Cover image via
SAYS
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Though she was forced to shut down her over 17-year-old well-loved restaurant due to the pandemic, Cheng has since helped open a small food business called Myat & Potatoes, serving some of the restaurant’s popular dishes, along with really delicious Burmese food.
“It was sometime in June when we got wind that MCO (Movement Control Order) will be extended and one of my staff who is an ardent cook, together with some of his friends, wanted to start a home-based business, as a few of them lost their jobs,” she shares with SAYS.
Cheng helped to market them and set up their Instagram page, sharing that all proceeds go back to them after deducting costs.
“In fact, this was what kept me sane during the lockdown,” she says, adding that Oriental Cravings’ closure had left her devastated so this has kept her going.
Myat & Potatoes’ team started with seven of them, including a couple of her staff who were working at Oriental Cravings and some of their friends. But it has now dwindled down to three, as most have gone back to full-time employment.
“Those left helming the project are waiting to go back to Myanmar once they are allowed to.” The ones currently involved are Maung Maung Oo, Su Su Win, and Khin Mawng Lin, who are all from Yangon and were previously working at Oriental Cravings.
“Maung O and Su Su are the parents of the twins whom we used the middle name for Myat and Potatoes (because it rhymes with Meat and Potatoes hahaha).”
These are the Burmese dishes:
1. Mohinga – widely known as the national dish of Myanmar, consisting of a fish-based broth with rice vermicelli, fish floss, fish cake, eggs, raw long beans, and chickpea crackers.
2. Nan Gyi Thoke – A dry noodle dish consisting of lou shi fun, dry curry pork, fish cake, eggs, raw long beans, and chickpea crackers.
3. Mot Phat Thoke – Cold noodles consisting of rice vermicelli tossed with fish floss, raw long beans, chickpea crackers, crispy shallots, and garlic oil.
4. Lahpet Thoke — A refreshing salad of fermented tea leaves on a bed of cabbage, tomatoes, and topped with a crunchy mix of peas, nuts, garlic, and dried shrimp.
5. Topu Thoke – Protein-packed chickpea tofu in tamarind dressing with crispy garlic and kaffir lime leaf.
The Malaysian dishes include Oriental Cravings’ signatures:
1. Claypot loh shi fun
2. Bittergourd mee hoon
3. Yam cake
On occasion, the small team also adds weekly specials to the menu.
“The most popular item I would say is Mohinga and Lahpet Thoke, as they are the more well-known dishes,” Cheng shares.
SAYS got to taste them and we would honestly order them again. The Mohinga is thick, packed with flavour, and kind of tastes like a combination of laksa and mee jawa.
We loved the fermented tea leaves in the Lahpet Thoke, which was crunchy and refreshing to pair with the Mohinga.
The Burmese chicken curry, which came with rice and egg, was also yummy. Overall, the dishes were flavourful and each one tasted comforting in their own way.
For first-timers who’ve never had Burmese food, Cheng explains that it’s “very much influenced by its neighbouring countries and you will find similarities in ingredients and taste from those countries”.
“It is also very close to our local food but they are generally lighter and cleaner in taste, relying on a lot of fresh ingredients — largely onions, lemongrass, and tomatoes.”
“You do find a combination of sour, bitter, salty, sweet, and spicy in most of their dishes. And they do like texture, so you will see a lot of nuts, seeds, legumes, and crackers in their food. Also, if comparing with Thai, the flavours are much lighter but you can enhance it with the addition of fish sauce, chilli flakes, and other side dips.”
As for future plans, Cheng shares that it really depends on how things pan out.
“This is a temporary thing and once they find gainful employment, it will probably be the end of it. But they are happy they get to showcase their country’s cuisine which seems to be catching up in a lot of countries. There is a very popular Burmese restaurant in San Francisco where you see constant queues.
“I would like to see it go further but really depends on the acceptance of this cuisine and with this current climate it is quite risky to start a new business. But who knows what the future might hold.”
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