Pages

Showing posts with label Kway Teow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kway Teow. Show all posts

Ah Hua Kway Teow Thng 亚华粿條汤 in Taman Century (Near to KSL Resort) in Johor Bahru, Malaysia


Johor Bahru is sometimes known as the "Little Swatow" as most Chinese here are Teochews. Stalls and shops selling the Teochew style of kway teow thng 粿條汤 are therefore found in nearly every corner of JB.

Ah Hua Kway Teow Thng 亚华粿條汤 is one of the oldest and most famous of JB's Teochew kway teow thng. The founder's shop used to be in Plentong, Masai in the northeastern part of JB. This contemporary, spic and spank shop in Taman Century (near to KSL Resort) is run by one of the founder's sons with his wife and young son.

I had wanted to try Ah Hua's kway teow thng here for a long time but somehow every time, I had earlier eaten somewhere else and my stomach was already filled.

Today, my stomach was filled as usual but out of curiosity, I walked into Ah Hua to watch the boss Steven at work. I have always been fascinated watching hawkers and chefs at work.
 

I was struck by the energy and focus that Steven put into every bowl of kway teow thng.

 
No matter how busy, Steven still made the kway teow noodle soup, one bowl at a time. No short cuts or mass production to save time. Still, Steven is such a fast worker that customers never waited long for their piping hot, old style kway teow thng.

Impressed by Steven's skill and dedication, I decided to try a bowl of Ah Hua kway teow thng despite not being hungry.
 

Steven asked me if I wanted vinegar and chili paste in my kway teow, and I said yes.

When I thought about it, I realised why it is so important to make kway teow thng one bowl at a time. Actually, this is the only way to ensure the quality of the kway teow thng.

Needless to say, the kway teow noodles must be blanched just right. Too long it will be too soft.

The meat in particular required a special touch that can come only with years of experience. The lean pork sliced nice and thin, had to be cooked right. Cooked too long, it will be hard and tasteless. The litmus test is probably the liver slices. Cooked too long, it will be stiff and rubbery - reminds me of those coarse "ink erasers" of my school days. Not long enough, it will be like a ozzing wet sponge and taste like blood.

Steven got everything cooked perfectly.
 

When I stirred it all up - kway teow noodles, lard, shallot oil, lard and shallot crackles, soy sauce, vinegar and chili paste - the kway teow became a ball of tangy, spicy and savoury flavours.

When I chewed the smooth richly flavoured kway teow together with the perfectly cooked pork slices and liver, the complex blend of flavours and texture was just, well...., heavenly.
 

Steven still hand makes these tasty, bouncy fish balls.


The tasty clear soup made with large stock bones. A tad salty for my taste and I also asked Steven to skip the minced pork. Of course, most other customers will not want to miss the minced pork :P
 
 

Orders by other customers - loaded with goodies.

I love this part of JB where the streets ringing KSL Resort are filled with well known eateries. I am coming back for these and also for Ah Hua Kuey Teow. 


 
 
Restaurant name: Ah Hua Kuey Teow Thng 亚华粿條汤
Address: 21, Jalan Serigala, Taman Century, Johor Bahru
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/R0PXY
GPS: 1.485622,103.76102
Hours: 7:30am to 4:30pm
Non Halal

Date visited: 5 Nov 2012

Johor Bahru is sometimes known as the "Little Swatow" as most Chinese here are Teochews. Stalls and shops selling the Teochew style of kway teow thng 粿條汤 are therefore found in nearly every corner of JB.

Ah Hua Kway Teow Thng 亚华粿條汤 is one of the oldest and most famous of JB's Teochew kway teow thng. The founder's shop used to be in Plentong, Masai in the northeastern part of JB. This contemporary, spic and spank shop in Taman Century (near to KSL Resort) is run by one of the founder's sons with his wife and young son.

I had wanted to try Ah Hua's kway teow thng here for a long time but somehow every time, I had earlier eaten somewhere else and my stomach was already filled.

Today, my stomach was filled as usual but out of curiosity, I walked into Ah Hua to watch the boss Steven at work. I have always been fascinated watching hawkers and chefs at work.
 

I was struck by the energy and focus that Steven put into every bowl of kway teow thng.

 
No matter how busy, Steven still made the kway teow noodle soup, one bowl at a time. No short cuts or mass production to save time. Still, Steven is such a fast worker that customers never waited long for their piping hot, old style kway teow thng.

Impressed by Steven's skill and dedication, I decided to try a bowl of Ah Hua kway teow thng despite not being hungry.
 

Steven asked me if I wanted vinegar and chili paste in my kway teow, and I said yes.

When I thought about it, I realised why it is so important to make kway teow thng one bowl at a time. Actually, this is the only way to ensure the quality of the kway teow thng.

Needless to say, the kway teow noodles must be blanched just right. Too long it will be too soft.

The meat in particular required a special touch that can come only with years of experience. The lean pork sliced nice and thin, had to be cooked right. Cooked too long, it will be hard and tasteless. The litmus test is probably the liver slices. Cooked too long, it will be stiff and rubbery - reminds me of those coarse "ink erasers" of my school days. Not long enough, it will be like a ozzing wet sponge and taste like blood.

Steven got everything cooked perfectly.
 

When I stirred it all up - kway teow noodles, lard, shallot oil, lard and shallot crackles, soy sauce, vinegar and chili paste - the kway teow became a ball of tangy, spicy and savoury flavours.

When I chewed the smooth richly flavoured kway teow together with the perfectly cooked pork slices and liver, the complex blend of flavours and texture was just, well...., heavenly.
 

Steven still hand makes these tasty, bouncy fish balls.


The tasty clear soup made with large stock bones. A tad salty for my taste and I also asked Steven to skip the minced pork. Of course, most other customers will not want to miss the minced pork :P
 
 

Orders by other customers - loaded with goodies.

I love this part of JB where the streets ringing KSL Resort are filled with well known eateries. I am coming back for these and also for Ah Hua Kuey Teow. 


 
 
Restaurant name: Ah Hua Kuey Teow Thng 亚华粿條汤
Address: 21, Jalan Serigala, Taman Century, Johor Bahru
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/R0PXY
GPS: 1.485622,103.76102
Hours: 7:30am to 4:30pm
Non Halal

Date visited: 5 Nov 2012
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Teochew Kway Teow Soup @ Restaurant Ah Huang 亞方 in Taman Johor Jaya, Johor Bahru, Malaysia

 
Johor Bahru has Teochew kway teow thng (soup) stalls in nearly every corner coffee shop as most Chinese in JB are Teochews. We stumbled upon this Teochew kway teow thng shop while food spotting in Taman Johor Jaya.

As usual, 2:30pm to 3:00pm is a good time to spot the outstanding restaurants. By 2:30pm, the lunch time is over, most average restaurants will have few, if any customers at all. If a restaurant is still buzzing with customers at 2:30 to 3:00pm, it usually means that the food is good.
 
Freshly topped up spread of fresh ingredients.

So, Ah Huang 亞方 caught our eye because the restaurant was still humming with activity at 2:30pm and fresh ingredients for the soup were still being brought out and topped up. Usually, by 2:30pm, most average restaurants would be packing their fresh ingredients back to the fridge.

When I asked the boss how come his shop is so popular, his reply, "I've been doing the same thing for over 40 years." It's that simple?! Just give the customers the same old wholesome food they are used to and they will be back for more?
 
MR Ang has been making kway teow thng for 40 years

Actually, it only sounds simple. Usually, keeping to the old traditional ways of making a dish is tedious, labour intensive and time consuming, and expensive. The old way means fresh ingredients, use of manual labour and hand tools, and long preparation hours. Expertise and skills are also getting scarcer as the young are not taking over the baton. Also, most recipes are implicit knowledge and when memories fade so do the recipes. But, there is simply no shortcuts to the good old traditional tastes and flavours.

So, how was Ah Huang's Teochew Kway Teow soup?
 

Simple kway teow or noodles in simple soy sauce based gravy. The winner here was their fried shallot crackles. Hand cut and freshly fried at the shop every day.
 

Completely different in taste from those brittle, tasteless, wood chip-like ones mass produced and bought from wholesalers. Each little bit of Ah Huang's fried shallot was like a taste sparkler. I am still thinking of it, as I wrote this.
 

The clear soup was robust with flavours from the bone and seafood stock. However, the soup was a tad salty and too oily for me, especially with the bits of minced pork fat floating in the broth. But, I do appreciate that this is the old way and it had always been like this.
 
Perfectly done kidney - one of the hardest meats to cook correctly

The ingredients were all super fresh and expertly blanched. Not raw and not overcooked, scooped out just at the point where the hot broth brought out the natural sweetness of the ingredients like liver, kidneys, prawns, abalone, squid, fish, fish maw and so on.

Come again? Definitely. Ah Huang stands quietly and proudly with the other old established names in Teochew kway teow thng in "Little Swatow" i.e. Johor Bahru.
 
Besides the staple kway teow soup, Ah Huang also serves pomfret porridge which I would like to try at the next visit.
 
 
 
Restaurant name: Restaurant Ah Huang 亞方
Address: 16, Jalan Teratai 8, Taman Johor Jaya, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/gPles
GPS: 1.538346,103.810817
Hours: 7:00am to 3:00pm (closed on Tuesday)
Non Halal
 
Date visited: 26 Sep 2012
 
Johor Bahru has Teochew kway teow thng (soup) stalls in nearly every corner coffee shop as most Chinese in JB are Teochews. We stumbled upon this Teochew kway teow thng shop while food spotting in Taman Johor Jaya.

As usual, 2:30pm to 3:00pm is a good time to spot the outstanding restaurants. By 2:30pm, the lunch time is over, most average restaurants will have few, if any customers at all. If a restaurant is still buzzing with customers at 2:30 to 3:00pm, it usually means that the food is good.
 
Freshly topped up spread of fresh ingredients.

So, Ah Huang 亞方 caught our eye because the restaurant was still humming with activity at 2:30pm and fresh ingredients for the soup were still being brought out and topped up. Usually, by 2:30pm, most average restaurants would be packing their fresh ingredients back to the fridge.

When I asked the boss how come his shop is so popular, his reply, "I've been doing the same thing for over 40 years." It's that simple?! Just give the customers the same old wholesome food they are used to and they will be back for more?
 
MR Ang has been making kway teow thng for 40 years

Actually, it only sounds simple. Usually, keeping to the old traditional ways of making a dish is tedious, labour intensive and time consuming, and expensive. The old way means fresh ingredients, use of manual labour and hand tools, and long preparation hours. Expertise and skills are also getting scarcer as the young are not taking over the baton. Also, most recipes are implicit knowledge and when memories fade so do the recipes. But, there is simply no shortcuts to the good old traditional tastes and flavours.

So, how was Ah Huang's Teochew Kway Teow soup?
 

Simple kway teow or noodles in simple soy sauce based gravy. The winner here was their fried shallot crackles. Hand cut and freshly fried at the shop every day.
 

Completely different in taste from those brittle, tasteless, wood chip-like ones mass produced and bought from wholesalers. Each little bit of Ah Huang's fried shallot was like a taste sparkler. I am still thinking of it, as I wrote this.
 

The clear soup was robust with flavours from the bone and seafood stock. However, the soup was a tad salty and too oily for me, especially with the bits of minced pork fat floating in the broth. But, I do appreciate that this is the old way and it had always been like this.
 
Perfectly done kidney - one of the hardest meats to cook correctly

The ingredients were all super fresh and expertly blanched. Not raw and not overcooked, scooped out just at the point where the hot broth brought out the natural sweetness of the ingredients like liver, kidneys, prawns, abalone, squid, fish, fish maw and so on.

Come again? Definitely. Ah Huang stands quietly and proudly with the other old established names in Teochew kway teow thng in "Little Swatow" i.e. Johor Bahru.
 
Besides the staple kway teow soup, Ah Huang also serves pomfret porridge which I would like to try at the next visit.
 
 
 
Restaurant name: Restaurant Ah Huang 亞方
Address: 16, Jalan Teratai 8, Taman Johor Jaya, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/gPles
GPS: 1.538346,103.810817
Hours: 7:00am to 3:00pm (closed on Tuesday)
Non Halal
 
Date visited: 26 Sep 2012
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Yong Hwa Kway Teow @ Taman Perling in Johor Bahru, Malaysia


Kway teow soup, which is a Teochew staple, can be found everywhere in Johor Bahru. Among the more popular ones, Yong Hwa is the local favourite in Taman Perling.

The design of the shop is a blend of the modern and traditional. The bright contemporary sign board stands out among the shop lots along Jalan Persisiran Perling 1. Yong Hwa has a cool comfortable air conditioned section like many modern cafés. It is very popular with customers who welcome a respite from the searing afternoon sun and stifling tropical humidity. 

At the front of the shop, the cooking area and the ingredients are laid out like a traditional push cart stall – charming and attractive.


The wide range of super fresh ingredients sits colourfully on a bed of cold ice cubes. Customers can pick any additional ingredients that they want at extra cost. There are prawns, fish slices, abalone slices, fish cakes and many more. 




The area in front is like a mini stage – the kway teow and ingredients are prepared with seasoned, swift, fluid, ballet like movements of the stall holder and his assistant. Always calm and efficient, no matter how big is the crowd of customers waiting.


The kway teow with the fresh rice fragrance is soft, thin, and melts in your mouth. In fact, it will start to "melt" as you stir it with the fragrant chili and dark sauce.



For RM4, we get a load of different ingredients with the soup like handmade pork ball, tofu, fish ball, lean pork slices, and liver. All are skillfully done just right by the stall holder.

The clear soup is naturally sweet as it is made by boiling fresh pork bones and also seafood.

Definitely a worthy favourite among kway teow soup shops.



Restaurant name: Yong Hwa Huey Teow
Address: 501, Jalan Persisiran Perling 1, Taman Perling, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.482870,103.686347
Hours: (closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 6 Mar 2012

Kway teow soup, which is a Teochew staple, can be found everywhere in Johor Bahru. Among the more popular ones, Yong Hwa is the local favourite in Taman Perling.

The design of the shop is a blend of the modern and traditional. The bright contemporary sign board stands out among the shop lots along Jalan Persisiran Perling 1. Yong Hwa has a cool comfortable air conditioned section like many modern cafés. It is very popular with customers who welcome a respite from the searing afternoon sun and stifling tropical humidity. 

At the front of the shop, the cooking area and the ingredients are laid out like a traditional push cart stall – charming and attractive.


The wide range of super fresh ingredients sits colourfully on a bed of cold ice cubes. Customers can pick any additional ingredients that they want at extra cost. There are prawns, fish slices, abalone slices, fish cakes and many more. 




The area in front is like a mini stage – the kway teow and ingredients are prepared with seasoned, swift, fluid, ballet like movements of the stall holder and his assistant. Always calm and efficient, no matter how big is the crowd of customers waiting.


The kway teow with the fresh rice fragrance is soft, thin, and melts in your mouth. In fact, it will start to "melt" as you stir it with the fragrant chili and dark sauce.



For RM4, we get a load of different ingredients with the soup like handmade pork ball, tofu, fish ball, lean pork slices, and liver. All are skillfully done just right by the stall holder.

The clear soup is naturally sweet as it is made by boiling fresh pork bones and also seafood.

Definitely a worthy favourite among kway teow soup shops.



Restaurant name: Yong Hwa Huey Teow
Address: 501, Jalan Persisiran Perling 1, Taman Perling, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.482870,103.686347
Hours: (closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 6 Mar 2012
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

No Lard Fish Ball Kway Teow Soup @ Ah Hua 亚华 along Jalan Stulang Darat, Johor Bahru



I pass this Ah Hua 亚华 fish ball noodle shop a few times before but never stopped to try it as I somehow do not fancy franchises. I did notice that this corner shop is quite popular even though it is along, rather out of the way, Jalan Stulang Darat. I finally gave it a try on a day when all my favourites in the area were closed.

It turned out to be a surprise find ☻

First, this Ah Hua 亚华 has no relations with its famous namesakes sprinkled around JB. I found that out after asking the owner, if they are related. The owner told me they have no relations at all and their shop started as a push cart stall at the beach (facing Woodlands, Singapore.)  Ah…. another inspiring push cart to shop success story ☻

So, what is so special about this fish ball kway teow shop? After all, even handmade fish balls are everywhere in JB.


The first thing that struck me was the fragrant sauce. Its aroma was subtle and coated the kway teow with a light, fresh flavour. When I asked the owner did he use lard to make the sauce since it was so flavourful, he surprised me by replying, no.

Unlike most kway teow soup shops that use lard, this Ah Hua uses only shallot oil  – oil that had been used to fry fresh shallots. I like this healthy choice that does not compromise on taste and flavour.

The soft kway teow coated with a fine film of soy sauce and shallot oil blend was lip smacking delicious. The bean sprouts (tau geh) stirred into the kway teow were crunchy and fun to bite. The tau geh made a rather loud gashing sound in my ear bones as I chewed on it.



The unevenly shaped, homemade, handmade fish balls were bouncy, tender yet firm, and had a delightful fresh fish fragrance. These were one of the best fish balls that I have ever tasted.


Look, they take a lot of trouble to keep the fish balls fresh. The fresh fish balls are kept under a constant stream of cool running water.


The clear soup has that old time 古早 taste and aroma, triggering memories of my primary school tuckshop’s kway teow soup stall.


I took a look at their steaming big pot of soup and saw lots of soy beans and anchovies tumbling around crazily inside the furiously boiling, bubbling broth.

I love this Ah Hua 亚华 kway teow soup shop. This will be my kway teow soup of the day whenever I am on cholesterol quota preservation mode.


Restaurant name: Ah Hua 亚华 Handmade Fish Ball Kway Teow Noodles
Address: G-08, Jalan Pandan 1, Pangsarpuri Impian Stulang, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.472768,103.77802
Hours: 12:00 Noon to 4:00pm (Closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 22 Feb 2012


I pass this Ah Hua 亚华 fish ball noodle shop a few times before but never stopped to try it as I somehow do not fancy franchises. I did notice that this corner shop is quite popular even though it is along, rather out of the way, Jalan Stulang Darat. I finally gave it a try on a day when all my favourites in the area were closed.

It turned out to be a surprise find ☻

First, this Ah Hua 亚华 has no relations with its famous namesakes sprinkled around JB. I found that out after asking the owner, if they are related. The owner told me they have no relations at all and their shop started as a push cart stall at the beach (facing Woodlands, Singapore.)  Ah…. another inspiring push cart to shop success story ☻

So, what is so special about this fish ball kway teow shop? After all, even handmade fish balls are everywhere in JB.


The first thing that struck me was the fragrant sauce. Its aroma was subtle and coated the kway teow with a light, fresh flavour. When I asked the owner did he use lard to make the sauce since it was so flavourful, he surprised me by replying, no.

Unlike most kway teow soup shops that use lard, this Ah Hua uses only shallot oil  – oil that had been used to fry fresh shallots. I like this healthy choice that does not compromise on taste and flavour.

The soft kway teow coated with a fine film of soy sauce and shallot oil blend was lip smacking delicious. The bean sprouts (tau geh) stirred into the kway teow were crunchy and fun to bite. The tau geh made a rather loud gashing sound in my ear bones as I chewed on it.



The unevenly shaped, homemade, handmade fish balls were bouncy, tender yet firm, and had a delightful fresh fish fragrance. These were one of the best fish balls that I have ever tasted.


Look, they take a lot of trouble to keep the fish balls fresh. The fresh fish balls are kept under a constant stream of cool running water.


The clear soup has that old time 古早 taste and aroma, triggering memories of my primary school tuckshop’s kway teow soup stall.


I took a look at their steaming big pot of soup and saw lots of soy beans and anchovies tumbling around crazily inside the furiously boiling, bubbling broth.

I love this Ah Hua 亚华 kway teow soup shop. This will be my kway teow soup of the day whenever I am on cholesterol quota preservation mode.


Restaurant name: Ah Hua 亚华 Handmade Fish Ball Kway Teow Noodles
Address: G-08, Jalan Pandan 1, Pangsarpuri Impian Stulang, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.472768,103.77802
Hours: 12:00 Noon to 4:00pm (Closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 22 Feb 2012
reade more... Résuméabuiyad