Our food culture...

zhihau

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Was reading Dr Leslie Tay's post the other and it struck a chord in me - We seem to be losing a lot of those kor zah bee (古早味)...

The same recipe may be passed down but it just doesn't taste the same way as it was before... what can be done to save our food culture?
 
What Dr Leslie Tay ? Real doctor or fake one ?

Real doctor studied so hard so high, why talk about aunty uncle topic ?
 
can always modify sinkie food for the better by making it personal. for example, i’m starting to add hum to mee siam and it opens up a new chapter of yummy delicious meals with new ingredients, thanks to the pm for that unintended tip. hum adds more flavor to mee siam and enhance the sweet sour gravy with a sexy shellfish smell and visions of horny nights staring down at raw open pinkish cheebyes.
 
Was reading Dr Leslie Tay's post the other and it struck a chord in me - We seem to be losing a lot of those kor zah bee (古早味)...

The same recipe may be passed down but it just doesn't taste the same way as it was before... what can be done to save our food culture?
For starters, don't allow foreigners to be the main cook. Follow in Penang's footsteps to preserve authenticity of our dishes.


GEORGE TOWN: The Penang Government’s move to ban foreigners from being the main cooks of local hawker fare effective Jan 1, 2016, received the thumbs up from the majority of hawkers and related associations.

Penang Consumer Protection Association president K. Koris Atan said he supported the effort and urged the state government to immediately enforce the ban.

“Why does the state need to give a grace period? When the foreigners are brought into the country to work, they are categorised as cleaners, construction workers or even cooks.

“The authorities must conduct regular checks and penalise those who disobey the ban,” he said when contacted yesterday.

Penang Hawkers Association chairman Lam Tong Ying also supported the ban.

“Penang is a preferred destination when it comes to hawker food. Tourists from all around the world travel to Penang for its local food so we must maintain the standard.

“The ban will help maintain the standard of our local food, unlike in Kuala Lumpur where foreigners are mainly the cooks,” he said.

Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng said the move was to preserve the authenticity of the state’s local flavours.

Lim added that all hawkers operating at coffee shops, hawker complexes, shopping mall food courts and roadside stalls should do away with employing foreigners as their main cooks and ensure that “only locals or Malaysian citizens” cooked their fare.

“Foreigners can still be hired to do the washing, handle orders or assist in preparing ingredients, but not to do the cooking,” he told a press conference in Komtar yesterday.

Lim said hawkers would be given a one-year grace period starting from Jan 1 next year, to enable them to adjust to the new regulation.

“This period is also to enable the Penang and Seberang Prai municipal councils the time to study and refine the implementation of this new regulation,” he added.

He said the regulation was to maintain and ensure that the unique tastes and flavours of local food would be retained to safeguard Penang’s food heritage, and to help ensure that foreigners would not take over Penang’s hawker food business.

Lim also said the local authorities would issue special stickers for hawkers to display at their stalls to prove that their food is authentically cooked by locals, and not foreigners.

“Most visitors would not want to come to Penang to taste food cooked by foreigners. Only when you maintain the original taste of flavours can you feel the warmth of Penang.”

State Local Government, Traffic Management and Flood Mitigation Committee chairman Chow Kon Yeow said a survey conducted by the Penang Municipal Council (MPPP) from July 25 to Aug 31 on the proposal to ban foreigners from cooking local fare saw 14,810 respondents, where 55.85% were Penangites while the rest were from other states or countries.

“From the survey on the island, we found that 87.45% were in favour that local fare should be cooked by the locals while 86.02% also agreed that the licences of the hawkers should be revoked if foreigners are employed to cook,” he said.

Chow said the same survey conducted by the Seberang Prai Municipal Council (MPSP) involving 1,591 respondents found that 85.3% agreed to the move, and 85.0% agreed that hawkers who failed to comply should have their licences revoked.

Lim had first made the proposal in July and it met with mixed reaction from the public.

Renowned Malaysian celebrity chef Datuk Redzuawan Ismail, better known as Chef Wan, had called the proposal ridiculous, saying that such a strange ruling would only serve to make Malaysia the laughing stock in the eyes of the world.

Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/news/nati...-food-will-begin-in-2016/#jOxKoGQ3yM5qow3d.99
 
Erm... do you know a lot of kopitiam tzechar taochew are from Malaysia?
 
Yes I am aware. Perhaps I should have been more specific. No PRCs manning the wok please.

Oops , press wrongly :p
Totally agreed Tiong cooks are destroying the taste of local food.
Jiu hoo kia cooks are still second best after Hainanese cooks :D


 
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my suggestions for souping up the sinkie food culture.... (some sinkies have already added new ingredients and tastes to bring sinkie street and hawker food to the next level).

1. of course, mee siam ai hum.
2. lobster nasi lemak - already a hit.
3. laksa with lobster - haven’t seen it yet.
4. fried hokkien mee with hum and crawfish - haven’t seen it yet.
5. mee pok ta with abalone and geoduck - haven’t seen it yet.
6. mee rebus with lamb shank - haven’t seen it yet.
6.8 hainan chicken brown lice with spicy deep fried korean chicken - haven’t seen it.
6.9 chili crab and curry lobster jambalaya.
 
Yes, you are right. Circa 1995, prices of hawker fare in coffee shops and hawker centre started to rise. In some places it went by 50% due to Labour cost. The cabinet intervened and allowed Malaysians to work and run these places. The prices actually nosedived and some hawker had to fight off competition with teaser prices. There was one chap that sold chicken rice for $1.

Kopitiam tzechar stalls were totally run by Malaysians and we had good food and affordable back again.

Erm... do you know a lot of kopitiam tzechar taochew are from Malaysia?
 
can always modify sinkie food for the better by making it personal. for example, i’m starting to add hum to mee siam and it opens up a new chapter of yummy delicious meals with new ingredients, thanks to the pm for that unintended tip. hum adds more flavor to mee siam and enhance the sweet sour gravy with a sexy shellfish smell and visions of horny nights staring down at raw open pinkish cheebyes.

He get to eat 2 hums and of course dont want more hum even in mee siam.
 
Asiatic food culture revolves around cooking good local food at suppressed prices. Who the fuck in their right minds want to keep working in such conditions?

Any talented chef worth his salt would aim to serve sushi, ramen, western cuisine or western pastries, all of which offers much higher profit margin and profits than serving hawker food.
 
i feel that queueing is an aspect of our local food culture. Many stall owners intentionally engineer a queue at their stalls by slowing down when the wait list is shorter.

Horrible food like punggol lasi lemak tastes better after a long queue.
 
Yes, you are right. Circa 1995, prices of hawker fare in coffee shops and hawker centre started to rise.

That was also about the same time PDMMs came shoring up and the flood gates for the Hong Kongers opened, Kayu proclaimed the great asset enhancement "scheme" and all hell broke loose.
 
Asiatic food culture revolves around cooking good local food at suppressed prices. Who the fuck in their right minds want to keep working in such conditions?

Any talented chef worth his salt would aim to serve sushi, ramen, western cuisine or western pastries, all of which offers much higher profit margin and profits than serving hawker food.

Chinese food needs MSG to bring out the favour. You cannot deny that.
 
Chinese food needs MSG to bring out the favour. You cannot deny that.

Bro, I politely disagree. Teochew steam fish is best without MSG, ginger slices at appropriate places, spring onion, mushrooms, giam chye and tomatoes. Complete the dish with 2 sng buay and a dash of Shao Xing wine. Ooh La La...
 
Bro, I politely disagree. Teochew steam fish is best without MSG, ginger slices at appropriate places, spring onion, mushrooms, giam chye and tomatoes. Complete the dish with 2 sng buay and a dash of Shao Xing wine. Ooh La La...

ahhahaa, it's ok. Just discussing

But if u add a few sprinkles of MSG into the above recipe and your sio bak, you will get a michelin star
 
ahhahaa, it's ok. Just discussing

We can always agree to disagree :):):)

The MSG leaves the diner fairly parched, hence spoiling that dining experience... how is that worthy of a michelin star? :(:(:(
 
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