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Melaka: Food and Museums

MALAYSIA | Monday, 5 June 2006 | Views [1586]

I went down to Melaka last Friday with Ray, his distant cousin-in-law Joanne, her friend Jamie, and her boss Samir. I was meant to have gone to Melaka earlier in the week, but my first (and hopefully last) bout of Traveller's Diarrhoea left me unwilling to move very far. For some reason I managed to survive Indonesia...

Population: Melaka was the major trading port of the region hundreds of years ago. It has populations of Chinese ("Baba-Nyonya"), Indian ("Chitty"), and Portuguese descendants that are considered to be native Malaysians.

Museums: There are fifteen or so museums clustered around Stadthuys, Melaka's red fort - many for local and national government, independence, and culture; another for beauty, several on Islam and its roles; one for UMNO (the political party); one for architecture. There are more museums elsewhere - a Baba-Nyonya museum and another dedicated to Chinese explorer/ambassador Admiral Cheng Ho in Chinatown, a Malay museum in the Malay kampung (village) area, maritime and naval museums on the waterfront, and probably others I missed. Lots of historic buildings and temples too.

Royal Malaysian Navy: Did you know that three RAN officers commanded the RMN? Two of them were Chiefs of Navy post-independence...

Chicken Rice: For lunch on Friday we had chicken rice, which consists of steamed chicken with soy-chilli sauce, and rice shaped into balls. Only Melaka does chicken rice this way. I liked the chicken, but the rice balls were only so-so.

Kaya: Coconut milk, Palm Sugar, Egg. Jam it. Serve with slices of very thin white toast. Breakfast on Saturday. Delicious.

River Cruise: We went on a river cruise on Saturday. The river was rather filthy, but our amusing but garrulous guide kept emphasising that the government was in the process of spending millions to upgrade the riverfront, add walkways, implement flow control, and restore it to a more pristine state. Garrulous? He spent five minutes saying goodbye in as many languages as he could think of.

Snails: After never having had snail before, I tried escargot on Friday night, and sea snail on the Saturday night. The escargot tasted not like chicken but like very garlicky oyster. The sea snail came in a salad and had a rubbery texture and bland taste. I was pleasantly surprised at my lack of reaction, as when I had raw horse in Japan fifteen years back I totally froze up and was unable to continue eating once I knew what it was.

Portuguese Settlement: On Saturday night we went for seafood at the Portuguese settlement, which is a few kilometres outside central Melaka. Melaka's Portuguese have intermarried - they're brown-skinned - and those of the settlement make a living by catching and selling seafood. We bought food from two stalls. The one we were sitting beside was operated by free-divers, who had lots of fresh shellfish from the ocean floor - huge oysters with shells bigger than your hand, mussels, furry-shelled clams, Horseshoe crabs, sea snails; that kind of thing. The other sold shellfish/crustaceans, and fish. We ate a lot of seafood, and (with the exception of the snail) it was delicious and (because it was so fresh) un-fishy. Highlight: Assam prawns.

Parties: The brochures issued by Melaka's tourist office have an unusual slogan written on them: "Even birds sleep in Melaka". I'm pretty sure that there have been better ways to suggest that the city is worth visiting. A bunch of people came down from KL on the Saturday to go to a Chinese Dance Club, and more came down for a rave.

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