: : Crime Scene: :

Cast : Grandma, Wena

Time of Crime Occurance : 10 p.m.

Grandma : Wei! Come and eat Kuku’s (Uncle’s) Kolo Mee.

Wena : Eh? Thought he wanted to eat later?

Grandma : Nanti basi later (Will turn bad). Come, I eat with you.

Wena : (Hmmm… using me as an excuse to eat the mee. Oh well. No harm. I get the mee. )

: : Mega Food Court : :

Grand name. Foodwise, I’m not too sure. Below are some fares from lunch, also with collegues from work. Mega Food Court is at King’s Centre, near the Simpang Tiga roundabout.

Tang Hoon Soup No. 2(another one)

Salad Chicken

Indonesian Fried Kway Teow

Tang Hoon Soup No. 2

Tang Hoon Soup No. 2

The great thing about tang hoon soup is that you can order whatever you would like to have in it. EL decided to have it with only fishballs and seaweed(red ones!). A LOT of fishballs. Usually, it’s the soup that matters most and this one didn’t quite make the mark. I still say the one that the temple, Carpenter Street is a lot better. Gotta take a snapshot one day.

Salad Chicken

Salad Chicken

This is the latest -in- food for the chinese : Thousand Island Sauce with fried chicken and rice. Bit bizarre for me but my love affair with Thousand Island Sauce was way over. Seems like Thousand Island Sauce is the latest favourite everywhere. You can even find it in Chinese Restaurants where it’s mixed with prawn and fruits! Hmmm…

Indonesian Fried Kway Teow

Indonesian Fried Kway Teow

I’m not quite sure whether this is the REAL Indon cooking or not. But, the stall is apparently famous for this style of cooking. Although the noodles aren’t cooked as dark, it’s still very spicy. Lacking in garnishing but it was okay. Cannot beat Uncle’s cooking.

Food wasn’t that bad today. A bad lunch = lunch at the company’s cafeteria. Urgh!

: : Asian Junk Food: :

Thought I’d put this up just for the heck of it. Yes, Asians do have their own version of junk food. In fact, it’s been around for years and years.

Dried Plum Version 1

Tapioca Crisps

Dried Plum Version 1

Dried Plum Version 1

There are so many different types of plum out there it’s hard to list them all. This snacks reminds me of my childhood days of buying snacks at the school canteen during break-time/recess. This is sweetened but nowadays, artificial sugar is used rather than the real stuff.

Tapioca Crisps

Tapioca Crisps

One of the best I’ve had so far. It’s not oily. It’s crunchy. Very spicy from the chillie. Not too sweet. Not too salty.

Both snacks were bought at a Timbang Outlet (Timbang = Weighing in Malay) at Big Fresh Supermarket, Tabuan Jaya. All snacks are bought according to weight. Kinda like a sweet soup but this time for junk food.

: : Expert : :

Went to Tabuan Jaya for lunch today with some collegues from work. Had to persuade them to give me some time to take shots of their meals before tucking into them.

Hurry up, Rowena! Hungry lah!

Okay okay okay.

Tang Hoon Soup

Kolo Mee Pok

Chicken Rice

Tang Hoon Soup

Tang Hoon Soup

Direct translation : glass noodle. Yes, it is transparent, made from rice. PL got it from the Fish Ball King stall. It’s not the best tasting Tang Hoon Soup but will do. For a better choice, there is always the Chinese Temple at Carpenter Street. Anyway, the soup also has a lot of other extras inside : the fish balls, meat balls, deep fried fish skin, tauhu stuffed with meat, plain tauhu, deep fried tauhu, crabsticks and others. At this stall, you get to choose what you want to eat although I always make the mistake of taking too much!!

Kolo Mee Pok

Kolo Mee Pok

Mee Pok is the flat egg noodles. Cholesterol bomb but definitely tasty. The mee is first cooked in boiling hot water. Then, it is mixed with salt, soy sauce, sesame seed oil, pepper. Garnishes include char siew (sweet roasted pork), minced pork, fish balls, spring onions. Sarawak Kolo Mee has a unique taste to eat and is a big favourite among the locals and West Malaysians!

Chicken Rice

I had this from the Singapore Chicken Rice stall. The good thing is the chilli-garlic sauce by the side. Very nice. The rice is cooked with chicken fat and chicken stock. It’s accompanied with roasted chicken and a bowl of soup.

Well, that was lunch! Expert Hawker Center is at Tabuan Jaya, behind Bank Utama and next to Thompson’s Corner. It’s so-so but it’s a typical lunch spot.

Live to Eat or Eat to Live? That is the question.