Monday, April 20, 2009

Japanese Karee Rice - Agefuku

Despite having more and more new Japanese restaurants and outlets opening, Japanese curry rice in Malaysia still wasn’t that popular. I’ve been to a few outlets and ordered curry rice, but the taste and quality disappoints me. Maybe Malaysians don’t really enjoy having curry rice that are not spicy compared to the local nasi kandar. Or maybe curry rice just sound like food that you will have it in jail.

So behold, Agefuku Japanese restaurant, which has been sitting near my workplace (Taipan USJ 10) for years without me noticing it. There are two sections; the top floor serves ala cart and buffet, while the ground floor serves the so call ‘Japanese Fried Delight’, or Japanese Fast food. While many would fancy the buffet on the top floor (due to the Japanese Buffet trend in Klang Valley), I find the fast food section more interesting. For some reason, we were happy to see the word ‘non-halal’. In Malaysia, very few Japanese restaurant would dare take the risk to serve pork in their menu, so kudos to Agefuku. And yes, pork plays an important role in Japanese food.

We tried the Japanese curry (Karee) rice with fried pork cutlet, and I can tell you that this is the best Japanese curry rice I have ever had in Malaysia. The meat is tender and juicy, the portion of rice is just nice, and the best part is the curry sauce, which is the exact taste I had in Japan (thick, sweet and a little spicy). It satisfies my taste bud every time I pay a visit.

Lately there is a promotion on certain items which cost only RM 3 for a main course. I am a little worried because such promotion could hint that the business is not doing very well. RM 3 for ramen or teriyaki chicken rice is certainly a loss making move, as the average meal there cost about RM 10. I have experience in a restaurant where they are doing RM 2 breakfast buffet. What we get is bread, butter, fried rice and some fried noodles. The restaurant closed after 1 week… So the lesson here is not to undervalue your product.

I hope this bold move will not jeopardize the restaurant. I believe there’s an opportunity to grow and to build up their reputation. They already have good food, good location, and they are the only Japanese fast food player in the region. So please gambateh and 生き続ける! (stay alive…)

Technorati Tags:


Technorati Profile

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Best Found Media – BFM 89.9


Long have I waited for such radio station to arrive. Most of the radio channels I listened in Malaysia have been either crappy or meaningless. Although some were entertaining, some DJs went overboard, playing fool on the listeners, and spitting jokes that are lame.

In BFM, not only you get the latest news headline every half an hour, there are tons of interviews with businessmen/women and entrepreneurs. Though I think that the interviewers could still improve in their questioning, the interviews are inspiring and motivating, especially in the morning when you stuck in the traffic jam going to work.

For those who are not staying in the Klang Valley, you can still tune in online here. You can even download Podcast in mp3 format for previous interviews that you have missed. Now that’s Best For Malaysians.

Technorati Tags:


Technorati Profile

Monday, April 6, 2009

My Movie Journal - Footprints 2004 Director's Cut Part 1

Continuing my movie journal on Footprints...

Part 1

Ricky falls into coma and dreamt about his childhood. He was bullied and upset. He feels that life has no meaning and hope that the car has ran over him.

The scene was shot outside the church and it was during winter. We want to make the Tai Lou (Darren) like terminator with dark glasses, gloves and tight leather suits. His bodyguard, Bao Pei and San Kai has to act fit while loosely dressed, like ‘Gu Wak Zai’. The scene where the body guard came out from Tai Lou was shot countless times because we just can’t stop laughing… and Gary had quite a scare during the car scene.

Casts:
Gary as Ricky
Darren as Tai Lou
James as Bao Pei
Ka Kit as San Kai

For your information,
- The name of the two gangsters, Bao Pei and San Kai was reference to a Hong Kong gangster film.
- Ricky’s last name, Conner, was reference to The Terminator movie’s John Conner.
- Bao Pei and San Kai have to act tough although the weather was cold during shooting time…
- It was my bag that they were throwing around…
- The Renault was Daniel’s car.

Stay tune for part 2 of my movie journal.



Technorati Profile

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Street Fighter II Special Moves – What they say, and what we thought it sounds like…

Street Fighter, one of the best fighting games ever created, has come a long way since the 90’s. Back in my primary school days, Street Fighter II has revolutionized the arcade industry, creating a trend no one has ever seen before. Though we are not very good in playing it, we do enjoy watching people play. Its like watching a free performance or competition.

In school, we learn the fighting strategies and discuss special moves like it was part of the education. It was also exciting to hear people shouting out ‘hadoken’ here and there, though we have no idea what it means and whether the sound is accurate or not (gaming sound technology was not so advance that time). But it was cool, and we make it sound a little ‘Hokkien’, hehe…

Here is the list of what we thought the special moves sound like in the good old days…

Ryu/Ken


What they say - Hadoken
What we thought - Ah Buuu… Ken


What they say - Shoryuken
What we thought - Ooo… Liu Ken


What they say - Tatsumaki Senpukyaku(Hurricane Kick)
What we thought - Ah Type Type Bull Ken

Chun Li

What they say - Spinning Bird Kick
What we thought - Cintan Kick (Mee?)

Guile

What they say - Sonic Boom
What we thought - Ah Lek Ku (This is the best!)

The most accurate sound?

Dhalsim’s Yoga Fire!

Please share your thoughts.



Technorati Profile