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Monday, February 18, 2013

Kampong Boy, Hurstville

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Forest Road in Hurstville is always bustling with shoppers, but there's a tiny one-way section of road that is significantly quieter. It's here you'll find Kampong Boy, squeezed between two Sichuan restaurants either side.

Inside the decor is understated and simple, but the dark timber tables, hanging lights and the spinning wooden fan overhead has echoes of a Malaysian kopitiam coffee house.

There's a steady stream of locals through for dinner - couples grabbing a quick to eat, and families tucking into matching bowls of laksa.

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Chicken and beef satay $15 for 1 dozen

The menu is reasonably brief, although it's present in a somewhat dizzying collection of laminated double-sided sheets. There are several types of laksa (including Hakka fried pork), a "toast corner" with kaya coconut jam and butter on thick toast, and they even serve Nestum prawns ($18.80), made with a crispy fried oat mixture.

We place a fairly large order and it doesn't take long for the food to arrive. In fact it all seems to arrive all at once, forcing us to play dinner table tetris with a relentless onslaught of dishes.

The satay is the first to arrive, skewers of chicken and beef marinated and grilled until lightly caramelised. The tender meats are even better when plunged into a bowl of peanut sauce, and eaten with chunks of cucumber and raw red onion.

Nasi lemak ($11.80) arrives next, a meal usually eaten by one, but we manage to share the crunchy fried chicken wing, boiled egg, achar pickled vegetables and peanuts with anchovies.

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Curry fish head $33.80

The assam curry fish ($15.80) is sold out so we upgrade to the curry fish head, a bubbling cauldron of aromatic soup heaving with a lucky dip of tomato, mushroom and fish. Fish heads are a seriously underrated delicacy - they offer a succulency of flesh not found elsewhere, combined with pockets of gelatinous fatty deposits and my favourite treat: the fish eye!

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Bak ku teh $18.80

Bak ku teh, or pork rib soup (teh actually means tea), isn't overly herbal, but the sweet soup still has a comforting and nourishing effect. Fishing the murky depths brings forth treasures of mushroom, bean curd skin and hunks of pork.

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Fried kuey tiaw $12.80

Fried kuey tiaw (char kway teow) yields a huddle of stir-fried rice noodles, tossed through with prawns, bean sprouts, omelette, garlic chives and slivers of lap cheong Chinese sausage. It's not as charred as I would have liked but the noodles are soft and springy.

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Belacan fried eggplant $10.80

There's much to love about the belacan fried eggplant, a contrast of sweet and creamy eggplant batons stir-fried with a fiery belacan shrimp paste mixed through with nuggets of pork mince. It is a touch on the oily side though.

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Rendang beef  $15.80

And finally a clay pot filled with rendang beef, cooked to a fork shredding level of tenderness. We mop up the sauce with rounds of flaky roti. Dinner tetris complete.

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Kampong Boy
370 Forest Road, Hurstville, Sydney
Tel: +61 (02) 8094 8409

Opening hours:
Tuesday to Friday 11.30am-2.30pm and 5.30pm-9.30pm
Saturday to Sunday 11.30am-4.30pm and 5.30pm-9.30pm


Related Grab Your Fork posts:
Hurstville - The Good Kitchen
Malaysian - Albee's Kitchen, Campsie
Malaysian - Aseana Food Village, Randwick
Malaysian - Chinta Ria... Mood for Love, Sydney
Malaysian - Malacca Straits, Broadway Ultimo
Malaysian - Malay Chinese Takeaway, Sydney
Malaysian - Mamak, Haymarket
Malaysian - Mamak Village, Glebe

20 comments:

  1. woahhhh that deep fried eggplant! oh how it calls to my cholesterol laden arteries!

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  2. damm! their curry looks so good and so hardcore!

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  3. Looks like the dishes are pretty decent all around. Have to say that curry fish head does look great. I can't eat the fish eye. I think my brother told me horror stories and have been scared since, but I think he only told me so he could have it...

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  4. I'm with Suze on the eggplant. Yeah baby!

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  5. I'd like the nasi lemak for lunch today, thank you :)

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  6. Well that just sounds like the perfect Malaysian feed :) Love eggplant done like this

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  7. oh my that looks good! im going through an eggplant phase atm and soft eggplant innards are my fav!

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  8. Love the cheek meat on fish heads!

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  9. That chicken wing looks soooo crunch!

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  10. This is so my kind of comfort food!

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  11. Great discovery Helen - love the look of the chicken wings.

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  12. Oh hello, this is close to home and I haven't been there. Need to rectify that stat.

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  13. The nasi lemak and the beef rendang looks good actually, big servings always make me happy! LOL

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  14. The nasi lemak and the beef rendang looks good actually, big servings always make me happy! LOL

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  15. Oh wow Helen. The satay and eggplant. I'm going..

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  16. Everything looks so delicious! I love the glistening sate sticks and the lush looking Beef Rendang!
    I just don't think I could every do a fish head... or an eye!!! eek

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  17. Omg sambal eggplant is the best! I haven't had it in ages and that pic just had me salivating!

    xox Sarah

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  18. It's really good! I've tried the nasi lemak, satay, rendang and laksa. cant stop!

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  19. Gosh, that all looks great! We go to Hurstville lots, given how close it is to our place, but we've never been to Kampong Boy yet! Will have to try next time.

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