Sunday, August 19, 2007

Lone Pine Hotel' s restaurant, The Bungalow - July 2007


Lone Pine Hotel' s restaurant, The Bungalow, is situated facing the beach and pool deck. For traditional dining with a contemporary twist, the menu at The Bungalow features eclectic options ranging from Hainanese Chicken Rice to Fish Curry to Filet Mignon.
Guests also have the alternative of dining alfresco at The Deck Bar. It is the place to unwind and sip your favourite cocktails, enjoy your snacks and tall coolers under matured Casuarina trees, all in great view of the sunset.
History... Established in 1948, Lone Pine Hotel, Penang was the first hotel on Batu Ferringhi Beach, a haven for expatriates and their families fleeing the severe winters of home. Today, completely refurbished, Lone Pine Hotel still retains much of its old world charm with its privacy and idyllic setting of landscaped gardens.
Lone Pine Hotel is located at Batu Ferringhi on the northwestern coast of Penang Island. Set on Penang' s finest beach, the hotel is a mere 17km or 20 minutes from Georgetown and 31km or 45 minutes from Penang International Airport. Buses and taxis are plentiful and readily available.

Penang Hill -David Brown's Restaurant & Tea Terraces






Ye olde English house on Penang Hill
Mention strawberries in Malaysia, and one is likely to snap up images of Cameron Highlands with its rolling acres of orchards and plantations.
Many people may not know, however, the first ever place in the Malay peninsula to grow strawberries was on Penang Hill.
Long before the fruit was famously harvested in the cool climes of the Camerons, Captain Francis Light of the East India Company, who was known for his fondness for strawberries, had levelled a little hillock located on Penang Hill for planting in the early 18th century.
British settler David Brown, a nutmeg merchant, is said to have later obtained the land to build a tea house that would be called David Brown's Cottage.
Till today, the hillock is popularly known as Strawberry Hill.
Now, a couple of centuries after Light grew his first strawberries here, the historical appeal of this little "hill upon a hill" is being rekindled with a new restaurant specialising in traditional English cuisine and a dose of old colonial charm.
The David Brown's Restaurant and Tea Terraces on Strawberry Hill was conceived by Peter lee, a jolly old veteran admirer of English cuisine and the best of British traditions."I love all things English," says a jovial Lee, immaculately dressed in a bright red bow-tie and a dandy straw hat when met at the restaurant. "Running an English restaurant is in my blood."
Lee, who owns a home in London for more than 30 years, has been known to call himself a "romantic" and "an unashamed dreamer" who relishes to bring back the old-world nostalgia of the British colonial period.
Significantly enough, Lee is the founder of the famous Smokehouse, a hotel and restaurant that has been a landmark in Cameron Highlands for more than thirty years now.
Very soon after he bought the Smokehouse building from a certain Colonel Forster in 1977, Lee helped develop its reputation as one of the grand old ladies among the lodging houses of the Camerons.
Standing on Strawberry Hill today, in front of a resplendent view of Penang Island's north-eastern cape with the inner city, the port and the serene Penang Channel in the distance, Lee now aspires to help rekindle the allure of this little hill's colonial history.
From the well-manicured garden of lily ponds and flowers to the spotlessly furnished interior, Lee maintains a meticulous eye for detail as his staff go about welcoming and servicing guests who turn up at the restaurant.Lee stresses that his sense for keenness and exactness is derived from the very legacy of the British. "You must take regular care of a place like this," says Lee. "I am particularly meticulous about the food."
"In the old days the British knew how top be fussy. The way they laid their food and napkins, the way they cleaned their carriages. Everything was comfortable and punctual."
In his youth during the late 50s, Lee was a student of St Xavier's Institution, the institution founded by the La Salle missionary institution along Farquhar Street in George Town. He later spent some years at Raffles Institution in Singapore.
When the idea to have a new restaurant on Strawberry Hill came about, Lee was inspired that the building should take the shape of the old cottage that used to stand there.
Restoring David Brown's cottage"We restored the look of David Brown's old cottage," Lee explains. "If you look at the old photos of the cottage, you can see that the shape of this new building is more or less the same as that of the old one."
He got conservation architect Laurence Loh to help bring back the authentic texture of the cottage on the hill with its ambience of an old British colonial garden.
It took ten months to plan and construct the new building. When completed in late 2006, the whole restoration had cost about RM 3 millionLee handled the interior design by himself, carefully selecting the leather couches, the chimney and its mantelpiece, the china vases, the paintings on the walls, such that they reflected the calming, nostalgic atmosphere of the place.This sort of an effort cannot be treated as just something commercial," he stresses. "It needs a heart and a soul. It needs a personality. It needs some one in love with history with a passion."
Indeed, great pains were taken to maintain the natural environment of Strawberry Hill as part of the overall Penang Hill heritage.
Care was taken to keep the nature around the hill largely intact. ("I don't like roof lines higher than tree lines," Lee says.)
A towering shady tree, home to a troop of long-tailed macaques, was carefully left undamaged during the construction work, while a docile python has also been allowed to keep to itself in a remote corner of the little hill.
English delights crafted to perfectionLee has three chefs to run his operation at David Brown. The team is headed by an executive chef who has been trained in the Smokehouse at the Cameron Highlands for the last ten years.
The cuisine, which is pork-free, offers English food with local specialities. There is a variety of hors d'oeuvers, steaks and grills, chicken and roasts on offer in the menu, which incidentally also offers a vegetarian selection.
Stews and pies; pudding and tea; cocktails and sandwiches. The gastronomic fare is as dreamily English as it can get.
With its magnificent view and cool fresh air, the terrace restaurant, which can serve a hundred guests, offers a memorable setting for functions like weddings and lifestyle parties.
"David Brown is like an oasis," says Lee. "Imagine taking the evening train up, as the hours become cooler and the lights of the Penang begin to appear, and you have a party here amid this marvellous historical setting. The feeling is irreplaceable
Visitors disembarking at the upper station of Penang Hill's funicular railway can see the entrance to David Brown's on Strawberry Hill along the road just a couple of minutes' walk away from the station. The restaurant is open 10am to 10pm everyday with a menu that includes all-day breakfast.
For reservations and more information, contact:David Brown's Restaurant & Tea HouseLot 400, MK 17, Daerah Bart DayaStrawberry Hill, Bukit Bendera, 11300 Ayer Itam, PenangTel: 604-828 8337Fax: 604-826 6337

Syed Alatas mansion -Armenian Street


In its heyday, the Syed Alatas mansion hosted Muslim-related cultural events, one of which was the homegrown Boria, usually performed during Awal Muharram (or the Muslim new year). But most of all, the mansion served as home to both Syed Alatas and his son.After it was abandoned, the once august dwelling fell from grace and into a state of disrepair. A great part of the wear and tear happened when the mansion was let out to a motley crew of Indian chettiars dealing with scrap metal and other discards, used timber dealers and even a kopitiam. They occupied the place from the 1930s right until 1993, when the Municipal Council (MPPP) took over the building.
Working with French technical support, the Penang State Government and the MPPP with the backing of the Federal Government, launched the "Syed Alatas Mansion Heritage Development Project" into action.

Sun Yat Sen's Penang base at 120 Armenian Street














The blue shoplot is Sun Yat sen house....


















At a cursory glance, the indigo-blue terraced house on 120 Armenian Street looks rather unassuming, blending in effortlessly with the other houses on the same street. One wouldn't have guessed that it was here that the epoch-making "Canton Uprising" of the 1911 Chinese Revolution was strategised. Their struggle sowed the seed of discord which signaled the end of the imperial rule in China and gave birth to the republic of China, with Dr. Sun Yat Sen (1866-1925) as the President.
Besides being the base for Dr. Sun's revolutionary movement, 120 Armenian Street was also where Malaysia's oldest Chinese newspaper, Kwong Wah Jit Poh, was founded, in 1910. This landmark event wasn't happenstance by the way - it was actually planned by Dr. Sun and his cohorts to use a newspaper as a clarion call for the T'ung Meng Hui party, and to disseminate an ideology called the Three People's Principle - Nationalism, Socialism and Democracy. The calligraphy for the newspaper's masthead (picture left) was written by Dr. Sun himself.
Illustrious members of the party included Choong Thiam Poe who started the Hu Yew Seah in 1914 to promote the Chinese language and literature, Tan Sin Cheng who founded Chung Ling School in 1917 and the Fukien Girls' School (now called Peng Hua) in 1919.
120 todayThe exact date of the house's construction cannot be established, however the land was subdivided in 1875, which means the house would have been built shortly afterward. It was first owned by Cheah Joo Seng of the local Penang Cheah Kongsi. Ownership of the house then changed hands several times over the course of its longish history. Lim Boon Yeow owned 120 from 1900 to 1913.
Ch'ng Teong Swee bought it in 1926, and eventually used it as a godown for his company Ch'ng Eng Joo. It first served as a family house, when the company premises was at Beach Street. Then the Beach Street premises were bombed, the Ch'ng Eng Joo moved here until a few years after the Japanese Occupation, when the company obtained another place in Chulia Street, so Ch'ng Eng Joo moved out, but when storage space was needed they used 120.
Today, it is the home of one of Penang's foremost historian, conservationist, writer, documenter and photographer Khoo Salma Nasution (also known as Khoo Su Nin). Khoo also happens to be Ch'ng's grand-daughter. She used it as a base for her publication company Areca Books and also Lestari Heritage Network.
Restoration work was carried out in 1993 under the personal supervision of Khoo and today, the front hall of 120 Armenian serves as an exhibition space and museum, while the back area is reserved for the office, and the floor above strictly for accommodation. The architecture
This late 19th century building is a common feature in old parts of Penang. Known as residential shophouses, the architecture almost always features a front hall for guests, an inner hall that is partitioned from the front, kitchen and toilet in the rear and bedrooms upstairs. The building is typically long with a narrow frontage with two air-wells for ventilation. The front air-well or courtyard of 120 is really the most significant part of the house. It was most probably here where the historic meetings were held. Today the same interior is kept neat and airy, the décor comprising a round marble table set with carved wooden legs and mother-of-pearl inlay complete with drum stools; a black mother-of-pearl inlay reclining chair, Victorian-styled showcases, traditional red and black Chinese baskets, large water urns with dragon motifs and original signboards of Wing Sun Company. Most of the furniture is original.
Strategicalle placed potted plants add a touch of green, improving the ambience of the living space. The back courtyard has a kitchen, water tank and bathroom which served as a cooking and washing areas. floor tiles are of a geometrical design popular with the Peranakan, in peach, brown and green shades.
The walls have always used the same paint - indigo-blue lime wash. The advantage that lime wash has over modern synthetic paints is its 'breatheability'. This feature allows moisture to escape into the air and act as a natural air coolant. Rightly so, lime wash is the only approved covering for restoration of old building such as this.
The front part of the house is partitioned with an intricately carved arabesque-like gilded wooden screen panel featuring figurines and floral motifs. This partition actually divides the living room, which is usually used by the head of the household for entertaining his guests, and the courtyard which is reserved for the women family members and their friends.The kitchen still retains a traditional Nyonya stove in all its glory, 'powered' by wood fire and still in working condition! This area also showcases cooking implements from a time long ago - pewter steamboat, wooden noodle press, traditional grinding stones for making rice flour, copper water boiler, two charcoal burners, clay curry pots and enamel tiffin carriers.
The cupboards, or meat-safes, are built into the wall for cooling purposes. The roof in the kitchen is high and the back air-well helps to disperse the hot air and smoke that rises from the stoveIf certain things in the house seem anachronistically out of place, it's because the owners have gone to great pains to preserve them and ensured their longevity as an inextricable part of home and hearth.
The Location
Armenian Street is located in the heritage enclave of George Town bounded by Carnavon Street, Chulia Street and Acheen Street.
According to Streets of George Town, Penang, a map of the early 1800s showed that Armenian Street was formerly called Malay Lane, due to the Malay kampong settlement there. The name Armenian Street, in tribute to the Armenian merchants who played a key role in Penang's economy. The neighbourhood was assumed by the Straits Chinese in the mid 1800s.
Incidentally, the location of No 120 was ideal for the base of Dr. Sun's political party because it provided an escape route should a raid occur. If the front of the house was stormed, the occupants could escape via the back door into the Indian Muslim village of Kampung Kaka and Kampung Kolam!
Apparently, the Malay community in the Acheen Street area was aware of the anti-Manchu revolutionaries who were operating in their neighbourhood. In fact, the revolutionaries were referred to as "orang Sun Yat Sen yang potong thau chang", or in English "the followers of Dr. Sun Yat Sen who cut off their pigtails in defiance against Manchu oppressors.
120 Armenian Street was one of two important venues in Penang where Dr. Sun Yat Sen planned the Canton Uprising. The other was at his office in Dato' Kramat Road, but that building has since been demolished.
Exhibition Hall and Museum
As mentioned earlier, 120 is today privately owned, but it still opens its doors to visitors and history buffs. The modest exhibition dedicated to Dr. Sun features several interesting posters that capture pivotal happenings.Within the halls lies a rich legacy that is both revolutionary as well as ostentatious. After all, it was here where Dr. Sun changed the face of China, and it was also here where a key figure of a Penang Straits Chinese made his home














Colonial Restaurant - Hainan Restaurant - Aug 17, 2007


For gastronomic and visual feasts: Chef Cheah It Kheang open a Hainanese restaurant-cumart gallery on Armenian Street.
Hainanese food chef and aspiring artist Cheah It Kheang, 46, said his new Colonial Restaurant would also serve as an art gallery.

“Art appreciation in a sense is similar to food. To the experienced eye, the flaws in a painting are easily noticeable, just as the skill of a cook can be gauged by the way the food is cut, cooked and presented,” said Cheah.
35 - Armenian Street 10200 Penang , Tel : 2614489
business hours : 11:30 Am to 3 PM , 6 PM to 10 PM. close on thursday.
Menu
Hainanese Chicken Lor Mee
Hainanese Fish Lor Mee
Roti Babi
Colonial Chicken Pie,
Colonial Chicken Chop

Dr Sun Yat Sen - 120, Armenian Street ( Aug 17, 2007)






This late 19th century shophouses at 120 Armenian Street was the base of the South-east Asia Tung Meng Hooi when it was headquartered in Penang from 1909 to 1911.
The Tung Meng Hooi was the party of Dr. Sun Yat Sen alias Sun Chong San, leader of the Chinese nationalist revolution. From Penang Dr. Sun and his friends planned the Canton Uprising of Spring 1911. The historic "Penang Conference" took place in November 1910 at the Tung Meng Hooi headquarters.
Although the Canton Uprising was defeated, it was considered the turning point of the Double Tenth Revolution, the establishment of the first Republic in Asia.
A grand memorial was built at Hwang Hwa kang to 72 fallen heroes of the Canton Uprising. Of the known martyrs, 24 were Nanyang Chinese, of whomthe most posthumously famous was Malaya's Luo Ching Huo.
Former Dr. Sun Yat Sen's Penang base


Dr. Sun Yat Sen, the first provisional President of the Republic, is generally considered the father of modern China.
Dr. Sun Yat Sen's Penang Base was the focal point of the progressive Chinese of that period. In their effort to promote a greater social awareness among the Nanyang Chinese, Dr. Sun and his Penang friends and supporters made lasting contribution to the local society.
The Kwong Wah Jit Poh was also founded in this house in 1910.
The Malay community in the Acheen Street area was also aware of the anti-Manchu revolutionaries who were operating in the neighbourhood around the same time. The group was referred to as orang Sun Yat Sen yang potong thauchang, that is, the followersof Dr. Sun Yat Sens who cut off their pigtails in protest againts Manchu rule in China.
The "dwelling houseor messuage" was already extant in 1875. At the time, the owner was Cheah Joo Seang, a trustee of the Cheah Kongsi from 1879 to 1895.
From 1900 to 1913, the shophouse belonged to Lim Boon Yeow. In the 1926, the house was taken over by a gun dealer Ch'ng Teong Swee, and until it was used as a godown for his company Ch'ng Eng Joo.
Today, it is the home of conservationist writer, Khoo Salma Nasution.

Cheah Kongsi - Armenian Street Aug 17, 2007




The Cheahs who originate from Sek Tong village in South China Sea are members of the Cheah association founded in 1820 by Penang's pioneer settler Cheah Yam.
Upon his death, his widow Ong Sin Neoh took charge. She created a trust body and laid down the rules, thus becoming the only woman ever wield such direct influence over a local Hokkien clan association.
Cheah Yam's som Cheah Choo Yew, his grandsons and great-grandson have served as Presidents of the Cheah Kongsi.
The Cheah Kongsi was the first of the five great Hokkien clans to be establised in Penang, with an endowment that includes a large group of early19th century rentable properties.
The Cheah Kongsi has a chaming front lawn and serene inner courtyards. the mid-19th century temple building uniquely intergrates the double storey porched bungalow plan with a Chinese courtyard building plan.The worship hall proper is located on the upper floor.

Cheah Kongsi

The temple porch was renovated in the 1930s with the addition of British lionheads. The roof decorations feature sirens, dogs, lions of stucco and shards of both Chinese and Dutch crockery.
Just as eclectic are the old office building and it's interior which combine Malay, Chinese and European elements.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

S.C. Foo & Family Massage


Foo and Family will give you a very good massage. Foo and Family will give you a very good massage. It's a family business (father, sun, brother-in-law) and special "the old Foo" is doing a great job.We did experience this more than 16 years and if you mention my name you will know more about me!A "full massage" will cost RM50,- and you feel like reborn again.Tip: the other refexologists don't have much experience. You'd better go to Foo. - Golden Sands

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Cheong Fatt Tze Mansions - June 4, 2007

The Side View
Front Main Entrance, with the 2 lanterns there



The Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion14, Leith Street,10200 Penang.(04) 262 0006
Built in the 1880s, this was the brainchild of Cheong Fatt Tze, left China in 1856 for “Nanyang”. His business empire traded tin, rubber, cocoa, spices. He was appointed Consul General for China, Mandarin of the Highest Order, Director of China’s Railway, and dubbed “China’s last Mandarin and first capitalist”. The New York Times called him the “Rockefeller of the East”.
The mansion incorporated 38 rooms, five granite-paved courtyards, seven staircases and 220 windows. . Other features of the house include Gothic louvered windows, Chinese cut & paste porcelain work, Stoke-on-Trent floor tiles, Scottish cast iron works and Art Nouveau stained glass. There are many hidden feng shui motifs in the art nouveau stain glass windows.The motif of pineapple traced onto a fan to symbolise the “fanning in of wealth.” (In Chinese, pineapple sounds the same as “wealth coming in”).
When Cheong Fatt Tze passed away in 1916, flags were ordered to be flown at half-mast by the Dutch and the British in their colonies, to honour this man. So respected a man was he and so much wealth he had amassed in his lifetime, unfortunately the wealth and fortune did not quite benefit the later generations. An old Chinese saying that a family’s great wealth and fortune do not last over three generations.
Eventually, the mansion was deserted by the family. Squaters moved in during the 70's and stayed until one day a group of Heritage preservationists acquired the Mansion to ensure that it would be maintained & conserved for posterity. It took them almost 3 years to negotiate with the squaters a deadline to leave the premise. When they finally did, then restoration work began, and led to this heritage project winning the UNESCO Asia Pacific Heritage Award 2000.
A scene of the French movie "Indochine" starring Catherine Deneueve was filmed in this building.