2020-04-01_Travel___Leisure_Southeast_Asia

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
From top: La Rouge’s
Fish House Punch;
Tiga’s retro style;
Shehab Mafuz of
Atas serves a
Tambun Nobility;
lemongrass-infused
beer and a toddy
stout with local
coffee at Kikilalat.

TRAVELANDLEISUREASIA.COM 25


BACK TO THE FUTURE


Tiga (fb.com/thetigabar; drinks from


R M30) means “three” in Malay, and it’s


presumably named after the lane where


the bar is located, which was once


where third wives of tin magnates and


other well-to-do men resided. The


space resembles a rough-around-the-


edges 1950s shophouse, down to the


communal washrooms, now stocked


with Aesop toiletries. Grab a seat, and


have a taste of bartender Alvin Au


Yong’s Concrete Jungle, Tiga’s riff on


the Jungle Bird, Malaysia’s national


cocktail. With the Concrete Jungle,


local flavors and condiments dominate.


There’s sesame rum, curry Aperol, port


wine and a dash of homemade syrup.


Owner Sunny Lim’s ethos for Tiga is


a crafted sepia-tinged frame of what


life was in the 1950s, a time when


partygoers inspired by the Rat Pack


made efforts to dress up. One can only


imagine what these folks will think of


the Market Club, a dessert-like


concoction of coconut palm, lemon,


pandan-layered gin and egg white. If


the building’s roughly hewn cement


walls could talk, they would probably


say “bring it on.”


HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT


Over in New Town, walk through a


black steel door (for directions, ask the


burger flipper), amble up a flight of red


lamp–lit stairs in a corner shophouse


next to Konda Kondi Cafe, and you’ll


arrive at Atas (fb.com/atas183; drinks


from RM30). Looking like a 1970s home


down to the Singer sewing machine


and chintzy tropical wallpaper, this


speakeasy-slash-living-room draws


crowds of the city’s slouchy college
party kids in regulation tropical-hipster
uniforms of colorful Hawaiian shirts
and baggy pants—the baggier the
better. They come for bartender
Shehab Mafuz’s creations. He mines
local ingredients like pomelo and
pandan syrups, edible flowers, along
with Martell Noblige and peach liqueur
to create the Tambun Nobility. The
crowd here doesn’t take itself too
seriously. The lack of pretention is as
refreshing as the fruity Thrift Store
Hipster, a potent combination of blanco
tequila, hazelnut liqueur, pineapple
juice and spearmint syrup, best enjoyed
with hip hop from the in-house DJ.

QUIRKY COCKTAILS, UP COLD
I nearly got lost getting to Falim, a
satellite town known for its heavy
industry. Development has come so
hard and so fast that Google Maps has
had difficulty keeping up. This is also
where La Rouge (fb.com/
larougecocktailbar; drinks from RM30),
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