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  2. Curry mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curry_mee

    Some versions of the dish are prepared with gravy which is drier and thicker in consistency. The city of Ipoh in Perak state is known for its dry curry noodles, which are often topped with pieces of cooked chicken, char siu or roast pork. [6] [12] Curry mee is also available as a flavour for commercial instant noodles. [13]

  3. Peranakan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peranakan_cuisine

    Mee siam, dish of fried thin rice vermicelli with spicy gravy. Nasi kunyit , a glutinous rice dish seasoned with turmeric powder, coconut milk and asam gelugor. It is usually served with a chicken curry, ang ku kue , and pink-dyed hard-boiled eggs as gifts in celebration of a child of friends and family turning one month old.

  4. Malaysian Chinese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian_Chinese_cuisine

    Curry mee. Curry Mee (Chinese : 咖喱麵). A bowl of thin yellow noodles mixed with bihun in a spicy curry soup enriched with coconut milk, and topped with tofu puffs, prawns, cuttlefish, chicken, long beans, cockles and mint leaves, with sambal served on the side. It is often referred to as curry laksa.

  5. Talk:Curry mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Curry_Mee

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  6. Lor mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lor_mee

    Lor mee can be served together with red chili. Traditional versions also include bits of fried fish as topping though few stalls serve this version anymore. Putian-style lor mee. In Putian cuisine, lor mee is a much lighter dish usually prepared with less starch and seafood instead of meat.

  7. Yellow curry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_curry

    Thai yellow curry, outside Thailand, usually refers to the dish kaeng kari. [2] Thai yellow curry is most typically served with chicken or beef and a starchy vegetable, most often potatoes, but it can be made with duck, tofu, shrimp, fish, or vegetables and is eaten with steamed rice [3] or round rice noodles known as khanom chin. [citation needed]

  8. Hokkien mee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokkien_mee

    A plate of Kuala Lumpur-style hokkien mee. Hokkien char mee (Hokkien fried noodles; 福建炒麵) is served in Kuala Lumpur and the surrounding region. It is a dish of thick yellow noodles braised in thick dark soy sauce with pork, squid, fish cake and cabbage as the main ingredients and cubes of pork fat fried until crispy (sometimes pork ...

  9. Mee pok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mee_pok

    Mee pok is commonly served tossed in a sauce (often referred to as "dry", or tah in Hokkien (Pe̍h-ōe-jī: ta)), though sometimes served in a soup (where it is referred to as "soup", or terng). Meat and vegetables are added on top. Mee pok can be categorised into two variants, fish ball mee pok (yu wan mee pok), and mushroom minced meat mee ...