Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Nom Nom Asia Asia on a plate

A perfectly organised Fridge…

- text Panchali Illankoon PHOTOS DAMITH WICKRAMASI­NGHE

From the owners of the Thai Heritage Food Truck comes ‘Nom Nom Asia’, a restaurant specialisi­ng in 6 different Asian cuisines; Thai, Vietnamese, Chinese, Malaysian, Indonesian and Singaporea­n. Owned and managed by the Sunnadeniy­a family, Nom Nom Asia is a business venture that is close to their heart. It is founded on the influence of their many travels abroad to different countries and the experience­s of all the different cultures they’ve witnessed. “We travelled a lot ever since we were kids and we were brought up to be all major foodies! My father, Kolvin Sunnadeniy­a, would always make sure we tried all kinds of food when we travelled so later, even if we sat for a dinner, we got used to reviewing our food talking about the flavours and the textures!” shared Savindri Sunnadeniy­a, a partner at the newly opened restaurant. “We opened Nom Nom Asia because we wanted to create a restaurant that had all these great dishes from our travels and we wanted to create a place where its not just the ambience or the aesthetics that are good but also where the food is great.” Setting themselves apart from other Asian restaurant­s in the scene, Nom Nom Asia differenti­ates itself based on the authentici­ty of their dishes. “Our menu doesn’t attempt to create fusion dishes. It’s not Chinese fusion or Singaporea­n fusion. We created our menu by handpickin­g dishes we tasted and loved and thought would go well together and we wanted to keep those dishes authentic to their origin.”

Ambience

Nom Nom Asia has two dining spaces. The downstairs has both an indoor dining space and a small strip of outdoor dining area and is ideal for quick lunches and dinners. The upstairs offer more privacy two private rooms ideal for groups of diners with one room large enough to accommodat­e a group of 80 and the other smaller room can accommodat­e a more intimate dinner party for a group of 12.

The décor at Nom Nom Asia is what really creates the ambience. You enter the restaurant through a 150-yearold door and walk into a creatively decorated space popping with colour. The colour schemes and the little decorative pieces all bear the influence of travel as it represents a certain place or a country the Sunnadeniy­as have visited; be it hanging flowers from a temple in Thailand or a patterned tile from a restaurant in China.

Drinks

Unlike their food menu the beverages they offer are very few. Besides a few sodas and fruit juices guests can either order a hot green tea pot or a flavoured iced tea. We tried their seasonal Chrysanthe­mum

Cold Tea (Rs. 350) which is a flowerbase­d infusion beverage made from chrysanthe­mums and is a popular drink in East Asian countries such as China.

Chrysanthe­mum once brewed produces a light yellow colour and is a naturally sweet tea with a citrus aroma to it. The cold tea is presented in a jug alongside a bowl filled with ice and sugar syrup and the tea is consumed once it is poured into the bowl of ice. The Chrysanthe­mum was super refreshing and instantly cooling – which was a perfect drink to have on a sunny, sunny afternoon!

Food

The menu at Nom Nom

Asia is extensive and is a combinatio­n of some of the best dishes from Thailand, China, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. Thai Chef, Suri, of Nom

Nom Asia has had many years of experience in cooking authentic Asian dishes and the menu promises just that with a variety of appetisers, soups, salads, meats, seafood, noodles and rice. The restaurant is currently in the works for a dessert’s menu as well.

We started off with one of their specialty salads. The Vietnamese Banana

Blossom (Rs. 950) is a salad made of scraped banana flower and prawns. The salad was interestin­g because there were so many different textures that went into this dish as alongside the banana flower was the shredded cabbage and onions which all played a role in how the dish came together. It also packed quite the punch as it was very easily one of the spiciest salads we’ve had!

For our main meal we ordered several dishes. For our carbs we ordered their

Salted Fish Fried Rice (Rs. 1195) and for protein we got their Chilli Garoupa and to make sure we ate our vegetables we also ordered their Buk Choy (Rs. 750).

The Salted Fish Fried Rice is a Cantonese dish and is simply fried rice with the addition of salted fish. While it is merely a simple addition to what is a usual fried rice, the inclusion of the salted fish gives the rice so much more flavour and fragrance. The Buk Choy was served in oyster sauce along with black mushrooms and fried garlic and complement­ed the meal.

The star of the main course was their Chilli

Garoupa. The stir fried garoupa in a chilli sauce was not just crunchy but it was also packed with intense flavours. A must try dish if you are a fan of fish! “We travelled a lot ever since we were kids and we were brought up to be all major foodies! My father, Kolvin Sunnadeniy­a, would always make sure we tried all kinds of food when we travelled so later, even if we sat for a dinner, we got used to reviewing our food talking about the flavours and the textures!”

Overall

Overall our experience at Nom

Nom Asia was great. They have created a lovely ambience with their creative décor and the food just ticked all the right boxes; great flavours, good portions and value for money.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Banana Blossom
Rs 950/=
Banana Blossom Rs 950/=
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Chilli Garoupa Salted Fish Fried Rice Rs Buk Choy
Rs 750/= 1195/=
Chilli Garoupa Salted Fish Fried Rice Rs Buk Choy Rs 750/= 1195/=
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Cold Tea
Rs 350/=
Cold Tea Rs 350/=
 ??  ??

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