Located near Manchester United's stadium is the UK's largest shopping mall, The Trafford Centre. As you would expect from any mall of this size, it is complete with shopping, entertainment and dining facilities. We live about 20 minutes walk fromthe centre and this was what we had last week at it's food court.
Harry Ramsden's is a world famous chain of Fish and Chips outlet and in my opinion, also serve the best battered fish you will find anywhere. My son had the fish bites meal, which consisted of little chunks of whole (not chopped) fish. Batter was light and crunchy and so were the chips.
I had a Karahi Lamb curry from Shere Khan, another popular restaurant name in the UK, mainly in the north. However, this curry was from a large pot and not made to order, so it tasted just ok rather than exceptional. At £5.50 per portion with rice and drink, it's cheap enough and worth the price.
Tuesday, 29 January 2008
Trafford Centre Food Court
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Labels: curry, fish and chips, harry ramsden, indian, karahi, shere khan, trafford centre
Friday, 25 January 2008
Char Siu, revisited (Chinese Barbeque Pork)
Here is a dish I have blogged about before. However, I felt I had to do it again because, like all amateur cooks, my dishes do not come out identical evertime I prepare them. On this occassion, it turned out really well, in taste as well as appearance. The reason is because I bought belly pork (the kind used in crispy roast pork - siu yoke) instead of tenderloin or shoulder/neck steak. The big difference is the amount of fat in belly pork and I also made too much marinade for this lot. As a result, it had a stronger taste and the fatty bits made some parts crispy and charred with that "melt in your mouth" texture as you bite into it. I dont usually use belly as its rather unhealthy, but find that it's the best cut if you want your char siu "pun fei sow" (half fat, half lean).
I am still a complete novice when it comes to food photography and presentation, but I am learning a lot by looking other people's food blogs. Can anyone tell me how to capture a photo where the object in front is clear, but all behind is blurred? I'm afraid I have only used the auto feature of my camera. When I select manual, everything is blurred!
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Hazza
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02:36
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Labels: belly pork, char siew, Chinese food, Malaysian, Manchester, marinade, tenderloin
Tuesday, 22 January 2008
Chow Kuey Teow
With most raw ingredients widely available locally, I make this dish quite frequently. However, it of course cannot compare with what you get in Malaysia, even the very worst ones :-(( . However, I believe I have theoretically worked out exactly how it can be done perfectly, but unfortunatley, circumstances does not permit it in the UK.
The things I lack:
- a cooker hot enough to achieve "wok hei"
- the right kind of ho fun noodles. Quality CKT requires thin, yet firm, fresh ho fun. The two fresh varieties available in Manchester are quite thick.- blood clams or "see hum"
- chinese chives. You can buy this in Manchester, but seems a waste to buy a 100g bunch just for a small dish of CKT.
The things that I can do, but don't:
- use lard. I usually have none available and making crispy pork fat bits are unhealthy.
- use chilli - because my family does not like it spicy.
- I don't use a wok, but a non-stick flat pan so as to not use too much oil. The raw ho fun itself is already very oily.
- Use of chopped preserved veg in the browning process. I'm afraid I don't know what veg it is they use, although I am sure it is available in Chinatown!
Here is the ho fun. It is bought folded up in a pack, like the cheong fun below, made by the same manufacturer. I immerse it in hot water to loosen and soften it.

The ingredients are garlic, squid, chinese sausage, prawns, fish cake and beansprouts (not pictured).

The sauces are sweet soy (blended with a little bit of the sauces pictured below .. only a LITTLE BIT!) and light soy.

And in the pan, only a tiny bit of vegetable oil to brown the garlic before putting in the noodles.


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Hazza
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02:06
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Labels: chinese sausage, Chow Kuey Teow, fried noodles, Ho Fun, Malaysian, Manchester, rice stick, UK, wok hei
Saturday, 19 January 2008
An essential kitchen item!
If you spend a lot of time in the kitchen, it is important to have the correct ambience to keep up your inspiration to produce that next culinary masterpiece. For me, music is a major factor in creating an ambience and this is my favourite equipment in my kitchen!
It is a Wi-Fi Internet Radio.
If you have ever listened to radio via the internet, you will know how it works. It is simply standalone computer that does nothing but streams radio from the internet. There are thousands of stations available worldwide, catering for every genre you can possible think of, or may not even know exist. There are over 9000 stations, increasing daily, and over 200 playing my favourite 80s music alone! It is not country specific and the only requirement is that you have a wireless internet router for it to pick up the signal from.
If you're like me, not interested in what you get on conventional local radio stations, this is the answer! I bought this for only UKP50.
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Hazza
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02:50
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Chee Cheong Fun
It is possible to have this dish in the UK too! Ok, so you cannot buy the Malaysian style ccf dish in restaurants - just the Hong Kong style. However, the noodles itself are readily available in all UK Chinatowns and all I had to do was to steam it and make my own sauce.
In Manchester, we even have our locally made ones! Look at the address of the factory on the packet!

I then simply steam it.

And then add the sauce, a mixture of fried garlic oil, Hoi Sin sauce, sugar, light soy, sesame oil and chilli sauce straight from the bottle (eg. Maggi's). If I wanted the sauce to be thick, unlike in the picture, I just add cornstarch. No sesame seeds in mine as I dont having to pick them out of my teeth afterwards!I have not come across a really good recipe for the sweet ccf sauce, so if anyone reading this has one to share, I would really appreciate it!

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Hazza
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01:45
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Tuesday, 15 January 2008
Fish, Veg and Soup, Malaysian style.
For the soup, I just boiled some pork bones which I trimmed off the shoulder steaks which I marinated for Char Siew the next day. After an hour, I added potatoes, carrots, onions, and later on, tomatoes. Only salt, sugar and pepper is needed later on for taste.

For the fish, I use filleted mackerel. This is the closest you get to "ikan kembung" in the UK, which is my favourite fish in Malaysia. I could have cooked the fish whole, but wife and son do not like small bones in fish! For the veg, I bought freshly air-freighted kangkung (water spinach) from Thailand. Outside the winter months, you can actually buy Dutch kangkung here, but they are too thick for my liking.

I simply fry the fish in a non-stick pan. The fish will shed a lot of oil while frying, so there is no need to use too much in the beginning. I continue to fry the skin side in its own oil till it's crispy. Then turn it over and just lightly brown the flesh side. For the veg, I use my own sambal belachan (prawn chilli paste), where all the ingredients are readily available here.

Finally, I garnish both with fried garlic, ginger and shallots.

Sunday, 13 January 2008
Dim Sum Lunch in Manchester Chinatown


Fung jow jung jai fan (chicken claws with rice). This was actually rather nice and very well presented. The claws were nice and succulent and not too soft as to break off as soon as you pick them up. They were the hottest (spiciest) fung jow I ever had though. Must have gone a bit overboard with the chillies!


Sang chow lor mai. Fried glutinous rice. I dont think many Manchester restaurants do this dish. When I previously had it at this restaurant, it was quite nice. However, like some other dishes before it, the less than fresh char-siu spoilt the taste slightly.
This whole lot only came to £18, inc Chinese tea.
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Labels: Chinatown, Chinese, Dim Sum, Hong Kong, Manchester, Restaurant