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Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?

Searching for beading supplies in Kuching can be a headache especially when you do not know where to start.

When it comes to beading, there are so many things that crafters need and it is not just beads alone.

Even for its stringing, beaders need to decide to use beading thread, wire, leather or elastic cords.

Plus, there are other supplies such as headpins, split rings, clasps, earring findings and many more.

Fret not because here at KajoMag we narrowed it down for you where to stock up your beading supplies in Kuching, Sarawak.

1.Beads Story By Xing Ya Enterprise

This is the Mecca for all the beading supplies in Kuching. Located at Kota Sentosa, it is the best place in town to buy Toho and Miyuki beads. Both brands are high quality Japan-made glass seed beads.

There are other types of bead being sold there too including tube, acrylic, wooden, faux pearls and many more.
Even for other supplies such as stringing materials, pliers, beading boards and even accessories displays are readily available.

Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
Beads Story by Xing Ya also offers semi-precious beads such as amethyst, quartz and agate.
Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
This store is the best place all the beading supplies one go in Kuching.
2. F.A.H

Fabric Accessories House or commonly known as FAH is the place to be to buy fabric in Kuching.
However, the store also has a good selection of beads for sell.

On top of the beads and fabric, the choices of ribbons, laces and rhinestones would give any crafters a glimpse of heaven. It is the best place for crafters to get buy their fabric and beading supplies in one place.

The store has few outlets all over the city but perhaps the most-visited one is at Gambier Street.

Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
The FAH branch located at Gambier Street has two floors; the ground floor is dedicated to all the fabric while the first floor is all about beading and sewing supplies.
Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
The variety of laces and ribbons at FAH.
3. Jing Lee Travel Souvenier Wholesale

Located at Ewe Hai Street, it is also selling souvenirs to tourists apart from beading supplies. The best part of this store, sometimes you can find old Orang Ulu beads in its collection. You might be feeling the pinch but it is definitely worth it.

4. Satex at Kuching Sentral

Similar to F.A.H., Satex at Kuching Sentral is also selling beading supplies on top of its fabrics. But, their beading collection is limited to seed beads only.

Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
If you are running out seed beads, Satex is another option for you to restock your supply.
5. SL FLowers and Handicraft Shop
Where to buy your beading supplies in Kuching?
Fancy anything from SL FLowers and Handicraft Shop?

Every year during Chinese New Year, Kenyalang Park Commercial Centre would come alive with people busy looking for house decoration.

The whole commercial area is known for affordable food and beauty supplies. But at SL FLowers and Handicraft Shop, crafters can also stock up their beading as well as embroidery and crochet supplies.

 

10 ways to use your sarong when travelling

A sarong in Asia typically refers to a fabric sewn together at both ends to to form a fabric tube, and is often used to wrap around the waist. For women, this common casual wear in Southeast Asia is a travel hack must-have.

Here are ten ways to fully utilise your sarong when travelling:

10 ways to use your sarong when travelling
Sarongs are also known as kain batik in Malaysia. Credits: Pixabay.
1. As beachwear

Tie it around your waist on top of your bikini and you have an instant skirt. Wrap it around your chest and you have an instant tube dress.

2. To change clothes

Do you know that you can change your clothes in public using a sarong without exposing your body? Firstly, it requires a little bit of skill and practice. If you want to change your shirt, wear the sarong and pull the fabric out from underneath your shirt. Give the sarong a small bite to make sure you don’t drop it and pull off your shirt.

You can do the same thing when you want to change your bottoms. Wear it, pull it up and hold it with your teeth. While doing that, make sure your hands are underneath the sarong and you can zip up or down and change your bottoms in a jiffy!

3.To take a shower in public

In some parts of Sarawak, it used to be common to see women taking baths by the river in their sarongs. This life skill is important if you need to take shower in the public toilet or just a dip in the river and you forget your bikini or change of clothes.

Just make sure to wrap it tightly around your chest before your bath.

4. As a blanket

A sleeping bag works way better than a sarong to keep yourself warm at night when you are outdoor camping. But if the sleeping bag is too warm for places like a  tropical country, use your sarong as a blanket instead.

5. As a lightweight towel

One of the ways to travel light is to leave your big, thick towel at home and bring a small towel and a sarong instead. Use the small towel to pat yourself dry and wrap your body with the sarong if you need to walk out from the bathroom.

6. As a beach mat

Your ultimate island essentials should include a drybag, a beach hat, a mat, sunscreen and more. Just in case you forget to bring your mat or you do not travel with one, spread the sarong like a mat.

7. As an emergency bed sheet

If you are on a budget travelling trip, you might not end up on the cleanest accommodation. When the bed feels icky or you just want to be safe, spread the sarong on your bed sheet like a mattress cover.

8. As an emergency pillow

The same thing goes when you feel uncomfortable with the pillow provided when travelling. Make use of the tube structure of the fabric to turn it into an emergency pillow. First of all, you need some cotton clothes preferably T-shirts and your sarong. Put all your T-shirts inside the tube and tie knots at both ends of the fabric. Voila! You have your pillow! This is a good travel hack especially when you are going camping.

9.To cover yourself at sacred places

When visiting sacred places like a temple, sarongs are provided to cover yourself before entering. However, it is still best to wear your own sarong.

10.To cover yourself to go to the loo

When you need to go, you really need to go, even when you are in the jungle.

For ladies, it might be tricky but with a sarong there is no need for you to worry. There are some local jungle superstitions that might to be observe when going to the loo. And when you already picked the right spot in the bush and asked for permission, used the sarong to cover yourself. Using the same trick to change your clothes; bite the fabric nicely and expand it with your hands to keep it clean while doing your business.

5 best ways to preserve your travel memories

The trip is over and you are on your way back to reality. Your mind is filled with travel memories and part of you wants these experiences embedded in your brain forever.

So, how do you preserve your travel memories?

Here are five Kajo-approved ways to document your travel memories for you to look back one day and say, “I’ve had the time of my life”:

1.Create a travel scrapbook
5 best ways to preserve your travel memories
Collect your travel memories and put them in your scrapbook. Credits: Unsplash.

The best part of making a scrapbook is that you can just let your creativity flow freely without any restriction.
Put anything, write about everywhere and scrap everything out of your travel memories.

Make a listicle out of new foods you have tried for the day and paste your receipt next to it. Pick up a travel package brochure, stick it on your scrapbook and jot down your experience of the day.

Press a flower or a leaf using your hotel iron and insert it in your scrapbook to remind you the what kind of greenery surrounded you during your travels.

There are so many ways to make a travel scrapbook.

If you are travelling with your partner or in a group, pass the scrapbook around for them to put their memories travelling with you. If you made a new friend on the road, let that stranger put a word or two in your scrapbook.

2.Make a travel photo book
5 best ways to preserve your travel memories
Come home and publish all your travel photos in a book. Credits: Unsplash.

A travel photo book is still one of the best ways to preserve your travel memories.
Just take tonnes and tonnes and photos during your trip and once you reach home, send them to a professional to make a photo book.

This idea is a lacking a bit of personal touch but you can rest assured your travel memories are well kept and preserved.

3.Write a personal travel journal
5 best ways to preserve your travel memories
Jot down your feelings while travelling. Credits: Unsplash.

Writing a personal travel journal is like having a time-out on your own. A private journal will always be your personal space where you can write down your thoughts.

Journalling can help you to get it out of the way of what you are feeling at that moment while travelling. Do you feel mellow while on the way from the airport to the hotel? What do you think about the stranger who sat next to you on the plane?
This way you can capture every travel memory in your own words and it is fun to read it back after a few years.

4.Send yourself a postcard
5 best ways to preserve your travel memories
You can write on your postcard, “Dear me, you rock!” Credits: Unsplash.

Sending a postcard to your loved ones are a common thing to do when travelling. But how about sending yourself a postcard?

Send yourself a postcard from every new place you visited for the first time.

You can write something quirky to yourself on the postcard like, “Hey you, your eyebrows are on point today – good job!”

5.Buy the same souvenir wherever you go
5 best ways to preserve your travel memories
A good old fridge magnets as a travelling souvenir. Credits: Unsplash.

Souvenirs can be overrated but not if you pick the same souvenirs from all over the world.

If you want to play safe, you can always buy the usual souvenir such as keychains and fridge magnets.
Nonetheless, there are other souvenirs out there that help to make your travel memories more personal.

If you love music, how about buying a traditional percussion from every country that you visited?

Or you can buy local crafted cider, wine or liquor and that way you still have a taste of your travel memories.

For bibliophiles, you can try to purchase your favourite book published in the local language. Imagine having Wuthering Heights in 20 different languages in your collection!

5 ways coconut oil makes a good travel hack

Every traveller appreciates a good travel hack so here is one from KajoMag. Save more space in your toiletries bag and carry a bottle of coconut oil.

Here are five reasons why you should bring a coconut oil with you when travelling:

1. It moisturises your skin

Most people like to use coconut oil as a natural moisturiser. There are different ways of applying iton your skin.

One of them is to apply coconut oil all over your body after showerIng to lock in the moisture.

There is no need to worry about the greasy feeling because it tends to absorb quickly into the skin.

You can also apply it generously to your feet before going to bed to reduce cracked heels.

If you are suffering from sunburn when travelling, it can work as a remedy for your inflamed skin.

Thanks to its moisturising effect, it also can help to hydrate chapped lips.

2. It works on your hair too

Forget to bring hair conditioner? Use coconut oil instead. This natural oil is known to contain vitamin E which helps to give you that silky hair you always wanted.

Just use it the way you use the usual hair conditioner or leave it overnight as a hair mask. 

3. It replaces your makeup remover and eye cream

Dab coconut oil on a piece of cotton pad and remove your makeup. You can also leave it underneath your eyes overnight to help remove those annoying dark circles.

5 ways coconut oil makes a good travel hack
Coconut oil will solidify when it is under 30 degree Celsius. Here in Malaysia, a tropical country, it is usually in liquid form. Credits: Pexels.

4. It works as a shaving cream

Apply coconut oil on your face, underarms, legs or bikini area and start shaving. While it helps to reduce ingrown hair problems and redness , coconut oil also keeps your skin moisturised after shaving.

5. Boost your oral health

Have you heard of oil pulling? It is an old Ayurvedic remedy to whiten teeth and boosting oral health.

You can use sesame or sunflower oil but coconut works well too.

Just swish around two tablespoons of oil in your mouth for up to 20 minutes. Do not swallow the oil after oil pulling.

It can also help to relieve mouth ulcers.

So by packing one bottle of coconut oil, there is no need for you to carry skin moisturiser, hair conditioner, make up remover, lip balm, eye cream, shaving cream and mouthwash.

Besides cutting down on your exposure to chemicals, you are also cutting down on excessive plastic packaging!

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

If you are one of the those people who gets hungry and starts to scavenge through your fridge in the middle of the night, this is for you.

Happy Together is a South Korean talk show which has been running since 2001. It used to have this regular segment called Late Night Cafeteria. Occasionally, the show brings back this famous segment.

The Late Night Cafeteria allows celebrities to share their easy, affordable meals that they make themselves at home.

Here are five easy Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try:

1. Kwantos

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

The life of a K-pop idol trainee is infamously known to be harsh. Some of the idol trainees even do not have enough to eat or be put on a diet at a young age.

K-pop star Kwanghee of ZE:A shared that once he accidentally left a bag of Cheetos open and the chips got soggy. But he refused to throw the chips away and developed a recipe out of the soggy snack.

The host of Late Night Cafeteria, Yoo Jaesuk initially had doubts about the recipe. However once he tasted it, he suggested the dish might goes well with beer.

So, how to make Kwanghee’s Kwangtos? Leave your Cheetos bag open for a day.Then top it with cheese and hot sauce before putting it in microwave.

This recipe is good if you do not want to let your Cheetos go to waste.

Watch how to make it here:

2.Mushroom toast

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

South Korean singer Byul is famously known as Running Man HaHa’s wife. Together, the couple runs a BBQ restaurant in Seoul on top of their entertainment careers.

During this year’s segment of Late Night Cafeteria, the mother of two shared a toast recipe she usually make for her son.

It is a sandwich made from mushroom patty with two slices of toast. She made a patty out out enoki mushroom, crabs stick, sweet corn and an egg. After that, pan-fry the batter to make square-shaped fritters.

As for the sauce, just mix tomato ketchup and mayonnaise. You can add on your own chilli if you prefer it to be a little bit more spicy.

This is how Byul makes it.

3.Egg toast and Shaved Ice

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

How about snacking like an Olympic gold medalist? Lee Sanghwa, a two-time Olympic champion shared her late night snack recipes which consist of egg toast and shaved ice.

The egg toast is made with bread dipped in beaten egg with a little bit of diced chili.

Sanghwa then completes her snack with dessert of homemade shaved ice. The cold dish comprises only three ingredients; frozen milk, vanilla ice-cream and chocolate cookies.

Watch how to make it here

4.Dumpling Spaghetti

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

Nowadays, instant food even dumplings are easily available at the supermarket. Actor Seo Hajoon accidentally discovered this recipe when he trying to cook instant dumplings but failed.

In attempt to rescue the dumplings, he mashed up the dumplings in a bowl. He added ketchup and mozzarella cheese on top of it before making it in the oven.

Hajoon called it Dumpling Spaghetti because the dumpling wrappers taste like noodles.

Watch how to make the dumpling spaghetti here. 

5.Pad Thai Ramyeon

5 easy recipes from Happy Together’s Late Night Cafeteria you should try

Although South Korean celebrity chef Baek Jongwon is the culinary expert, he entrusts his wife to cooking spaghetti or noodle-related dishes at home.

His wife, Korean actress So Yujin shared an easy to make homemade pad thai ramyeon.

Basically, it is similar to Malaysian Maggi Goreng. Using the noodle from ramyeon packet, Yujin stir-fries the noodle with garlic, chili, pickled radish. As for the seasoning, she combines chili powder, fish sauce, soy sauce, vinegar and sugar. There you have it, a taste of Thailand in the middle of the night.

Watch it here.

How to be beautiful from the inside like Im Soohyang

South Korean actress Im Soohyang is currently wrapping up her latest drama My ID is Gangnam Beauty.

In the drama, the 28-year-old actress is playing a college student who did plastic surgery to become prettier.

Off camera, Soohyang believes taking care of your beauty also means nurturing your body from within.

During an episode of KBS Beauty Bible, Im Soohyang shares the four things she uses to be beautiful from the inside:

How to be beautiful from the inside like Im Soohyang
Soohyang mixing her detox drink to start her day as an actress.

1. Detox drink

The actress said her skin condition fluctuates depending on what she eats. Thus, she takes detoxifying beverages to get rid of excess toxins in the body. The key is to choose a cleansing drink that allows you to take food like usual, not the ones that require you to fast.

She said, “Detox drinks help me to reduce the toxins in my body and it is also a great for constipation. I usually get skin problems whenever I am constipated.”

2. Vitamin D Jelly Supplement

Do you know that vitamin D has antioxidant properties which can prevent skin damage and premature aging even when taken via supplements?

Speaking of supplements, Soohyang takes her extra dose of vitamin E – not in pill or liquid form – but in jelly form instead.
There is this product in South Korea called VAP Sunbeam Vitamin D Jelly which basically supplement made in jelly. According to the Korean actress, the best part of this supplement is that you can take it like a snack.

3.Skin collagen jelly

Besides Vitamin D jelly, Soohyang is also taking skin collagen jelly as a snack.
Collagen helps to promote skin elasticity, reverse skin aging and reduce cellulite.

4.LED Mask

How to be beautiful from the inside like Im Soohyang
LED Mask helps to rejuvenate your skin at the end of the day.

Soohyang ends her day by wearing LED Mask. This revolutionary facial mask uses colour light therapy in specific wavelengths to increase facial blood circulation and promote collagen production.

There are plenty of good reviews of wearing LED Mask out there. Some of the changes are smoother skin, reduced crow’s feet, forehead wrinkles and reduced pigmentation.

Watch the full segment of Soohyang’s Beauty 24 on Beauty Bible here:

5 ingredients that go well with Sarawakian pounded cassava leaves

5 ingredients that go well with Sarawakian pounded cassava leaves
A local favourite, the cassava leaf or ‘daun ubi’.

Sarawakians love our pounded cassava leaves. Only, we don’t call them “cassava leaves”. We call this bitter, fibrous plant by different names including daun ubi tumbuk, daun bandung tumbuk, uvek kele (in Kayan) and many more.

There is no better way to prepare cassava leaves than to pound them. Traditionally, Sarawakians used a long wooden pestle and mortar to pound the leaves till they got nicely crushed – not too pulpy – and slightly moist.

The cooking method for pounded cassava leaves is generally the same as stir-frying any Asian vegetable except it takes more time to cook.

For a really simple stir-fry, just heat up some oil in a wok, throw in some garlic and red onions until aromatic and then throw in your pounded cassava leaves. You know they’re done once the light green uncooked pounded cassava leaves change to a darker shade of green.

With cassava leaves, every part of its preparation from stem to pot is important. This is because poorly processed cassava plants can trigger the production of cyanide. So while you cannot eat raw cassava leaves, traditional techniques like pounding and mashing cassava leaves before cooking it can help to neutralise the cyanide-inducing cyanogens. While you are stir-frying your cassava leaves, never ever cover your wok as this is believed to trap the cyanogens as it cooks.

Here in Sarawak we have mastered the art of preparing these cassava leaves, and it is very much an essential part of local Sarawak cuisine. Here are a variety of ingredients to mix with this dish.

5 ingredients that go well with Sarawakian pounded cassava leaves
There are plenty ingredients which go well this pounded cassava leaves dish.

Here are how five common ingredients Sarawakians love to cook their pounded cassava leaves with.

1. Three layer pork meat

Three layer pork or pork belly is the boneless cut of fatty meat from the belly of a pig, and as such it has a rich, oily flavour that pork-lovers crave.

One commonly known tip to make pounded cassava leaves tastier and more delicious is to cook it with a lot of oil. However, some people would stir-fry the pork belly long enough to allow the oil from the meat to flavour the cassava. leaves.

2. Tepus

Tepus is a type of wild ginger found in Sarawak. While some people enjoy tepus and chicken cooked in a bamboo, it also goes well with pounded cassava leaves.

3. Terung pipit

Here is another local vegetable= commonly found in Sarawak which goes well with pounded cassava leaves. In the state, the vegetable is known as terung pipit but it has fancier names such as turkey berry, shoo-shoo bush and prickly nightshade.

Also known with its scientific name Solanum torvum, the vegetable is usually stir-fried with belacan (shrimp paste).
To pair up terung pipit and cassava leaves is easy; it’s either you cook them together or you can also pound the leaves and egg plant together.

3. Gulong Sliced Stewed Pork

We bet when China brand Gulong came up with this product, they didn’t imagine that hundreds of miles away in Sarawak that people would use it with pounded cassava leaves.

Put the pork slices in once the cassava leaves are cooked. The oiliness and saltiness of the processed food somehow makes the whole dish more flavourful.

4. Luncheon meat

Luncheon meat is another source of protein which goes well with pounded cassava leaves. Just like Gulong Stewed Pork Sliced, luncheon meat is put in once the leaves are cooked.

5. Pork crackling

If we were to name a list delicious yet unhealthy snacks, pork crackling definitely takes the crown.
This snack which made of fried pork rind is crunchy and salty. Once you cook it together with pounded cassava leaves, the crackling would turn soft giving another extra texture to the whole dish.

So Sarawakians, let us know in the comment box which ingredient is your favourite!

5 Taiwanese foods featured on Running Man

Since 2010, Korean variety show Running Man has been running all over the world visiting various different countries such as Vietnam, Indonesia and England.

Over the course of their visits outside of South Korea, they have never failed to promote other countries’ specialties and culture.

This includes when they visited Taiwan in episode 347. The members HaHa, Yang Se-chan and Song Ji-Hyo needed to try the countries’ food specialties as part of their mission.

Here are the Taiwanese foods featured in that Running Man episode and why they are so special:

1.Taiwanese Beef Noodle

5 Taiwanese foods featured on Running Man

There are plenty of variations when comes to beef noodles around Asia. However, the Taiwanese version of this dish is like kolo mee for Sarawak. It is listed as one of the must-try foods when visiting the country.

Generally, beef noodles are either cooked in a clear broth or with braised meat. The Taiwanese version is the latter. In Taiwan, people prefer the tomato variation of the braised beef noodles. It is red in colour, cooked with chunks of tomatoes, sometimes even without soy sauce.

2. Danzai Noodle

5 Taiwanese foods featured on Running Man

Also known as Ta-a or danzi noodles, this dish has history that can be traced back 130 years.

Legend has it that a fisherman named Hong Yutou began selling this noodle to earn money during off-season when typhoons were frequent. Usually served in small size, this dish is more like a snack rather than the main course.
On top of the noodles, it is made with bean sprouts, cilantro, shrimp and minced pork.

3. Stinky Tofu

This Taiwanese food requires first timers to gather their guts to try. Traditionally a Chinese snack, it is also found in mainland China and Hong Kong.

In Taiwan, however, the tofu is usually served deep-fried with sour pickled vegetables. Visitors can find the deep-fried stinky tofu in Taiwanese night markets. Other ways to cook it in Taiwan are with spicy hot soup and barbecued over charcoal.

4. Mango Shaved Ice

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Mango shaved Ice is a quintessential Taiwanese dessert. Now you can find Taiwanese dessert chains popping up around the world serving mango shaved ice as their star menu item. It is basically made from freshly cut mango, mango ice cream and sweet mango sauce.

5. Pineapple Cake

Here is one of those Taiwanese foods you can bring home as a gift. It is a sweet traditional pastry made with butter, flour, egg, sugar and pineapple jam in between.

Pineapple played an important economical role in the country’s history which started when it was under Japanese rule (1895-1945).

During this period, Japanese brought in pineapple cultivators and set up processing plants. By the late 1930s, the country was the third largest pineapple exporter in the world.

In 2015, CNN readers voted Taiwan as the number one food destinations in the world. If you are planning a visit to the country, you can start with your must-try Taiwanese foods with this list.

10 types of Korean kimchi you can make from your Malaysian kitchen

Although kimchi is quintessentially a part of Korean cuisine, we can still make and enjoy it here in Malaysia.

Kimchi is basiclly fermented vegetables, much like preserved tuhau for the Sabahans. Just like tuhau, Korean kimchi makes a great quick meal if you are in a rush. Just cook some rice, take out those preserved vegetables, fry an egg and voila you have a complete meal.

Most kimchi is made with the basic seasoning of gochujang (Korean chilli paste), Korean chilli powder, garlic, ginger and jeotgal (salted shrimp).

If you do not have Korean chilli powder, you can replace it with Malaysian serbuk cili. (It is also more economical.)

As for jeotgal, some replace it with fish sauce while some Malaysians may use cencaluk as a substitute.

So what are you waiting for, here are ten types of Korean kimchi you can make from your Malaysian kitchen:

1. Napa kimchi

10 types of Korean kimchi you can make from your Malaysian kitchen
Napa kimchi, the most regular type of Korean kimchi. Credits: Pixabay.

The most common type of Korean kimchi is napa kimchi. It is made from napa cabbage which is widely known as Chinese cabbage in Malaysia. The secret to make your napa kimchi a little bit sweet is to put in some shredded pear.

2. Buchu kimchi

Buchu is an onion species known for many names including garlic chives, Chinese leek, oriental garlic, Asian chives. Here in Malaysia, we simply know it as daun kucai. While we enjoy stir-fried daun kucai with garlic, you can also make a type of Korean kimchi out of it.

Watch how to make it here.

3.Oisabagi

Oisabagi is basically spicy stuffed cucumber kimchi made with garlic chive, carrot and seasoning. The best part about this type of Korean kimchi is, you can eat it right away without waiting for it to be fermented.

Watch how to make it here. 

4. Baek kimchi

Here comes a Korean kimchi without the chilli powder, aptly named baek kimchi or white kimchi. If you find regular kimchi is too spicy for you, opt for baek kimchi. It is mainly made with salted napa cabbage, radish, spring onions, salt, garlic, and sugar.

Watch how to make it here. 

5. Gat kimchi

Even in Malaysia, not everyone enjoys gat which is sawi pahit in Malay or mustard leaves in English. The bitter taste lingers even after you finish your meal. However, you might enjoy it after turning the vegetable into kimchi.

Watch how to make it here.

6. Kakdugi

10 types of Korean kimchi you can make from your Malaysian kitchen
Kakdugi. Credits: Pixabay.

The star ingredient for kakdugi is white radish or else is called mu in Korean or daikon in Japanese. Unlike other Korean kimchi, kakdugi is crunchier thanks to the radish texture. Making kakdugi is another way to eat radish instead of our usual Malaysian radish cake.

7. Dongchimi

Traditionally, the Koreans enjoy dongchimi during winter season. Though it is all-year summer season in Malaysia, make your own dongchimi out of radish, cabbage, pickled green chilli, pear, and water. It takes usually two or three days to mature.

Watch how to make it here.

8.Nabak kimchi

Similar to dongchimi, nabak kimchi is a watery kimchi except it is added with chilli pepper powder. Thus, the colour is redder than dongchimi.

Watch how to make it here.

9. Gaji kimchi

Gaji means eggplant in English or terung in Malay. Here in Malaysia, one of the favourite ways to cook it is with sambal (Malay hot paste). Gaji kimchi takes about half an hour to make and one day to mature before you can enjoy it.

Watch how to make it here.

10. Gochu Sobagi

Most Malaysians can handle spiciness pretty well which is why Korean cuisine is well received here. Gochu sobagi or spicy stuffed green chilli is another way to satisfy your craving for spiciness. It is made by stuffing kimchi seasoning into green chilli.

Watch how to make it here. 

8 Malaysian recipes with pineapple

While the Italians do not like pineapples on their pizzas, people in Malaysia have plenty of ways to cook it.

For those who are in love with this tropical fruit, here are eight Malaysian recipes with pineapple:

1.Sweet and sour fish
8 Malaysian recipes with pineapple
Sweet and sour pork. Credits: Pixabay.

This dish is originally a Chinese recipe made of fried white fish covered in a sauce made from ketchup, diced pineapples and cucumbers.

The sauce offers a nice blend of sweetness and sourness all thanks to the ketchup, canned pineapple juice and vinegar.

If you are not a big fan of fish, you can replace it with fried chicken meat or pork.

2. Pig intestines cooked with pineapple

Speaking of pork, pig intestines might not be everyone’s cup of tea but in Sarawak it is famously cooked with this tropical fruit.

During Gawai or the harvest festival, pork is the white meat of choice. Usually, each and every part of the pig is not wasted and cooked including its intestines. Pineapple makes the perfect pairing, as its sweetness balances out this organ’s strong taste.

3. Pajeri nanas

From Sarawak, we now head to Peninsular Malaysia. “Pajeri nanas” or pineapple curry is a Malay traditional dish whereby each West Malaysian state has its own recipe.

Watch how to make it here.

4. Sambal nanas

Here is another Malay recipe; sambal is a sauce or paste made mainly from chili peppers with other secondary ingredients such as shrimp paste (sambal belacan) or petai (sambal petai).

Hence, sambal nanas is a rough paste made from pineapple.

5. Nanas Tumis Air

“Nanas tumis air” is a stir fried dish suitable for vegetarians. It is cooked with shallots, garlic, turmeric powder and spices like clove, star anise and cardamom.

6. Pineapple fried rice

Inspired by Thai fried rice, it is commonly seasoned with turmeric powder giving the dish its slightly yellow colour. What makes this dish so good, is the sweetness of the pineapple which gives this Asian staple the tropical fusion it needs.

7. Fruit rojak

Also known as Malaysian fruit salad, a rojak is a famous dish taken during tea-time. It consists of cucumber, jicama, deep-fried tofu and of course pineapple.

8. Pineapple tart

If you are not a big fan of this fruit as a savoury dish, here is the recipe that will suit all taste buds. These tarts are bite-sized baked goods topped or filled with pineapple jam. It is one of the famous festive cookies because it is usually served during Hari Raya, Chinese New Year and Gawai.
However, you can still find them in local bakeries all year round.

Watch how to make it here.

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