Tag Archives: Gaya Street

Yu Kee Bak Kut Teh

Yu Kee Bak Kut Teh (佑记肉骨茶)

Yu Kee Bak Kut Teh (佑记肉骨茶) is the most crowded restaurant in Gaya Street of Kota Kinabalu city after office hours, and throngs of local and tourists come to try their famous Bak Kut Teh (肉骨茶 in Chinese), which is pork and organs simmered for hours in soup of herbs and spices (such as star anise, cinnamon, cloves, dang gui and garlic).


The broth has nice aroma of traditional herb and the soup is thick and rich in meat sweetness. Once it enters your mouth, your body will send you a rewarding signal to tell you that it’s nutritious stuff.

Bak Kut Teh (肉骨茶) literally means “meat bone tea” in Hokkien. It is introduced to Malaysia by Chinese labors and coolies of Hokkien origin in 19th century. As they are too poor to afford expensive herb such as ginseng, they cook the pork with herb and eat it as a supplement to boost their vitality.


If you eat alone, you can order the standard set meal, which costs about MYR15.00 (about USD4.50) and includes a bowl of Bak Kut Teh, white rice, soup, a teapot of Chinese tea and a few pieces of beancurd puffs (see photo above).


Pic: price list of Bak Kut Teh items (as of April 2015, 6% GST tax included).

Or if you eat with a few friends, you can order a few bowls of different items (see photo above) such as meat balls, kidney and liver and share the food together. The items and their prices per bowl are shown in the photo above (Note: RM is Ringgit, Malaysian currency). To balance your diet, you can order blanched lettuce with oyster sauce too, which is not listed. The prices are subjected change in future (prices listed here are updated on 8 Apr 2015).


Pic: meat balls


Pic: blanched lettuce with oyster sauce


Pic: different dishes of Bah Kut Teh


Besides the meaty pork ribs & belly, there are intestines, liver and pig ear slices in the soup too. If you don’t like organs, you can tell the waitress that you want meat only (you can even ask for slim or fat meat only, or both), but I have to tell you that you will miss the best parts..


Above: workers preparing Bak Kut Teh. The restaurant is always packed with hungry customers, so they are very busy.


The beancurd puffs (known as U Cha Kui or “油条” in Chinese) go well with Bak Kut Teh.


Enjoying the fatty meal but it doesn’t really taste oily though. Bak Kut Teh tastes best when served hot, so I hope they will use heated claypot to store the soup. After 5 minutes of photo-taking, my soup was cooling down and affected the taste.


It’s full of people even on weekdays. The shop address is No. 74, Jalan Gaya, 88000 Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia (opposite Jesselton Hotel in Gaya Street). Yu Kee Bak Kut Teh opens from 4:00pm to 10:30pm daily and closed on alternate Mondays. To be sure, you can phone +60 88-221192 to check in advance. The owner is Mr. Yap Leong Tuck.


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Yu Kee Bak Kut Teh is so well-known that even foreign tourists, especially those from Hong Kong know it, so I think blogging to introduce it is not even necessary.


You see. The restaurant is so crowded that some have to sit outside but everyone still looks happy. If you come after 6pm, you will have to stand and wait for your turn to get a seat.


After a pork-laden meal, drinking Chinese tea can help to dissolve the excessive fat. They are serving Tie Guanyin (铁观音).

A little note for foreigners


The pot of boil water is for your to “sterilize” the dinner set. It’s not soup so don’t drink it.


Above: the optional condiment for Bak Kut Teh. Dark soy sauce if you want it more salty. You may eat the meat with chopped chilli or minced garlic for extra flavor. Up to you. I like to eat it with a lot of garlic. Don’t do this if you will go for a date later LOL.

Bak Kut Teh is herb soup with “heat” property. Don’t take too much if you feel feverish.

Photos taken in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia Borneo

Bonding with Gaya Street, the heritage street of Sabah

Try to tell the youngsters about your past, and you will see the “WTF, here he comes again…” impatient expression on their faces. However, everyone did want to hear about your stories in Gaya Street last weekends (11-12 Feb).


Not only that, the TV media also interviewed the people about their stories.


All these excitement are the outcome of the “Bonding with Gaya Street” event, which is a community heritage exhibition that features old buildings, old-time stories, cultures and social history about Gaya Street, which is known as Bond Street during British colony era. Gaya Street is chosen for the event because it is where Jesselton (now Kota Kinabalu (KK), capital of Sabah) started.


“Sudah lama lor…” (means it’s a long time ago) is the commonest phrase heard during the event. The old photographs of Kota Kinabalu with timeline from 1657 to 1960 attracts locals from all walks of live. Most KK folks have a piece of memory in Gaya Street, so these nostalgic photos bring back their memory. Strangers pointed at the photos and shared with others that what was used to be there and what they had done.


Bonding with Gaya Street is organized by North Borneo History Enthusiasts (NBHE) and Kota Kinabalu City Hall, and supported by Sabah Tourism Board, Information Department, Sabah State Museum, Sabah Archives and Daily Express.


Today Gaya Street is well-known for its Sunday market that is frequented by many tourists, but few knows about its history. After the event, I know that it’s more than a tourist attraction, it is a heritage street rich of history!


My favorite of this event is the display of colorful street art painted on the sun shade canvas, a very welcome enrichment. These are the creative works of professional artists, teachers and students as young as 6-year! You may look at my photo album for bigger photos. Which painting you like by the way?


Above: Nunuk Ragang photo exhibition by Flanegan Bainon.


Above: the volunteers of the event. They have a Collection Booth for old photographs and personal stories in Sen Chong Wah restaurant (新中华) in Gaya Street, if you would like to share yours.


If you go inside this restaurant, you will a beautiful display of Kota Kinabalu’s old-day information on the wall.


Above: a street performance by Julie Sawmundax during the launching. It’s fun to have her around.

You may watch the 3-min video below about the event:


Above: vintage cars


Above: a replica of North Borneo war memorial made of bamboo. The “real” memorial is moved to City Park many years ago.


Many shops in Gaya Street also decorate their doors and windows with nostalgic items such as old photos. Do you see your pretty mom or handsome dad in the photo? LOL.

At first those locals felt suspicious, when the organizer asked them for the old stories and photographs. Once they understood the purposes, they become very supportive to this project.


It’s so cool that some shops were showing the historical photos of their shops 50 or 60 years ago. Gaya Street has become a live museum. Our schools have turned history class into something dry and boring. This might be the first time people, both old and young, think that history is interesting. And these things are not found on our textbook, so we need to document them ASAP before they are gone forever.


Above: proud of the history. Sen Chong Wah restaurant (新中华) was established since 1945!


Above: this stone on the wall of Syarikat Eng Leong is the most important relic easily overlooked by most. It is laid in 1951 and marks the first row of 17 permanent shophouses of Kota Kinabalu. These traditional shophouses are under threat when big and air-conditioned shopping malls sprout in city nowadays.


Above: built in 1954, Jesselton Hotel is the oldest post-war hotel in Sabah. The famous boxer, Muhammad Ali stayed there before.


Above: the Sabah Tourism building is nearly 100 years old. Locals still call it “old post office”.

In the past, I thought that the historical value of an old building is only from its age, the longer it is, the more precious. Now I think the stories and collective memories are more significant. Without any story, an old building is just an aged structure that has no life and meaning. I hope the social histories of our Gaya Street will be passed on to our new generations.


In conjunction with Bonding with Gaya Street, Hotel 63 held an exhibition about the 107-year-old Atkinson Clock Tower in 1st floor. A coffee-table book titled “Colonial Townships in Sabah: West Coast” is on sale for RM135. Since Richard, the author was there, I bought the book and requested for his autograph. Haha, then the rest also became kiasu and did the same thing. Richard was busy writing but I guess he was also glad that the books were sold like hot cake.


Atkinson Clock Tower is built in 1903 in memory of Francis George Atkinson, the first District Officer of Jesselton. There are many information and old photographs of Atkinson Clock Tower in this exhibition. I’m glad that Malaysians today really care about their history and heritage, like what the Jalan Sultan incident shows.


The highlight is the 8×48 foot graphic mural of the Atkinson Clock Tower. If you look closely, this mural is formed by a large collection of photos.


Above: Atkinson Clock Tower is only a stone throw away from Gaya Street. This oldest structure of Sabah has become an iconic landmark of Kota Kinabalu.

However, Atkinson Clock Tower is under serious threat when a developer proposes to build a 16-storey Commercial Shopping Mall next to it! WTF, there are many damn developers cut all the forest and mangrove to build their housing, then market their property as a nature-rich location. Same to this greedy developer who wants to build a mall next to Atkinson Clock Tower, they are not f*cking care about our heritage. Please do object this project!

More Info:
Official website of Bonding with Gaya Street
North Borneo History Enthusiasts (NBHE), the main organizer

More Photos

You may check out my photo album if you want to see more nice pictures:

Photos taken in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia Borneo