite sized chunks for easy eating.

The through stewing process brings out the sweetness of the onions and the carrots in the lamb and rosemary stew, making the filling even more luscious. The bun, however, doesn’t do much to add flavour and is not dense enough to comfortably hold the stew. 



The Chili Dawg is another interesting menu item as it takes your conventional hot dog and tops it off with a Chilli Con Carne of sorts (minus the heat) and beef Bolognese. The flavour is slightly sweet and sour from the tomato and the mince is still moist and fatty, which is adds well to the plump sausage hidden beneath. The bun is similar to the Mary Lamb Rose Stew, but as it does not hold as much filling as the former, it does a good job in holding in everything in.

Although obviously inspired by the traditional Chilli Dog, its biggest difference is how messy the Chilli is, which is not at all. It’s neatly arranged and in three uniformed scoops which makes for easier eating and sharing, if that’s what you’re into. That is of course if you don’t devour it before dividing it for your friends to try.



The last item we’ll be talking about is the Veggie Burger. Unique in the fact that it actually is a burger as this sandwich has a patty, but unlike most patties, this patty does not consist of meat.

The blend of shitake, tofu, long beans and carrots that are coated in panko makes up this patty of sorts. The tofu provides a soft body while the long beans and carrots provide savoury and sweet flavours respectively. It is also a delight to have the panko provide a light crisp. The patty sandwiched between two soft buns makes for a delicious vegetarian meal.

The Wrong Place overall is a delightful place to have a meal if you like being surprised by a delicious assortment of food. The concept may change from time to time here, but the goal will always be to provide the best meal possible.

The Wrong Place is open Daily from 12:00pm to 12:00am except on Fridays when it is open from 2:00pm to 12:00am.

For more information, you may head over to their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/wrongplace.carpenterst/info?tab=page_info or their website at http://www.wrongplace.webs.com/ 


The original content of this article belongs to The Borneo Post SEED and can be found HERE. Head on there by clicking the picture below for more great content and happenings in and about in Sarawak.




OLD KUCHING, CARPENTER STREET PART 5: ALADIN CHICKEN RICE

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I
n our final entry for our OLD KUCHING: CARPENTER STREET series, it might seem strange that we’re ending with something that doesn’t sound very Kuching at all. If you’re thinking like the many of us that a shop named Aladin would serve something Middle Eastern or at least gimmicky Disney products, then you’d be like the many of us that got it wrong. If just by their name, you guessed that they sell Chicken Rice, you’d be one of the few whom I’d also ask for advice on lottery tickets.



Yes I agree that it is a strange name, but just like its name – this shop embodies the fact that good things come in strange packages. In this case, really good things. Though tattooed up tough guys carrying knives may be intimidating at first, especially if you’re a specky skinny 20 something like I am, put that fear aside. Do that and proceed to request for some food and watch this charming family-run business cut up what they’ve been cutting up best for thirty something years. Chicken. 



For a while now, Aladin has been touted as serving the best Chicken Rice in Kuching but it may be unfair to say so and compare, as Aladin does not serve traditional Chicken Rice. As the guys over at Aladin call it, it is as original Aladin as Chicken Rice gets. One might wonder how different Chicken Rice can be from place to place as it is just put plainly, chicken and rice. You may be right, but when any food is served with love and care, it becomes more than just the sum of its parts.


When ordering any portion of Chicken Rice, what you will have that comes with it, is a helping of some Chilli Sauce and their signature Black Sweet Sauce. The Chilli Sauce is a perfect addition on top of something mild like their Steamed Chicken. It is because the strong flavours of Cilipadi and vinegar from the Chilli Sauce adds to flavours not present in the Steamed Chicken, as opposed to clashing with them. You may of course spray this on whatever you please, but that’s a personal choice.

The Black Sweet Sauce obviously has some heat judging from the Chilli seeds that can be seen, while the slight sticky consistency is most probably due to the presence of sugar. This is perfect for either the Roasted Chicken or the Fried Chicken, as the sweetness does well to lift the flavours of the already strong flavoured proteins.


As for the rice that also comes with every portion, it is pleasant while being cooked well in a manner that is similar to that of the Hainans with mild flavours of garlic, sesame oil and chicken stock. Though pretty basic, it accompanies the juicy chicken (which is all moist and juicy I might add) that it comes present with very well.

Steamed Chicken RM11.50 for this portion of chicken with one bowl of rice

We’ll start with personally my favourite version of the chicken that they cook, which is the Steamed Chicken. 




Rarely do people get Steamed Chicken right like it is done here, whereby the chicken is drizzled with a sauce that makes the already soft chicken even softer than it already tastes, while still being firm and juicy. The sauce that covers it has a flavour likened to Chinese Rice Wine and Sesame Oil that is quite common with Drunken Chicken.


What it tastes like is a mixture of sweetness that you get from wine, while having savoury nutty flavours of sesame oil. Added with the flavours of chicken that’s cooked well, results in a stark contrast to the usual tasteless Steamed Chicken that is usually in the market.

Roasted Chicken Rice RM5 per plate



The Roasted Chicken does not hold back either. The meat within is juicy as usual, while the skin is where this choice shines. 




It is not very common to have Roasted Chicken which has skin as crisp and light as this, with the seasoning of five spice and sweetness carrying the delectable tasting chicken.

Fried Chicken Rice RM7 per plate


 Last but not least, let us talk about the chicken of choice for most of y’all. The Fried Chicken. I will not lie. I can absolutely see why this always sells out within the first 2 hours, as not only is it juicy but just like the skin of the Roasted Chicken, it is delicious. Delicious in its simplicity, the skin is light but crunchy, with strong flavours of ginger. That chicken, when topped with the Black Sweet Sauce makes for a sandwich of textures.


What I mean by sandwich of textures, is the sticky layer of Black Sweet Sauce covering the light crunchy gingery skin that wraps around the juicy succulent meat of the chicken. Now, for my followers overseas who are reading this in the late of night, I hope you’re feeling hungry.

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Aladin has earned a strong following over the course of time that it has been open, garnering support from young and old customers for good reason. I could list a few starting from their bright smiles, colourful tattoos, charming old layout all the way down to how good the food they serve is.

They open daily from 10am – 2pm and 6pm – 9pm. You’ll need to come early to grab yourself a table big enough for your family, and if you have to wait – It will be worth it.

If you liked this post, please like, share and comment. Much love!

Urban Palate posts every Tuesdays around 7pm - 8pm Malaysian time.

OLD KUCHING: CARPENTER STREET PART 4. BLACK BEAN COFFEE

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H
idden away at the edge of Carpenter Street, you might be wondering why such a small café might be full (It’s not just because they only have three tables). Being a café located in the part of town where cafés are usually designed as “tourist bait”, selling expensive foreign coffee equivalent to black watery dirt and faking their way into unsuspecting hearts with their “local” decor, Kuching-ites may feel wary in trusting just any café. Besides, who could blame them?

If you can suspend your scepticism and stop by to soak in the stained columns, white coated walls and charming setup, this shop which epitomises Classic Kuching might just entice you to grab a seat. If you have, you might have also been enticed to grab a cup of coffee. Once you’ve had your coffee and taken your first sip, congratulations! You now understand why so many stay and why it’s worth the wait even when this place is full. You now understand that this is not just any “tourist bait”. Quite the opposite. You’re experiencing the real deal of what Local Sarawak Coffee is like.

Opened in 2001, Black Bean has managed to take local Liberica coffee beans to new heights by steering away from the norm of promoting Arabica beans. Arabica beans have rightly so been the Coffee species of choice, yielding a large array of different flavour and aroma profiles. What Liberica beans do provide though is a different matter. Not better, but different. What kind of different though? The good kind of different.


Unlike beans that we are used to that are pre-roasted and packed for us, Black Bean is one of the two prominent cafés that roast their own beans. What in-house roasting does is present us with a flavour that is exactly the way the owner intended for us to taste. It is the attention to detail from the way these beans are personally picked after acquiring them from a local plantation, to the way it is roasted to form the flavour you are picking up with your palates.

Now the way you’ll want to pick up these flavours starts from a single cup of espresso which is the base for our favourite coffee drinks. The water to coffee ratio in the espresso here is estimated to be 1:3 so it makes for easier drinking and upon first sip, you will want to take a whiff of your coffee before spraying it on your tongue by said sipping.


Before we continue, I might add that it takes years to pick up all the notes from your cup of coffee and though I do not have the experience, I can do my best tell you what most of us who are not coffee aficionados might pick up.

You will be able to pick up hints of berry and nutty aromas while the flavour spraying your tongue will carry an earthy and mildly dark chocolaty flavour. It must be noted as well that this espresso is a blend of Liberica and Robusta and the latter brings about a pleasant bitterness that we are so fond of in our coffee. This is only possible due to the care that is taken from the roasting process all the way to manually pulling the espresso unlike many cafés you might encounter. You will not find many places in Kuching that not only do this, but proudly serve beans that make up 2% of coffee produced in the world.

There are many things that could have gone wrong with this cup, but for all the things that could have gone wrong.. What Black Bean has done by no easy feat, is create a good cup of coffee.

Now because the base of your coffee is done right, we know that we do not have to worry too much about how the rest of our coffee choices will turn out.



As for these choices, you may choose to add brown sugar which is a good additive if you like something a little sweeter while adding a fuller body, or even milk that Black Bean does well to add enough of said flavour and body that you require to enhance your coffee experience.

Iced Latte 
Iced Cappucino
Cappucino 
Latte
Regardless of what you choose to add, I will never go so far to say that these additives will contaminate your coffee experience, but done well like in Black Bean, these will enhance what you enjoy most with your coffee and trust me; Black Bean is one of those rare cafés that does it well.

Black Bean is open from Monday to Saturday and from 9:00am to 6:00pm.


You may find them using the following Google Map Location found below and if you have liked reading this post, please like, share and comment to share your views! Much Love!