Wednesday, 14 February 2024

Much More Than A Colorful Collection Of Malay Recipes

 

Much More Than A Colorful Collection Of Malay Recipes

M. Bakri Musa

 

Khir Johari:  The Food Of Singapore Malays:  Gastronomic Travels Through The Archipelago

Marshall Cavendish, Singapore, December 1, 2021. Illustrated, hardcover.

ISBN 9789814841924; 624pp; US $80.00

Foreword by Anton Mosimann

 

What made CNN’s series “Anthony Bourdain:  Parts Unknown” popular and its late host endearing was that he went beyond describing the various exotic tantalizing recipes of the world to telling the unique enchanting stories of the people behind them.

 

         Likewise, Khir Johari’s The Food Of Singapore Malays: Gastronomic Travels Through The Archipelago goes far beyond being simply a rich and colorful compendium of Malay recipes. No surprise that it is now in its third printing after its first in December 2021 and had won many prizes, locally as well as internationally. I was fortunate to get one of the last copies. On a recent California book tour, Khir was pleased to see his book displayed in local Target stores.

 

         At 624 pages with generous high-resolution images on top-quality paper, and weighing nearly eight pounds, this is more an illustrated encyclopedia of Malay culture focusing on the culinary arts. The volume has four sections (“People, Space and Place,” “Indigenous Ingenuity,” “Food As Civilization,” and “Food and the Politics of Identity”), each comprising three to six chapters. Within each chapter are short inserts, with distinct fonts and color page margins, dealing with specific mini topics and loaded with well-researched materials. For example, Chapter I “Setting Sail,” has three –“Malaya Irredenta, Malays, Malayans and Malaysians,” “Melayu” with a quote from Usman Awang’s immortal poem of the same title, and ending with the first recipe, “Asam Pedas.”

 

         As per the foreword, “Khir’s book provides us a deeper understanding of Malays themselves. . . . [O]f how an ingenious people have been able to tap into the advantages of their location between mountain and sea, and their maritime connections, to create a cuisine that is typical of who they are as a people – warm and engaging, willing to experiment and eager to please.”

 

         As for the greater Malay world Nusantara, or Maritime Southeast Asia, this is how Khir Johari describes it in his first chapter:

 

         “Like clouds drifting in a serene sky, a vast constellation of isles and peninsulas – the Malay Archipelago – unravels in majesty from the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea. The island of Sumatra reclines in esteemed repose. The Malay Peninsula meanders like a vine. Arching gently like a string of pearls lie Java and the Lesser Sunda Islands.”

 

         No surprise to the elegant prose. The writer has a graduate degree from Stanford and had taught for some years at a Silicon Valley public school before returning to Singapore.

 

         Khir’s culinary interest began early, having been brought up in a traditional multigenerational Malay family in Kampung Gelam, Singapore, and seeing his mother, grandmother, and assorted aunties concocting tantalizing aromatic dishes in their communal kitchen. Kampung Gelam, in Khir’s words, “was once the capital of Malay intellectual, political and religious life in Singapore.”

 

         Later as an advisor to his California school’s culinary club, his interest was reignited when one of his students whose family had come from India had an Eureka moment: “I have found myself in front of a tandoori oven!” As an aside, it reflects the richness of the curricular offerings of California’s public schools that they have culinary clubs!

 

         While there are many books on Malay history and society, “that on Malay food was under-researched and under-recognized . . . . In order to preserve what we have, we need to document. Sometimes in order to document, we need to first reconstruct.”

 

         And document and reconstruct Khir did, with meticulous research into areas hitherto unexplored, leading him to conclude, “Our island [Singapore] is not only a recipient of the creations from all the reaches of the Archipelago . . .[but also] a creative kitchen hub, spewing forth its own interpretations of what it means to be delicious, and through that, what it means to be a Malay.”

 

         If I were to liken this volume to a publication in my specialty, it would be a super surgical atlas where the author has gone beyond the myriad technical minutiae of detailed drawings and real life illustrations of organs in living colors to adding the history and biology as well as historical vignettes and towering personalities associated, thus bringing out the human dimension to those miraculous operations.

 

         Seeing pictures of those ladies in their baju kurong stirring their kualis brought back my own precious memories of my mother and grandmother back in my Minang Sri Menanti kampung. Thank God Malay women then were not Bedouin wannabees. Hijabs and burkas are serious fire hazards in the kitchen!

 

         This book blazes new, vibrant, and exciting fields. As such, like all good research, it prompts more questions. Khir Johari pines in us for the taste of related cuisines, as with the Philippines’ Mindanao, Southern Thailand, and coastal Indochina’s Chaim community, as well as of Hindu Bali, Protestant Batak, and Catholic Ibans. Beyond are the Malay diasporas on Christmas Islands and Sri Lanka; further west, Madagascar and South Africa; and in the New World, Surinam and the West Indies. Then there is the converse; the influence of Malay cuisines on local Peranakan Chinese and Indian dishes.

 

         The biologist in me is also curious on whether the spread of cuisines across Nusantara would also have its own equivalent cultural so-called Wallace Line, the invisible barrier between Bali and Borneo to the west with Lombok and Celebes to the east that accounts for the distinctly different flora and fauna on either side.

 

         The vibrant vignettes of history, perceptive sociological observations, and captivating human dramas interspersed in this rich volume makes it an invaluable addition to any library, quite apart from increasing the repertoire of creative and adventurous chefs. For Malay kitchens and others interested in Malay cuisines, this is an essential addition.

Monday, 12 February 2024

Cast From the Herd Excerpt #116 Alberta, Here I Come!

 Cast From The Herd:  Memories of Matriarchal Malaysia

M. Bakri Musa

Excerpt #116:  Alberta, Here I Come!


I arrived at Edmonton’s Nisku International Airport on a cool autumn evening, the sun still glowing bright orange in the low western horizon, the residuum of the midnight sun. The outside solitary flag post cast a long shadow onto the pavement. As I emerged from the arrival lounge, a familiar-looking young man extended his hand. 


            “You must be Bakri!” he said with a ready smile. The mention of my name in a strange city and in a foreign country, properly pronounced too, warmed my heart. “I am Ben Azman; we are your welcoming committee,” as he introduced another Malaysian. 


            They took my bags and off we went to his car. “I oso from Malaysia, lah!” the other student finally blurted as he introduced himself. Unlike Ben, he was more Malaysian, meaning, he was rather taciturn. Also unlike Ben whose diction was clear and slow, this other fellow’s words just rushed by in a torrent, made worse by his singsong Malaysian accent, as with emphasizing the last syllable in Malay-see ah as well as oso and ending with the all-encompassing lah. As I was still fresh from my native land I could comprehend him. However, after having listened only to Canadians for the past few days, I found his words just swishing by. 


            “It’s hard to call ourselves Malaysians,” Ben said as we drove off. “We’re so used to being Malayans.” 


            I told him that I was still Malayan as per my passport; I left on the eve of the formation of Malaysia. 


            “This is Alberta,” as Ben waved his right hand across the clear windscreen of his Ford sedan, “wild rose country.” 


            The scene looked familiar, thanks to the many colorful brochures sent to me earlier by the university. I looked around; vast open sky and endless flatland. The soft evening sun gave a subdued beauty to the landscape. It was right out of a Zane Grey novel except for the smooth car ride on the undulating well-paved freeway. That prompted me to ask, “Are there many wild buffalo here?” 


            “Nope, not on these plains! The wild buffalo here are all fenced in. We’ll take you to Elk Island National Park this weekend,” Ben suggested. 


            You could never fence in the wild buffalo back home, I thought to myself. The seladang there is feared; its mere mention would make villagers tremble with fear. Here in Canada, wild buffalo are fenced in and turned into tourist attractions!


            The supreme irony! Here I was in praise of the solitary seladang, cast from its herd and free to roam far and wide. I modeled myself after it. I had flown across the vast Pacific, the towering Rockies, and the rolling prairies only to discover that my idolized wild buffalo but of the Canadian variety had been fenced in. 


            Oh Allah! Bless and guide me in my new life’s journey. Let me be like the seladang of my native land, respected if not feared, and free to roam God’s vast earth, guided only by my deep abiding faith and rich resilient tradition but tethered to neither. Oh Allah! Spare me the fate of my grandfather’s buffalo, well fed and lovingly cared for but alas even the village idiot could lead and control it by holding on to the rope attached to the ring through its nose.


Next:  Excerpt #117:  An Unexpected Identity Crisis

Thursday, 8 February 2024

Prof Nor Akmal bin Wahab

 OBITUARY - PROF NOR AKMAL WAHAB, 1955-2023


Nor Akmal Wahab

Biodata

  • Name: Nor Akmal bin Wahab
  • Occupation: University lecturer, professor of Medical Biochemistry/Chemical Pathology
  • Field of Specialisation: Chemical Pathology, Clinical Biochemistry
  • Born: 12 March 1955 Gombak, Selangor
  • Deceased: 19 November 2023 (aged 68)
  • Cause of death: He was diabetic and passed away of diabetic complications in the ICU.
  • Burial: Perkuburan Meru, Shah Alam, Selangor

High school

  1. Sultan Ismail College (Maktab Sultan Ismail), Telipot, Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia 1971-1973, MCE 1973
Tertiary education
  1. Bournemouth College of Technology, University of London, 1974-1976 GCE A-Levels
  2. University of Bradford, UK, B. Tech. (Honours) Medical Science (Chem Path) 1976-1980
  3. Chelsea College, University of London, UK, MSc (Biochemistry) 1981-1982

Academic qualifications

  • MCE (Malaysian Certificate of Education) 1973
  • GCE A-Levels 1976
  • B. Tech (Honours) Medical Science (Chemical Pathology) 1980 
  • MSc (Biochemistry) 1982

Workplaces

  1. USM (Universiti Sains Malaysia) in Penang 1982-1990, USM Kubang Kerian in Kelantan 1990-2011 (total 29 years)
  2. KUIN (Kolej Universiti Insaniah/Insaniah University College) in Alor Setar, Kedah, Malaysia.
  3. Allianze University College of Medical Sciences (AUCMS) Medical School in Bertam, Kepala Batas, Penang, Malaysia
  4. MAHSA University in Bandar Saujana Putra, Selangor, Malaysia

Experience

  1. University lecturer
  2. Clinical researcher
  3. Medical textbook translator (Zilva and Pannall, 1982/83)
  4. Medical curriculum planner
  5. Medical curriculum quality assurance program
  6. Medical Laboratory Technology lecturer
  7. Medical Laboratory Technology manager
  8. Medical Laboratory Technology preceptorship program
  9. Medical Laboratory Technology training
  10. Medical Education curriculum planner
  11. Medical Education training
  12. Undergraduate supervision
  13. Postgraduate supervision
  14. Business administration

Retired from USM: March 2011


Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab was a retired medical lecturer who made significant contributions in the field of Chemical Pathology. Below are some key points about him.

Academic Achievements at KUIN
  • Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab held the position of Professor of Chemical Pathology at Kolej Universiti Insaniah KUIN) in Alor Setar, Kedah, Malaysia.
  • He had been involved in medical education, including supervising postgraduate students (MSc and PhD), and contributing to the medical curriculum and its review.
  • He played a crucial role in establishing a private medical school (KUIN) in Kedah in November 2011, which received approval from the Malaysian Medical Council and the Malaysian Ministry of Education.
  • The medical program at Kolej Universiti Insaniah (KUIN) began in June 2012 with its first batch of medical students.
  • Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab also oversaw the Chemical Pathology Laboratory reports and ran the Pathology laboratories at KUIN.

Lectureship at AUCMS and MAHSA
  • Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab also contributed to the Allianze University College of Medical Sciences (AUCMS) Medical School in Bertam, Kepala Batas, Penang.
  • He continued to give lectures at the AUCMS Medical School and at MAHSA University.
  • His role involved lecturing, supervising postgraduate students (MSc and PhD), and contributing to the medical curriculum.

Entrepreneurial Ventures
  • After retiring from academia, Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab set up six companies involved in various domains, including food production, aluminium composites, bakery cum restaurant, import-export, automobile workshops, and logistics.
  • His enterprises aim to benefit the Muslim Ummah and create positive impact.
  • After retiring from academia, Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab embarked on an entrepreneurial journey.
  • He has set up six companies since his retirement in March 2011.
  • His ventures spanned various domains, including food production, automobile workshops, import-export, and more.
  • Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab is committed to using his enterprise to benefit the Muslim Ummah.

Details of Business Ventures

Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab had been quite active in the business world, setting up several companies after his retirement from academia. Here are some details about his ventures:
  1. Food Production: Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab is involved in food production. While specific details about the type of food or products are not available, it is likely related to the food industry.
  2. Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Aluminium Composites: His enterprise includes working with aluminium composites. These materials are commonly used in construction, signage, and other applications. Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's involvement in this field suggests an interest in innovative materials.
  3. Bakery cum Restaurant: Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab had ventured into the food service industry by establishing a bakery cum restaurant. This combination allowed him to offer freshly baked goods alongside a dining experience.
  4. Import-Export: His company engaged in import-export activities. This could involve trading goods internationally, facilitating cross-border transactions, or sourcing products from various countries.
  5. Automobile Workshop: Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's enterprise included an automobile workshop. This suggests an interest in automotive maintenance, repairs, or related services.
  6. Logistics: Logistics companies handle the movement of goods, transportation, and supply chain management. Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's involvement in logistics indicates a focus on efficient distribution and delivery.

Community Involvement and Mission to Benefit the Muslim Ummah

His mission was to stay active, useful to others, and engage in deeds that pleased Allah SWT.

Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's overarching goal is to contribute to the well-being of the Muslim Ummah. His enterprises likely align with this mission, aiming to create positive impact and benefit the community.


Summary

In summary, Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab was a dedicated academician, entrepreneur, and advocate for positive impact within the medical and business realms. Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's educational journey spanned human resource development and chemical pathology. His commitment to education, entrepreneurship, and community welfare is commendable. Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab's diverse business ventures spanned food production, aluminium composites, dining establishments, import-export, automotive services, and logistics. His commitment to benefiting the Muslim community underscores his entrepreneurial endeavours.


Family

Widow: Hajah Fauziah bt Abdul Karim
Children: 9, many are working professionals
  1. Azzam - Engineer with Shell International. Married Nor Khalilah.
  2. Nadwah - Manager with Petronas. Married Mohd Najib.
  3. Nadirah - IT teacher at secondary school. Married Azrul.
  4. Khairina - Executive with Puncak Niaga. Married Luqman Hakim.
  5. Mohammad - Consultant Civil Engineer, offshore O&G. Married Munirah.
  6. Nabillah - Quantity Surveyor
  7. Munirah - Chemical Engineer
  8. Ismail - Studying Petroleum Engineering
  9. Adlina - Studying

Hajj

Both Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab and wife have performed the Hajj in 2018.

Siblings

Prof. Nor Akmal Wahab was the eldest of four siblings: Nor Akmal, Shadida, Sabri, and Hairani.

--
I will update as information trickles in. - Prof Faridah, 8 Feb. 2024.