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Ipoh’s Simee Market : Every Bite Brings Back Happy Memories

May 19, 2014 | 10,755 views
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This article was originally published in The Malay Mail Online. Click HERE to read it.

Choy Kee Egg Tarts

Freshly baked egg tarts from Choy Kee @ Simee Market

Waking up early for breakfast on a weekend morning during my school days was too rare an occasion. Unless, of course, the lure of a piping hot, fluffy egg tart proved to be too much to resist.

Imagine biting into one such piece de resistance freshly baked from the oven; crumbling pastry bursting with the aroma of butter and a wobbly, creamy centre of rich egg custard. 

Collage Simee Market Traders

Faces of traders @ Simee Market – One of the best places for breakfast in Ipoh.

I found myself looking forward to Saturday mornings more often after discovering the magic of Choy Kee’s egg tarts from Simee Market.

Packed neatly in a box of 8s, the quality of the egg tarts has been well-maintained over the years. They go really well with a cup of frothy milk tea or robust Ipoh old town white coffee.

Choy Kee opens early in the morning; and on good days (weekends or public holidays), the egg tarts sell off really fast. Diehard loyalists line up even while the tarts are being baked in the oven!

Choy Kee Pastries

The many other pastries from Choy Kee; try their ‘Charn Pau’ – glorious baked bun filled with juicy char siew or the ‘Kai Sou’ – mini chicken pie

If you happen to come in between batches, be prepared to wait (you can check with the ladies manning the stall on the timing for the next batch of tarts to be ready) or better yet, make full use of your time and go savour some other hawker delicacies around the market.

Simee Market has always been one of the cleaner markets (relative to the other wet markets of Ipoh) and houses quite a healthy number of hawker stalls.

Simee Chee Cheong Fun Stall

On certain days when I had to tag along with Mum or grandma to the market, we would sometimes stop by the chee cheong fun stall right behind Choy Kee.

The lady managing the stall took over from her mother-in-law who has been selling her trademark chee cheong fun (CCF) since the 50s. My personal favourite is the CCF served with mushroom and minced pork gravy (what we call tung koo jup). This is a savoury brown sauce infused with the earthiness of shiitake mushrooms, and sweetness from minced pork.

Chee Cheong Fun with Mushroom Sauce

Smooth Chee Cheong Fun with Mushroom Sauce; garnished with fried shallots, sesame seeds and served with pickled green chillies

The smooth sheets of steamed rice noodles studded with dried shrimps are first cut into strands and then garnished with fried shallots and sesame seeds.

The CCF ensemble is usually completed with pickled green chillies; and here lies the litmus test for some. Homemade pickled green chillies that taste fresh, crunchy and without burning the tongue are preferred over softened, spicier ones sourced from other suppliers.

Besides the mushroom gravy, the most popular combination of sauces is still the chilli + sweet sauce (lat jiu tim jeong), while some adventurous souls go for the curry pig’s skin for a heavier start to the day.

The CCF stall is sandwiched between two other equally interesting ones; on the left is the fish ball noodles stall (what we Ipohans call liew fun) with fish balls, pork balls, stuffed bell peppers and stuffed tofu dipped in the owner’s brand of tangy chilli sauce, while on the other side is the auntie selling various types of old school kuih including savoury glutinous rice with dried shrimps and omelette strips, sweet glutinous rice coloured with blue dye (pulut tai tai) served with kaya, and something very rarely seen nowadays — white chunks of alkaline kuih (kan sui gou) served with a dark-coloured sauce made from gula Melaka and fried minced garlic.

Sweet Potato Balls

Sweet Potato Balls at 7 pieces for MYR2 is a must-try item whenever you visit Simee Market

If you think you have had enough, wait until you walk to the other side of the food court. Situated at the far end of the market is this stall selling various snacks like prawn fritters (cucur udang), sweet potato balls and curry puffs that are all homemade and absolutely perfectly made.

Prawn Fritters & Curry Puffs

Homemade Prawn Fritters & Curry Puffs

Each prawn fritter has two prawns with shells intact; fried to a crisp and diced yam bean and chopped scallions embedded into the dough. The spherical sweet potato balls from this stall were grandma’s favourite; just the right balance of sweetness and a chewy texture that’s second to none.

And if you love bak zhang — wrapped steamed glutinous rice in lotus leaf — then you’re in luck. She sells them too every morning.

And finally, another stall worth mentioning (and the ensuing guilt) is this truck on the outside of the market selling Menglembu’s famous apam balik (ban chang kueh or dai gau min).

Apom Balik

Menglembu Famous Apom Balik (Dai Gau Min) Truck operates from Simee Market in the mornings

The popularity of this stall transcends the local community though, as they move around Ipoh a lot. Made freshly on the spot before your eyes, every single bite into the thick, chewy dough filled with crushed peanuts and sugar is a real delight.

Best to go for the side cuts where the crispy layer is.

Collage Simee Market Food & Coffee

A stroll around Simee Market has never failed to bring a smile to my face, bringing back sweet memories of my teenage days and the lingering first bite of that delectable egg tart.

Breakfast Platter from Simee Market

Simee Market is open early in the morning (about 6am onwards). The food stalls have different days off. The chee cheong fun stall closes on Tuesdays (not fixed), the cucur udang stall closes on Mondays and Tuesdays, while the apam balik truck does not do business on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. *to learn more on Simee Market, click HERE.

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5 Responses to “Ipoh’s Simee Market : Every Bite Brings Back Happy Memories”

  1. Simee Market Food Motormouth From Ipoh | Rianne Chin says:
    May 20, 2014 at 1:28 pm

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    May 20, 2014 at 4:34 pm

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    Motormouth From Ipoh – Malaysian Food & Travel Blog

  3. Irene says:
    May 20, 2014 at 4:35 pm

    Hi! Have you tried the “kai see hor fun” and dried curry mee at Restoran Moon De Moon, Wah Keong Park? They’re most delicious!!!

    [Reply]

  4. Joan says:
    May 22, 2014 at 1:07 am

    Hi ! Glad to know that the ‘gan sui gou’ is still existing. It was me and my mom’s favorite. I love it at very young age about 40 over years ago. They sold it in the very old market closed to McDonald (Cold Storage at that time). The taste was so unique that no other kuih can compare. OMG … You ‘dai gao min’ really make me drooling for the whole morning, haven’t had that for years. Love your blog.

    [Reply]

  5. Eddie Barlow says:
    June 23, 2019 at 6:06 pm

    I was there this Sunday 23th. June 2019 with my wife. Sorry to disappoint you. There was No queue waiting the egg tarts to be baked because there was No oven to do that. I bought two tarts to try but sorry it taste just ordinary except Its quite sweet.

    [Reply]

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