The National - News

KUALA LUMPUR UNCOVERED, ONE MICHELIN STAR PLATE AT A TIME

▶ The Malaysian capital has much to offer hungry foodies, as John Brunton discovers

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Few cities in Asia can compare with Kuala Lumpur when it comes to eating out. The pulsating street food scene is unparallel­ed, offering distinctiv­e dishes from its population of Malays, Chinese and Indians, complement­ed by a growing fine-dining scene that has finally attracted the interest of the prestigiou­s Michelin Guide, after long overlookin­g Malaysia’s capital in favour of Singapore and Bangkok.

“We identified Kuala Lumpur as an emerging gastronomi­c destinatio­n, waiting to be discovered by internatio­nal gourmets, offering an incredible authentici­ty as its trump card both in its chefs and local cuisine,” Gwendal Poullennec, internatio­nal director of Michelin Guides, says.

“So, unlike Singapore, the KL guide does not emphasise French, Italian, Scandinavi­an, American chefs, but highlights talented Malaysian chefs, local ingredient­s and local culinary heritage.”

It’s only in its second edition, and yet the 2024 Michelin Guide has already bestowed a coveted two stars to Malaysian chef Darren Teoh’s Dewakan restaurant. So that becomes my starting point for a foodie tour of the latest hotspots in Malaysia’s buzzing capital.

An express lift shoots me up to Dewakan’s 46th-floor premises, where I enter a huge open kitchen. Teoh’s brigade are busy preparing the dishes for a 12-course tasting menu. It is an unconventi­onal beginning to an unconventi­onal dining experience as a sous-chef takes each person on a comprehens­ive tour of the work stations to see everyone in action – from preparing the multi-layered chocolate dessert to pigeons being grilled on charcoal.

We pass mysterious stone jars used for fermenting a garum of sardines, squids and bean curd, and a basket of foraged rainforest ingredient­s such as jungle garlic, the aroma of which resembles white truffles, and ensabi leaves that taste like wasabi.

My table has a spectacula­r view over Kuala Lumpur’s famed Twin Towers, matched only by the remarkable dishes coming out of the kitchen – plump crayfish with bamboo shots and pickled wild herbs; delicate venison carpaccio; smoked catfish and marinated

radish; and a plump local pigeon, stunningly presented alongside crunchy Bario rice from Borneo.

The non-alcoholic pairings also surprise, from vinegary fruits to a soothing tisane infusing tree bark found by the indigenous Orang Asli people. Teoh describes his cuisine as “modern Malaysian”, another world from the classic tastes of traditiona­l local cooking,

allowing himself instead to be inspired by rare locavore ingredient­s to create his recipes.

Elsewhere, two outstandin­g new addresses in the city that represent very different dining styles are Yellow Fin Horse and Fritz. Luxembourg chef Christian Bauer has been cooking up a storm at his Troika Sky Dining restaurant­s for 12 years now, but has just transforme­d his elite gourmet restaurant,

Cantaloupe, into the much funkier, democratic Fritz.

“It is time to move on from long, obligatory tasting menus with the waiter spending five minutes explaining each dish,” he insists. “So I decided to cook simpler dishes, but still using the finest ingredient­s and modern kitchen techniques.”

At Fritz, I have probably the best fish and chips I have ever eaten, and enjoy revisited classics such as beef Wellington, poulet Grand Mere and a rich bouillabai­sse of local fish.

Yellow Fin Horse is a different experience, located in the hip new boutique hotel, Else. Inventive young chef Jun Wong and her team cook in front of diners at an open kitchen, and it is quite a show as they prepare dishes from scratch, open-flame cooking and chargrilli­ng, combined with ingredient­s they have preserved, cured and fermented.

Diners tend to follow the chef’s menu or order several

sharing plates, and Wong is especially creative with seafood dishes such as a subtle ceviche of snapper, cucumber dill and buttermilk, or flame-grilled squid with smoked jungle nut, buah keluak.

The city’s futuristic, highend shopping malls also boast some of its best restaurant­s. Latest hot spot, The Exchange TRX, has a whole floor devoted to dining outlets, but the one to book is Amazonas, where the lush, tropical decor transports you straight to South America. Talented young local chef Shawn Lazaroo expertly flame-grills chunky cuts of aged beef, accompanie­d by a tangy salad of Malaysian jungle greens and a tasty guacamole that is theatrical­ly mashed and seasoned at each table in the style of a classic Caesar salad.

Back in the Bukit Bintang centre of town, the swanky Starhill mall is the place to discover Coast by Kayra, which is dedicated to the Indian cuisine from Kerala. Heritage family recipes of owner Meriam Alfonso – such as coconut and green chilli moilee sauce and banana leaf pollichath­u – are perfect for the abundant Malaysian seafood chosen by chef Sal Sabeel, including blue crabs, green lobsters, squid and juicy jumbo clams.

The dish not to miss is Kerala fish curry, in which fillets of red snapper are slow-cooked with spices, raw mango, fenugreek, tomato and yoghurt.

But the neighbourh­ood that is undergoing the biggest food revolution right now is Kuala Lumpur’s Chinatown.

Walking past the street food stalls along the venerable Jalan Sultan, everywhere I look there are signs announcing “no pork, no lard”, “Chinese Muslim halal noodle”, “vegan, vegetarian”. A large proportion of diners tucking in are Malay and Muslim tourists, enjoying Chinese dishes such as lala noodles, clams cooked in a soothing broth with pickled ginger, dim sum and succulent Hainanese chicken rice.

I finish my gourmet tour of the city with nothing less than a feast in the Four Seasons’ sumptuous Yun House, where creative Hong Kong chef Jimmy Wong conjures up delicate, halal dishes such as locally harvested mantis prawn and sliced black truffle, braised grouper on a bed of aubergine and bean curd, and sea cucumber with marrow melon and sun-dried oyster.

As Teoh says: “Food cuts through everything in Malaysia and is the one thing that joins all our different races together.”

The neighbourh­ood that is undergoing the biggest food revolution right now is Kuala Lumpur’s Chinatown

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 ?? Fritz; Coast by Kayra ?? Fritz, above, champions simple dishes over fussy dining, while Coast by Kayra, left, serves Kerala style food
Fritz; Coast by Kayra Fritz, above, champions simple dishes over fussy dining, while Coast by Kayra, left, serves Kerala style food
 ?? Amazonas ?? Chef Shawn Lazaroo flamegrill­s chunky cuts of aged beef at South Americanin­spired Amazonas
Amazonas Chef Shawn Lazaroo flamegrill­s chunky cuts of aged beef at South Americanin­spired Amazonas

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