Best pasar malam food in KL

Snack your way through the top night markets in town where the best street food is born and perfected.

These days, apam balik filling might include banana and desiccated coconut. But we still prefer the original – the turnover pancake is sprinkled with chopped peanuts and cooked to a crisp on the griddle. When the sugar starts to caramelise, the apam balik releases an irresistible nutty and sweet aroma.
RM1.20 per piece

Durian purists, don’t turn your nose up at this snack just yet. Ordinarily the king of fruits should be enjoyed on its own, but you can’t go wrong with a little innovation now and then – like, for instance, fried durian in a crispy, delicious batter. The flour coating is just thin enough to produce a golden skin while the fruit stays beautifully creamy inside.
RM 1.20 per piece

The focused vendor fries up cubes of radish in a swift motion, guaranteeing a smoky, greasy finish. Get him to crack an egg into the wok; you won’t regret it.
From RM4

Despite its playful appearance, apam beras is a complex, delicately textured kuih that’s becoming increasingly rare in markets. If you’re packing up a few, top with shredded or desiccated coconut before eating.
RM1 for five

The Malaysian version of fruit salad, consisting of raw mangoes, sengkuang, pineapple, cucumber and papaya, tossed in sweet and salty hae ko (shrimp paste). The owner jazzes up the bite-sized ingredients with chopped peanuts and a prawn cracker. Trust us, one cracker is never enough.
From RM5

Zaidi’s satay stall is where you want to go for sticky, juicy, charred-at-the-wingtips grilled chicken wings. A word of warning, however: the wings have probably been through a dose of food colouring.
RM1 per piece

Korean pancakes
Korean pancake
Shopping Markets and fairs Mont Kiara

Stall no. 63 only specialises in one thing, and that’s Korean pancake. Our favourite is the pleasing sour-spicy kimchi iteration (other flavours include mushroom and yellow bean), which is pan-fried to golden, crispy perfection.
RM4 for one, RM10 for three

Is it Indian? Is it Malay? The ambiguous origins of kuih peneram (or athirasam in India) are ignored at Kak Som’s stall, where batter is rolled out, filled with palm sugar and fried to a puff.
RM1 for ten pieces

Luk luk
Luk-luk
Shopping Markets and fairs Cheras

This streetside steamboat’s secret weapon is the chilli and peanut sauce. There’s something about dipping our food in a communal hotpot that we love – the joy of parking our butts on the roadside and gorging on a variety of meat skewers. The experience is even better on a rainy day.
RM1.50 per skewer

Lemon Terrace boasts a formidable catalogue of Korean delicacies, namely gimbab (steamed rice rolls), chapchae (glass noodles) and spicy tteokbokki (rice cakes), but the juicy mandoo (dumplings) are the stall’s star attraction.
RM10 for seven pieces

Oyster mushrooms are dipped in spicy batter and deep-fried till they’re brown, light and crispy. The bustling stall’s trippy sign (S’hroom) will also reel you in.
RM3 per portion

A street snack that’s commonly associated with Taman Connaught pasar malam, the stinky tofu assaults the nose but pleases the palate. You’ll smell it from afar but once you bite into the deep-fried tofu with pickled vegetables, the soft white curd melts on the tongue. Watch out for the sauce that gushes out with every bite.
RM3 for four pieces

The mango sticky rice and pad thai are crowd pleasers, but patrons flock to this perpetually buzzing stall for its wide range of Thai-style meat dishes, curries, noodles and fried rice.
From RM5

Despite the presence of other Japanese treats like inari and edamame, Onipon Japan’s biggest draw is perhaps its fluffy homemade rice balls, which are given experimental new fillings like chilli tuna.
RM4 each