My
brother and his family wants dim sum for breakfast and he told me last night so
we arranged to meet bright and early at Tasixi Hong Kong Dim Sum restaurant in
Taman Perling.
Steamed siew mai is a must when we yum cha at Tasixi |
A
dim sum meal or to yum cha, is best enjoyed at leisure. And to have the pleasure of a fuss-free meal,
we try to get there early or must join a queue to wait for a table.
Tasixi is
our regular restaurant for old-school Hong Kong dim sum where traditional dim
sum is served in a boisterous and bustling ambience, typical of all good dim
sum places.
Opened
in 1994, Tasixi is one of the oldest modern dim sum restaurants in Johor Baru
that continues to serve a wide range of Cantonese dim sum reminiscent of Hong
Kong yum cha restaurants but without the pushcarts.
Facade of the restaurant, Tasixi Hong Hong Dim Sum |
Here,
a variety of sweet and savoury dim sum are served on big trays by staff who
walk around to let diners pick their preferred portions.
With
an experienced team skilled in creating a wide range of handmade dim sum,
customers are kept satisfied with the taste, quality and portions of
freshly-made and efficiently served dim sum.
As
I approach the restaurant, I spot a queue but breathe a sigh of relieve when I
see my brother and his wife standing at the front of the queue. This means our group is next in line for a
table.
Chong Chee Peng [Standing] with our family at Tasixi |
When
Tasixi moved to its present premises, regulars like us, followed them to the
new shop which has dining spaces both indoors and outdoors with an upstairs
banquet hall for private groups.
On
busy mornings, we often spot co-owner and executive chef, Chong Chee Peng,
helping to seat customers or having a friendly chat with regulars. While the business expanded with a branch at
Taman Johor Jaya, Chong is mostly at this flagship outlet which is also its central
kitchen.
Chong
leads us to a table and makes sure there is an order list on the table for
serving staff to mark order quantities so that the total may be tallied up for
payment at the end of our meal.
Freshly steamed servings of Xiao Loong Pau |
My
brother decides on an order of Chinese tea from popular brands like Pu Erh
(black tea) and Tieguanyin (amber tea) to complement our dim sum meal while we
help ourselves to the sauce plates and pour out bottled garlic chillie sauce as
a spicy dip to savour our dim sum.
There
are really no rules to enjoying dim sum but I like to begin with choices of
savoury items – steamed and deep-fried – before ending with the sweet dumplings
and desserts.
The
staff are walking about serving separate trays of savoury and sweet items and I
wave them over to pick small plates of my favourite stuffed brinjals (RM4.40) topped
with a delicious black-bean sauce and steamed siew mai garnished with ikura
fish roe (RM4.90).
A serving of Yam Cake |
From
the tray of fried items, I select slices of yam cake (RM4.90) and a mini yam
ring (RM8) with chopped sweet & sour pork stuffed into its hollow centre.
Chong
suggests we try a new item on their menu, enoki mushrooms rolled in ham (RM8) which
to me, at a glance looks deceptively like giant cuttlefish!
He
gets a staff to come to our table with a pair of scissors and requests him to
snip the two pieces of brinjals into halves and the enoki ham rolls into bite
size.
While
most of the dim sum are ready-to-eat items, we have to place orders for freshly
made items like bowls of congee (RM3.50), chee
cheong fun or rice rolls (RM5.50) and steamed
Xiao Loong Pau (RM9.50) or (Cantonese) siew
loong pau.
Desserts of fruit tartlets and Gui Ling Gao |
Xiao Loong Pau are delicate dumplings
filled with minced meat and soup which got its name from the small bamboo
steaming baskets they are steamed in.
There is not only an art to creating these dumplings but also an art to eating
them without scalding your mouth!
Served with six dumplings in each
steaming basket, we agree that Tasixi has got the pastry just right to keep the
soup from bursting through when the plump dumpling is gently held with a pair
of chopsticks.
The Cantonese way of preparing rice
porridge is boiling it into a smooth congee and this favourite comfort food is
served in small bowls flavoured with chopped century eggs.
Each serving of Hong Kong style chee
cheong fun comes in three rolls on an oval plate with a side of spicy sambal
dip. The soft and smooth rice rolls are
filled with chopped char siew, prawns or chicken.
More egg yolk than custard in the Lau Sar Pau! |
While
the staff keep proffering their trays to us, the best part of a leisurely dim
sum meal is to eat as much or as little as you wish.
By
this time, I’m ready for dessert. I
beckon a staff bearing tray of sweet items and pick Gui Ling Gao (RM4.40) for
my sister-in-law while the fruit tartlets (RM8) just look irresistible. Gui Ling Gao is an acquired taste because
it’s an herb jelly with a slight bitter aftertaste.
Steamed
Lau Sar Pau (RM5.50) or salted egg
yolk custard bun, is another firm favourite which are served warm
in a set of three. It’s a satisfying
sweet ending to our dim sum meal and the best part of this dessert is there’s more egg yolk than custard in
the filling of the Lau Sar Pau!
WHERE
Tasixi Hong
Kong Dim Sum restaurant (Non Halal)
11, Jalan
Camar 1/3
Taman
Perling
81200
Johor Baru, Johor
Tel: 6016
– 778 9933
OPENING
HOURS
Daily
6.30am to 5pm
GETTING
THERE
Taman
Perling is highly accessible from Johor Baru city via the Skudai Highway and
Iskandar Coastal Highway or from Singapore via the Second Link
WHAT’S
COOKING
Authentic
Hong Kong dim sum
MUST TRY
A range of steamed and fried dim sum,
Xiao Loong Pau, Hong Kong style filled rice flour rolls (chee cheong fun),
stir-fried radish cake, congee and desserts like Gui Ling Gao, Liu Sar Pau and
fruit tartlets
YOU’LL
PAY
RM3.50 to
RM9.50 per portion of dim sum inclusive of GST
ATMOSPHERE
Casual
Chinese restaurant
FACILITIES
Disabled-friendly
High
chair
No Smoking
and Smoking sections
No Pets
Credit
card facilities
THE LOO
Modern shophouse
toilet
SERVICE
Friendly
and efficient
OVERALL
VERDICT
Go give
it a try
A version of this was published in The New Straits Times, Life & Times on 2 December 2016
Wonder if this is a spin-off from the famed New Hong Kong Restaurant of old?
ReplyDeleteKH