Time always
for Laksa
Laksa is amongst
the best known and loved of hawker fare in Penang. A bowl of steamed
spaghetti-sized rice vermicelli is first generously garnished with finely
sliced vegetables including onions, cucumber, red chillis, pineapple, lettuce,
mint and pink bunga kantan (ginger buds).
Onto the mixture is poured a
steaming hot curry soup that is sour and thick with fish meat. A spoonful
of fish paste is provided for those who favour the addition. While for decades,
Penangites and visitors only knew this variety, a lemak (coconut milk)
version was subsequently introduced as an alternative.
Apart from breakfast,
laksa time is almost every time for some Penangites lunch,
tea, dinner or supper. And whilst this ubiquitous meal is available at most
of the hawker complexes or coffee shops in the city centre of George Town
and in the surburbs, the discerning enthusiast would prefer to go to one
of three places.
If you are in the city, the stall
at Lorong Selamat off Macalister Road is a premium choice. It sells
laksa at tea time and both the sour and lemak varieties are available.
The sour variety is piquant
yet "sharp" while the lemak alternative is rich yet not too heavy on the
stomach. A generous spray of chilli powder and/or spoonful of chilli oil
is available upon request for those who enjoy the hot challenge.
At RM3.00 a bowl and 50
sen extra for an additional fish to add more body, the price appears slightly
on the high side but it is value for money.
For years, the market- place
in Ayer Itam, next door to the famed Kek Lok Si Temple, has been the place
locals congregate to enjoy their laksa. The quality has been consistently
the same through the years, the inevitable hot surroundings adding perhaps
to the challenge of the flaming hot laksa.
True to old tradition,
only the sour variety, perhaps enhanced by many slices of tamarind slices
is available at the price of RM2.00 per bowl; visitors and tourists are sometimes
known to have slurped up this laksa with relish, go for an extended
walk at the Temple grounds, then return for a second round.
No visitor who "knows" his
laksa would miss that in Balik Pulau for the world. The corner coffee
shop opposite the T-junction leading into the main and only street of Balik
Pulau houses the most popular laksa stall in the village. Both varieties
match in quality. The sour variety has maintained its sharp yet exciting
flavour and aroma over the years and the fish content is thick yet smooth.
If the lemak variety
is not so popular, it could be because the patrons, especially those from
the village, have been too used to the original sour recipe which is so much
a trademark of Balik Pulau laksa as it is known over the years and
as it was known decades back. If you are in a quandary about what to choose,
either take one of each or simply have a half and half. At the price of RM1.70
a bowl, it is still a steal for value.
While consistency is the
hallmark of excellent food, the introduction of extra frills may only serve
to heighten the spicy sensation on the taste buds. Hence, the spray of chilli
powder and the spoonful of chilli oil are recent arrivals but they may well
be the subtle and ultimate oomph for some.
As garnishing goes, the
pickled white onions and gherkins have yet to make a permanent mark
most likely because they are rather expensive but who knows what
tomorrow's food gourmet might relish and demand?
Written by
Josephine Choo. |