Local Delights: Ching Han Guan – Famous in Ipoh, Malaysia.

Dad came home one night with these biscuits after a trip to Ipoh. “They are famous in Ipoh.” He said. I was allowed to eat most of them as they get it fairly often due to Dad’s business travels. Good thing too, as these were yummy beyond belief.

They have a lovely crisp pastry on the outside that crumbles at the slightest touch. Besides the obvious meat floss and lotus paste in the biscuit, it also contains a salted egg yolk in it. Yum!

Beware of eating too many though, they are ‘heaty’ and can bring on sore throats!

I’d love to visit Ching Han Guan bakery at some point – from the sounds of it, they have more than just these that are famous and popular there.

Ching Han Guan was founded in Ipoh, Malaysia in 1949. To read more about Ching Han Guan, you can visit their website here.

To visit them, you can find Ching Han Guan at:

145, Jalan Sultan Iskandar (Hugh Low Street), 30000 Ipoh, Perak.

Eating out: Lok lok @ Pulau Tikus Market, Penang

What exactly is Lok lok? To me, lok lok is like steamboat – except your ingredients are all on skewers and your soup base is really just boiling water.

And that’s exactly what you see in the above picture. (Photo credit to Desmond). A table with a cooker fitted in the middle, a pot of boiling water and plates and plates of fresh ingredients on skewers surrounding the cooker.

On this particular day, we were having Lok lok at the evening hawker center at Pulau Tikus Market in Penang. This was a new experience for me as lok lok has always been a food truck affair for me. And one that mum would never let us try because of its questionable hygiene.

It’s not hard to see why it’d be unhygienic. While communal eating is not a foreign concept to us Asians, lok lok is a pot of water where every Tom, Dick and Harry will dip their skewer into. You don’t know who you’d be sharing that pot of boiling water with! Still, we like to argue that the boiling water will kill anything (not true) and that as long as people don’t double dip it’s okay? Maybe!

The eating process is easy, you pick a skewer with the ingredient you want and you pop it into the cooker. You let it cook for however long you’d like and then retrieve it. Dunk it in your choice of sauce (mine was Tom Yum) and chow down! Other sauces available were Satay and Sweet Chilli I think. Or I might be making that last one up. I don’t know, I stuck to my Tom Yum.

With a group of friends, this can be a really jovial affair. I love steamboats, and I love lok lok. Hell, I just love communal eating. There is nothing more heartwarming than sitting around a table with your friends, eating and laughing away.

Lok lok at Pulau Tikus Market. Hit it.

Eating out: Penang’s famous cendol @ Penang Road

Penang is known as the food heaven of Malaysia. If you want to eat really good food, most will point you to Penang. I remember when we visited Penang when I was Primary four, our family friend said this: “Eat as much as you can, but don’t forget to bring tummy medicine.”

Penang is a little bit odd compared to the rest of Malaysia. The roads seem tinier, the drivers a whole lot more aggressive and the same food is called different names. Take for example the ever popular Har Mee (Prawn noodles). The rest of Malaysia calls it Har Mee, but Penang insists on calling it Hokkien Mee. But for the rest of Malaysia, Hokkien Mee is thick noodles stir-fried in dark soy sauce! Oh, that. Penang calls that Hokkien Char. What.

Confusing names aside, Penang has some pretty unique food. I wish Johor could say the same. What exactly is there in Johor? Not very much. Feh.

On this particular day, I was out with the lovely Glow. She had driven into Penang to meetup with me! I was excited! Oh and of course, the boy came along too. It was a bit of a funny feeling really, because the boy had just became the boy once again the night before, and when Glow asked me “Is he your boyfriend?”, saying yes felt so odd. So. Very. Odd.

Glow is incredibly sweet, did I mention? She came by to pick me and the boy up and whisked us away to start our eating and shopping tour of Penang! The first place we went to was the ever famous Penang Road Cendol.

Oh hey, look! Even PCK has been. This cendol store is hard to miss. It is in a small alley but there is no mistaking the queue. Be mindful though, it’s not exactly the world’s best queue system and you will find that if you are overly polite, you will never get that bowl of cendol. Right opposite is another cendol stall. They aren’t very friendly, and if you stick around their stall with a bowl of cendol from their competitor, they will yell at you.

I have to admit. This cendol was sublime. Unlike many other cendols I have come across, this one was just the right amount of sweetness (from palm sugar) and had a really generous helping of the green jelly and red bean for extra texture. And in that hot and humid weather, the icy cold dessert went down a treat.

Now, much like other Malaysian dessert, cendol doesn’t look like much. In fact, to some, the above photo might be down right unappetizing. But if you are ever in Malaysia, you need to try cendol. If you are ever in Penang, you need to try this cendol. So good.

We also had Chee Cheong Fun (above) and Assam Laksa (below). Or in Penang, Assam Laksa is just known as Laksa. Ah, stupidly confusing! Especially because then they also like to separate it into curry laksa and lemak laksa… As for that Chee Cheong Fun, it was just not good. Tasted incredibly fishy and I wasn’t a fan. Give me back the Chee Cheong Fun we get in SG please!

**If you are confused as to what these dishes are, I have linked their wiki pages**

After that we went shopping, in which Glow made me spend monies by pointing out a really pretty lacy scarf that had music notes all over it. Doom.

All too soon, the day was over and Glow had to go home. Sadface. We did take some photos in the car though!! These were taken with the Popbooth app, so the quality’s not that great but it does take some pretty funny photos. Enjoy!

Restaurant review: Secret Recipe

Secret Recipe
03 9801 3335

Corner Stud Rd & Burwood Hwy
Wantirna South, VIC 3152
Secret Recipe Online

I don’t normally like going to restaurants that are ‘asian inspired’. Call me a snob, but I try to avoid them as they generally disappoint. But a dear friend, Siera, insisted on paying Secret Recipe a visit, and who am I to say no? After all, her obsession with Secret Recipe was my fault as well.

I think sometimes, the best way to go to a restaurant is to go without any sort of expectations. Because that’s what I did. I went without any expectations of grandeur, instead I thought I was going to be horribly disappointed but instead I found myself loving the food!

I will admit, the Char Kuey Teow wasn’t authentic. But authenticity is a slippery slope and the more I go through the mind-boggling number of malaysian/singaporean cuisine restaurants, the less inclined I am to talk about authenticity. So let’s skip right past that. Because despite the lack of wok hei, it was incredibly tasty. We were sharing two mains between three of us to have room for cakes so it took an absurd amount of willpower not to just finished the lot. Save to say, I wish we had more. Ah damn.

Looks can be deceiving. When this appeared on the table, I shook my head and thought “here comes the disaster”. It does look quite unappetizing, doesn’t it? What is this dish? It’s pumpkin and almond agnolotti with sage and shallot cream sauce. And of course, I had to eat my words just as much as I had to stop myself from licking the plate. Was this just a fluke or was Secret Recipe actually dishing out decent meals?

The mains were made really quick work of, especially between the three of us. We eagerly pushed the plates away and started contemplating dessert. After all, Secret Recipe is known for their cakes. That’s their hero product.

Here are the cakes we got:

I wouldn’t say that this is where the meal went downhill, but I will say that it’s funny how things worked out. I didn’t expect anything good from the mains and I was greeted with incredibly tasty dishes. I was expecting the cakes to be amazing, and they were so-so. Full of fatty, fatty cream and not much else. Ew.

I won’t even bother naming the cakes because I don’t think any of it was memorable. But that’s alright, because I’d still go back to Secret Recipe. Those mains!

Here’s another reason why I will go back. I left my brand new camera there, on the table. I went three days without realising it was gone. When I did, I couldn’t even begin to think where I had left it. In a fit of desperation I called up Secret Recipe and what do you know, my camera was there. Untouched, safe, and perfectly taken care of. I went to retrieve it immediately but I was so incredibly impressed by the service for having taken care of the camera and keeping it safe. Thank you.

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Restaurant review: Gurney Drive, West Melbourne

Restaurant review: Gurney Drive, West Melbourne

Please be aware that Gurney Drive has been renamed Kari Leaf and may or may not have the same owners. This review does not cover the food from Kari Leaf.

Gurney Drive

(03) 9329 6649
284 Victoria Street
Melbourne, 3000

I have to apologize from the get go. The lighting in Gurney Drive is rather interesting, and because I was more focused on wanting to eat than taking photos, the resulting photos leave much to be desire. I’ve tried fixing them, but they just look odd now. If you close your eyes to a mere slit and squint with your head on an angle, they just might look normal again.

You get the idea.

I don’t remember who told me about Gurney Drive. But when I heard about it, I told K we were going. There was no two ways about it. Malaysian restaurant I haven’t been? Uh huh, hell yeah I’m there!

Gurney Drive is advertised as being a Penang hawker food outlet. The place is done up in the very typical chinese tacky sense. It doesn’t really match up to the hawker food fare they claim to serve, but then I’m no interior designer. K is probably the better person to discuss that.

I’ve heard that the Hainanese Chicken Rice was a winner. And who was I to go against the norm? So we ordered the hainanese chicken rice. And the char kuey teow too. And marvelled at the next table who seemed to be having a ball with a whole plate of fried things. I wonder what they were.

I really did like the chicken rice! The rice, chicken and condiments were all excellent. The soup however, was a let down. It didn’t have the same punch, same soul-releasing goodness as the soups I get back home. Ah well. You can’t have everything. It’s already amazing that the rest of it was good. I’ve had the chicken rice on two occasions now. I think I’d like to have it again. Yum.

On our second visit, we ordered this plate of goopy goodness. It’s Hor Fun, if anybody’s wondering. I do like a good plate of hor fun but I think Straits Cafe does a way better rendition of it. Oh well. Next!

Still on the eternal search for good laksa in Melbourne (no, not laksa king nor chef lagenda hit the mark), we tried the laksa here at Gurney Drive. It missed the mark too. Sigh, come on guys, the ratio of paste to coconut isn’t that hard to get right, no? Apparently it is.

I did like the CKT tho. Lacking somewhat in Wok Hei but still tasty. I’m actually rather keen to head back to Gurney Drive. I think the place has potential and I’ve heard that some of their other dishes are really quite excellent. So I’ll definitely be back. Especially for more of that chicken rice. Mmm.

As for it being Penang hawker fare. I think it’s slightly closer to being Penang inspired than being the actual deal. Sorry, GD!

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