Eat Drink KL: Fusion
Showing posts with label Fusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fusion. Show all posts

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Bene Pasta

With about eight recipes available for delivery, Bene Pasta strives to satisfy spaghetti cravings. 

We tried two Asian-influenced styles (RM16). The Mala Pasta might be too hot for some of us to handle - the Szechuan spiciness blazes a scorching, stinging path on the palate, burning over the mushrooms, roasted peanuts, salted vegetables and coriander in its rampage.

The Sesame Pasta is easier to enjoy, fragrantly nutty with sesame sauce and seeds, plus more mushrooms and a soft onsen egg, a textural treat with the perfectly firm pasta. Safe, soothing and scrumptious.

Bene Pasta 
instagram.com/benepasta.my
Tel: 016-788-1817

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Soul Kitchen, Sri Hartamas





Soul Kitchen serves spirited fare with contemporary East Asian cool. Fans of flavour-packed cooking might enjoy the lamb rack, richly saturated with a sweet-savoury char stew sauce, cushioned with carrots and onions (RM68), and river prawns in a creamy curry, coupled with a crisp bread roll for delicious dunking (RM58). Pair with sake for an easygoing evening.



Soul Kitchen

B-0-10, Plaza Damas 3, Jalan Sri Hartamas 1, 50480 Kuala Lumpur. Daily, 12pm-230pm, 6pm-1030pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com


Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Nippori Bistro, Petaling Jaya

Nippori first introduced itself in 2016 as a Japanese home-cooking cafe in Empire Damansara; this month, it debuts a spinoff that embraces a European viewpoint - Nippori Bistro is set in a high-ceilinged space that's meant to evoke a British colonial residence, with eclectic elements like a French-inspired patisserie's cake counter, an oversize portrait of a heavyset Mona Lisa enjoying her Italian wine, and Japanese tatami-like floor seating with low tables.


Pizzas, pastas and sushi are all given a cross-continental makeover: The Expensive One (RM65) is the humorously but honestly named pizza that strays far from its Neapolitan roots, topped not only with a Parisian brasserie's flourish of foie gras but Japanese-inflected ingredients like cubed unagi and wagyu beef, black tobiko and house-made teriyaki sauce. It's almost an overload of sweet-savoury richness on a relatively thin-crusted pizza.

Coming close to spaghetti with sashimi, the Nippori Reimen (RM48) showcases slick, smoothly firm Japanese noodles, served cold in a sauce with both umami and zest, blanketed with raw and cured fish and crustaceans - a fresh twist on seafood pasta.

We love our liver, so the maki topped with trout and foie sounded too luscious to ignore, especially with a moniker like Foie Gras Heaven (RM58). Again, a tad over the top, but if you like punchy flavours, these recipes should be robust enough for you.

If you're wondering whether this meal should be paired with sake or wine, have both. Diners are tempted to order two glasses of the latter - one glass clocks in at a pricey RM38, but two glasses cost a sensible RM48.

Pastries and cakes galore are available to end the experience on an English high-tea note.

The service team is authentically warm and proficient, ensuring a pleasant visit.

Nippori Bistro
Lot 2 and 3, B Land, Jalan 51a/225, Seksyen 51a, 46100 Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Open Tuesday-Sunday, 12pm-10pm.

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com


Monday, August 31, 2020

Anggun Chef Café Restaurant, MITEC





With a vibrantly colourful interior and an alfresco area that offers wide-open views, Anggun Chef Café Restaurant returns with a revamped setting that beautifully complements its creative cuisine. The culinary centrepiece of the Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre (MITEC) is now ready to reintroduce itself following months of refurbishment - take a cool marble table by the rattan swing beneath neon-lit lettering and enjoy this venue, a five-minute drive from Publika.






If you love flowers in your photos, Anggun Chef's new decor is set for your snapshots, with lavender-hued petals coiling down from arches of 14-foot-high ceilings. Seating booths surrounded by hydrangeas promise a picturesque peek out of the windows.

While the restaurant is ideal for a casual meal with friends or family, it's also available for parties, product launches and events, with a capacity of 100 people seated or 120 including standing room. A private dining space can accommodate 25 people.



Anggun Chef's kitchen is no less noteworthy, furnishing a contemporary perspective to familiar favourites from Malaysia and abroad. The restaurant's founder, Mimie Azura Mohamed, harnesses more than a decade of experience in running F&B businesses to serve up flavours that are robust without being overpowering, crowd-pleasing for every palate, wide-ranging and wallet-friendly.



Embark on your exploration with Anggun Chef's most prized dish, the Anggun Nasi Lemak Rendang Peanut Butter (RM18), a recipe that the restaurant has successfully fine-tuned over time. Every component has been prepared and cooked separately to showcase its best characteristics, from the emphatically aromatic rice to the extra-special sambal (infused with Cajun spices, for a KL-meets-New Orleans kick), though the star of this platter is the chicken rendang, coated with peanut butter that balances out the spice of the rendang for a rich, rounded texture, with an aftertaste that potently conveys kerisik (toasted grated coconut).  



The fusion fun continues with the Anggun Asam Pedas Lamb Grill (RM25), another longtime Anggun Chef creation. This is painstaking to prepare - the New Zealand lamb is marinated with a medley of Asian and Western herbs and spices for two weeks, yielding savoury-sweet succulence. It's served with Anggun Chef's own asam pedas sauce, a thick and tangy match for the meat, lusciously paired with al dente strands of spaghetti and a crisp slice of garlic bread for a double dose of irresistible carbs.



Anggun Chef is not merely about innovation but also execution, reflected in the classic pizza, the Margherita (RM20) - it might not be baked in a wood-fired oven, but it still strives to do justice to Italian traditions, with dough and tomato sauce that are both meticulously house-made, resulting in a fresh-tasting, crunchy-creamy foundation for a back-to-basics pizza that's brightened with edible flowers sprinkled over melted mozzarella.


Similarly, while mushroom soup might sound conventional, Anggun Chef jazzes up its Soup De Champignon (RM13) with plenty of shiitake, white button and other mushrooms, crowned with milky foam for additional dynamics, gracefully laid with more edible flowers. Dunk Anggun's own-made garlic bread into the soup to make a splash.

There's much more to tempt us back - from Nyonya-style curry mee to grilled smoked duck confit with pineapple risotto, Cantonese-style fried yi mihn and Malaya oxtail soup to salmon steak and filet mignon, each with its own twists and flourishes.    




Desserts are equally delectable. The popular picks are well-represented and extremely affordable - Molten Lava Cake (RM10) comes crafted with Callebaut Belgian chocolate for that luscious, steaming-hot centre, topped with blueberries, strawberries and strawberry sauce, while the Tiramisu (RM10) layers cream with Anggun Chef's house-blend coffee, finished with ladyfinger biscuits and chocolate sauce. Other desserts to tickle your fancy include Belgian waffles, Creme brulee, and an intriguing Seri Muka brulee with pandan vanilla sauce.  




Beverages all meet the mark too - the Cafe Latte (RM10) relies on a house blend of French-roasted pure Arabica beans, dark and chocolaty with subtle hints of spice. An organic roast is also available for customers who favour a fresher, fruitier flavour.


The Cucumber Virgin Mojito (RM12) is the cool thirst-quencher to combat our tropical heat, a mocktail mix of soda water, cucumber syrup, lemon concentrate, mint syrup, lime and lemon slices, plus asam boi for that mouth-puckering local kick. This is also served in four other flavours (original, blueberry, apple mint or strawberry); other mocktails include the Virgin Passion Margarita, the La Vie En Rose, and a Fruit & Spices Lemonade.

Shakes and smoothies are sip-worthy, convenient for having here or getting on the go, spanning the Cookies & Cream Milkshake to the Salted Caramel Mocha Frappe. For a relatively wholesome treat, try the Mango Yogurt Smoothie (RM12), natural fresh yogurt with mango puree, topped with chocolate sprinkles. Alternatively, check out the Do It Yourself orange and lemon juice, enabling customers to squeeze out their own drink using professional restaurant equipment.

Many thanks to Anggun Chef Café Restaurant for having us here.





Anggun Chef Café Restaurant

MITEC, South Entrance, Jalan Dutamas 2, Kompleks Kerajaan, Kuala Lumpur. Open Monday-Sunday, 7am-9pm. Tel: 019-312-0689

This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com