17 Malaysian Recipes to Introduce You to the Country’s Vibrant and Varied Cuisine

These essential dishes reflect the unique and complex nature of Malaysian identity, culture, and cuisine.

Published September 26, 2024
Graphic with multipl Malaysian dishes

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

Malaysia can be a confusing country to define—even if you, like me, were born here and have lived here all your life. The ebb and flow of migration throughout history, along with numerous waves of colonization by the Portuguese, Dutch, English, and Japanese, have resulted in a complex identity, culture, and cuisine. Add to that the myriad ethnicities that call this country home and have contributed greatly to its culture, and there isn’t quite a monolithic identity that one can hold onto, leading many of us to wonder what exactly makes us Malaysian.

Though there are people native to Malaysia, it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly where each group came from and when, as reliable written records are scarce. Many stories, skills, and recipes have been passed down orally, from parent to child or teacher to student, making it challenging to trace the exact history and origins of communities and their traditions. 

Situated in Southeast Asia, a region with a convoluted history of colonization, immigration, and trade, Malaysia is divided into two separate land masses with the South China Sea in between. Peninsular Malaysia, an extension from the south of Thailand, lies to the west, while East Malaysia sits on the northern part of Borneo, an island shared with neighboring Indonesia and Brunei.

Before colonization, Southeast Asia was a borderless region where people, often following the seasons of agriculture and commerce, migrated as they pleased. Many debates about the specific origins of certain dishes began only after European colonizers drew arbitrary lines in the sand to mark their territories—because of these new boundaries, members of different cultural groups felt the need to stake a claim on certain dishes. The many periods of colonization, along with the flow of traders (mainly from the Indian subcontinent and the Chinese empire) who stayed, settled, and intermarried, have resulted in a rich cultural tapestry that has been evolving for centuries.

Malaysia had no set borders until the British government and Siamese monarchy decided jointly, in 1909, on what is now the peninsula’s northern border. According to Thanet Aphornsuvan, a historian and author of Rebellion in Southern Thailand: Contending Histories, Britain and Siam wanted clear demarcation, and both parties signed a treaty in 1909 to define this specific border, which exists to this day. The northern Borneo states of Sabah and Sarawak joined the federation of Malaysia in 1963, and Singapore, once a part of Malaysia, seceded in 1965, shifting the country’s borders and further complicating the discussion on what dishes belong to which national cuisine. (A famous example is the discussion on who really “invented” bak kut teh, a spiced pork rib soup enjoyed in both Malaysia and Singapore.)

Overhead view of meat

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

In order to understand Malaysian cooking, it’s crucial to recognize just how many cultures and ethnic groups exist in the country and how their contributions have shaped the cuisine. Today, the main ethnic groups in Malaysia are Malay, Chinese, Indian, and others of mixed heritage, including Portuguese Eurasians, the Peranakan Chinese, and Nyonya peoples. There are also other various indigenous groups throughout Malaysia, with some as large as the 700,000 Dayaks in Sarawak, and others as small as the Kanaqs—today, there are fewer than 100 Kanaqs living in the Southeast of the peninsula. 

Each group’s cuisine has been shaped by the local geography and climate, as well as the blending of cultures through migration and intermarriage. A quick rundown:

  • Orang Asal are the native groups of people across Malaysia. There are over 80 different Orang Asal groups, and their members make up at least half of the population in East Malaysia. As different as each group is, their food cultures are similar; they are all rooted in deep respect and reverence for the land, and never foraging or hunting more than they need to survive.
  • Malays are ethnoreligious people and are the predominant race in peninsular Malaysia. They use a prolific amount of coconut milk in their cooking, along with aromatics like shallots, garlic, chiles, lemongrass, and various rhizomes like ginger, galangal, and turmeric. Both saltwater and freshwater fish, along with local greens like water spinach and pennywort, make up a majority of their diet. Pork is strictly prohibited in Islam, though it isn’t uncommon for folks of other ethnicities to make Malay-style dishes with it, like pork rendang.
  • Chinese people came to Malaysia in several waves, most significantly between the early 1800s and the mid 1900s. Many came as laborers to work in mining and agriculture, and settled throughout the country. In the north and northeastern peninsular states that border Thailand, the Hokkiens and the Hakkas are predominant. Many dishes incorporate Thai ingredients and culinary techniques. There are many distinct Thai-Chinese flavor combinations like a crispy fried pork with a local Malay fermented fish sauce called “budu,” an ingredient that is unique to this region. Cantonese folks mostly settled in the central states of Perak and Selangor; their simple braises and stir-fries (like wat tan hor, noodles tossed in a thick egg sauce) allow the natural flavors of local ingredients to shine. In the south, the Hokkien population is also significant; here, you can find heartier dishes like tau eu bah (soy sauce pork) and bak kut teh (herbal pork soup). Chinese-style fermented vegetables like pickled mustard greens occasionally make an appearance in other dishes, like the Southern Malay sour and spicy fish dish of asam pedas.
  • Indians make up about seven percent of Malaysia’s population. Many Indians arrived under British rule as forced labor; these workers brought spices, like black pepper and turmeric, that heavily influenced local cuisines. Curry powder stars in dishes like the local griddled omelet sandwich roti John and kam heong, a style of cooking that incorporates curry powder along with dried shrimp and oyster sauce. Malaysian curries most closely resemble the spicy gravies of the southern Indian region of Tamil Nadu, where many Malaysian-Indians hail from. The biggest Indian influence on Malaysian culture and cuisine may be the many mamak shops throughout the country. These establishments are operated by Tamil Muslims who serve South Indian-style food, and are important cultural institutions where people across socio-economic lines come together for cups of frothy milk tea called teh tarik.
  • Mixed heritage ethnic groups such as the Portuguese Eurasians, Chinese Peranakans (also known as Nyonya), and Indian Peranakans (also known as Chitty) each have their own specialty dishes that have become popular in mainstream Malaysian cuisine, like Nyonya-style curry laksa and spicy Portuguese baked fish. These traditions have survived centuries, and many are a result of migration—like the Portuguese who remained after the Dutch wrested control from them in 1641—or intermarriage between the different groups who integrated into local Malaysian communities.
Graphic for Malaysian Food 101

All of this is to say, it’s incredibly difficult to neatly categorize Malaysian cuisine, and it’s not uncommon for groups to put their own spin on dishes from other local cuisines. For example: The Chinese community sometimes prepares nasi lemak (Malaysian coconut rice) with pork curry, while the Indian population often enjoys the dish with a sweeter sambal. Because there’s so much crossover within Malaysian cuisine, it’s much easier to organize this guide by meal, which will more broadly cover what many different ethnic groups eat each day. The Malaysian dishes below are essential to me, and are also based on my own experiences and conversations with home cooks and food writers across the country.

The Essential Flavors of Malaysian Cuisine

The flavors and ingredients that often appear in Malaysian cooking are similar to those of its Southeast Asian neighbors. You’ll find aromatics like shallots, ginger, galangal, lemongrass, and makrut lime leaves, along with woody spices, fermented seafood, and the liberal use of coconut in all its forms. Even seemingly “imported” cuisines like Indian or Chinese—groups that have assimilated over centuries—make use of these ingredients. 

Overhead view of finished sambal tumis

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

What sets Malaysian flavors apart, at least in my opinion, is their sheer intensity. We’re not shy about flavor and turn almost everything up to 11. If it’s umami, it’s incredibly umami. If it’s spicy, it’s especially spicy. Though there is balance and nuance, many dishes pack a punch and will likely knock your socks off.

How Malaysian Meals Are Served

Malaysians love to eat, no matter the hour. Three square meals is nice and is definitely the norm, but many of us tend towards a more hobbit-like schedule, munching whenever something particularly tasty—be it a steamed dessert like kuih or bite-sized curry puffs filled with spiced potatoes— crosses our path. At three in the morning, it might be roti canai (Indian-style flaky flatbread) at an Indian Muslim eatery, or hot-and-sour tom yam soup from a roadside stall that’s ready to serve hungry diners at all hours. 

Overhead view of dipping kaya toast

Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

Because dining out is relatively affordable in Malaysia, busy folks often take their meals outside of the home. Malaysians dine out like it’s a sport; we are constantly comparing notes on which char kueh teow spot has the best wok hei, or if one curry mee stall is better than the other. Still, many people cherish a good home-cooked meal, jumping at invitations to eat rice and lauk (side dishes) prepared lovingly by someone’s parents. The ability to cook a full meal from scratch is hugely admirable, especially in a country where a good and affordable meal in an eatery is so easily available. 

It may sound like Malaysians are passionate about food, but that’s not quite it. To paraphrase the much-lauded and award-winning Malaysian chef Darren Teoh: “Malaysians don’t like food, per se. They like to eat.” The following are some of the dishes we love eating the most.

Breakfast

Nothing gets us out of bed in the morning like the fear that our favorite breakfast might sell out. In Malaysia, breakfast is typically a grab-and-go-affair that’s purchased, but a home-cooked breakfast may include nasi lemak, fried rice studded with pantry ingredients or leftovers, or a quick approximation of kaya toast, all washed down with strong coffee or Milo, a beloved malted chocolate drink.

  • Kaya Toast

    Side view of stack of kaya toast

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    In Malaysia, one of the most popular jams is a coconut-based spread known locally as kaya, a rich condiment made from cooking eggs, sugar, and coconut cream until caramelized. To make a sturdy breakfast called kaya toast, people spread the jam onto white bread, top it with generous pats of butter, and sandwich it with another slice of bread.

  • Nasi Lemak (Malaysian Coconut Rice)

    Overhead view of Nasi Lemak

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    At its most basic, nasi lemak is rice cooked in coconut milk. It’s one of the most popular Malaysian breakfasts, and there are many ways to enjoy it. Popular accouterments include sambal tumis (Malaysian chile paste), fried ikan bilis (dried and salted anchovies), a slice of hard-boiled egg, fried peanuts, and sliced cucumbers.

    Lunch

    Ethnic segregation may be at its most obvious during lunch breaks, when groups of colleagues break off and head to separate eateries that typically serve Malay, Chinese, or Indian food. No matter one’s ethnicity, the choice is often “mixed rice”: rice with a literal buffet of various dishes like stir-fried vegetables and hearty curries to choose from. Because Muslim Malays make up a large percentage of the population and don't eat pork, many Malay-style eateries often feature dishes like grilled chicken or fish with stunning varieties of curries like masak lemak (coconut milk braises) accompanied by condiments like sambal belacan (chile paste with fermented shrimp) and vegetable salads like kerabu.

    Many office workers also gather at kopitiams (local Hokkien parlance for “coffee shop”) for lunch, where they sweat through business-casual attire as they slurp on hot noodle soups like wonton noodles, pan mee (handmade wheat noodles) or spicy asam laksa. Lunch al desko is decidedly not the norm, so packed lunches from home aren’t particularly commonplace.

  • Masak Lemak Cili Api (Fiddleheads and Fava Beans in Spicy Coconut Milk)

    Fiddleheads and fresh fava beans in coconut milk.

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    “Masak lemak” is one of the most popular styles of cooking in Peninsular Malaysia; it literally translates to “cooked in fat,” but it specifically means to cook in coconut milk. You can cook almost any ingredient in this style, from various proteins to a whole host of vegetables.

  • Sambal Belacan (Malaysian Chile Paste)

    Overhead view of sambal belcan

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Made with chiles, fermented shrimp paste, and a squeeze of lime, sambal belacan is the most famous and ubiquitous of Malaysian chile pastes. The condiment is used to amp up the heat of meals, and the chile paste’s spiciness can range from tame to knock-your-socks off, depending on the type and amount of chiles used.

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  • Kerabu (5-Ingredient Malaysian Vegetable Salad)

    Angled view of multiple bowls of kerabu

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    “Kerabu” is the Malay word for “salad,” and often features wild or cultivated vegetables that are tossed with sambal, toasted grated coconut, and zesty lime juice.

  • Asam Laksa (Spicy and Sour Noodle Soup)

    Overhead view of Asam Laska S

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Most people may associate “laksa” with noodles in a thick coconut curry. But in Malaysia, “laksa” means “noodle soup.” This version hails from Penang, an island off Malaysia’s western coast, and features plenty of small, oil fish like sardines for a pungent stock.

    Teatime

    Teatime—a holdover from British colonial times—is a break in the mid- to late-afternoon for a quick snack or refreshment. Enterprising aunties will set up shop outside office buildings, where they sell all sorts of little snacks like kuih, which may include onde-onde (palm sugar dumplings) and pengat pisang (banana and coconut soup). Those who manage to escape the office will likely be at the nearest mamak shop (Indian Muslim eatery) sipping teh tarik.

  • Onde-Onde (Malaysian Sweet Palm-Sugar Dumplings)

    Overhead view of a hand picking up an onde-onde from a platter full with one cut open to see the inside

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Called onde-onde, these chewy balls are filled with melted palm sugar and tossed with freshly grated coconut. Its emerald color comes from pandan juice, which also lends the balls a subtle, pleasant grassy flavor. Onde-onde are a kind of kuih, little snacks with roots in Nyonya culture. (Nyonya is short for Baba-Nyonya, which refers to the Peranakan Chinese.)

  • Pengat Pisang (Malaysian Banana Coconut Soup)

    Overhead view of Pengat Pisang

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    “Pengat” is a portmanteau of the words “penganan” (sweet food items) and “hangat” (warm), and refers to warm, sweet soups that contain coconut milk. They often feature fruit like bananas, jackfruit, and durian. They may also have sago pearls, small chewy balls made from the starch of the pith of palm tree stems.

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  • Teh Tarik (Sweet and Frothy Malaysian Milk Tea)

    Overhead view of teh tarik

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    “Teh tarik” means “pulled tea,” and is a nod to how hot tea is poured back and forth between two cups to cool it down, resulting in its signature frothy head of bubbles. The beverage, which is made with boiled black tea, evaporated creamer, and condensed milk, is a staple at mamak shops.

    Dinner

    Dinner is often a simpler affair eaten at home. Rice is once again an essential component, and is served with an assortment of dishes like spiced braises, simple stir-fries, and condiments like ferments or pickles. Dinner without sambal belacan is incomplete, and the condiment is typically served alongside cencaluk (fermented krill), tempoyak (fermented durian paste), and kasam sabi (fermented mustard greens). A Chinese dinner table without soup (like ABC soup) is rare, as is a Malay or coastal Bornean dinner table without small fish, whether fried or braised like pinarasakan.

    Those who choose to dine out may patronize a southern Thai-style eatery known colloquially and affectionately as “kedai tom yam” (tom yam shop) for tom yam (sour and spicy soup) and stir-fried vegetables. Others may venture to outdoor food courts, which offer a plethora of dishes from various cuisines. Crowd-favorites include oyster omelets, char kueh teow (stir-fried flat rice noodles), and sambal stingray.

  • Pinarasakan (Malaysian Braised Fish With Sour Fruit)

    Overehead view of Pinarasakan

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Pinarasakan is a cooking technique from the indigenous Kadazan-Dusun community of Sabah, Malaysia. Before refrigeration, the Kadazan-Dusun found that preparing fish this way—with plenty of salt and sour fruit—helped dry it out, improving its flavor and extending its shelf life. The braised fish is salty, sour, spicy, and fragrant with turmeric and ginger, and typically served with leafy greens and rice.

  • Kasam Sabi (Bornean Fermented Mustard Greens)

    Overhead view of fermented Mustard Greens

    Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

    Pleasantly tangy and salty, kasam sabi is commonly eaten as a side dish with rice. It’s also frequently combined with meats and/or starches like rice or potatoes to make flavorful stews.

  • Sambal Stingray (Malaysian-Portuguese Baked Fish)

    Overhead view of sambal stingray

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Malaysia’s long history of colonization—by the Portuguese, the Dutch, and the British—has greatly shaped its cultural landscape. This baked fish, which is smothered in a rich spiced chile paste, wrapped in banana leaves, then grilled or baked, comes from the Malaysian Portuguese community.

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  • Malaysian ABC Soup

    Overhead view of ABC soup

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    This simple chicken and vegetable soup is deeply flavorful, with an ease to deliciousness ratio that’s hard to beat. It’s often the first recipe parents teach their children when they move out, and what families make when they’re tired, ill, or need a hearty meal they can easily prepare.

    Weekends

    Late mornings make for big appetites, and many Malaysians often crowd banana leaf restaurants for a hefty brunch. These restaurants serve an assortment of dishes on top of large  banana leaves. Kari kepala ikan (fish head curry) soaks through mounds of rice set alongside fried spicy squid and battered chicken, both laden with turmeric and chile powders. For those of us on the Bornean side of Malaysia, open flame grills are a regular sight: People char meat like freshly slaughtered pork on grates and roast skewers of large fish. Some may even nestle meat-filled bamboo culms alongside the fire to prepare manuk pansuh (chicken in bamboo) or as-sam. 

    On the peninsula, crowds form long, snaking queues for roti john from busy roadside stalls that are equipped with little more than a large griddle. Diners sit at fold-out tables below heavy-duty umbrella canopies, slowly savoring their food. And in the wee hours of the early morning, a night at the club may be followed by a stop for street burgers: Dubbed Ramly burgers, these thin patties of beef or chicken smothered in sweet chile sauce and mayonnaise are named after a famous Malaysian brand of hamburger patties. People may also pause for or bak kut teh, a nourishing herbal pork soup.

  • Kari Kepala Ikan (Malaysian Fish Head Curry)

    Overhead view of fish head curry

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Malaysian-style curry is typically a brilliant red-orange gravy with different vegetables and proteins, and tends to be on the spicier side. The most famous version is fish head curry, which likely began as a poor man’s meal but has since risen in popularity to become one of the most expensive items on Indian restaurant menus.

  • As-sam (Bornean Bamboo-Cooked Rice With Chicken)

    Overhead view of As-am

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    The island of Borneo is home to many indigenous groups, including the Bidayuh people, who are collectively referred to as Dayak. Foraging is a big part of Dayak life, and meat is considered a luxury. In Dayak cooking, bamboo is often used as a vessel for cooking. To make as-sam, rice and chicken spiced with garlic, ginger, lemongrass, and black pepper are packed into a tube of bamboo, sealed with pandan leaves, then slowly roasted over open flames.

  • Roti John (Malaysian Griddled Omelette Sandwich)

    Side view of stack of roti johns

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    Roti John is a savory Malaysian sandwich loaded with a curry-beef omelette and stuffed with the toppings of your choice. Many stalls offer two versions: one with minced beef, and another with chicken. Though the sandwich is eaten year-round, it’s especially popular during Ramadan, when many Malaysians pick up roti John at an evening bazaar to break their fast at home.

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  • Bak Kut Teh (Malaysian Pork Rib Soup)

    Overhead view of Bak Kut Teh

    Serious Eats / Michelle Yip

    This fortifying pork rib soup is packed with an assortment of herbs and spices, like angelica root, Szechuan lovage, star anise, and cassia bark, among many more. Deeply flavorful and comforting, this soup is what many Malaysians enjoy after an evening out—or when they’re feeling homesick and in need for a nourishing meal.

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