Location: Manna Cafe Gallery, Floor 5, Wisma Sanyan.

Let’s put it this way. When Manna Cafe Gallery was first opened and established themselves as a Korean restaurant, I thought that was just another public gimmick. I was almost sure that there’s no way they could persuade the stuborn locals to substantially try and fall for their food. There were many similarly themed restaurants (Korean, Taiwan, Japanese, Vietnam etc) beforehand, either needed to localize their menus or forced to close down after few months of business.
The main reason is that the food prepared was suprisingly in low standard and ridiculously overpriced. Reason two is that I think the Foochows are simply too proud of their own food and reluctant to open to new culinary experience.
To be perfectly honest, I have little expectation with Manna Cafe Gallery. Over the years, I was so reluctant to try their food despite I hangout regularly in Wisma Sanyan. Not to mention I admit to have preconcieved prejudice against shopping centre’s food.
And I don’t like Korean drama.

This afternoon, I finally decided to take a quick brunch there with my two other friends. The decor is fairly relaxing and comfortable. The environment is relaxing with soothing gentle music. It’s not like a typical restaurant where you are expected to come in and feed and leave. We actually wandered around gracefully and studied the many decor and artifacts before we were ready for meal. After all, it is a cafe gallery.
Manna has a rather elaborate menus offering many Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Western and even local delights such as Eight Herbal Mee Sua. I thought that was quite local friendly.
We ordered Manna’s specialty such as Korean Mix Stone Rice, Manna’s Special Fried Noodle and cutely name Auntie Miao’s Oyakadum. The staff asked me whether I mind to wait for 20 minutes of cooking time for the Korean Mix Stone Rice. I didn’t mind, I told her. But it better be good, I thought silently.

We ordered two drinks. One was the Jujube and another was sort of red date tea. Served in plastic glass. Point loss. For a restaurant of this stature, you just couldn’t understand why they didn’t invest on their glass better.

The Manna Special Fried Noodle arrived first. The presentation was really attractive with radiant red. Basically it was a ketchup fried noodle but with a twist. its noodle was deep-fried until golden crispy before drenching with thick intensed color ketchup sauce. There were small prawns, fishballs, squids and a melting egg to further thicken the sauce. It had a strong sweet and sour taste. The prawns and squids were lightly overcooked. The fishballs were okay. But I thought it was the combination of crispy noodle and the flavorful gooey sauce really made the dish worked. For my preferrence, perhaps the sauce was a bit too rich, overpowered bascially all the other ingredients. There is a similar noodle dish using a thinner noodle called Ee Mian. But I just thought theirs was much better. Priced at RM 7.90, I thought it’s not a bad value. Should be popular among children as well.

The Oyakadum is a famous Japanese rice dish cooked with chicken and egg. Auntie Miao’s Oyakadum was indeed another colorful dish with the golden yellow egg omelet, decorated with red carrot, green onions and black dried seaweed. Its really looking very appertizing. I thought the egg omelete was cooked to good standard. Its not fully cooked, still had the smooth and sight slimy texture which gave the rice a good moist and bound all the flavors together. The egg was smooth and flavorful. The chicken meat was from the thigh, thus juicy and crunchy. The rice used was not the best, but certainly not the worst I had tried. No point lost there. For personally, I found dish slightly too salty and overseasoned. Priced at RM 8, I would come back for this dish again.

And finally, the Korean Mix Stone Rice arrived. In many Korean restaurants, this is a make or break dish. If you can’t even make this dish well, your very existence would be a shame. I always thought so. Imagine a Malay restaurant can’t even make good Nasi Lemak or Chinese Restaurant can’t make good Fried Rice.
The female staff sprinkled a handsful of dried seaweed and poured some sesame seed oil onto the dish before leaving. The nutty aromatic smell from the sesame seed instantly being released and it was really enticing. But where is the stone pot? Aren’t we suppose to expect this dish to be served in a stoneware or anything. I wondered silently. Again.
On the presentation, I just thought since all the sprouts, cucumber, red carrot were julianed in similar sized strips, perhaps they should follow the same treatment for the dried seaweed and mince meat to match the overall theme and texture.
We used the spoon to mix the rice with the ingredients well. The key was to mix the red Korean chilli sauce evenly to all the rice and ingredients. That was where all the flavors came from. We begun tasting the signature dish.
I thought this dish was more about texture than flavor. The rice was soft, the carrot and cucumber were crunchy, the seaweeds too offered another chewy texture and the bottom rice crust was crispy. But I couldn’t taste much of the flavor especially the Korean red chilli sauce. Then again, this could be caused by the intensed sweet and sour noodle dish. By this time, my tastebuds were probably a bit exhausted.
The Korean Mix Stone Rice came with 4 mini plates namely the Miso white carrot Soup and pickled seaweeds with sesame seeds as appertizers, Kimchi as side dish and sweet jelly as dessert. The Kimchi wasn’t very nice.
But overall I thought I really enjoyed the dish. It’s delicious and healthy too I reckoned. In fact, this was my favorite dish of the whole meal.
I was quite impressed with what we had. I thought this restaurant did a pretty good job on the food.
The Manna Special Fried Noodle gets a 3 1/2 Star. The sauce was a bit too much. Can score higher I reckoned with some improvisation.

The Korean Mix Stone Rice gets a 3 1/2 Star. I really liked it.

The Oyakadum was nice too. Deserved 3 1/2 Stars as well. Don’t overseason any egg dish. Use good chicken and good egg and better rice.

I take my word back. Manna Cafe Gallery is no gimmick.
I like this restaurant and its potential.
And I would like to see more creativity in the food, both in flavor and presentation.
Cafe And Restaurant, Foreign Specialty, News, Sanyan Plaza Area