Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
LOCAL KNOWLEDGE
BRICKFIELDS STREET EATS
Brickfields offers several street vendors serving tasty snacks well worth sampling as you explore the area:
parking lot across the road from KL Sentral, the family who run this stall fry up tasty Indian snacks, such as lentil
vadai
(fritters) flavoured with fennel seeds, in giant woks.
RM1.20; 10am-6pm; monorail Tun Sambanthan) Offering banana fritters so tasty that it can get away with
charging a bit more for them than other vendors. The stall also sells curry puffs.
10am-6pm; monorail Tun Sambathan) Cool your throat with fresh coconut juice, some
ais cendol
(shaved ice)
and other desserts.
Little India Fountain Hawker Stalls
Great for cheap eats, open around the clock, and a far more pleasant option
than the streetside tables down the Little India section of Jln Tun Sambanthan, where your ears will be assaulted
by Hindi and Tamil pop songs.
Brickfields & Around
AUTHENTIC CHAPATI HUT$
(Lot 635 Jln Scott; mains RM7; 10.30am-11pm; monorail Tun Sambanthan)
This bona fide hut at the end
of a car park strewn with plastic tables and chairs becomes packed every evening when
locals arrive to scoff the freshly made chapatis, other Indian breads and spicy dishes.
INDIAN
ANNALAKSHMI$
INDIAN
( 2272 3799; Temple of Fine Arts, 116 Jln Berhala; 11.30am-3pm & 6.30-10pm Tue-Sun; ; KL Sent-
ral)
The fancy main restaurant inside the Temple of Fine Arts has set prices for its tasty ve-
getarian cuisine with a daily lunch buffet (a good deal for RM12). Next to the car park be-
neath the building, it's still 'eat as you wish, give as you feel' at the simpler Annalakshmi
Riverside operation.
VISHAL$
INDIAN