Petaling Street, Kuala Lumpur
Lama
A Petaling Street shophouse turning three-day rempah pastes into some of the city's most precise Peranakan cooking.
FlightLogic expert score: 8.3/10 · ££ · Peranakan , Malaysian
Quick answer
Is Lama worth visiting? FlightLogic assigns an expert score of 8.3/10 based on editorial research. The 4.6/5 star figure is an editorial composite for guide comparison — not a verified consumer aggregate. Best for casual lunch, food enthusiasts, first-time peranakan diners.
About Lama
Lama occupies a narrow prewar shophouse two doors from the wet market clatter of Petaling Street, its dining room barely wider than the kitchen pass that runs along one wall. The rempah here is pounded, not blitzed — candlenut, galangal, and dried chilies worked by hand over three days before they meet coconut milk in the ayam pongteh, and the difference shows in a gravy that coats rather than pools. Portions are generous for the price point, service moves fast without feeling rushed, and the kitchen holds its nerve on sourness and heat rather than smoothing either out for a broader audience. The Bib Gourmand fits: this is precision cooking sold at a neighborhood price.
Menu highlights
Editorial rating breakdown
Published reviews
Sorted by date (newest first). We do not reorder by rating or “helpfulness”. Review integrity policy
- 5.0Editorial sample
The pongteh gravy had real depth, not the sweetened version you get at most kopitiams. Portions are enormous for RM28.
Response from Lama
Terima kasih, Wei Ling — the pongteh is still cooked in small batches every morning, glad it showed.
- 4.0Editorial sample
Went on a Tuesday night and the assam fish head alone justified the trip. Room is tiny and fills up by 7pm, worth booking ahead.
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How far ahead should I book a table at Lama?
For dinner, especially Friday and Saturday, book 3 to 5 days out — the dining room seats under 30 and turns over quickly at lunch but fills solid at night.
Can the kitchen adjust spice levels for guests who don't eat very hot food?
Yes, staff will tone down the chili in dishes like the assam fish head on request, though the sourness and fermented notes stay as intended.