Cristang Portuguese Cuisine

(download)

I had heard about Cristang from friends on Facebook and twitter. "Cristang's pork burgers are to die for" someone said. "For sure, one of the top three places for burgers in KL" said another. I decided to go taste for myself.

I went there after a meeting at 5pm and they were opening up for dinner time. Being first on the scene gave me the opportunity to chat with Yin - part-time restaurant manager and long-time assistant to Gerald, who owns the place. I told her I came to investigate claims of Cristang having the best pork burgers in town and we started talking. Not long after, Gerald came and we sat down, talking for two whole hours.

I told him I was surprized his name was Gerald and not Cris Tang. "I get that a lot and I've had people come in here telling me they are friends of Cris Tang and wants a discount on their bill." He explained that "Cristang" is a slang that means 'people of Christian faith' and is commonly used by the Eurasian community of Portuguese descent to refer to each other.  Portuguese itself is not the correct term to refer to folks like Gerald because he's not Portuguese and the food he serves isn't anything you'll find in Portugal. We'll call it Portuguese anyways, to keep it short. So, it could be that our Malaysian Portuguese food is the country's first fusion food if they win the Pie Tie and Pongteh ownership debate with the Nyonya's (Malaysia assimilated Straits Chinese?). 

Gerald is full of wonderful stories. There's a story behind the restaurant's famous pork burger called P7 The Urban Legend. I asked how that name came about but first, all the burger names have a P and a number. What that means is the number of pork items in the burger. P1 means one pork item and that's the pork patty and P2 has two pork items - patty + bacon etc. The P could also mean grilled cajun prawns, petai, chilli pork con carne and pineapple. P7 however, doesn't have seven "P" items but because P1-P6 were taken. The P7 only appeared on the menu a month and a half ago but they have been serving it for over five months like a beta test. It was so good that word got around and people were often heard asking for the P7 like an urban legend.

I figured most of the items on the menu are from recipes passed down through generations of portuguese in his family but the burgers were far from the usual Portuguese fare. "Most of my dishes are accidents in the kitchen" he explains, "I love to cook and I've never been to chef school so I don't know my limits and there are no rules to tell me what I can and cannot do with food." He does have one personal rule though, after one of his dishes become famous, he won't eat it anymore in case he jinx it. I think this trait is in a lot of artists or perfectionists or both. They always think their best work is yet to come so if he tasted his dish, he might fix something that's not broken and end up breaking it instead. It's not like programming, flavor is highly subjective.

Well I had a great time today tasting the legendary P7 and having a wonderful chat with Gerald. The P7 is indeed very delicious. The petai (a strong tasting bean) did not over-power the taste of the pork which was so juicy and tender, it melts in your mouth. I'm a fan of burgers again.

Cristang is at 8 Avenue, Jalan 8/1. Tel: +603.7956.7877. They are opened for lunch and dinner, 6 days a week and closed on Mondays. Highly recommended are of course the P7 Urban Legend Pork Burger, Bacon and Eggs Soup, Bacon Rib Ambila, Tenggiri with Soy Limang and Debal Chicken.

Filed under  //  blog   blogging   burger   cristang   iphone photography  
Viewed
times




Fans

The Great Disqus Challenge

 

Commenting on blogs is a good way of joining conversations with communities. Sharing an opinion, an experience or any kind of feedback also helps the writer learn from you. I like leaving comments whenever an article moved me. I know as a blogger, getting a comment to an article I wrote always feels great even if that person disagrees with my POV. Some  bloggers will respond, some won't. It doesn't matter. Some seem to enjoy writing for themselves and can't handle any comments which may disagree with their point of view. They can get really nasty with their commenters. I usually don't go back to those blogs.

So after @Nileshbabu and I added each other to the sites we have in common from DandyID I noticed he has made as many comments as I have on blogs with Disqus which was about 25. It's a pathetic number I thought. Got to up that and do some good for the blog cause. So I issued @nileshbabu a challenge on twitter, "I challenge you to a Disqus Comment Race, whoever gets to 100 comments first WINS." It didn't matter what the prize was. Nilesh accepted the challenge and the race was on.

I have to say that it was tough work, we had to hunt down sites and find those with the Disqus comment system to leave a comment. I enjoyed the hunt and Nilesh said he hadn't been to so many sites in so short a time.

Nilesh has won this round. Congratulations. I had to catch up with some work and lagged behind. I was also happily sharing all the cool sites I came across while I was on this quest and wasted some precious time.

Disqus Comments is a comment system and moderation tool for websites. This service adds next-gen community management and social web integrations to any site on any platform. Hundreds of thousands of sites, from small blogs to large publications, rely on Disqus Comments for their discussion communities.
And I wish Posterous use Disqus too.

Filed under  //  Comment   Disqus   blog   blogging  
Viewed
times






Theme created by: Roy David Farber and Hunson. Crudely modified by: Carolyn Chan