Posts Tagged ‘Wan Tan Mee’
Restoran Hung Kee – Wan Tan Mee along Jalan Loke Yew
Hung Kee started out in the mid 1960s serving delicious wan tan mee and has since expanded to take two shop lots. Situated along the busy road of Jalan Loke Yew (near the pedestrian bridge), parking around this area can get limited depending on the time of the day. Also, the service in the restaurant has improved throughout the years as the food comes out alot quicker.

Restoran Hung Kee
Know What is Good Wan Tan Mee [Uncle SG]
I know what is a good wan tan mee as I have eaten it from the stall as the son of a wan tan mee vendor for close to half a century and have been an assistant to my father from young till late teens.
Wan tan mee can be rated by its components making up of the soup, the noodle, char siew and wantan. In the early days wan tan mee does not have curry soup, it was either the dry or soup version. Also, the prawn dumpling or sui kow, roasted meats, mushroom and stewed chicken feet, stew beef, stewed pork ribs, dried curry chicken, prawn wantan and many other add-ons found these days are later years’ additions.

These days a good wan tan mee could only be found at street stalls, usually manned by an old couple who have plied the trade for 40-50 years or the second generation of the family. The ones at food courts run by foreign workers I will avoid.

A good soup should be clear and smell strongly of ikan bilis and dried flounder fish meat. The soup will be deliciously sweet. Ikan bilis are of several grades and stalls usually use a cheaper quality which is big and have a flaky silvery skin. To avoid the flaking ikan bilis skin and have a clear soup, the ikan bilis has to be put into a cloth bag and tied at one end. So, if you see a blackish bloated bag floating in the soup, be assured that it is ikan bilis soup you are getting. Some stalls use pork bones and the soup can be easily recognized as it is milky white in colour. I prefer the clear soup. If neither of this is used then beware – it is monosodium glutamate that they are using. This you can observe when they spoon into the soup soya sauce laden with the msg. For ikan bilis soup no further flavoring is needed.

Wan tan noodle in Kuala Lumpur these days are not made by the noodle seller but at some small supplier factories. In smaller towns where demand cannot sustain a noodle supplier, the wan tan noodle seller makes his own. The noodles are available in various grades dependent on the quantity of eggs used. The more eggs are in the noodle, hence more expensive, the springier it will be. This grade, in Cantonese, “chin tan meen” meaning only eggs ( used in the ) noodle. Springy noodles with thinner strands are the better noodles. Generally, the thinner noodles you see are the noodles that are springy. Only established stalls have this grade of noodles.

Char siew or barbecue pork is usually dyed red but there are those marinated with thick black soya sauce. I much prefer the latter as it is probably healthier without the chemical dye. Good char siew should not be made with lean meat but instead has substantial fat. Its called half fat and thin, literally translating from Cantonese “poon fei sau”. Besides being moist, the oiliness from the fat gives the meat its juicy texture. If you are afraid of the fatty meat you are not eating a good char siew. The meat is usually marinated with salt, sugar and five spice powder besides the colorant which will come from either the thick black sauce or the red dye.
In Malaysia the Muslim market is a big one and food court uses chicken meat for the halal version of char siew. The lean chicken meat is not so tasty. The seasonings used I suspect is different.

Nowadays many stalls fry cook their char siew in a wok. This is a short cut and the end product is not roasted meat which the char siew is. Such char siew is usually not moist and taste more like woody fibre. The best char siew is roasted in an oil drum with both ends removed and over a strong kerosene fire. This char siew comes in the long strips when roasted. Parts of the strips will have burnt ends called in Cantonese, char siew tow meaning char siew head. Some connoisseurs asked for a separate plate of these burnt char siew as the bitter burnt taste can be delicious, ignoring health advice that burnt meat can be carcinogenic.
The wantan skin does not require any special ingredient except flour. A thick skin will slow cooking and taste of too much of flour. The minced pork used should have some fatty bits as just lean meat does not taste good. Machine mincing the meat is not as good as chopping it manually. The former method gives you a paste whilst the other method let you taste the pork better with its unevenness and fatty bits. Many good stalls use the dried flounder fish meat as an ingredient in the wan tan. The fish meat which comes dried is roasted over a low fire and than grounded roughly. However, these days they can buy them ground and in a tin.
Boiling wantan requires hot boiling water so that it is quickly cooked. Slow cooking melts and soften the skin and the wantan does not look and taste freshly made. Some operators when they are busy ignore changing the boiling water and accumulated flour from cooking much noodles and wantan make the water slimy and thick. This will also form a film and mask the wantan’s taste. Those who pre-cook their wantan makes them soggy and unattractive to eat.
Sometimes you get deep fried wantan. I believe they originated from excess wantan from a previous day that could still be sold by deep frying them. Only the freshly fried ones taste nice. This item has found its way in hotels as items in tim sum, starters in a banquet and buffet line.

The sui kow, a bigger version of the wantan with more ingredients and considered a family member of wantan noodle. I love the delicious prawn in big chunks found in it. Other ingredients include bits of water chest nut for its crunchiness and thinly sliced black fungus for its crunchiness and rubbery texture. Chopped spring onion and chopped carrot are also included. There is a version of sui kow without prawns for those who do not eat prawns because of cholesterol fear.
The oil used to mix the noodles should preferably be pork lard as it is more fragrant than other oils. Using pork lard only requires some soya and thick black sauce. There is no need for oyster sauce. Some use a mixture of oyster sauce, soya sauce, sometimes gravy from char siew and msg in the gravy spooned in after mixing with the black sauce. I do not like the latter mixture.

Sawi or mustard leaf vegetable in its full length not cut into shorter pieces is the traditional greens added to the noodle. Some use baby kai lan but this is at the more pricy places. A very important accompaniment is green pickled chillies. Freshly made chillies is revealed by its crunchiness and the clear vinegar water in which it is kept in. Popular stalls where the turnover is high prepares their pickled chillies daily.
Chuah Soon Guan
Kedai Kopi Swee Kong @ Pulau Tikus, Penang
On our last day in Penang, we decided to head to Pulau Tikus to have our lunch. We remember seeing a crowded coffee shop while driving in the area during our hunting trail. This coffee shop is situated directly opposite the Pulau Tikus police station.
After many wrong turns and many road stops to check our faithful Penang map, we manage to back track and re-located this coffee shop. And we’re glad to say, no regrets on ending our Penang trip eating here.
Shene had apparently eaten here before many many years ago, and excitedly pointed out that the char kuey teow here was good. ( Till that day, we still have yet to eat a good plate of char kuey teow). The assam laksa stall also caught my eye as the uncle was preparing many many bowls of assam laksa to serve. Also, at the back of the shop was a stall displaying the sign famous wan tan mee. So In the end, we ordered 2 plates of char kuey teow, 2 bowl of assam laksa ,1 plate of wan tan mee and 1 bowl of wan tans.
Our plate of char kuey teow came, and we knew then that we have come to the right place. This was the char kuey teow we were looking for. It was just perfect and only for a price of RM3.00 (egg) . Look at the huge prawns, in KL we only get shrimp size prawns plus this had an added bonus of some ju yau char ‘ fried pork fat’. Delicious.
The assam laksa was by far one of the best I have tasted. The broth for the assam laksa was not too thick so it was quite light on the palate. All the ingredients blended in very well with each other and 1 bowl was not enough. So after finishing the first bowl we proceeded to seconds, and even after that I was still craving more. Priced at only RM2.50 per bowl who can resist?
The wan tan mee was a different style to the one found here in KL. The texture of the noodles was slightly different, more chewy I would say. It was the wan tans that had us going. The wan tans were very big. It almost looked like miniature curry puffs and it was full of meaty goodness inside. It finished very fast after it got to our table.
We will definitely come back here the next time we are Penang. We loved the food at this place very very much and its cheap too!! Average price for a meal is RM2.50 – RM3.50. If only KL were so cheap, then having a food blog won’t cost us so much. haha.
Kedai Kopi Swee Kong
Opposite Balai Polis Pulau Tikus.
Non Halal











