[Sungai Bakap, Malaysia] Teochew dim sum from Chop Soon Lee (顺利茶楼)

Sungai Bakap, a tiny but historic town on the mainland part of Penang (foreign visitors are more familiar with George Town on the island of Penang itself) has a large Teochew or Chaozhou (潮州人) population. The Teochew people are a significant minority in Guangdong Province in southern China, but who speak a language more akin to Hokkien or Minnan language, rather than Guangdong’s native Cantonese language, as the Teochews’ homeland borders Fujian Province.

For close to a millennia, the Chinese have been emigrating to South-east Asia, known as Nanyang or the South Seas. The Hokkiens form a majority of the Chinese populace found in SE-Asian cities like Jakarta (Indonesia), Manila (the Philippines), Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon (Vietnam), Singapore and Penang, the Teochews are the majority in Bangkok (Thailand) and with a sizeable influence in Singapore, whereas the Cantonese predominate in Kuala Lumpur and Ipoh in Malaysia. In all SE-Asian countries with Chinese minorities, the Hakkas and Hainanese are also present in significant numbers.

Cuisine-wise, the Teochews prefer a style of cooking much lighter than those from both Fujian or Guangdong. This is also reflected in the cooking of Penang state in Malaysia, where the Hokkiens/Fujianese form the majority on Penang Island, whereas the Teochews predominate Province Wellesley, the mainland part of Penang state.

Penang island is seen on the left on this map, whereas mainland Penang (where Sungai Bakap is located) is on the right. One can sense the distinct change of language use, and even the taste of the food, once one crosses the 13.5 km Penang Bridge linking the two parts of Penang state.

One of oldest, and best-known, eateries in Sungai Bakap is Chop Soon Lee (Est. 1924), which serves Teochew-style “sio bee” (dim sum). It’s an atmospheric eatery, preserved in a time warp circa 1960. Sungai Bakap residents are small-town folks, togged up mostly in t-shirts, shorts and slippers, as they eat out.

The Teochew-style “dim sum” here is amazing - lighter and less greasy compared to the Cantonese version. Crabmeat is used in abundance here, often paired with minced pork, which resulted in an addictive, delicious “dim sum” item we call “chim kway”:

The waitress will come by your table, bearing a large trayful of freshly-steamed dumplings, a practice similar to that at old dim sum spots in Hong Kong like Luk Yu Tea House in Hong Kong which, at 87-years-old, is a full 9 years younger than Soon Lee.

The fried “tung hoon” (glass noodles) and Teochew-style fish soup with “kiam chye” are also must-not-miss dishes here. Both tasted truly amazing!

Also must-not-miss items are their rendition of the signature Teochew vegetable dumplings - the chives-stuffed ku chai kway and the soon kway with jicama filling, both excellent and tastier than ones I’d tried elsewhere on Province Wellesley.

The dumplings were steamed covered in a massive, cast-iron wok:

The founder-patriarch, Lim Ah Kwai, has passed on - he was a chef at the Kee Mansion (owned by the Kee family, the main landowners of Sungai Bakap) up the road, before striking out and starting his own restaurant here in 1924.
Ah Kwai’s son, Lim Yam Ju, 80, still cooks these days, whilst the grandson, 50-something-year-old Lim Choon Heng, manages the front of the restaurant.

An offshoot of Chop Soon Lee, though not directly related in terms of operation or management, is Sin Soon Lee down the road, run by the family of Mr Lim Yam Ju’s younger brother. Similar menu offerings but, taste-wise, is nowhere as tasty as Soon Lee’s, IMO.

Address
Restoran Chop Soon Lee (顺利茶楼)
34, Jalan Besar, Sungai Bakap, 14200 Sungai Jawi
Penang, Malaysia
Tel: +604 5824063
Opening hours: 7am to 2pm, Tue-Sun

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One can never have too much of a good thing. Back here at Chop Soon Lee this Sunday morning, before our excursion to Caledonia House at the Byram Estate nearby.

Soon Lee’s Teochew (Chaozhou) sio bee, which is what the Teochews call “dim sum”, are still the best I’d come across anywhere in Malaysia, especially its chim bak - minced pork-crabmeat cake, steamed and served in crabshells.

Their char tung hoon, stir-fried glass noodles with pork, shrimps, dried shrimps, garlic & chives is another personal favourite.

Chop Soon Lee also does very good chai kueh - the quintessential steamed Teochew dumplings stuffed with either jicama or chives, although they are not exactly my cup of tea.

Steamed pork-and-shrimp dumplings

Steamed shrimp dumplings

Stir-fried preserved cuttlefish - Ugh, one of those dishes is an acquired taste. Not for me - way too salty and chewy.

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So interesting. Same peoples, same languages, same food but all of that is not the same on both sides of the bridge.

I know you eat at all sorts of establishments from low to high cuisine but this kind of place is very much my style. Home-style and unpretentious. The owners honour traditions and respect the old ways (in terms of the food).

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I know you’ll love this place - you just need to make a trip back to this part of the world when all the COVID madness is finally behind us.

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You brought up an unpleasant childhood memory for me… I remember my parents and brother eating cuttlefish straight out of the bag as a snack and it used to turn my stomach. Still does to this day.

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Penang’s doyenne of domesticity - cookbook writer, TV personality and the foremost authority on Penang-Nyonya cuisine, Pearly Kee, invited me to observe her Kee Clan’s annual Cheng Beng (Mandarin: Qingming) ceremony at the Kee Ancestral Mansion in Sungai Bakap last Friday.

Chinese the world over observe this important 2,600-year-old ancestor-worship ceremony, but the Kee’s version was on a much larger scale, befitting the Kee clan who were the founders and landowners of Sungai Bakap and its surrounding towns & villages.

The Kee Ancestral Mansion, during its glory days in the 1850s, was home to the Kee Clan patriarch, Kee Poh Huat, together with his six sons and their families.

Food offerings to the ancestors:

Afterwards, I joined Pearly Kee and another cousin, TH Kee, for lunch at Chop Soon Lee after the Cheng Beng ceremony ended. The 101-year-old eatery was founded in 1924 by Teochew chef, Lim Ah Kwai, who used to work in the Kee Mansion. It is now run by his 85-year-old son, Lim Yam Ju, and 59-year-old grandson, Lim Choon Heng.

The very popular crab-shell dim sum is sold out, but we managed to savour the must-not-miss char 𝘵𝘶𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘰𝘰𝘯 (stir-fried glass noodles, with pork, prawns and shallots) - an absolute winner.

Pork-prawn “sio bee” (called “siu mai” in Cantonese) - the Teochew term (Teochew is the lingua franca of Sungai Bakap, as with most towns and villages on Mainland Penang) is used here.

Pork-prawn-century egg “sio bee”

“Chai kueh” - glutinous rice flour dumplings with jicama & dried shrimp filling.

Braised fish with tofu, leeks & garlic pips

Simple, old-fashioned flavours.

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Those crab patties upthread look amazing!

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Taste absolutely out of this world! I can never get enough of them!

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It was the last day of the Seventh Month on the Chinese lunar calendar, also known as the Hungry Ghosts Month. We were at the historic 𝗞𝗲𝗲 𝗣𝗼𝗵 𝗛𝘂𝗮𝘁 𝗞𝗼𝗻𝗴𝘀𝗶 clan house in the tiny hamlet of Sungai Bakap this morning to witness the Kee clan’s Hungry Ghost Festival prayer ceremony for the “ho hia tee” (“good brothers”), an old tradition to pay homage to the spirits or souls of fishermen and seafarers who were lost at sea.

Food offerings to the dead.

5-spiced meat rolls, mixed vegetables, Nyonya chicken curry. etc.

Pork and pig’s stomach soup.

The 𝗞𝗲𝗲 𝗣𝗼𝗵 𝗛𝘂𝗮𝘁 𝗞𝗼𝗻𝗴𝘀𝗶 complex is a sprawling Chinese ancestral temple and residence built by the founder of Sungai Bakap, Kee Lai Huat, in the late-19th century. It comprises of an ancestral temple, accessed through a gateway and a courtyard, plus a row of townhouse residences for his six sons.
No one lives in this huge residential complex now, with only a caretaker who looks after the grounds and gets paid from the trust fund set up by the founder over a century ago. But on special religious occasions like this, the clan members - descendants from the founder’s six sons - will converge onto their ancestral hall and its surrounding courtyard.

But first, it was breakfast-time for our party of 6, led by Pearly Kee, Penang’s most famous Nyonya chef and cookbook author. Pearly Kee is the great-great-granddaughter of the Kee clan’s founder-patriarch. The others like me are just tagging along to observe the Kee clan’s elaborate prayer ceremony.

Breakfast was at Chop Soon Lee, of course. Founded in 1924 by Lim Ah Kwai, the former head chef at the 𝗞𝗲𝗲 𝗣𝗼𝗵 𝗛𝘂𝗮𝘁 𝗞𝗼𝗻𝗴𝘀𝗶 clan house over a century ago. Today, Lim Ah Kwai’s son, 85-year-old Lim Wan Ju, still personally cooks each and every plate of Teochew stir-fry. Traditional flavors predominate here.

Teochew jicama and chive dumplings, ready-to-eat from the steamers

Other types of dim sum on offer:

My fave steamed crab cakes:

Stir-fried tung hoon (glass noodles) with pork and shrimps - best noodle dish in the house!

Stir-fried/braised hard tofu with leeks and fish fillets.

Stir-fried fish maw with pork and shrimps.

Superb meal. We over-ate as usual and waddled out with satisfied smiles on our faces. :joy:

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