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Fountain Kitchen

1.0 (1 review)
Closed • 11:30 am - 2:30 pm, 4:30 PM - 8:30 PM

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FOUNTAIN KITCHEN ATMOSPHERE

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4 months ago

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Berempah Malaysian Street Food - Shop front

Berempah Malaysian Street Food

4.0(2 reviews)
41.3 km

Well coat me in sambal and call me spicy, there's a new Malaysian restaurant just down the road…read morefrom me and I don't know what its name means but it's fun to sound out phonetically. Berempah. See? Swung past for one of their lunch specials, got the $9.90 vegetarian curry (with a hit of sambal on the side, natch). Welcome to flavourville, population: your homeboy me. The curry is made on lentils with big steaming hunks of potato and eggplant, there's tomato and carrot in there, and coriander and chilli. I'd actually eat it just as a soup but I love rice so much I'll never look a gift rice in the face if someone is throwing it at me. I'd just catch it in a bowl and now it's my rice. These guys better get used to seeing me at lunchtimes on my phone.

One of the few restaurants that open early, at 5:00pm. With young kids it was nice to be able to…read moreeat early. The service was pretty good and the portions reasonable. Food tasted good. The kids had satay chicken and spring rolls followed by deep fried battered squid. I can't help but compare them to the Salt & Pepper Squid served in the Qantas First Class Lounge in Sydney. They taste just the same! The Fried Koay Teow was a little pale but pretty good. The specialty of the house, crispy skin pork in special sauce was good but a little too oily. I could not eat too many pieces. The curry chicken with Roti was ordinary. Sambal Kankong was passable. There was no iced Kopi, so I settled for iced milk tea. This was extremely sweet but tasted okay when you add a bit more water.

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Berempah Malaysian Street Food
Berempah Malaysian Street Food - From the street

From the street

Berempah Malaysian Street Food - Crispy Skin Pork in Special sauce

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Crispy Skin Pork in Special sauce

PappaRich

PappaRich

4.0(2 reviews)
23.1 km

The concept is simple: bringing the traditional Malaysian Coffee shops into the 21st Century…read more Their continual expansion to become the household name of 'authentic Malaysian cuisine' replicated for the eighth time at its new home in Castle Hill, opening just a month ago, with Owner, Grace at the helm. Typical dishes from the hawker market stalls are brought from the open streets into a sit-down dining experience that's really setting expectation levels for this style of cuisine to a new standard. You'll find this in the classic Satay peanut sauce which we had with our chicken skewers (also available in beef). The meat on its own soothed with the marinade of lemongrass and turmeric, just as good on its own. But the dipping action required here rounds off the staple experience which is essential when opening your Malaysian cuisine experience Throughout the meal, keeping us entertained were the ever so fattening yet flavorsome crispy chicken skin. A mountainous heap of indulgence perfectly queued to enhance the bite of the curry, bring crunch to the softening noodles, to dip into the sambal, satay and sweet chili sauces, but a nice prelude to the mains. There was something very familiar about The Crispy Noodle dish, Pappa Wat Tan Hor, which we enjoyed. Almost reminiscent of a Chinese chow mein yet distinct characteristics in the consistency of the egg that is weaved through and left to cook in it's hot broth while adding the texture that coats the prawn, fish cake and chicken. The wok fried noodles retain their crunch but absorb that rich sauce and as you work your way through the bowl, its the chow sum that provides the essential crunch to this dish. Perhaps a descendant of the Thai influence would be in the Pappa Char Koay Teow. Much like the Pad Thai is the very familiar flat noodle, prawn, fish cake, egg, bean sprouts and chives. Again the subtle elements making it very Malaysian, the smokey charcoal flavor that comes through due to the way it's cooked When traditional Southeast Asian herbs and Indian spices meet, fragrant combinations of the Malaysian curry base (coriander and cumin) with lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, cardamom, star anise and fenugreek fill the air. You'll see the obvious merge of these cultures in the Roti Canai. That all too familiar contrast of inner fluffiness and crisp outer casing designed for dipping into the Curry Chicken sauce and accompanying dhal. Malay food is generally spicy. Dishes are not always necessarily chilli-hot per se, but there will always, at the least, be a chilli-based sambal on hand Rice is an essential staple in Asia, so naturally, at the core of Malaysian cuisine. The Nasi Lemak uses an Indian basmati, which is common in many biryani dishes. The elements of is why it is considered to be the national dish of the country. A dish of rice steamed with coconut milk, served with dried anchovies (ikan bilis), peanuts, hardboiled egg, cucumber, however this rendition uses samba fresh prawns (instead of dried shrimp) and curry chicken (the best of both worlds). A great salute to the past while modernising the portion and variation for big appetites like ourselves It's essentially, a malaysian coffee shop, so the coconut juice was a nice way to cool things down between dishes. One of the desserts demonstrates the versatility of Roti when paired with banana and vanilla ice cream - simple flavours working in magnifcent unison However, if you enjoyed the dipping action at the start of the meal, why not end it the same with with the Roti Bom, A thicker and sweeter Roti Canai with the dough wound in a spiral, served with condensed milk and sugar. All in all, it was a symphony of flavours, showcasing the best of Malaysian and its highly complex and diverse flavours

Unfortunately what you will get is grossly over-priced attempts at Malaysian good. Sydney has far…read morebetter and much better value for money Malaysian food options than this.

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PappaRich
PappaRich
PappaRich

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Petit Thai Cuisine - One of many awards

Petit Thai Cuisine

4.0(4 reviews)
2.0 km
•$$

I came here last night with my partner and a group of his friends midway through our weekly bike…read moreride around NSW. I had my doubts over whether or not I would be able to eat here due to my dietary restrictions (it's quite difficult being vegan and having food allergies to certain vegetables as well!), as I couldn't find a website or even a PDF of their menu available online. So I pretty much went in blind. Upon arrival, I immediately fell in love with the atmosphere. The music was set on an early 50s to early 60s playlist, and the decor felt absolutely homey and overall lovely. The menu was a tad confusing as it was split into vegetarian and regular dishes (which I do appreciate though!). I spent a good 3 minutes wondering why there wasn't a tofu/veggie option for their curries. Once I made it towards the end of the menu I just sighed in relief that I wouldn't have to order an entree and just be done for the night with a 3hr bike ride ahead of me to boot. I was having a bit of trouble properly communicating with the waitress and had to ask her 3 times if there were no peas in the red curry (as I'm highly allergic to them), and she seemed to think that I wanted peas included, but once that was cleared up, I wasn't entirely certain if she wrote down my rice order along with it as it didn't arrive for 10 minutes after my curry did, and 20 minutes after the rest of my group received their food. We had to ask if she had taken my rice order and promptly returned with a massive bowl of rice (rather than a single person portion). I felt bad to ask her about it again so I just tried my best to finish it all and had to give the other quarter that was left to my partner and his friends. Even so, I was starting to feel a bit sick from all the food and having to quickly eat (as my order took substantially longer to arrive than everyone else's). As our little tradition, we all went through the menus to add up what we owed that night's paying person, but I noticed that one of their menus was missing the single page that I ordered my dishes from, so we had to wait for one of the staff to exit out of the kitchen in order to ask for another one. Once we were nearly ready to leave, a member of our group ordered a coffee to go (takeaway) but when he asked for 2 sugars, he was instead given 2 orders of coffee, to stay. My partner had to drink one of them since it was simply too much coffee for one person in such a short time. One of the younger waitresses admitted that she was still new, and advised us to ask the other in regards to all of our orders that night, but I feel as though the language barrier and disorder within the establishment just made it all the more complicated for everyone. I wouldn't necessarily recommend this restaurant unless you're allergy-free and not picky with getting something you didn't order. It was such a shame too. The place looked absolutely lovely, but they really seemed to have an issue with either the management or staff.

Surprisingly good given its location in this small town where everything closes at 8pm…read more Satay chicken was definitely the highlight, with the Massaman also beating my expectations. Pad Thai I've had better ones but it was still fairly good. The environment is nice and clean and service friendly. Recommended!

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Petit Thai Cuisine
Petit Thai Cuisine - Part of the menu

Part of the menu

Petit Thai Cuisine - Smiling Duck!

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Smiling Duck!

Fountain Kitchen - chinese - Updated May 2026

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