Soo Kee @ Sea Park – Ipoh Chicken Kuey Teow & Fresh Prawn Wantan

Since the previous post was on Annie 1; a kopitiam in Damansara Uptown serving pretty delicious Ipoh hawker food like wantan mee, chee cheong fun and even a caramel egg custard that vaguely reminded me of Thean Chun's, let's continue the theme here with Soo Kee; an old classic in its own right here in Seapark.

For decades now, Soo Kee capitalizes on the lack of honourable hawker fares in KL/PJ that bring forth the sense of rendezvous to one who misses Ipoh food; "Kai See Hor Fun" (Ipoh's style of chicken noodle soup; served with Hor Fun/flat rice noodles ONLY) to be exact.

In case you're wondering if the Ipoh famous kuey teow is imported (aka the real deal from various manufacturers in Ipoh), the answer is NO. The noodles are indeed, made by a local manufacturer with half a century of experience in churning out the velvety smooth creation; uniformly processed into strips of 1cm-wide strands.

The immediate difference one will notice here is that the noodles do not have the translucent quality of Ipoh's version; nor the extremely smooth texture even when unaided by the addition of oil into the serving. Soo Kee's version of the kuey teow surpasses what most hawker stalls around KL/PJ have been serving (read : horribly, over-processed stuff sometimes pungent with the aroma of a certain chemical compound used to soften and preserve the noodles), yet was still a notch below what one would expect from the best quality Ipoh hor fun.

Ordering a meal here is simple. You walk over to the counter and state what you favour; dry or soup noodles, and whether to serve the chicken separately (they serve quite a mean steamed chicken with oyster sauce), or shredded and placed on top of the noodles.

Then if you're hankering for a taste of succulent prawn wanton (dumplings), by all means, go for it. Order a bowl to yourself or sharing one portion with fellow diner(s). The prawn wanton here deserves compliments for the fresh prawn enveloped within a casing of dumpling skin (that might be a tad too thick to one's liking) was not only fresh, but sweet, plump and juicy too. Another notable point is that the soup used to serve the wanton tasted different from the noodle's; a far more savoury taste laden with an 'umami' kick from the generous addition of prawn oil (boiled from prawn carapace, shells and all). Essentially, this robust oil appearing as an orange layer on the surface of the broth won the brownie points for Thean Chun against the likes of many other contenders in Ipoh.

The VERY-lightly blanched bean sprouts was served simply tossed in a light dressing of soy sauce and shallot oil, garnished with chopped spring onion and fried shallots. A far cry from what you can expect from most of Ipoh's famous 'nga choy gai' outlets, as even the lean, wriggly bean sprouts had that unpleasant 'green/raw' taste to them.