11.1.08

New Cathay Restaurant, Penang

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This is a place I used to take breakfast once a blue moon as I am not from the island. However, I make it a point to order the banana pancake with raisin there. First of all, this food is not easily available (except from some homes' kitchens). Second, it simply make a good breakfast for me.

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I am not sure whether the chef put in any sugar or not, but the sweetness is just appropriate, maybe it's just the natural sweetness of banana. The pancake is added with banana slices and some raisins. The pancakes are cut into pieces and served with some sesames sprinkled on top.

There are many other food available in the restaurant. Though not bad, but most of them are somehow averagely tasted. Anyway, I do really hope they open up branches in somewhere nearby (in KL) so that I won't be too home-sicked with Penang food!

Chee Cheong Fun - the thick but not stinky gravy earns my vote.

A rice noodle roll (also translated as steamed rice roll) is a Cantonese dish from southern China and Hong Kong, commonly served as a variety of dim sum. It is a thin roll made from a wide strip of Shahe fen (rice noodles), filled with shrimp, pork, vegetables, or other ingredients. Sweet soy sauce is poured over the dish upon serving. A very similar dish is the Vietnamese bánh cuốn.
(Extracted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_noodle_roll)

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Hokkien Mee - The soup doesn't have stinky smell but tasted average, as in no surprises to me.
(mind you, the "average" is in terms of what you can get in Penang and absolutely does not mean the "average" elsewhere.)

Hokkien hae mee (Hokkien/Fujian prawn noodles; 福建虾麺) is served in Penang (with a variant served in Singapore known as Hae mee). It is a dish of egg noodles and rice noodles in a fragrant stock, which is made from both fresh shrimp and dried prawns, as well as pork or chicken. Traditionally, small cubes of fried pork fat are added to the soup, but this is now less common due to health concerns. It is garnished with prawns, fish cake, leafy greens, pork ribs, squid, vegetables, crisp deep-fried shallots, spring onions and fresh lime. The dish is served with sliced red chili, light soy sauce and sambal.
(Extracted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokkien_mee)

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Jawa Mee - Just normal.

Jawa Mee is similar to the Mee rebus. Mee rebus (literally boiled noodles in English) is a Malay inspired noodle dish. It is most popular in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. The dish is made of yellow egg noodles, which are also used in Hokkien mee, with a spicy slightly sweet curry-like gravy.
(Extracted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mee_rebus)

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Char Keow Teow - Normal either.

Char kway teow, literally "fried flat noodles", is a popular noodle dish in Malaysia and Singapore. It is made from flat rice noodles (Shāhé fěn or hé fěn in Mandarin), approximately 1 cm or slightly narrower in width, fried over very high heat with light and dark soy sauce, chilli, prawns, cockles, egg, bean sprouts and Chinese chives. Sometimes slices of Chinese sausage and fish cake are added. It is fried in pork fat, with crisp croutons of pork lard, which give it its characteristic taste.
(Extracted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Char_kway_teow)


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Other Reviews :
http://everythingasian.blogspot.com/2007/12/kedai-kopi-new-cathay-pulau-tikus.html

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

ooo.. I will go try one day :)

joy said...

Yeah, do try it out and share me your opinions. :P

Pamela Yeoh said...

food dere is real nice.. yummy.. many nice food include wan tan mee and all ... mine is http://malaysianfoodie.blogspot.com/