When in Kuching during the weekends, you simply can’t afford to miss Satok Weekend Market. @ Jalan Satok locally known in Malay as 'Pasar Minggu', is a Kuching institution that dates back several decades. For many years, Satok market have been the best place to buy all assortment of local products, food & jungle produces. Not only that, you would probably see many of Sarawak Ethnic groups people doing their business here.
To get to the market from downtown, walk the kilometre or so from along Jln Tun Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, and turn right onto the westbound lanes of Jln Satok after you have crossed under the Satok overpass. The markets are liveliest in the late afternoons and evenings on Saturday, and mid-Sunday morning. If the weekend coincides with a major holiday however, then some of the stalls will not be open, for instance, the Dayak-owned stalls on Gawai. Walking south here, you will enter the general-produce section, which sprawls around and takes up space wherever. Well, some tourists brochure indicates Satok Sunday Market, don’t be misled. Satok Markets open from Sat 2pm till Sun noon around the clock (Weather permitting of course). It’s a short taxi ride from Kuching Waterfront, of course you can choose to walk.
A good place to start exploring the market is from the pedestrian overpass. The first section, directly south, has stalls selling a wide range of goods from hardware to souvenirs to clothing. This is a good place to pick up a bargain on batiks and cheesy Sarawak t-shirts. From here, head towards the fresh-plants section, where you can stop to admire delicate bonsais, pick up a bunch of local flowers for your dearly beloved, or see what a durian sapling looks like.
With stalls selling eggs, vegetables and fruits, sprinkled with various others hawking drinks and snacks. The fruits section sells in-season popular tropical fruits such as watermelon or mango, and at the far end is a stall selling cakoi, which is deep-fried bread dough, a popular snack item. Going back up, stalls selling kueh(small Malaysian cakes) jostle with others selling Malay food and Chinese pastries. Definitely try apam balik, a Malaysian pancake folded over and stuffed with butter and peanuts, or kueh salat, a small cake made from salty glutinous rice and pandan-flavoured jelly.
Close by is a large aquarium-supplies stall selling exotic tropical fish.
From here, the produce in the stalls start giving way to more local vegetables and spices and stall-owners here are more likely to be Bidayuh from the surrounding longhouses. Keep an eye out for local vegetables such as kangkong (water spinach) or paku (jungle ferns found only in Sarawak), fruits such assalak (a sweet and acidic fruit with skin resembling that of a snake's) or dabai (an olivelike fruit from the Sibu area). If in doubt, ask the vendor as to the identity of what you are looking at, and how to eat it.
Those taking Malaysian cooking lessons will find this a great place to buy some serai (lemongrass), lengkuas(galangal) or kunyit (turmeric) as well as kerisik (ground coconut, look for stalls with a grinding machine). Other items of interest to foodies are fresh tempeh (Javanese-style fermented soy beans), belacan (shrimp paste) andcincalot (fermented krill dip) while the more adventurous might want to try live sago grubs, which are available from time to time.
You can pick up kampung-style grilled fish just before heading into the fresh-seafood section, featuring fresh catch such as pomfret, Spanish mackerel, skate and local shellfish. This section lies next to Pasar Tamu DBKU, the covered market which operates on weekdays when the weekend market is closed. Halal (food prepared according to Muslim dietry laws) beef and lamb is sold by butchers next to the seafood section.
The Pasar Tani Mega, which is a farmer's market organisation, is a new addition to the market, and features stalls selling strictly local produce, great for 100-mile foodies.
If you are here during the durian fruiting season (November to February), check out the durian stalls that are set up at the intersection of Jln Rubber and Jln Rubber Lorong to smell and taste what the fuss is all about.
My hands are photogenic.ngeeee!
ReplyDeletewow what a nice place to go
ReplyDeleteaku dulu 15 tahun kat sarawak di kuching..yang aku minat ia lh mee kolok/laksa/terong asam
ReplyDelete