Welcome to Swinging By

These are the places of interest that I've been to and I would like to share them with you. I hope you find them interesting too.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Modern Food Court

Food courts are usually crammed with different kinds of stalls selling various types of food. They are usually arranged against the walls and customers sit in the central area where tables and seats are crammed into the space available.

The mall which we recently visited had a food court unlike the usual run of the mill kind.
It also had a name, Food Nestie!! It was located on a high floor.

                                             Starlings hanging in the void

The stalls were individual and stood apart, each from the other. There were tables and seats in the spaces near them but they were not crammed.

                                              A stall selling Japanese food

We opted for a table which had a good view through the glass panels. Those customers who opted to sit outside the glass enclosure enjoyed the breeze and could smoke there since it was considered to be outside the air-conditioned mall.

                                        Seating area outside the glass panels

We selected our seats which gave us a nice view of the outside and ordered our food, which turned out to be tasty and filling too!! It didn’t burn a hole in my pocket either.




So a thumbs up for this place!

Old Coffee Shop Chilli Pan Mee

There is an old ordinary old coffee shop tucked away in an old corner of Kuala Lumpur, quite hard to access unless you know the roads of the city but I guess with Waze/GPS, there should be no problem. The shop is always packed with customers.

It is owned by an old man who employs foreign workers to help him make drinks, churn out the noodles and to cook them. The noodles are round instead of the usual flat ones.

He has a machine which makes it easy to cut the noodles from slabs of dough.

                                    Noodle making machine with the slabs of dough on the right

He inserts the dough into the machine which then cuts it into thin strips. These strips of noodles are then passed to those who do the cooking.



There is a bottle of dry chilli flakes which you toss into your pan mee when it is served. You can have the mee in soup or dry. There is a poached egg on top of the mee, some crispy ikan bilis (white bait) and minced pork.

                                                Dry version of the pan mee

People from outstation usually make a beeline for this coffee shop. No other shop has managed to duplicate the taste of this old man’s chilli pan mee.