Skip to main content

The taste of a name


Westerners eat foods like cereals, toast and bacon and eggs for breakfast. Malaysians eat curries. Both were on offer at the hotel buffet this morning, but when in Penang do what the Penangites do. Laksa, curried chicken and coconut rice for starters, plus lots of fresh tropical fruit.


We had to hurry our meal as we had booked a "Markets and Meal Experience" from the hotel as part of a loyalty club membership. The executive chef of the Parkroyal Penang met us at the lobby and he, B, Alex and myself piled into a car for a ride to Georgetown. The first part is very scenic as the road twists around the coast. The centre of Georgetown is narrow streets and old mansions, many sadly run down.

We stopped nearby to where we walked yesterday, alongside the old shophouses in the UNESCO heritage area. Filling the sides of the street were small stalls selling fresh ingredients, preserved ingredients and all sorts of plastic junk. And a snake. Wonder if we should have visited the snake temple. Last time we were in Penang I did. It was pretty unimpressive.


At one open stall we tried a piece of pink-green ginger flower, which had a slightly astringent, but refreshing taste. It's added raw to dishes like Penang laksa and salads, but isn't the same plant as regular ginger.

Our destination was a couple of wet markets, where meat and fish are sold. The chef told us that these markets were under threat as younger locals preferred the airconditioned comfort and convenience of supermarkets and shopping centres.


Alex was fascinated by a coconut grinding machine. B purchased bags of unfried keropok, prawn and fish crackers. I had a taste of a preserved mango, again surprisingly refreshing and sweet, unlike those salty preserves of Japan that I am more familiar with.


This wet market is mostly empty
Iceman, but where's Maverick?
As we walked around old streets like Lebuh Campbell and Chulia the chef pointed out some of the famous restaurants that M-i-L had been requesting the day before.


Then it was time to pile back into the car and return to the hotel. The experience description had talked about a private cooking lesson, but that didn't eventuate and we were too hot to care much. The local knowledge had been enough to make the trip worthwhile.

Despite the exhaustion we had to repeat the sequence of the morning's events, only this time with M-i-L, friend and no chef as we piled into a taxi for a food adventure back in Georgetown.

The taxi dropped us off near Lorong Chulia, but the Shinkheang restaurant was shuttered. But M-i-L was delighted when we showed her an alternative, the Foo Heong restaurant as it turns out that there was a special history about it. After dining in there B's mother decided to name her daughter Heong, after the restaurants name, and indeed it forms part of B's Chinese name.


The restaurant was devoid of any customers, arches open to the air, worn owners staring vacantly outward. When the menu was presented my heart fell, for it was boring Cantonese staples. B's mum ordered shark fin soup, some sweet chicken and a couple of noodle dishes with thick brown sauce that were little touched. It was most unappetising, but M-i-L declared she was satisfied, but wanted to get some chicken rice from another famous shop to take back for dinner.


This lead to a lot of wandering the streets (despite the fact I knew the way), stopping off at old shophouses selling medicinal drinks, biscuits, dumplings, antiques, jewelry. It was hot and we were all tired, especially Alex, but I loved these shophouses. They were remnants of a different age and so were many of their contents. From some you could smell grease, see items still being manufactured and some for which there was surely no new stock available.




My day was made when I happened upon a portable apom balik stall. The elderly owner had been making them for 43 years.



We found the Kedia Kopi Thew Chik Cafe, but M-i-L was disappointed with what little Hainanese chicken they had left. Still, Alex ate enough and I got to try refreshing and sweet nutmeg juice.


It was a relief to finally return back to the resort for a swim. I'm going to miss those waterslides!

We were treated to a glorious red sunset behind the hills across the water. Tomorrow we must wake very early for our flight to Kuching.


Photos

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Kamioka mines: from silver to supernovas

Part of the Kamioka zinc mining and smelter complex Just after posting about the Kamioka Railway another photo from that 2006 set piqued my interest. Up there in the mountains the landscape looked blasted not just by winter but by something more. It was the kind of lonely place where you would not expect to find major industry, so this sight was quite surprising. Even more surprising is the history associated with this photo. According to some sources mining and refining of ores in Kamioka dates back to 710 AD  and only closed in 2001. Undoubtedly the mine was a major reason for the existence of the Kamioka Railway. Refining of zinc still continues to this day under the parent Mitsui Kenzoku zaibatsu . Gold, silver, copper, zinc and lead were all dug out of the rock here. Unfortunately, the process released cadmium into the river, which, when taken up by the rice that was grown in the river, caused the terrible itai-itai disease  - meaning "It hurts! It hurts". Cadm...

Asagaya and heading home

How can I be happy? I am about to return to a country where the toilets have at most two buttons and no seat warmers. But the tickets are booked and there are no cyclones, typhoons or other disasters standing in our way. It's almost time to go back to my first home. First B wants to do some "local shopping". So we catch the Chuo Line up a few stations to Asagaya, a residential area with a number of Shotengai, covered and uncovered arcades leading away from the station and narrow alleys lined with bars. It is an interesting area for a wander around. We are mainly looking, do some shopping for toothbrushes and sweets from Seiyu, a Wal-Mart owned supermarket/minor department store. We skipped breakfast and lunch is ramen and gyoza at a small restaurant near the entrance to the Pearl Centre shotengai. With the help of a staff member, I manage to purchase tickets at a branch of Lawson to the Ghibli Museum for a friend travelling to Japan in May. There are some...

To Melbourne on the XPT sleeper

Excited by the prospect of reliving the experience of seeing my very first movie and hearing the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra perform it I bought tickets to The Empire Strikes Back in Concert in Melbourne back in February. Then I did nothing about actually getting there. Much as I love Melbourne, due to family commitments I didn't want to spend more than the Sunday away. Flights there and back made sense, but  my flight down to Melbourne in late October reiterated the fact that I usually don't enjoy descending into the city. And the concert was in December, a season of summer storms. I really didn't feel like driving the whole route alone and in a hurry, so that left one choice. The train. My very first trip up to Sydney from Melbourne was aboard the luxury Southern Aurora. Or it was supposed to be luxury. I wouldn't know because I spent the whole ride up very sick with the flu lying in the top bunk, unable to stay awake for my whole of night vigil. Now only...