Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 January 2022

Nangka Burger at The PC Studio Cafe

 By Lee Yu Kit

Jan 2022


PC Studio Café is located in Damansara Intan, a high-rise incongruity in a commercial enclave shoehorned into PJ’s otherwise residential Section 17/19 and SS2 areas.  

In spite of its ground floor frontage and a few reserved parking lots, the anonymously named PC Studio Café doesn’t impress on first entry, into a plain jane interior with wooden tables laid out in orderly rows and a serving counter at the far end. Café, convenient canteen, or restaurant? 

Monday, 1 November 2021

A Harvested Burger

By Lee Yu Kit, Nov 2, 2021, 

Updated, Nov 9, 2021

With the surge in interest in realistic plant-based meat alternatives, food giant Nestle has launched its own line under the Harvest Gourmet brand. Like the poster boys of the alternative meat movement, Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat, Harvest Gourmet (HG) is all plant-based, with a range of products launched in Malaysia earlier this year. 


The products are made-in-Malaysia in a Nestle plant (See here ) and are available in local supermarkets. If you experienced sticker shock shopping for plant-based meats, you’ll be pleasantly surprised at how reasonably priced Nestle’s offerings are.

Tuesday, 9 February 2021

KFC's ZERO Chicken Burger is a ?

 

Tasting KFC’s first meatless burger available in Malaysia

By Lee Yu Kit

The last time I stepped into a KFC was in 2019, in the town of Maran, en route to Kuantan. I was on a cycling trip with the longest, hottest section still ahead on the open road. It was after lunch time on a swooningly hot day. Most of the restaurants and coffee shops had closed, but there was an air-conditioned KFC open.


What I remember about that meal was that it had rice and fried chicken. The air-conditioning was blessedly cool within the restaurant.  We blinked in the bright sunshine after the meal, smiled bravely for selfies, mounted our saddles and started out on in the sultry heat on the second leg of our journey to Kuantan.

I didn’t step into another KFC until Feb 9, 2021, in rather altered circumstances. The Covid19 pandemic had affected the world in unprecedented ways. For the time being, dine-ins were disallowed. The KFC counter was strangely quiet.   It was the first day of KFC’s introduction of its Zero-Chicken Burger in Malaysia, said burger being its first meatless burger sold the country, following an apparently unstoppable trend sweeping the food world in plant-based meat alternatives. The Zero Chicken Burger has been available in Singapore before this.  

The Zero Chicken burger uses a meat-substitute patty said to be “high in protein, high in fibre, low in saturated fat, and contains no cholesterol’. It’s made by a company called Quorn, which has been producing a meat substitute from the 1960s, well before the darlings of the meat alternatives, Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat, made their debut.

Quorn has been available in supermarkets for decades, producing a range of meat-free alternatives: sausages, nuggets, meat pies, burgers, fish, among others, using mycoprotein, derived from fungi fermented in large vats. The result is a highly versatile, high-protein paste.

I’d bought and cooked Quorn sausages before. You can read of my impressions here: http://yukits.blogspot.com/2020/08/meat-free-quorn-vegetarian-sausages.html

The burger was presented in a snappy, attractive, green and white banded carboard box.


Within the box, the burger (RM12.99, RM15.99 in a Combo with fries and drinks) fit into the palm of the hand, smaller than I expected.  It didn’t look anywhere as luscious as the pictures, but that’s not unexpected; there’s advertising and there’s reality. 

A single fried patty with shredded lettuce was sandwiched between the two halves of the rather deflated looking bun. Brown barbeque sauce leaked from the burger onto the Colonel Sanders-decorated paper bag it was wrapped in.

The patty itself looked dry, so first impressions weren’t very inviting.  Biting in, the main thing I tasted was the barbeque sauce, piquant and strong-tasting, which pretty much set the tone for the overall burger experience. The bun didn’t belie appearances; it had no discernable character, no bite, no spine, little texture – it was, in other words, blank space, a filling meant to complete the idea that this was a burger, which necessarily includes a bread patty.

The meat alternative patty didn’t make an impression either, with a homogenous, somewhat pastier texture than I expected, with any flavour it possessed being drowned out by the brown barbeque sauce. The lettuce? Wilted looking. I scarfed down the rest of the burger without any sense of anticipation. It was a stomach filler, but nothing more.

Although the meatless chicken burger idea is laudable in coaxing meat eaters away from consuming meat (and the disproportionate resources it consumes compared to plant-based meat, as well as no chicken being sacrificed), the Zero Chicken Burger doesn’t present a strong case for switching over. It’s well-conceived and well-packaged, but the final product is hardly inspiring. It’s disappointing for what it could have been, but is not.

To console myself, I toasted a couple of slices of sourdough bread, spread them over with fresh avocado, fresh red onion, sprinkled with a little pepper. Fragrant, warm and inviting. Now that’s my idea of a sandwich.

 

Tuesday, 5 January 2021

I Can't Believe It's Not Luncheon Meat!

By Lee Yu Kit

Jan 6, 2021

Luncheon meat was a staple of my early years. I ate enough of it to keep the local distributor prosperous, if not tilt the trade balance with China. Luncheon meat came in cans from China, although the original product is actually SPAM, by Hormel Foods of the US. It was the right product at the right time, meeting a need for an inexpensive source of meat during the Great Depression, and becoming globally popular after WW2, thanks to its wide distribution wherever US troops went.

Luncheon Meat is still hugely popular, although we now know that it’s a highly processed meat, high in saturated fats, carcinogenic preservatives and low in nutrients, and even protein. But it tastes good, being a mainstay of chap fan (economy rice) vendors and a cheap and tasty, if nastily unhealthy food. 

Monday, 12 October 2020

Vegetarian Restaurant Cafe Bookshop in SS2

 


Residents of SS2, PJ will be familiar with Murni Discovery, the value-for-money eatery that sees tables spilling onto sidewalks since 1999. Murni’s latest venture is something else entirely: up the stairs above Murni is M’Laboori, a modern, spacious nook with clean lines, books on wooden shelves, discreet overhead lighting and air-conditioning. It’s a bookshop cum vegetarian restaurant-café.

Monday, 10 August 2020

Meat Free: Quorn Vegetarian Sausages

 

By Lee Yu Kit

Quorn meat-free products are now available in Malaysia. We take a look, cook and taste the vegetarian sausages


 The plant-based meat movement has gained mainstream popularity, especially with Impossible Foods’ and Beyond Meats’ realistic meat substitutes. Lockdowns under Covid19 seem to have increased the popularity of realistic plant-based ‘meats’, and even large food producers such as Nestle and Tyson foods have jumped onto the substitute meat bandwagon. 

Health concerns, the large environmental footprint of producing meat, as well as animal welfare have all been given as reasons for the upward trajectory in the consumption of plant-based meats, although, on a global level, meat consumption overall is higher than ever, largely driven by demand from developing countries.

Of the plant-based meats, UK-based Quorn has been around since 1985. It is widely available in over a dozen countries, including, recently, Malaysia.

 

Vegetable protein: Mycoprotein

Unlike most meat substitutes, which use soy and pea proteins, Quorn uses mycoprotein, which is derived and harvested from the fermentation of a fungus. Nutritionally, mycoprotein is naturally high in protein (11g per 100g) and fibre. It is low in saturated fats, carbohydrates, sugar and salt.  Additionally, it contains calcium, potassium, phosphorus and small amounts of other minerals such as zinc and selenium.

Notably, mycoprotein is a complete protein, containing all the essential amino acids, which is unusual in plant proteins.

A 1992 study linked the consumption of mycoprotein with lowered levels of LDL (“bad” cholesterol) and increased HDL cholesterol (“good” cholesterol).

Quorn also points out that the production of mycoprotein uses as much as 90% less land and water resources than in producing some animal proteins.

Quorn products are available in a range of forms, including sausages, nuggets, mince, burgers and fish fingers. You can check out their range at https://www.quorn.co.uk/products/all.

For those concerned about intolerance or allergies to Quorn products, the company addresses this in their website, https://www.quorn.co.uk/intolerance 

 

Cooking Quorn Sausages

I picked up a bag of at Quorn sausages at Jaya Grocer in The Starling.  At RM31.20 for 12 sausages, that’s quite a bit more than you’d expect to pay for commercial meat sausages.

The cooking instructions were simple: fry from frozen for about 15 minutes in a little oil, which I dutifully followed. Appearance wise, the sausages are short and stubby, and pale coloured when uncooked. The sausages are not vegan, using rehydrated free-range egg albumin as a binder, although vegan Quorn products are also available. Mycoprotein and albumin are the two major ingredients, with others being vegetable oils, rusk, onion, stabilisers, firming agents and flavouring.

In the pan, the sausages turned brown rather nicely as they heated up, with the heated parts browning more than the less heated parts, as with real sausages.  They certainly looked convincing. They smelled quite nice as well. Appearance wise, there was nothing to suggest that these weren’t ordinary meat sausages.  In the attached picture, the sausages are acquiring a nice brown colour in a frying pan.



 

Isn’t this a chicken sausage?

And how did they turn out? The look like regular sausages and when cooked, have a firm texture, revealing a slightly-pinkish cross section when cut. I had the sausages with fried onions, lettuce and tomato slices on bread. The sausages had a good mouthfeel and gave a good sense of satiety after eating.  You can see how the sausage looks when cooked, and served on bread with condiments in the attached picture.

In the taste test, they are most similar to chicken sausages, with the slight bounce and mild flavour of chicken sausages.  It was a good lunch meal, sausages with bread and vegetables.

It’s noteworthy that real chicken sausages can be expected to contain amounts of growth hormone and antibiotics fed to chickens, as well as some saturated fat. Sausages are usually made from the less commercially desirable parts of the animal, ground up with the addition of flavouring, colouring and preservatives, into a homogenous mince.

Although they contain no animal meat, Quorn sausages are, nevertheless, a highly-processed food, made to look and taste like chicken sausages. They’re not the best choice if you want to eat healthily – for that, go with minimally processed, whole foods – but if you fancy chicken sausages every now and then, and have reservations about eating animal meat, these would do the trick.