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Friday, July 18, 2008

Jia Xiang Sarawak Kuching Kolo Mee - A Different Kind of Mee

kolo mee is a signature noodle dish in sarawak, perhaps equivalent to wanton mee, another dry-tossed noodle dish that singaporeans would be more familiar with. besides char siew (barbecued pork) and vegetables, kolo mee is also served with minced meat.

Kolo Mee

in recent years, someone from sarawak set up the jia xiang sarawak kuching kolo mee chain of small eateries selling this favorite dish. to make it even more authentic, the noodles and ingredients are air-flown directly from sarawak daily.

well, i haven’t actually tasted the kolo mee in sarawak before, so i really have no benchmark to compare this with. but the kolo mee at jia xiang tastes really good, if a little expensive!

Kolo Mee

Spicy dish Kolo Mee
Price: $6
Dish rating: Dish ratingDish ratingDish ratingDish rating

due to the air-flown ingredients, a bowl of noodles is priced at $6, inclusive of a bowl of soup with prawn and wanton. to be perfectly honest, i must say that this is too expensive. but hey, at least the food is good.

the noodles are firm, springy and light, and don’t feel oily, which is a plus point. the minced meat is savory and delicious. but most of all, i love the sweet and tender char siew, which is perfect in taste and texture. it also looks healthier than your regular char siew with the fatty bits and the charred bits, although i know some people would prefer the “unhealthy” version.

in sarawak, kolo mee is normally served with cut chili. but at jia xiang, a metal container of sambal chili gravy is offered at every table instead, perhaps to cater to local taste.

Soup with prawn and wanton

the bowl of soup is a good pairing with the dry noodle dish. in it, you would find a couple of fresh prawns and some wanton. the wanton is rather skimpy with very little meat filling. but for me, the main focus is still the noodle dish itself.

the food is good, and i really like the fact that the whole dish isn’t oily like your average dry-tossed noodle dish. but would i return again? unlikely. i just can’t bring the miser in me to pay 6 bucks for a bowl of noodles! still, i’m recommending it here for those of you with looser purse strings.

Jia Xiang Sarawak Kuching Kolo Mee
190 Toa Payoh Lorong 6
#01-530
Singapore 310190
(65) 6295 5024

for now, does anyone have other recommendations for nice kuching kolo mee in singapore?

(note: all photos in this post had been captured using my LG viewty.)

Posted by Veron Posted by Veron · Category Food category · Total number of reads 1,366 views

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c(11)mments
  1. Yea I kinda like Sarawak Kolo Mee but it is kinda ex actually. View all comments by GaMerZ

    Posted by posted by GaMerZ SINGAPORE Windows Vista Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 · Time posted July 18, 2008 at 12:33pm · Direct link to this comment link



  2. Yes, it’s very expensive! I was expecting the price to be in the region of $3-4 and sure didn’t expect it to be almost doubled! I heard they used to sell it for just $3.90. Not sure why they increased the price by such a huge margin. View all comments by Veron

    Posted by posted by Veron SINGAPORE Windows XP Mozilla Firefox 3.0 · Time posted July 18, 2008 at 12:39pm · Direct link to this comment link



  3. Morning Veron,

    Concidentally, I was having mee at Bedok, at Hawker Centre 85 when you upload this blog entries !

    I prefer Bak Chor Mee there to this version of Sarawak mee.

    But end of the day, nothing beats a bowl of Wanton Mee or Char Siew Mee on a cold early morning in those eateries in Hong Kong, where after the main meal, you can have a cup of hot silky smooth “pantyhose-ed” milk tea, in the midst of endless “ya-da-ya-da-ya-da”.

    Great weather, great food, great “ambience”…

    Regards View all comments by X Wings

    Posted by posted by X Wings SINGAPORE Windows XP Internet Explorer 7.0 · Time posted July 19, 2008 at 8:31am · Direct link to this comment link



  4. I’ve tried the original, uncommercialised one in East Malaysia, both in Kuching and Sibu. They char RM 1.50 for a normal bowl and RM 2.00 for a larger one.

    Everytime I walk past the Jia Xiang branches in Singapore, I just have to chuckle at the exorbitant prices being paid for what is, in all respects, simply a very ordinary bowl of noodles.

    Whilst I am used to paying sometimes hundreds of dollars for a meal, I will never pay the asking price at Jia Xiang. Also, the meat is pork, and I thought you don’t eat that variety of meat? View all comments by Kyo

    Posted by posted by Kyo SINGAPORE Windows Vista Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 · Time posted July 19, 2008 at 10:45am · Direct link to this comment link



  5. Hey Veron, happy that u r introducing kolomee here.

    Actually i just came back from kuching,Sarawak few days before, and i had try the real kolo mee there, it is very nice, and the price is reasonable too, just around RM2-3 only, i think if convert to sing dolar, may be is $1-2 only..

    Nice post, i m voting for u, all the best!!! View all comments by Miss Qian

    Posted by posted by Miss Qian MALAYSIA Windows XP Internet Explorer 7.0 · Time posted July 19, 2008 at 1:31pm · Direct link to this comment link



  6. I love your blog, especially the articles about Japan, which I’m hoping to visit in a few years time.
    Noodles and barbecue pork are delicious, not a prawn fan mind. View all comments by March Hare

    Posted by posted by March Hare UNITED KINGDOM Windows XP Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.16 · Time posted July 19, 2008 at 9:52pm · Direct link to this comment link



  7. Hi,

    The Kuching one is defintely nicer than the Singapore one. It is so much cheaper, I remember I had it like 4 years back and it cost a mere $1. It is really addictive, super delicious. The authentic one doesn’t have so much meat and vege, cos it was the noodle that taste so much more amazing. It doesn’t like become ‘lua lua’ and stick together when you dabao them and bring it back to the hotel after more than an hour of travelling. Not too oily. Arg … making me hungry already. View all comments by JL

    Posted by posted by JL SINGAPORE Windows XP Internet Explorer 7.0 · Time posted July 20, 2008 at 1:11am · Direct link to this comment link



  8. Hey Veron

    Interesting post - was wondering when you would be reviewing the Sarawak kolo mee!

    Actually, the Jia Xiang Sarawak Kuching Kolo Mee may be the most “popular” brand here in Sg due to its many outlets, but its not the best in terms of taste (if u ask the local Malaysians who know their kolo mee). I’ve got a few friends from Kuching who mentioned the best kolo mee was located in Chinatown food street (the push-cart vendor) but he’s since closed down unfortunately.

    There are a few more Kuching kolo mee stalls around the Bedok bus interchange, Bedok Nth St 1 - and another at Jurong East St 13 near the mrt. View all comments by Edmund

    Posted by posted by Edmund SINGAPORE Windows Vista Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.15 · Time posted July 20, 2008 at 3:14am · Direct link to this comment link



  9. X Wings: It’s funny. I hear so much about the char siew mee in Hong Kong but I neglected to try it out during my trip there in ‘05. While you like milk tea, I much prefer the yuan yang and would always have myself a cup of it each time I visit a Hong Kong café in Singapore.

    Kyo: You have good memory! Yes, I tend to stay away from all kinds of meat except for seafood and chicken. That said, I’m not that strict about this diet, so around 1 in 20 meals I still have myself a little minced meat or char siew.

    Miss Qian: Thanks for your votes gal! I miss the cheap food in Malaysia, especially the RM2 Ramly burgers! I used to travel there a lot but it’s been a while.

    March Hare: You would totally love Japan. It’s so unique and different from most other touristy places in the world!

    JL: Interesting! Because in this case the noodles didn’t really leave as deep an impression on me as the char siew. I wonder if it’s worth making a trip to Kuching just to check out all the food?

    Edmund: I think I just might visit the one at Bedok bus interchange (it’s the most inconvenient for me among those you listed). View all comments by Veron

    Posted by posted by Veron SINGAPORE Windows XP Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 · Time posted July 20, 2008 at 8:40pm · Direct link to this comment link



  10. haha.. you have found my favourite kolo mee. I often had my lunch there on Saturday, once every 2 weeks. But I had it in VivoCity. Think it is one of the branch in Singapore. View all comments by r.p

    Posted by posted by r.p SINGAPORE Windows XP Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 · Time posted July 23, 2008 at 1:14pm · Direct link to this comment link



  11. Veron, I remembered easily your aversion for pork because I also avoid eating this variety of meat. So - it’s something I pay attention to in all of your food reviews. :) View all comments by Kyo

    Posted by posted by Kyo SINGAPORE Windows Vista Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 · Time posted July 24, 2008 at 12:20am · Direct link to this comment link



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