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Rasa Sayang
This unassuming restaurant is easily missed. It sits on a
side street off the main Chinatown thoroughfare although it still
manages to attract a loyal following from the local and not-so-local
Malaysian community.
It’s evident that food rather than decor is the draw here. It isn’t
over-themed with Chinese lanterns and calligraphy. There is not a jade
dragon to be seen. Rather, think Habitat and its Swedish counterpart
than the Forbidden City, with a practical no-nonsense appearance. The
food, however, a far cry from meatballs and open sandwiches.
Rasa Sayang offers Straits dishes. This isn’t modern fusion, and if
it’s fusion at all it’s ancient. It is a cuisine that nods to all the
culinary traditions of Malaysia and its neighbours. It has a spice
palate of both Chinese and Indian but the resulting masterpiece is
unique.
As snow fell, we drank traditional Malaysian tea, Teh Tarik. This was
welcome, hot and much lighter than the versions I have previously
tried. Chicken Satay is ubiquitous to Malaysian restaurants all around
the world. They often pander to “Western” taste and may be nothing more
than skewers of grilled chicken with a dip of peanut butter and a dash
of soy sauce. Rasa Sayang has satay that is robust and boastful. It has
punch.
Gado Gado is a preparation of bean curd and mixed vegetables with a
sweet-spicy sauce. Roti Canai was a simple dish but an absolute
triumph. This is the lightest and flakiest roti I have ever had. It is
served with a small bowl of curry sauce and should come with a warning
- you’ll find it hard to resist a second helping. Much better value for
money than a cold curly sandwich for a light winter lunch.
Otak Otak – grilled fish cakes in banana leaf – were delicate and not
excessively fishy with a mousse-like texture.
Fried
Tofu with a spicy mango sauce was a visual delight.
Balls of bean
curd are deep-fried to produce a crisp crust and a custard-like
interior. The tangy sauce was a good counterpoint. A must-try dish for
anyone who has professed to hating tofu.
Nasi Lemak is a hearty plateful of steamed coconut rice and chicken
curry. A feast for the eyes. The meat was melt-in-the-mouth tender and
was accompanied by a selection of condiments and garnishes such as
peanuts and dried fish similar to the now-absent Bombay Duck of Indian
restaurant fame. This added a pleasant saltiness to the rich curry.
The desserts at Rasa Sayang are fascinating, different and delicious. I
am a lover of neither commercial ice cream nor banana fritters so an
evening at an oriental restaurant often sees me leaving sans sweet
finale. This restaurant has some exotic and impressive temptations in
the form of Kueh Dada – pancakes of pandan (flavoured with an extract
of leaves of pandanus amaryllifolius) filled with coconut; Kueh Salat –
pandan essence and glutinous rice, subtle and sophisticated;
Ondeh-Ondeh – sweet glutinous rice cakes.
The sweet stunner was Sago gula melaka – sago pudding in coconut and
palm sugar broth. I can see you, dear reader, cringing at the very
thought of sago. Yes, we can all remember it from school days (if one
is of a certain age), cooked with water and looking and tasting like
wallpaper paste. Sago gula melaka is far removed from that horror. It
is, in fact, one of the few restaurant desserts that I would want to
replicate chez nous. The sago is set, so there is no unseemly rolling
around the plate. The palm sugar had a real flavour of rich toffee.
Moreish and memorable.
Rasa Sayang has been open for a year or so and it deserves to become an
institution. The quality of food is first class and much appreciated by
its discerning regulars. It offers value for money and dishes that are
said by the expat Malaysians to be authentic. I am planning a return
visit.
Asian restaurant review: Rasa Sayang
5 Macclesfield Street
London, W1D 6AY,
Phone: 020 7734 1382
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