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Halal pork at last. Time to indulge in hokkien mee soon.

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Meaty issue: mock pork edges onto Southeast Asian plates
  • ASEAN+
  • Wednesday, 18 Sep 2019
    1:57 PM MYT
image: https://apicms.thestar.com.my/uploads/images/2019/09/18/278065.jpg
278065.jpg

This picture taken on September 4, 2019 shows a chef presenting a vegetarian version of larb tord, fried "pork" balls" made with a meat substitute, at a restaurant in Bangkok. - A sprinkle of chili, some pinkish "pork" and a few basil leaves tossed into a sizzling wok -- chef Songpol swears his vegan version of punchy Thai favourite pad kra phao is a match for the original, as plant-based protein creeps onto Southeast Asia's meat-heavy menus. (Photo by Mladen ANTONOV / AFP) / TO GO WITH Thailand-lifestyle-food-environment, FEATURE by Joe FREEMAN
BANGKOK (AFP): A sprinkle of chili, some pinkish "pork" and a few basil leaves tossed into a sizzling wok -- chef Songpol swears his vegan version of punchy Thai favourite pad kra phao is a match for the original, as plant-based protein creeps onto Southeast Asia's meat-heavy menus.
"It has the texture, the flavour (of pork). The rest is about technique," he said in the bustling kitchen at the Bangkok You & Mee restaurant.


But he concedes some diners remain to be convinced of the merits of fiddling with old recipes in a country ferociously proud of its cuisine.
"They do not expect plant-based items to be cooked with Thai dishes," he added.

Global food producers are racing to dominate the "alt-protein" sector, an industry Barclay's bank estimates could be worth $140 billion in a decade, as environmental, ethical and health concerns drive a plant-based boom.
Shares of beef-less burger maker Beyond Meat soared from their initial pricing of $25 to over $65 on the first day of trading on Wall Street in May, whetting the appetites of both investors and consumers who shun animal products.
Burger King already sells the beef-free "Impossible Whopper" in many US locations, KFC has trialled vegan nuggets and wings, while plant-based milk, cheese and even seafood are proliferating.
But while the trend nibbles at the US' gargantuan meat industry, alt-protein protagonists are also eyeing new frontiers including in Asia where millions are nourished on meat and fish-heavy diets.
Pork in particular is ever-present in rice dishes and noodle bowls across the region.
Chef Songpol's pad kra phao is made with new brand Omnimeat, a pork imitation of peas, shiitake mushrooms, rice and soy from Hong Kong-based firm Green Monday.
"It is designed with Asian food in mind," said CEO David Yeung.
After Singapore -- where the brand launched in restaurants late last year -- Buddhist-majority Thailand has become a major Southeast Asian test bed for the mock pork.
But changing Asian palates and culinary habits "is extremely difficult", concedes Yeung.
- 'Thais love their meat' -
In the US the plant-based sector makes up less than one percent of the conventional meat industry.
Asia poses similar challenges, from ubiquitous meat use to higher prices of protein substitutes.
The pad kra phao at You & Mee costs about $8, four times more than a diner might pay on a Bangkok street.
Critics also say that many new plant-based products are still processed and therefore not as healthy as advertised.
But a 2018 survey from market research firm Mintel found over half of urban Thai consumers say they plan to reduce their meat intake.
In step, companies across the region are "starting to move into this area and attracting more serious investments", according to Michelle Teodoro, a food science and nutrition analyst at Mintel.
From Japan to the Philippines, firms are snapping up alt-protein producers in deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars -- while Singapore's state-owned Temasek Holdings recently invested in Perfect Day Foods, which makes cow-less ice cream.
At some restaurants in the Vietnamese capital a popular stew of snails and pork now uses soya beans to replace the animal protein, while diners can also chow down on sweet and sour "ribs", made from potato flour and bean paste.
But the jury is out on whether a critical mass of Southeast Asians will convert from meat.
One evening Thai kindergarten teacher Diane Piroon tried the meatless pad kra phao in Bangkok.
It "tastes like pork," she said, before dropping in a caveat: "Thais love their meat... the challenge is getting them to change what they grew up with." - AFP

Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/news/reg...to-southeast-asian-plates#IqVRQaAuX0YvCUbo.99
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Meaty issue: mock pork edges onto Southeast Asian plates
  • ASEAN+
  • Wednesday, 18 Sep 2019
    1:57 PM MYT
image: https://apicms.thestar.com.my/uploads/images/2019/09/18/278065.jpg
278065.jpg

This picture taken on September 4, 2019 shows a chef presenting a vegetarian version of larb tord, fried "pork" balls" made with a meat substitute, at a restaurant in Bangkok. - A sprinkle of chili, some pinkish "pork" and a few basil leaves tossed into a sizzling wok -- chef Songpol swears his vegan version of punchy Thai favourite pad kra phao is a match for the original, as plant-based protein creeps onto Southeast Asia's meat-heavy menus. (Photo by Mladen ANTONOV / AFP) / TO GO WITH Thailand-lifestyle-food-environment, FEATURE by Joe FREEMAN
BANGKOK (AFP): A sprinkle of chili, some pinkish "pork" and a few basil leaves tossed into a sizzling wok -- chef Songpol swears his vegan version of punchy Thai favourite pad kra phao is a match for the original, as plant-based protein creeps onto Southeast Asia's meat-heavy menus.
"It has the texture, the flavour (of pork). The rest is about technique," he said in the bustling kitchen at the Bangkok You & Mee restaurant.


But he concedes some diners remain to be convinced of the merits of fiddling with old recipes in a country ferociously proud of its cuisine.
"They do not expect plant-based items to be cooked with Thai dishes," he added.

Global food producers are racing to dominate the "alt-protein" sector, an industry Barclay's bank estimates could be worth $140 billion in a decade, as environmental, ethical and health concerns drive a plant-based boom.
Shares of beef-less burger maker Beyond Meat soared from their initial pricing of $25 to over $65 on the first day of trading on Wall Street in May, whetting the appetites of both investors and consumers who shun animal products.
Burger King already sells the beef-free "Impossible Whopper" in many US locations, KFC has trialled vegan nuggets and wings, while plant-based milk, cheese and even seafood are proliferating.
But while the trend nibbles at the US' gargantuan meat industry, alt-protein protagonists are also eyeing new frontiers including in Asia where millions are nourished on meat and fish-heavy diets.
Pork in particular is ever-present in rice dishes and noodle bowls across the region.
Chef Songpol's pad kra phao is made with new brand Omnimeat, a pork imitation of peas, shiitake mushrooms, rice and soy from Hong Kong-based firm Green Monday.
"It is designed with Asian food in mind," said CEO David Yeung.
After Singapore -- where the brand launched in restaurants late last year -- Buddhist-majority Thailand has become a major Southeast Asian test bed for the mock pork.
But changing Asian palates and culinary habits "is extremely difficult", concedes Yeung.
- 'Thais love their meat' -
In the US the plant-based sector makes up less than one percent of the conventional meat industry.
Asia poses similar challenges, from ubiquitous meat use to higher prices of protein substitutes.
The pad kra phao at You & Mee costs about $8, four times more than a diner might pay on a Bangkok street.
Critics also say that many new plant-based products are still processed and therefore not as healthy as advertised.
But a 2018 survey from market research firm Mintel found over half of urban Thai consumers say they plan to reduce their meat intake.
In step, companies across the region are "starting to move into this area and attracting more serious investments", according to Michelle Teodoro, a food science and nutrition analyst at Mintel.
From Japan to the Philippines, firms are snapping up alt-protein producers in deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars -- while Singapore's state-owned Temasek Holdings recently invested in Perfect Day Foods, which makes cow-less ice cream.
At some restaurants in the Vietnamese capital a popular stew of snails and pork now uses soya beans to replace the animal protein, while diners can also chow down on sweet and sour "ribs", made from potato flour and bean paste.
But the jury is out on whether a critical mass of Southeast Asians will convert from meat.
One evening Thai kindergarten teacher Diane Piroon tried the meatless pad kra phao in Bangkok.
It "tastes like pork," she said, before dropping in a caveat: "Thais love their meat... the challenge is getting them to change what they grew up with." - AFP

Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/news/reg...to-southeast-asian-plates#IqVRQaAuX0YvCUbo.99
I have always known that muslims want to eat pork!:biggrin:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Global food producers are racing to dominate the "alt-protein" sector, an industry Barclay's bank estimates could be worth $140 billion in a decade, as environmental, ethical and health concerns drive a plant-based boom.

To hell with the globalists and environmental activists.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
This vegetarian pork substitute will also b banned by mudslimes. Mudslimes even banned non-alcoholic beer using a shitty excuse. Black they can say to white etc

Even non-alcoholic “beer” is having trouble getting a Halal stamp in Malaysia
By Coconuts KL Feb 27, 2015 | 12:16pm KL time

Non-alcoholic malted drinks, marketed as halal “beer” all around the world, has proven to be increasingly popular in Muslim-majority markets in the Middle East and Africa … but Malaysia might be a tougher market to crack.

Businessman Ruzi Shuib planned on cornering the emerging market by partnering up with Netherlands-based Bavaria 0.0 percent malt drinks, one of several popular brands of non-alcholic beer, for distribution in Malaysia, but he’s come against a robadlock.

Despite the Malaysian economy moving three million litres of non-alcoholic beer in 2013, the beverages themselves have a hard time receiving official halal certification from the Malaysian Islamic Development Department (Jakim) – which refuses to deem any product halal (even if it is halal) that has the word “beer” in it.

The Wall Street Journal‘s Celine Fernandez reports that this is the same Jakim policy that led to popular fast food chain A&W to rename its signature Root Beer soft drink to just “RB” in 2013, and for its retail partner Coca-Cola Malaysia to rebrand the drink as “A&W Sarsaparilla” in 2009.

Further, Jakim decided to deny Ruzi’s application for a halal certificate for Bavaria 0.0 percent beer due to the drink being made and bottled in the same factories that produce alcoholic beverages.

Federal restrictions aren’t the only things holding halal beer back in Malaysia. Malaysian Muslims are also wary of the packaging of non-alcoholic beer brands, which obviously try to capture the mystique of their alcoholic counterparts by using similar bottles and packaging labels.

Ruzi has had an easier time selling his halal beer to Middle Eastern customers in Malaysia, who have less reservations and are more aware of the distinction between alcoholic and non-alcoholic malted drinks. They make up 40% of Ruzi’s clientele in the country.
 
Last edited:

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Non-alcoholic malted drinks, marketed as halal “beer” all around the world, has proven to be increasingly popular in Muslim-majority markets in the Middle East and Africa … but Malaysia might be a tougher market to crack.

Priorities. Start with ending segregation of non-halal products from supermarket shelves.

Once that is accomplished, the other stuff will be easy.

960px-Papar_Sabah_Non-Halal-Corner-in-Giant-Supermarket-01.jpg


NSK-Non-trolley.jpg
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Babi panggang, sate babi in bali. I dunno what they call it in philippines. Staple diet before islamic period. Because its found in the jungle. Babi hutan. Available all over south east asia.next is ayam hutan.
Exactly, pork is a gift from nature, from God. All should partake in it, regardless of race or religion. I love Balinese babi guling. How about you?
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Mudslimes can eat this..

Ah Mang Mee: This Chinese-Muslim Cooks Up Halal Hokkien Mee In Selangor
Atiqah Mokhtar
Cheng Sim on Jul 01, 2019

Save

Some cravings can only be satiated by a serving of KL-style Hokkien Mee. However, finding a halal version of this hawker favourite is almost uncommon. That is until Ah Mang Mee (also known as Abang Jamal Halal Hokkien Mee) entered the food scene in Petaling Jaya.


Credit: @poppy_nattt on Instagram

This third-generation stall first started in Jalan Silang before making their move to PJ Old Town where they found a new home in Stall No. 8. In the beginning, this hawker stall served Hokkien Mee with pork lard bits, the same recipe that was traditionally made by the founder.

When the baton was passed to the current owner Abang Jamal, he reinvented the Hokkien Mee recipe by replacing it with chicken bits for that extra burst of flavour as well as sambal for that extra zing!


Cooking up a storm since 2008, Abang Jamal is never alone in the kitchen. His wife, Ooi Hai Choo, will help to run things smoothly at Ah Mang Mee. She was also present when her husband decided to recreate the traditional Hokkien Mee with a Muslim-friendly twist.


“Uncle reverted to Islam in 2008. Before that, he did not use chicken. When the Japanese encephalitis epidemic occurred, our business suffered greatly, and no one could help us,” shares his wife, Ooi. “Ustaz told us that if we made Hokkien Mee using chicken, everyone in Malaysia can enjoy it! From then on, uncle makes his Hokkien Mee with chicken.”


Credit: @suriani_yusuf on Instagram

The Hokkien Mee is said to be so authentic, you can't tell the difference between the halal version and the original one! “Just the other day, we had a Chinese customer who has eaten this Hokkien Mee for one year," she recalls. "He didn’t notice that it was made with chicken!”


Credit: @rusydanmohd90 on Instagram

While there are other things on the stall’s signboard, such as Loh Mee and Kung Fu fried noodles, your meal of the day is apparent. Order a plate of Hokkien Mee, and you’ll get slurpy thick noodles that are deliciously coated with dark soy sauce. Punctuated with cabbage, prawns and crispy chicken bits, you know it’s going to delight your palate with pleasure.

Watch our candid interview with the husband-and-wife duo behind Ah Mang Mee


Address: Ah Mang Mee (Abang Jamal Halal Hokkien Noodles), Stall No.8, Pusat Penjaja Seksyen 1/12, Jalan Othman, PJ Old Town, 46000 Petaling Jaya, Selangor

Operating hours: Wed-Sun, 5PM-10PM (Closed on Mon and Tue)

Halal status: Muslim-owned

Tags: halal-chinese-food, halal-food-in-kl, halal-food-in-selangor, kl,
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
All these vegan meat is worse than real meal as it's full of salt n flavour enhances..just eat the real stuff

Opinion | Fast food's meatless marvels aren't any healthier than the original options
Sept. 8, 2019, 8:44 PM GMT+8
By Erika Nicole Kendall
The impossible isn’t in any sandwich — it’s in changing the American perspective on meat.

Fast-food restaurants across the country are embracing a meat-free mentality nowadays, with several big brands adding meatless sandwiches to their menus. Burger King was among the first to do so, partnering with plant-based burger brand Impossible Foods to create the Impossible Whopper.

Many other brands since then have announced that they will be followed suit. Subway said they are introducing plant-based meatballs from Beyond Meat to create the Beyond Meatball Marinara Sub. White Castle’s Impossible Slider, Carl’s Jr.’s Beyond Famous Star, The Cheesecake Factory’s own Impossible Burger, Del Taco’s Beyond Meat tacos and now KFC’s Beyond Chicken are all meat-free options here now or forthcoming for the person looking to grab something a little healthier on the go.

'Clean eating' is such a sham that fast food chains are pushing it
The challenge here is that these offerings aren’t actually any healthier. The Impossible Whopper, for instance, not only has comparable caloric and fat levels as its meat-based counterpart, but it has more salt per serving; the Del Taco options are comparable. The Impossible Slider has more calories, more fat and more sodium than the meaty original (before you add cheese to either).

In fact, when you start to compare all of these offerings to their meat-based counterparts, you realize it’s the same story no matter what brands you’re talking about — you might possibly save a few calories or carbs, but you'll probably get way more salt.

Want more articles like this? Sign up for the THINK newsletter to get updates on the week's most important cultural analysis
Switching from meat-based fast foods to meat-free, then, isn’t likely to help your health. As always, it's only about helping a corporation's bottom line. In an era in which the public is becoming more aware of the consequences of climate change, the conversation will inevitably turn to livestock, factory farming and the side effects of satisfying the American appetite for beef: The greenhouse gas emissions from livestock make up an estimated 14.5 percent of all global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Strike one against animal meat.

Burger King has a meatless 'Impossible' Whopper. Is it healthier?
Beyond that, many people are currently trying to understand why chronic illness is so prevalent. Heart disease and cases of type 2 diabetes are on the rise, no matter where you look, and research has suggested that cutting red meat and processed meats (like bologna and other deli meats) might help people facing these conditions. Strike two against meat.

And an excessive amount of salt in one's diet has been linked in several different ways to heart disease — but it’s not alone. Large quantities of dietary fat, with the potential to clog arteries in an otherwise average American, can contribute, as well. These conditions — heart disease, high cholesterol and type 2 diabetes — are linked for a reason: In a diet loaded with the kinds of processed foods you’re likely to find in a big name fast-food restaurant, these conditions all pull one another into a downward spiral, dragging your health down along with them.

So people everywhere are asking themselves, Should I cut bread? What about meat? Is sugar the devil incarnate? So many are scared that they don't know how their perfectly average diets might kill them, and nobody can blame them. Most of us don't truly understand how to feed ourselves in a way that doesn’t leave us susceptible to life-threatening illnesses.

We all hope for a change in the food system that doesn't require us to do anything, and that’s where the big moneyed plant-based meat alternatives come in. Brands like Impossible Foods (a private company with both celebrity and institution investors), Beyond Meat (which recently went public but used to count Tyson Food among its investors) and Morningstar (owned by Kellogg) are theoretically solving a two-for-one problem: “Plant-based” sounds so much healthier, and plants are better for the environment than cows, right? The dual halo of “healthy” and “better for the environment” becomes something that can easily be sold, both so that people can feel like they’re eating better and so that fast food brands in need of a financial windfall can take advantage, too.

The latter is precisely what has Big Meat up in arms. A flurry of bills have been making their way through state legislatures across the country seeking to restrict the use of words like “meat,” “sausage” and “hot dog” solely to products made by “that which comes from an animal.” To make matters worse, the bills are levied as protection against “confusing” the consumer. (This is particularly rich coming from an industry that routinely lobbies against country-of-origin labels or GMO-labeling, lest consumers start making decisions that are bad for Big Food’s bottom line.)

We want to hear what you THINK. Please submit a letter to the editor.
That bottom line, though, is unfortunately what all of this all boils down to. If eating more realistic fake meat was about health, the offerings would be far lower in salt content, contain fewer calories and have a bit less dietary fat. None of them do, because the point was never to live up to the marketing of healthier eating. It was to simply act as a smooth replacement for the meat we worried about eating in our day-to-day lives.

It should be lauded that we, as a society, are trying to find ways to separate ourselves from a food product that might be causing us as well as our environment harm. But the answer is not to switch from gorging ourselves on one particular item to another because a corporation makes it easy to do so. The answer has to include consuming less — and not just buying less, but eating less as well. Our desire to overindulge might be as hard to conquer as climate change, but it isn’t impossible to make the necessary changes both for ourselves and our planet.

Erika Nicole Kendall
Erika Nicole Kendall
Erika Nicole Kendall is the writer, certified personal trainer and certified nutritionist behind the popular weight loss blog A Black Girl's Guide to Weight Loss.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
SP is not a muslim. Of course everything is halal except beef.:smile:

But teres so many choice rite. Why eat something tats unclean?
What is unclean? Pigs? It's like saying a pig is dirtier than a sheep...they are animals ..they stink tat is it. Cats also unclean
 

myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I have the urge to stop eating meat completely. It has nothing to do with religion. At the rate we are going, is meat even safe for consumption nowadays? They are either fake, synthetic, expired, rotten or contain virus within and they clot your organs.
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
SP is not a muslim. Of course everything is halal except beef.:smile:

But teres so many choice rite. Why eat something tats unclean?
He's fake muslim lah. When pork is prepared properly, it's clean and tastes heavenly. Serious!:thumbsup::biggrin:
 
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