KUALA LUMPUR, May 15 — The sweltering weather has got me looking for food to cool down with.
I decided to take my cue from the Koreans. When the heat is dialled up for their summer, they turn towards naengmyeon or cold noodles to stay refreshed.
Hence, I've been visiting Lee Ga Korean Noodles Restaurant almost every week for their cold noodles.
For those new to cold noodles, start with Mul Nengmyun (RM26 for a regular portion).
You get a stainless steel bowl filled with a chilled broth made with beef broth and radish water kimchi water. In the middle, find a mound of chewy noodles. The thin noodles are crafted from buckwheat and sweet potato starch.
On the table, find vinegar and yellow mustard. Add it to zing up the bowl, whether you want it tangy or a broth that will clear your nasal passages.
If you crave for a tingling spiciness on your tongue but still want to drink the refreshing beef broth, there's Mul Bibim Nengmyun. This combines the best of both worlds where you get cold soup layered with a spicy kick.
On days I want to change up my meal, I ditch the broth for the dry spicy cold noodles or the Bibim Nengmyun (RM27 for the regular portion).
And if Bibim Nengmyun is not spicy enough for you, go for the Hoe Nengmyun (RM30 for a regular portion). You get seasoned raw stingray that adds another layer of spiciness.
If you find the noodles too hard to handle as it tends to clump together, you can reach for a pair of scissors to cut through them. However, try to untangle them with your chopsticks so you get that sensation of slurping down long strands of chewy noodles.
It's best eaten with a bowl of rice and the dipping sauces.
The broths range from beef and vegetables, pork meat and innards, chicken to the simpler bean sprout broth. As I wanted to try the Korean pork blood sausage or sundae, I selected the Sundae Gukbap (RM30) for that particular combination which also has pork meat and innards.
Luckily you get dipping sauces like ssamjang and saeujeot on the side. I like both sauces, hence I combine both together to give a flavour boost to the whole bowl of soup.
The ssamjang is a mix of fermented soybeans with gochujang hence the fiery red colour while saeujeot resembles our local cincalok as it's made with fermented shrimps. It's not as pungent though, giving a subtle saltiness to your food.
Do avoid the mandu though. I usually love dumplings but these just didn't impress at all. They're king sized with a minced pork and beef filling but the thin skin and filling just tasted a little flat and mushy for me.
Lee Ga Korean Noodles Restaurant, 34G, Jalan 27/70A, Desa Sri Hartamas, Kuala Lumpur. Open:9.30am to 3pm (last call 2.30pm), 5pm to 9pm (last call 8.30pm). Closed on Tuesday except when it's public holiday. Tel:03-28562041.
* Follow us on Instagram @eatdrinkmm for more food gems.
You May Also Like