Land Dragon Boat
A new year of reunions
It started with the CGL97 reunion with the group. This is suppose to be the official CGL Class of 97 reunion but most of the time, only the 5 Science 1 folks attend. There is a book and a keeper of the spoon who organizes the reunion and writes about the night in the book.
This year organizers were Guat May and Christine (who couldn't make it eventually) at Palace D'India in Tanjung Tokong. It was REALLY nice to see some people, who I normally only get to see during events like these, such as Doris who now has a son! And Vern Ying (who we affectionately call Poo) and Yvonne who is now a MMU lecturer. I think I haven't met up with Yvonne since uni days.
Just a note of the Palaca D' India. SERVICE there SUCKS. Most of us spent the night being really impatient with the wait staff. The water almost never came even after many attempts to remind them. The captain who took our orders told us the one order could feed 4 person when it could barely feed 2. And it took forever to get anything in this place! If you want to go to a great North Indian restaurant, I would recommend Passage Through India along Penang Road.
A couple of us, Ai Ping, Suan Lynn, Guat May and me eventually ended up at QEII for drinks to meet up with a few other ex-CGL-ians, Jo Lynn and Marion.
Oh, and by the way, I got nominated by Doris who was is this year's keeper of the spoon as her assistant.
The second reunion was organized by Patricia for non-5 science-ers. But still it was just basically 5 Science 2 and 5 Arts 1 folks. It took place at an open karaoke bar along Bellisa Row. This place used to be a kopitiam, with roti bakar and coffee. But it has now be taken over by Bed. There were tons of people and we didn't even managed to get to sing many songs. Most of the other patrons there mainly chose Mandarin/Cantonese songs.
We ended the night at my favourite maggi goreng spot. The one located at the corner of Transfer Road and Burmah Road. Across from the police headquarters.
Yummy plate of maggi goreng
Back to Penang
clock tower, Copthorne, penangIt kinda sucks to run alone :(
runI practically had to drag myself out of bed. The intention was to wake up at 6am and get running by 7am. I didn't manage to get myself up until 6.15am. And I plodded around VERY slowly getting ready. I intended to run around Air Itam dam to train myself on some hills but I considered the crazy marketing crowd I will probably meet driving up there so I changed my running plans to Botanical-Jesselton.
Target distance: 10km.
Target time: 55 minutes (5:30 min/km)
I did managed to reach the Youth Park parking lot at 6:53am. I was still so darn sleepy and it was still so darn dark that I actually took a 5-minute power nap in my car. I really like running in the morning as the weather is so cool. Plus at 7am, you pretty much have the roads to yourself. The start of the run can be best described as sluggish. My body and brain was still asleep. As I entered Botanicals it got a little bit better. I suffered on the hills in Botanicals and Jesselton. On good days I can chug up it with a pretty good pace. But on both occasions today I felt my pace slacking off quite a bit at the end.
Francis Western Food, Pulau Tikus
westernThe menu is quite extensive. They have classics like Chicken Chop and Fish and Chips. On top of that they do have interesting sounding choices like Baked Chicken with Peanut Butter (?!?) and Bacon Wrapped Pork Chop with Cheese.
I ordered the Chef's Spicy Chicken and Lynn had the Meditteranean Fish. Both were baked so they took awhile to come. The two dishes came with coleslaw and baked potatoes as the sides. The presentation was nice for a kopitiam western food stall.
My Chef's Spicy Chicken was topped with green capsicum, ham, canned pineapple, onions and tomato sauce. The chicken was pretty tender and juicy and the sauce was not too tomato-y. It was interesting (for the lack of a better word) but not fantastic tastewise. Lynn's fish had canned lychee, crabstick, green capsicum, canned pineapple and onions. The coleslaw had fresh pineapple. The potatoes came baked with butter and parsley. The best thing I had that night was the garlic bread which was smothered liberally with garlic butter. YUM! The theme of the night was pineapple.
Mediterranean Fish
Chef's Spicy Chicken
Verdict for now, I would rather go back to the Fort Cornwallis western food and have the yummy chicken chop. I would definitely give Francis another chance by trying the classics but I'm going to stay away from the exotic sounding stuff.
*** Be warned that the place does get busy. Go early if you do not want to wait for a table. It is closed on Mondays.
-Chin-
I am an aspiring chef
cooking, SaladOh and in the process of making this salad I found out that watercress was in actual fact "sai yong choi". Haha... watercress is just the fancy-schmancy name.
Citrus and Avocado Salad (with "sai yong choi" and pine nuts)
Lynn very dillgently tossing the salad
-Chin-
Run 25k?!?
runRoute: Rasa Sayang Hotel to Teluk Bahang dam (x2)
Target distance: 25km
I was pretty reluctant to run 25km as our longest distance has been 18km so far. I was worried that a 7km increase might break something. I still recalled the horrors of my first ever attempt for a 25k at Balik Pulau. It brings back bad memories and that distance still terrifies me until today. I told myself I was going to try, no matter what to push as best as I could. So I told myself, try to hit 25km.
Wei Chern announced that he will only do one loop as he was not feeling well. His brother Wei Khoon, a 70.3 triathlete and former winner of the Penang bridge half marathon joined us.
As I started my climb up to the dam, my legs started to slowly give up. I knew it was impossible to continue a 25km. It was going to be a stretch to get to 17km. If I had wanted to do a 25km I should have ran it at my own pace. Starting at Wei Chern pace drained me. When I descended from the dam, I made my mind up to run a really hard 17km because I knew I would hurt myself badly if I attempted a 25k.
Time: 1:34:00
Average pace: 5:32 min/km
-Chin-
My favourite bakery - Rainforest Bakery
bakeryThe multigrain bread
The best bread they bake by far, the French farmhouse
Cinnamon rolls
Rainforest Bakery is located on Chulia Street beside the Olive Spring Hotel.
Some bakeries I used to go to when I lived in Portland, Oregon.
St Honore (http://www.sainthonorebakery.com/) - The best almond croissants in town!
Ken's Artisan Bakery (http://www.kensartisan.com/) - Some to die for morning buns. If you want to know more about morning buns, check out this post: http://www.chowhound.com/topics/372524
Grand Central Bakery (http://www.grandcentralbakery.com/store_hawthorne.html) - For their freshly baked breads such as Yukon Gold Potato or their Corn Loaf.
-Chin-
Karakudi, Little India
IndianARGH!
So I suggested Karakudi at Little India because Kenneth had previously said some good things about it. I had only been to one other Little India restaurant, Madras Woodlands and they had some pretty yummy food.
Aan Chien and I ended up ordering the lunch set with a choice over mutton curry and an Indian dessert called payasam. It was HUGE! It came with briyani, basmati rice and naan. Enough carbs for me to run a couple marathons! Lynn ordered the aloo gobi masala. We also are big fans of masala tea, so we had that.
Set lunch with mutton curry... and dessert
Verdict: Maybe we should just go to Madras Woodlands next time.
-Chin-