Yummy Momo

It looks rather Chinese, but momo is quite easy to eat when you don’t have much of an appetite when trekking in Nepal. The filling can be mutton, chicken, buffalo meat or vegetables. It’s usually steamed, but it can also be fried. Of course, standards vary, but when it’s good, it’s very good.

Roadside Eatery

This is a roadside eatery that is able to whip up some awesome dishes. I don’t this place can pass any NEA inspection, but who cares? The food is great and I’ve lived to share this … and go back again.

A pretty little roadside kitchen.

Fried shrimp. Goes very well with beer, rum, whisky …

Fried fish that tastes a bit like shishamo.

Their killer fish curry!

Cheap, simple and tasty.

© Chan Joon Yee

Nepal 16th March 2014 -23rd March 2014

My kitchen will be temporarily closed when I travel to Nepal during the school holidays. In its place, will be kitchens in Nepal which will whip up plate after plate of dhal baat for one whole week. Let’s see how my pampered little kids are going to survive this. OK, some of you may not know what dhal baat is.

Steamed rice, curry vegetables (carrots, cauliflower) and a cooked lentil soup called dhal are the main components of Nepal’s staple food. The dish is called dhal baat. Porters can eat a mountain of this.

Above is a video taken by me at a lunch stop on the way to the Langtang Valley just north of Kathmandu. This is as authentic and unadulterated as it gets. The mutton is even rubbery. It’s going to be one heck of an adventure for uninitiated Singaporeans.

© Chan Joon Yee