: : Stall 25 Bukit Mata, Topspot : :

Right, pictures are finally sorted out. I hope. So, here goes.

Bukit Mata open-air restaurant is a place where you can pick and choose your ingredients. You can also tell the waitresses how you would like the food to be prepared. There are so many varieties to choose from : sweet and sour, with soy sauce, ginger, curry style, tom yam style, thai style, etc. Note that not everything will come out tasty but it’s still an adventure to find out.

Fresh Local Crab

Thought I’ll start with something that was still alive. This is the local crab that’s cook fresh. However, if the crab is too old, you’ll find that the meat is a lot less and that it becomes powdery. Sometimes, if you’re lucky, there are eggs inside. It’s tasty!! My favourite dish is black pepper crab but you’ll need to check with the restaurant whether they use fresh black pepper or the quick sauce that comes in the bottle (which is too starchy!! yuk!!). Another popular way of cooking crab is with chillies but this is a bit sweet at the same time. There is also asam crab and good ol’ boiled crab.

Imported Frozen Crabs

These are the imported crabs. Very colourful but I find the local crab more tasty as it’s fresher and somehow, the meat is sweeter. Think it’s something to do with being in the tropics.

Fresh Vegetables

Right now, onto the greens! Have to stay healthy! Also, must be able to good bowel system to get rid of all the rich rich seafood eaten for the day. Left to right : Chinese lettuce, tom yau, spinach (I think). Chinese lettuce has a slightly different taste to the normal lettuce found in salads because it’s a lot juicy as it retains more water. Remember the posting on tom yau? This is how it looks like uncook. Similar taste to watercress but the stalk is firmer. Spinach is Popeye’s diet. Same everywhere. Spinach is usually cooked with garlic and oyster sauce. In fact, most vegetables are cooked with oyster sauce.

More Fresh Vegetables

Left to Right : Broccoli, Midin, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Chinese Cabbage, Pineapple. Midin is actually the young shoots of fern found in swampy area/marshland. It’s a jungle dish that has become increasingly popular over the past years. That’s because it’s very crunchy but watch out for the high ureaic acid inside. Not for people with gout. Also, once cooked, the veggie doesn’t keep well. It will turn black very fast and black spots will appear as well. Great with garlic or belachan or Chinese Rice Wine (not at this stall. Remember, this stall is HALAL!). Chinese cabbage looks similarl to the ordinary cabbage except that it’s a longish shape. I know Caris has a great recipe for Chinese Cabbage Salad with Ikan Billis and lime juice.

Some more Fresh Vegetables

Left to Right : Tomatoes, Carrot, Local Tangerine (extremely sour!!!), Ladies’ Finger (Okra). The tangerine cannot be eaten raw because it’s so sour. However, it goes great with any assam dish, especially Assam Fish Head Curry. Ladies’ Finger goes well with belachan but it’s an extremely sticker vegetable once its all cut up into slices. Extremely goeey but great with curry.

Too bad, more veggies!

Left to Right : Baby carrots, broccoli, French Beans, Sweet Beans, Leek. The French Beans are the thin and flat one. The Sweet Beans are the better ones with peas inside. The sweet beans are very crunchy and yet still very sweet. Goes great with oyster sauce and garlic. Keeping it simple is sometimes the best. As for leek, the Chinese believe that this is a ‘money come’ vegetables and it also eaten during Chinese New Year to usher in more money for the new year!!

Tons and tons of veggies!!

Left to Right : Bak Choi (I think), Sabah Veggie, Leek. For Sabah veggie, it’s an expensive vegetable because it has to be picked from the wild. Cannot be farm as far as I know. Goes great with belachan (spicy prawn paste) or with garlic alone. There is also the Chinese Rice wine version but not at this restaurant since it is a halal establishment. If you were to go to Sabah and ask for Sabah veggie, people will look at you in a funny way. They do not call it that but by another name although I don’t know what. If you were to order Sabah veggie in West Malaysia, it’s a different vegetable. Confused by now yet? ;p

Surprise surprise, more greens!!

The famous cangkuk manis!! Looks alot huh? But once cook, it’s actually not a lot. Watch out! Can be poisonous if one doesn’t know how to cook it properly. Will arrange with Granny for a step-by-step recipe for this dish.

The end of the greens is here

Left to Right : Celery, Chinese Lettuce, Bitter Gourd. Yep, this is how the Chinese Lettuce looks like. It goes great with Tuna and Corn salad. Extremely tasty as it is so juicy!! Bitter gourd is just downright bitter. An acquired taste but it’s very popular as a fried dish and in herbal soup as well. Surprisingly, the bitterness actually detoxifies your body? Keeps one body pure. Personally, I like bitter gourd that is sliced thinly and deep fried. This is the way the Indians do it as an condiment to banana leaf rice servings.

Quail's eggs and Fish Bladder

Right, ran out of vegetables. Left is the quail’s eggs : a firm favourite for mix vegetables but a cholesterol bomb. On the right is ho piuo or rather, the fish bladder. It’s actually tasteless but very spongy. It’s also a bit expensive but great for soups. Yum. The bladder is usually found dried up so it needs to be soak in hot water before cooking it.

Seafood Galore

Front, Left to Right : Cockles, chuk-chuk, black mushrooms. Back, Left to Right : Cuttlefish, Squid, Sea Cucumber. Chuk-chuk is another type of shellfish whose taste is similar to cockles. I think it’s name comes from the sound that one makes when sucking out the shellfish from the shell tip. Slurp slurp! There is a technique to do this as it’s not easy to get the meat up. You can hear people trying to suck out a stubborn piece of meat from the shell. There is no other way to do this. The shell is too hard to crack except for the tip. The skin of the squid was reflecting the light so can’t it but then again, it’s nothing fancy. :p On the other hand, sea cucumber is cooked with soup but it’s not for me. Too rubbery.

Some more catch from the sea

Bottom, L to R : Crab, lobster. Top, L to R : more crab, anchovies. This is quite a large anchovie which can be deep fried and eating completely, bones and all. Since it’s very crispy, it’s easy to eat the bones. The lobster is great when cook in soup or a sweet and sour dish. Takes a bit of skill to remove the flesh from the thorny armclaws. Bite it gently without hitting your gums until the shell cracks slightly. Using your fingers, crack open the shell of the armclaw and gently pull it apart. Now, it’s easy to get a grip on the flesh and pull it out.

The Anchovies

Another shot of the anchovies.

Oh la la la!!

Arggghh!! Didn’t realise that they had lala until I saw the pic. Lala is the local mussels but not commonly eaten in Sarawak. However, it’s very popular in West Malaysia where the best tasking lala dishes are cooked by the Malays. It’s cook with chilli so can be very spicy depending on how much spicyness one wants it to be.

Fishball, anyone?

This is a picture showing the variety of fishballs that is used in the cooking.

More seafood coming up!

L to R : Fish, bamboo seashells, fish eggs. The bamboo seashells are so tasty when fried with chillis or cooked with curry powder. These ones are the common ones found along the seashore. Sometimes, one can find bigger ones. Sometimes known as the monkey’s anatomy, if you catch my drift. Can’t be too open about this else no one will come to mum-mum’s.

What? More seafood?

Starting to look like a Fish Market

All sorts of fish are available but better check with the waitress on what is the best cooking style for the fish. Also, check out the prices some. Some are astronomically costly, like the local terubok which has very sweet meat but very boney. But, because of it’s sweet flesh, the prices rockets up sky high. How to get rid of fish bones stuck in your throat? Easy : take a teaspoon of cooked rice and swallow it without biting it. The fish bone will stick onto the rice and will eventually go out through the ‘back door’.

Catch of the Sea

This is the mantis. It taste like a lobster but flesh has more taste to it. It’s a very popular dish in Sabah and cheap there. Not here. That’s why we didn’t order it. It’s great when deep fried in butter, in exactly the same way butter prawn is cooked.

It is THAT big!!

These prawns the huge freshwater prawns. See how big it gets compared to the hand? Great as Prawn Termidor. I love eating the flesh from the head but that’s where the highest cholesterol levels are found in a prawn. Oh well. Hmmm… Still, it’s simply delicious when cook in a variety of ways.

Well, that’s about it. Other than Stall 25-Bukit Mata, you can check out these other two stalls : ABC Seafood and Ling Loong Seafood. The other stalls aren’t that great so you’re not going to be missing much if you don’t go.

ABC Seafood and Ling Loong Seafood

: : Snacks : :

I think I went a little bit overboard when I decided to take pictures of the fresh food section at Bukit Mata, Topspot on Friday night. Now, have to sort through 30 pictures!!

Anyway, let’s a little something on the local snacks found at pubs. *Tongue in cheek*. After the huge dinner at Topspot, we went off to a nearby pub called Monsoon where drinks are cheap and service is very prompt.

Fried Banana Chips

Fried Banana Chips

This is very sweet and spicy. The banana is sliced thinly before being fried until crispy. Then, it’s coated with syrup that has already been mixed with chopped chillies. Very spicy. But, it was a bit soft that night. What a pity.

Peanuts and Salted Fish

Peanuts and Salted Fish

Now this goes great with beer. The salted fish is known locally as ikan billis. It’s actually very small anchovies. Sometimes, you can find them in slightly bigger sizes and those can be eaten on it’s own. Good source of calcium. Bad source of salt. :p Give and take, lor.

: : Stall 25 Bukit Mata, Topspot : :

This is going to be really long blog so will only put up the dinner items. Took too many pictures and it’s taking me a long time to sort them all out. I’ll cover the different types of food (uncooked) later on.

Went out with BJ and her bf to join her sister UJ, friends and other relatives for dinner. There were about 14 of us having dinner so we had to join two tables. It was a seafood dinner at a popular foodspot. Would you believe that the open-air restaurant is above a carpark in Kuching?

Topspot is a great place to go for seafood, especially since it has lot of restaurants to choose from. We ate at Stall 25, Bukit Mata, as the food is one of the better tasting spot in Kuching. Also, parking is extremely convenient (corny today, so what? ;p).

Okay, let’s bring on the food. We could not finish everything because it was just too much.

Oyster Omellette

Butter Prawn

Sweet and Sour Fish with Mangos and Chillies

Stir-Fried Kangkung Belachan

Bake Tom Yam Squid

Stir-Fried Cangkuk Manis with Egg

Fried Cockles in Oyster Sauce and Soy Sauce

Lemon Chicken

Oyster Omelette

Oyster Omelette

Another way to cook the oyster omelette. It’s different from the earlier posting of the same dish. The one we had was deep fried until it was crispy. Serve with light soy sauce that was extremely salty. The oyster omelette is a specialty of Stall 25.

Butter Prawn

Butter Prawn

Need to have a very very hot wok to cook the butter prawn until it’s crispy. The prawns are still partially covered with it’s shell but it’s crispy enough that you can munch the whole thing. It’s not a spicy dish but seriously fattening because of the butter. Still, not bothered last night about this. A chloresterol bomb.

Sweet and Sour Fish with Mangos and Chillies

Sweet and Sour Fish with Mango and Chillies

An excellent version of sweet and sour fish that was cooked with mango and chillies. The mango is the sour type and the flesh is still very firm. Still, it added a pleasant taste. It wasn’t so spicy even though there were chillies in it. Or maybe it’s because I just cannot taste the spicy-ness. In other places, this dish is known as Thai Style Fried Fish. I can hear Auntie Sandie saying, “Too much taste that it’s so hard to sort it all out!” Auntie Sandie is a lovable American lady I met last year, my mum’s close friend. Couldn’t take all the different tastes at once.

Stir-Fried Kangkung Belachan

Stir-Fried Kangkung Belachan

An all-time favourite but definitely spicy. Just found out that kangkung is known as Chinese spinach. Hmmm… spinach with hollow, crunchy stems. The entire dish was eaten completely.

Bake Tom Yam Squid

Bake Tom Yam Squid

First things first : do NOT be deceived by the words tom yam. They actually put curry powder into it! Ewww! Well, the squid wasn’t so bad but it could have been better if they only put in the spices. I didn’t even see a single piece of lemon grass swimming in all that gravy. Do not order.

Stir-Fried Cangkuk Manis with Egg

Stir-Fried Cangkuk Manis with Egg

Cangkuk manis again. Well, it’s a great dish so cannot complain.

Fried Cockles in Soy Sauce and Chillies

Fried Cockles in Soy Sauce and Chillies

Yep, fried cockles in soy sauce and some chillies as well. Everything was spicy that night. Just love spicy food. But!!!! Do not like cockles. It’s called se ham here in the local Chinese dialects. Not for me. I prefer scallops. :p

Lemon Chicken

Lemon Chicken

Last dish of the night. 8 dishes for 14 people. Phew! Too full lah! All-time favourite : lemon chicken!! Tasted more sweet than sour. Yumm….

Well, that’s all for now. I’ll add another blog tomorrow on what is up at Topspot. Took too long to get this blog up. Enjoy reading it!!

: : LittleYellowDifferent : :

I forgot to mention that I also got a lot of visitors from Little.Yellow.Different . An amusing blog and one that cheers me up when I’ve had a bad day or just feeling glum. His stories about his parents sort of remind me of mine. Not that it’s terrible but sure is funny when you look at it from an outside perspective. Ha!

Thanks again guys! Ernie, thanks for the link!

: : Granny’s Cooking : :

This is a dish called asam prawn. It’s a fried dish whereby the prawn is fried with a type of fruit called asam jawa. Asam jawa is both sweet and sour at the same time. If you look closely at the picture, you can see the seeds of the fruit. The asam used in this picture has already been preserved.

Great Nyonya dish. The shells of the prawn are left on so that the prawn itself doesn’t shrink.

Asam Prawn