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51 That fact is worth mentioning because a lot of the restau- rants in the city serve food that is a mix of styles. A good  example is Pelita Nasi Kandar, a vast open-air restaurant  downtown, just down the street from the Petronas Towers.  When we arrived, there was a line of a dozen or so people  waiting to get a plate of “nasi” (Malaysian for rice — the  word precedes many dishes here) and a few of the many  sauces, curries and sides on offer. Eating there reminded  me of eating at the Piccadilly Cafeteria when I was a boy   — you could choose a meat, two sides and a bread, pretty  much the same deal as at Pelita Nasi Kandar. Standing  in line I noticed that the people before me were ordering  their rice with “mixed sauce.” The server would take his  ladle and dip out a little sauce from five or six of the dif- ferent curries, splashing each dip onto the mound of white  rice on the plate. Needless to say, we also ordered mixed  sauce, along with “honey chicken,” mutton curry, cabbage  and the most unique dish we had all trip: a large, curried  fish head.   The dishes we had at Pelita Nasi Kandar were pure com- fort food: savory, saucy, spicy and rich. The honey chicken  was sticky and sweet and, thanks to some marinating in  thick soy sauce, almost black. Slow cooking had left the  skin of the chicken chewy and sweet. The mutton curry  was pretty standard fare — delicious, but nothing unique.  The fish head curry was like nothing I’ve ever seen. The  head came from a red snapper. We only got the head, but  there was plenty of flaky white meat on it. It was present- ed with fresh red and green chili pepper, red onion and  stewed okra piled on top. The lips of the fish were parted,  showing jagged needle teeth. Around the fish was a thick,  spicy red gravy.  Pelita Nasi Kandar is one of the few traditional restau- rants around the Petronas Towers, those twin symbols of  KL. There are many more international places and chain  restaurants. The base of the towers is actually a huge mall  called Suria KLCC that has a Chili’s. We didn’t try it.  Many of KL’s Malay restaurants have been influenced  by Chinese and Indian food. It’s hard to find strictly Ma- lay dishes, but the downtown area of Bukit Bintang is a  good place to look. There’s a side street called Jalan Alor  that specializes in selling grilled, fried and steamed sea- food and durian, that most famous of Southeast Asian  fruits. The “chicken fish” (whatever that is) is supposed to  be good there, but we opted for steamed stingray, along  with few sides — a soft noodle dish, some fried pork and  greens. The stingray’s flesh was white and stringy, and  there was surprisingly a lot of it. It was nice and simple,  tasty, slightly ammoniac. But after all the bold flavors at the  Indian restaurants we had eaten at, a little underwhelming. The durian for sale in carts on the sidewalk was more  interesting. The fruit has a bad reputation. OK, it has a  strong smell. A pungent smell. The smell of something  … aged. I’ll admit that. But is it really that bad a smell?  We bought some pieces already removed from their spiky  yellow shell. The meat of the fruit is layered over large pits  like those of an avocado. It’s soft and creamy and mildly  sweet, wholly worth trying, although your fingers will smell  like it for the rest of the day.  Toward the end of our trip we decided to explore China- town, a crowded section of the city intercrossed by many  small alleys filled with stalls and restaurants. KL’s China- town is also not as distinct as in other major cities. The city  was founded by Chinese tin miners in the 1800s, after all;  the whole city is Chinatown. But this is the part of town  where you can try pure Chinese food, unadulterated by ex- otic tropical spices. Oh, and this is where you can come to  find the best pork in the city. Malaysia is a majority-Muslim  country, and you won’t find pork in most restaurants in KL.  Want a pizza with pineapple and ham? How ‘bout chicken  ham? You’d be hard pressed to find it here, but in China- town the pig is hanging in the windows in all its fatty glory.  We had lunch one day at Nam Heong, a restaurant that  specializes in the Hainanese dish of Wenchang chicken. In  Malaysia, they just call it “chicken rice.” The long restau- rant was full of ethnic Chinese. The food at Nam Heong  was as subtle in its flavors as the Indian food we tried was  bold. Instead of overloading everything with sauce and  spices, the food here focused more on quiet flavors and  textures. We ordered a mixed plate of chicken and barbe- cue pork, a soft tofu side dish, and some braised lettuce.  The chicken came out in little slices. No browning on the  outside, no visible spices. It had been simmered at very  low temperatures in a Chinese “master stock.” The result  was soft, savory, moist pieces of meat. The accompanying  rice had been boiled in chicken stock. The barbecued pork  had plenty of color, all dark and caramelized on the out- side with tender meat inside. The soft tofu came in a salty  broth, topped with crispy browned onions. The braised let- tuce came in the same broth. It was a meal full of nuanced  flavors and textures — the moistness of the chicken, the  saltiness of the lettuce, the silkiness of the tofu, the chew- iness of the pork.  We spent two weeks exploring the cuisines of the city.  As we waited at the airport for our flight back to Seoul, I  decided to have one last taste of Malaysia’s most domi- nant culture — a coffee and McMuffin from the airport’s  insanely crowded McDonald’s.   We only got the head, but there was  plenty of faky white meat on it. It  was presented with fresh red and  green chili pepper, red onion and  stewed okra piled on top.