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Showing posts with label Jalan Stulang Darat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jalan Stulang Darat. Show all posts

Yee Sang Lo Hei 鱼生撈起 at Ayukawa Grand at ZON Regency Hotel, Johor Bahru (This Restaurant is Closed.)

 Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起

Yesterday, we had our first yee san lo hei 鱼生撈起 of the coming Chinese New Year. It was a foodie gathering of Joell Choo's Facebook group 吃的平台 at Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian restaurant in ZON Regency Hotel in Johor Bahru.

Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起
 
Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起

This cheery, colourful yee sang set for 4-8 persons comes at RM48. A smaller set for 2-4 persons is also available at RM28.

As Ayukawa has a large Japanese section, naturally the yee sang here has interesting Japanese touches like seaweed and bonito (dried fish shavings).

Japanese-Buffet-Johor

This unique yee sang set is in addition to the basic buffet charges.

Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起
 
Our happy group occupied three tables. We had a lot of fun and enjoyed ourselves very much, catching up and lots of eating burp.. burp.. and drinking bloop.. bloop...
 
Restaurant name: Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant
Address: Level 6, The ZON Regency Hotel at 88 Jalan Ibrahim Sultan, Stulang Laut, Johor Bahru
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/IqzbY
GPS: 1.470826,103.783239
Hours: Lunch 12:00 noon to 3:00pm. Dinner 6:00pm to 10:00pm.
Pricing information: Mon - Fri Lunch Adult RM43, Child RM24. Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. Sat & Sun Lunch & Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. No charge for child age 5 and younger. Tax extra.
Not certified Halal, no pork, no lard served

Date visited: 7 Jan 2013, 17 Jan 2013
 Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起

Yesterday, we had our first yee san lo hei 鱼生撈起 of the coming Chinese New Year. It was a foodie gathering of Joell Choo's Facebook group 吃的平台 at Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian restaurant in ZON Regency Hotel in Johor Bahru.

Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起
 
Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起

This cheery, colourful yee sang set for 4-8 persons comes at RM48. A smaller set for 2-4 persons is also available at RM28.

As Ayukawa has a large Japanese section, naturally the yee sang here has interesting Japanese touches like seaweed and bonito (dried fish shavings).

Japanese-Buffet-Johor

This unique yee sang set is in addition to the basic buffet charges.

Yee-Sang-Lo-Hei-鱼生撈起
 
Our happy group occupied three tables. We had a lot of fun and enjoyed ourselves very much, catching up and lots of eating burp.. burp.. and drinking bloop.. bloop...
 
Restaurant name: Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant
Address: Level 6, The ZON Regency Hotel at 88 Jalan Ibrahim Sultan, Stulang Laut, Johor Bahru
Map: http://goo.gl/maps/IqzbY
GPS: 1.470826,103.783239
Hours: Lunch 12:00 noon to 3:00pm. Dinner 6:00pm to 10:00pm.
Pricing information: Mon - Fri Lunch Adult RM43, Child RM24. Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. Sat & Sun Lunch & Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. No charge for child age 5 and younger. Tax extra.
Not certified Halal, no pork, no lard served

Date visited: 7 Jan 2013, 17 Jan 2013
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Ayukawa Grand at The ZON Regency Hotel - Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant (This Restaurant is Closed.)

Today, we were at Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant at The ZON Regency Hotel for lunch at the invitation of Rebecca Lee, the owner.
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Buffet-Johor
 
Ayukawa Grand is a large a la carte buffet style restaurant on the sixth floor of The ZON Regency Hotel in Stulang Darat, Johor Bahru. The interior is huge and cavernous.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
I like those seats with large arch windows with good views of the Straits and of Singapore. I was there at lunch and could imagine that the view is going to be quite pretty at night.  
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
There were many items on the spread but as usual at buffets, I went for the same few things that I liked most. And, when it comes to Japanese, I go for the sashimi :)) The sashimi was fresh and we had two large servings which were quite prettily presented. 
 Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
I love grilled salmon heads especially for its gelatinous parts and that little bit of belly just behind the chin where the pectoral fins are :)) Simple and nice. 
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
  
I love grilled oily sanma or Pacific Saury.  
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
I sampled a plate of their pasta and was so impressed with the al dente spaghetti and the freshly made olive based sauce that I ended up trying servings of the other sauces.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB 
 
By now, I was stuffed and stayed on to chat over steamed soy beans. I love chomping on these healthy munchies as we chatted. 
 
Sushi-Johor
 
Chef Yap takes special pride in his sushi and sashimi creations. Chef Yap's brother who is also an accomplished chef, takes care of the Italian section.
 
 Teppanyaki-Johor
 
Just before leaving I ordered a teppanyaki pan fried salmon, just to have a picture of the Chef in action.
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
As I watch and photographed the Chef, I caught a waft of that aromatic fragrance as the Chef was making that sauce on the teppanyaki. In the end, I ate up that lovely fried salmon in savoury sauce, somehow  finding space in my stuffed stomach to pack it in :))
 
Obviously, I couldn't eat everything on offer but at least we could feast our eyes on them. So here are the OPM - not "Other People's Money" in that Danny DeVito movie classic but "Other People's Makan" :))
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Turkey
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Lamb chops.
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
Oyster-Johor
 
 Sushi-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
We are having a foodies' gathering on 17 Jan 2013, also at Ayukawa Grand at The ZON. I am so looking forward to meet fellow foodies and to enjoy the food at Ayukawa again. This time, I shall try out the things that I missed this round :)) Look out for the update.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
Restaurant name: Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant at Level 6, The ZON Regency Hotel
Address: 88 Jalan Ibrahim Sultan, Stulang Laut, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.470826,103.783239
Hours: Lunch 12:00 noon to 3:00pm. Dinner 6:00pm to 10:00pm.
Pricing information: Mon - Fri Lunch Adult RM43, Child RM24. Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. Sat & Sun Lunch & Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. No charge for child age 5 and younger. Tax extra.
Not certified Halal, no pork, no lard served
 
Date visited: 7 Jan 2013

Today, we were at Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant at The ZON Regency Hotel for lunch at the invitation of Rebecca Lee, the owner.
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Buffet-Johor
 
Ayukawa Grand is a large a la carte buffet style restaurant on the sixth floor of The ZON Regency Hotel in Stulang Darat, Johor Bahru. The interior is huge and cavernous.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
I like those seats with large arch windows with good views of the Straits and of Singapore. I was there at lunch and could imagine that the view is going to be quite pretty at night.  
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
There were many items on the spread but as usual at buffets, I went for the same few things that I liked most. And, when it comes to Japanese, I go for the sashimi :)) The sashimi was fresh and we had two large servings which were quite prettily presented. 
 Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
I love grilled salmon heads especially for its gelatinous parts and that little bit of belly just behind the chin where the pectoral fins are :)) Simple and nice. 
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
  
I love grilled oily sanma or Pacific Saury.  
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
I sampled a plate of their pasta and was so impressed with the al dente spaghetti and the freshly made olive based sauce that I ended up trying servings of the other sauces.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB 
 
By now, I was stuffed and stayed on to chat over steamed soy beans. I love chomping on these healthy munchies as we chatted. 
 
Sushi-Johor
 
Chef Yap takes special pride in his sushi and sashimi creations. Chef Yap's brother who is also an accomplished chef, takes care of the Italian section.
 
 Teppanyaki-Johor
 
Just before leaving I ordered a teppanyaki pan fried salmon, just to have a picture of the Chef in action.
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor-Bahru
 
As I watch and photographed the Chef, I caught a waft of that aromatic fragrance as the Chef was making that sauce on the teppanyaki. In the end, I ate up that lovely fried salmon in savoury sauce, somehow  finding space in my stuffed stomach to pack it in :))
 
Obviously, I couldn't eat everything on offer but at least we could feast our eyes on them. So here are the OPM - not "Other People's Money" in that Danny DeVito movie classic but "Other People's Makan" :))
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Italian-Buffet-Johor
 
Turkey
 
Italian-Buffet-JB
 
Lamb chops.
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
Oyster-Johor
 
 Sushi-Johor
 
Japanese-Buffet-Johor
 
We are having a foodies' gathering on 17 Jan 2013, also at Ayukawa Grand at The ZON. I am so looking forward to meet fellow foodies and to enjoy the food at Ayukawa again. This time, I shall try out the things that I missed this round :)) Look out for the update.
 
Japanese-Buffet-JB
 
Restaurant name: Ayukawa Grand Japanese and Italian Buffet Restaurant at Level 6, The ZON Regency Hotel
Address: 88 Jalan Ibrahim Sultan, Stulang Laut, Johor Bahru
GPS: 1.470826,103.783239
Hours: Lunch 12:00 noon to 3:00pm. Dinner 6:00pm to 10:00pm.
Pricing information: Mon - Fri Lunch Adult RM43, Child RM24. Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. Sat & Sun Lunch & Dinner Adult RM69, Child RM39. No charge for child age 5 and younger. Tax extra.
Not certified Halal, no pork, no lard served
 
Date visited: 7 Jan 2013

reade more... Résuméabuiyad

No Name Laksa and Yong Tau Foo Stall along Jalan Stulang Darat (near Hotel Zon), Johor Bahru, Malaysia (Guest Post)

I thoroughly enjoyed this informative and hilarious guest post on Johor Kaki blog by my friend and makan kaki, Kumes. I am sure you will too. My thanks to Kumes for being Johor Kaki's first guest blogger!


Johore Bahru - Nov 21st, 2012: It was a rainy Wednesday night, and I had promised my family a warming dinner of delicious Yong Tau Foo from my favourite stall in Pelangi.

What did I do to anger the Yong Tau Foo gods so much?......Was it my brief flirtation with wantan soup?” I wearily wondered to myself. “But that happened when I was a much younger and more foolish boy,” subconsciously gripping the steering wheel harder in protest. “….it was two weeks ago….I repent, I swear!” slumping back into the drivers’ seat. After 45 minutes of driving around, not only was my favourite stall closed, but so were two others that came highly recommended by my friend, Joe.
 
 
Yong Tau Foo-less, I headed home in disappointment. Speeding down the road that led to my house, a glimmer of hope appeared. I noticed a shack out the left corner of my windscreen off Jalan Stulang Darat. I vaguely recalled the sagely Johor Kaki mentioning it contained good eats. Desperate and out of options, I pulled over to investigate.

Bingo! The offerings laid out in colourful baskets looked decidedly average, but hey, average Yong Tau Foo is definitely better than no Yong Tau Foo when you’re craving it on a cold rainy night.


Based on looks alone - the aubergine was very thinly stuffed, the bitter gourd looked generic, and the tofu looked bland…. I was truly expecting a forgettable meal. I truly expected to think “Well, it’s not horrible; maybe if everywhere else is closed, or my mum steals the car I stole from her, I might buy this again since it’s so close to the house.”

Boy was I Wrong. Wrong with a capital W. This then, is a culinary version of the shabbily dressed geeky girl in the corner no one notices - except at night, she just happens to turn into Catwoman.


The camera shy Madam Lua has been a Yong Tau Foo hawker for over 20 years, since her son who now mans the furiously boiling soup pot was just knee high. Before this she was located in the car park of the nearby old 3 storey flats, where her husband used to man their stall. Her personal favourites are their very own handmade fishballs, which come in both the boiled and fried varieties. Some of the other items such as the fish roe balls and Foochow fishballs are supplied by a friend of hers.


This is where all those hidden gems are tucked away - I strongly recommend the items shown in this general picture.



This is really the most deceiving piece of the lot. Biting into what appears to be a mild mannered tofu skin wrapped fried fishball reveals a jewel like filling of flavourful caviar. Biting into this is like pressing the call button for a lift, but instead of a lift, the Space Shuttle appears. Unexpected, Interesting, Surprising. Joyful even.



The flavourful roe and associated flavours that just spurt into your mouth when you take a bite is utterly delightful, almost like how a perfectly steamed onde-ondereleases its payload of gula Melaka like a sensory nuclear bomb when you bite in. The firm microbubbles of caviar pop against your tongue as you chew, the texture and flavours released are just lovely. I have a strong feeling even those who don’t usually like fish roe will love this as the flavours are well balanced. No strong fishy taste to be found here.



This delightful morsel is a minced pork dumpling with salted egg yolk wrapped in wantan skin. Delicious. The salty richness of the egg goes so well with the pork mixture that has hints of dried cuttlefish and the silky slurpy wantan skin wraps up the whole package.


This Foochow fishball was also delightful. The flavour of quality sesame oil and what I suspect is prawn or fish paste made it taste almost like a siew mai stuffed fishball. Bouncy with a succulent filling. The juice spurting out from this when you bite in is very addictive.



 
This stall is just full of surprises. Nothing is as it seems. The rich sambal looks like your average home made dried prawn sambal, but she adds ground curry spices to it. This may be an acquired taste as I personally felt normal sambal would have gone better with some of the pieces I chose. I have a faint suspicion if I were to boil a dollop of that sambal with coconut milk I’d end up with a bowl of curry laksa. It has all the elements of a curry laksa base, the lemongrass and galangal flavour, along with the dried prawns and curry spices. My mum loved it so much she mixed a whole packet of that sambal into her soup before dunking more bee hoon in. As I also discovered after trying her soup, this was a rather good way of enjoying the sambal, almost like getting two different soup bases in one meal. It tasted like the curry mee you get in some places up north, where the soup is clear, with either none or very little coconut milk, but all the flavour of curry. The umami laden soup helped give it that "full" mouthfeel, without coconut milk as a thickener.



 
Speaking of the soup, notice how Ah Huiwas proudly showing me the generous amounts of pig skin he added to the soup? I happen to know from my own soup making efforts that boiling pig skin takes a lot of time and patience, having to skim off loads of oil from the melting subcutaneous fat that is impossible to remove completely before cooking. At this point in time, some readers might have noticed food writers sometimes use the word “umami” rather a lot in their scribbles, but what is it exactly, and what does it have to do with pig skin?

Let’s start with the basics - Umami is a term coined up by some Japanese dude called Kikunae Ikeda, a Professor at Tokyo Imperial University to describe the taste when L-glutamate receptors on your tongue are activated by foods that well….contain L-glutamate and members of its happy family known as 5’ribonucleotides such as inosine monophosphate and guanosine monophosphate.

In plain English, this means our good friend MSG and foods such as seaweed, tomato, mushrooms, dried oysters, and shrimp among other natural ingredients contain chemicals similar to MSG that will have a similar effect on your taste as MSG.
 

But another thing that can give you that umami mouthfeel, albeit without triggering these specific tastebuds are skin, bones, and tendon. Boil them long enough and the complex three dimensional protein strains within called collagen that women love to see on the ingredient list of their cosmetics, unwind into a less tight form known as gelatin. Yes gelatin, the same thing you use to make gummy bears and mentos. Why does this make soup taste more umami? It’s because it tricks your tongue into thinking you’re eating fat, and back when we were cavemen who had to hunt for our food, fat was good. Now you know. Also, just in case you were wondering, boiling your girlfriend’s makeup will not result in better soup. Rather it would probably result in her unwinding into an entity known as ‘the ex-girlfriend’.

I honestly think some of these items might have come from a dim sum menu. They are just so delectable you could eat them on their own, or with a dab of Kampung Koh style chili sauce - but when matched with that umami laden soup it just takes things to a whole new level. I have never come across another Yong Tau Foo stall which made me go “Wow” at every bite. Not just because it was delicious, but because it’s so different and unexpected. Every first bite was a process of discovery. I thank the Yong Tau Foo gods for this blessing in disguise. To borrow some words from Optimus Prime; there is certainly more than meets the eye at this humble stall.
 
 
Restaurant name: No name makeshift stall in a shack
Address: Along Jalan Stulang Darat (near Hotel Zon)
Map: http://g.co/maps/km32z
GPS: 1.472092,103.777295
Hours: 6:00pm to sold out
Non Halal
 
Date visited: 21 Nov 2012

About the Guest Blogger

Kumes is an ardent foodie born a Johorian, but spent most of his teenage and young adult life as a Londoner. He is currently located in Singapore, however, the whereabouts of his mind are unknown and probably couldn’t be found on any map.
I thoroughly enjoyed this informative and hilarious guest post on Johor Kaki blog by my friend and makan kaki, Kumes. I am sure you will too. My thanks to Kumes for being Johor Kaki's first guest blogger!


Johore Bahru - Nov 21st, 2012: It was a rainy Wednesday night, and I had promised my family a warming dinner of delicious Yong Tau Foo from my favourite stall in Pelangi.

What did I do to anger the Yong Tau Foo gods so much?......Was it my brief flirtation with wantan soup?” I wearily wondered to myself. “But that happened when I was a much younger and more foolish boy,” subconsciously gripping the steering wheel harder in protest. “….it was two weeks ago….I repent, I swear!” slumping back into the drivers’ seat. After 45 minutes of driving around, not only was my favourite stall closed, but so were two others that came highly recommended by my friend, Joe.
 
 
Yong Tau Foo-less, I headed home in disappointment. Speeding down the road that led to my house, a glimmer of hope appeared. I noticed a shack out the left corner of my windscreen off Jalan Stulang Darat. I vaguely recalled the sagely Johor Kaki mentioning it contained good eats. Desperate and out of options, I pulled over to investigate.

Bingo! The offerings laid out in colourful baskets looked decidedly average, but hey, average Yong Tau Foo is definitely better than no Yong Tau Foo when you’re craving it on a cold rainy night.


Based on looks alone - the aubergine was very thinly stuffed, the bitter gourd looked generic, and the tofu looked bland…. I was truly expecting a forgettable meal. I truly expected to think “Well, it’s not horrible; maybe if everywhere else is closed, or my mum steals the car I stole from her, I might buy this again since it’s so close to the house.”

Boy was I Wrong. Wrong with a capital W. This then, is a culinary version of the shabbily dressed geeky girl in the corner no one notices - except at night, she just happens to turn into Catwoman.


The camera shy Madam Lua has been a Yong Tau Foo hawker for over 20 years, since her son who now mans the furiously boiling soup pot was just knee high. Before this she was located in the car park of the nearby old 3 storey flats, where her husband used to man their stall. Her personal favourites are their very own handmade fishballs, which come in both the boiled and fried varieties. Some of the other items such as the fish roe balls and Foochow fishballs are supplied by a friend of hers.


This is where all those hidden gems are tucked away - I strongly recommend the items shown in this general picture.



This is really the most deceiving piece of the lot. Biting into what appears to be a mild mannered tofu skin wrapped fried fishball reveals a jewel like filling of flavourful caviar. Biting into this is like pressing the call button for a lift, but instead of a lift, the Space Shuttle appears. Unexpected, Interesting, Surprising. Joyful even.



The flavourful roe and associated flavours that just spurt into your mouth when you take a bite is utterly delightful, almost like how a perfectly steamed onde-ondereleases its payload of gula Melaka like a sensory nuclear bomb when you bite in. The firm microbubbles of caviar pop against your tongue as you chew, the texture and flavours released are just lovely. I have a strong feeling even those who don’t usually like fish roe will love this as the flavours are well balanced. No strong fishy taste to be found here.



This delightful morsel is a minced pork dumpling with salted egg yolk wrapped in wantan skin. Delicious. The salty richness of the egg goes so well with the pork mixture that has hints of dried cuttlefish and the silky slurpy wantan skin wraps up the whole package.


This Foochow fishball was also delightful. The flavour of quality sesame oil and what I suspect is prawn or fish paste made it taste almost like a siew mai stuffed fishball. Bouncy with a succulent filling. The juice spurting out from this when you bite in is very addictive.



 
This stall is just full of surprises. Nothing is as it seems. The rich sambal looks like your average home made dried prawn sambal, but she adds ground curry spices to it. This may be an acquired taste as I personally felt normal sambal would have gone better with some of the pieces I chose. I have a faint suspicion if I were to boil a dollop of that sambal with coconut milk I’d end up with a bowl of curry laksa. It has all the elements of a curry laksa base, the lemongrass and galangal flavour, along with the dried prawns and curry spices. My mum loved it so much she mixed a whole packet of that sambal into her soup before dunking more bee hoon in. As I also discovered after trying her soup, this was a rather good way of enjoying the sambal, almost like getting two different soup bases in one meal. It tasted like the curry mee you get in some places up north, where the soup is clear, with either none or very little coconut milk, but all the flavour of curry. The umami laden soup helped give it that "full" mouthfeel, without coconut milk as a thickener.



 
Speaking of the soup, notice how Ah Huiwas proudly showing me the generous amounts of pig skin he added to the soup? I happen to know from my own soup making efforts that boiling pig skin takes a lot of time and patience, having to skim off loads of oil from the melting subcutaneous fat that is impossible to remove completely before cooking. At this point in time, some readers might have noticed food writers sometimes use the word “umami” rather a lot in their scribbles, but what is it exactly, and what does it have to do with pig skin?

Let’s start with the basics - Umami is a term coined up by some Japanese dude called Kikunae Ikeda, a Professor at Tokyo Imperial University to describe the taste when L-glutamate receptors on your tongue are activated by foods that well….contain L-glutamate and members of its happy family known as 5’ribonucleotides such as inosine monophosphate and guanosine monophosphate.

In plain English, this means our good friend MSG and foods such as seaweed, tomato, mushrooms, dried oysters, and shrimp among other natural ingredients contain chemicals similar to MSG that will have a similar effect on your taste as MSG.
 

But another thing that can give you that umami mouthfeel, albeit without triggering these specific tastebuds are skin, bones, and tendon. Boil them long enough and the complex three dimensional protein strains within called collagen that women love to see on the ingredient list of their cosmetics, unwind into a less tight form known as gelatin. Yes gelatin, the same thing you use to make gummy bears and mentos. Why does this make soup taste more umami? It’s because it tricks your tongue into thinking you’re eating fat, and back when we were cavemen who had to hunt for our food, fat was good. Now you know. Also, just in case you were wondering, boiling your girlfriend’s makeup will not result in better soup. Rather it would probably result in her unwinding into an entity known as ‘the ex-girlfriend’.

I honestly think some of these items might have come from a dim sum menu. They are just so delectable you could eat them on their own, or with a dab of Kampung Koh style chili sauce - but when matched with that umami laden soup it just takes things to a whole new level. I have never come across another Yong Tau Foo stall which made me go “Wow” at every bite. Not just because it was delicious, but because it’s so different and unexpected. Every first bite was a process of discovery. I thank the Yong Tau Foo gods for this blessing in disguise. To borrow some words from Optimus Prime; there is certainly more than meets the eye at this humble stall.
 
 
Restaurant name: No name makeshift stall in a shack
Address: Along Jalan Stulang Darat (near Hotel Zon)
Map: http://g.co/maps/km32z
GPS: 1.472092,103.777295
Hours: 6:00pm to sold out
Non Halal
 
Date visited: 21 Nov 2012

About the Guest Blogger

Kumes is an ardent foodie born a Johorian, but spent most of his teenage and young adult life as a Londoner. He is currently located in Singapore, however, the whereabouts of his mind are unknown and probably couldn’t be found on any map.
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Teochew Porridge @ Come & Eat 吃又来潮州粥 off Jalan Stulang Darat, Johor Bahru

Teochew Porridge

“Find dining” is a hit or miss pursuit that risks our meagre daily cholesterol and calorie quota. Once in a while, I stumble upon an outstanding eatery in an unlikely place that cancels all the misses of “find dining”.

Teochew Porridge

Restoran Come & Eat 吃又来潮州粥 is such a gem.

Just like the glint of a gold nugget in a pile of rocks, a good food find has telltale signs.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

The moment Come & Eat Teochew porridge opens its shutters at , cars pull up in front and grinning customers emerge to fill the tables. They eagerly make their way to the food laid out at the counter like excited children during recess time at the school tuck shop. Wide eyed customers purposefully survey what is served today as some of the dishes are offered only on certain days.

Teochew Porridge

For example, the very popular asam fish is served only on Thursdays. Their asam fish is exceptionally delicious. Made with fish boiled in a large pot choked full with tamarind, dried chili, garlic and spices, it is a complex blend of mildly salty, tangy sour, sweet and spicy hot. The flesh of the fish saturated with the asam brew is smoky, creamy and the bones are so soft they literally dissolve with gentle chewing. When it is available on Thursdays, every table will order at least one piece – more often than not, each diner will order a separate piece of their own.

Teochew Porridge

The fish here are ocean fresh – the boss buys them fresh everyday. The fish are steamed in small batches and every time a new tray of fish emerges from the kitchen, customers interrupt their eating and dash from their tables to the counter to grab the fish. The fish steamed in their own naturally sweet juices taste like sweet succulent fruits.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

Besides fish there is a selection of popular braised duck and pork items such as meat, innards, snort and ears.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

There is also a wide range homely Teochew dishes of fried and braised vegetables, fried pumpkin, tofu, spring rolls and so on, depending on the day.

The atmosphere is cheerful and familial – the voices of the restaurant workers calling out the orders serve as the background to the rowdy banter of the customers, most of whom are regulars, including from Singapore.

The unceasing waves of arriving customers replacing those who have just finished their meal reminded me of the waves on the beach near by. Despite the big crowd, the service is fast and friendly – the staff move swiftly and the orders are taken as if by telepathy as they know the customers’ favourites.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

My meal of delicious steamed fish, asam fish and two bowls of porridge came to RM23 (SGD 9.50).

Definitely a good place to come and eat a hearty traditional Teochew dinner.

Teochew Porridge

Restaurant name: Restoran Come & Eat 吃又来潮州粥
Address: 34-2-A, Jalan Stulang Darat (shop lot at foot of 3-storey flats facing the highway)
Map: http://g.co/maps/aut82
GPS: 1.47285, 103.77829
Hours: (closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 1 Mar 2012
Teochew Porridge

“Find dining” is a hit or miss pursuit that risks our meagre daily cholesterol and calorie quota. Once in a while, I stumble upon an outstanding eatery in an unlikely place that cancels all the misses of “find dining”.

Teochew Porridge

Restoran Come & Eat 吃又来潮州粥 is such a gem.

Just like the glint of a gold nugget in a pile of rocks, a good food find has telltale signs.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

The moment Come & Eat Teochew porridge opens its shutters at , cars pull up in front and grinning customers emerge to fill the tables. They eagerly make their way to the food laid out at the counter like excited children during recess time at the school tuck shop. Wide eyed customers purposefully survey what is served today as some of the dishes are offered only on certain days.

Teochew Porridge

For example, the very popular asam fish is served only on Thursdays. Their asam fish is exceptionally delicious. Made with fish boiled in a large pot choked full with tamarind, dried chili, garlic and spices, it is a complex blend of mildly salty, tangy sour, sweet and spicy hot. The flesh of the fish saturated with the asam brew is smoky, creamy and the bones are so soft they literally dissolve with gentle chewing. When it is available on Thursdays, every table will order at least one piece – more often than not, each diner will order a separate piece of their own.

Teochew Porridge

The fish here are ocean fresh – the boss buys them fresh everyday. The fish are steamed in small batches and every time a new tray of fish emerges from the kitchen, customers interrupt their eating and dash from their tables to the counter to grab the fish. The fish steamed in their own naturally sweet juices taste like sweet succulent fruits.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

Besides fish there is a selection of popular braised duck and pork items such as meat, innards, snort and ears.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

There is also a wide range homely Teochew dishes of fried and braised vegetables, fried pumpkin, tofu, spring rolls and so on, depending on the day.

The atmosphere is cheerful and familial – the voices of the restaurant workers calling out the orders serve as the background to the rowdy banter of the customers, most of whom are regulars, including from Singapore.

The unceasing waves of arriving customers replacing those who have just finished their meal reminded me of the waves on the beach near by. Despite the big crowd, the service is fast and friendly – the staff move swiftly and the orders are taken as if by telepathy as they know the customers’ favourites.

Teochew Porridge

Teochew Porridge

My meal of delicious steamed fish, asam fish and two bowls of porridge came to RM23 (SGD 9.50).

Definitely a good place to come and eat a hearty traditional Teochew dinner.

Teochew Porridge

Restaurant name: Restoran Come & Eat 吃又来潮州粥
Address: 34-2-A, Jalan Stulang Darat (shop lot at foot of 3-storey flats facing the highway)
Map: http://g.co/maps/aut82
GPS: 1.47285, 103.77829
Hours: (closed on Monday)
Non Halal

Date visited: 1 Mar 2012
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